No plans for a book, but you raise a fascinating subject. The NFL started keeping statistics in 1932. That was 84 seasons ago. The Packers have two quarterbacks in the Pro Football Hall of Fame: Bart Starr and Brett Favre. Arnie Herber is listed as a quarterback, although he never really played the position in Curly Lambeau's Notre Dame Box offense. And Aaron Rodgers is virtually a shoo-in to be inducted into Canton five years after he retires. Starr was the Packers' leading passer in 13 seasons. Ditto for Favre in 16 seasons, Herber in seven (1932-37, '39) as a halfback and Rodgers in eight. Basically, the Packers have had a future Pro Football Hall of Famer as their primary passer for 44 of 84 seasons. Cecil Isbell, a Packers Hall of Famer who almost certainly would be enshrined in Canton if he hadn't abruptly retired after five seasons, led the Packers in passing four times (1938, '40-42) as a left halfback in the Box. Packers Hall of Famer Tobin Rote, who later led Detroit to its last NFL championship in 1957 and San Diego to its only championship ever, the American Football League title in 1963, was the Packers' passing leader six times before he was traded. Irv Comp led the Packers to the 1944 NFL title as their left halfback and also was the league's passing champion that year ahead of Hall of Famers Sammy Baugh and Sid Luckman. A member of the Packers Hall of Fame, Comp led them in passing four times. Lynn Dickey also is in the Packers Hall of Fame and led them in passing eight times. Don Majkowski, yet another Packers Hall of Famer, led them three times. Jacobs led Winnipeg to two Grey Cup appearances in the 1950s and was later inducted into the Canadian Football League Hall of Fame. He led the Packers in passing in 1947 and '48. In 1951, Bobby Thomason led the Packers in passing. The seventh overall choice in the 1949 NFL draft, Thomason essentially was loaned to the Packers by the Los Angeles Rams, which had two future Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterbacks, Bob Waterfield and Norm Van Brocklin. The Packers kept Thomason for a season and then returned him to the Rams rather than turn over their first- and second-round draft picks as stipulated in the conditional trade agreement. The Rams, in turn, traded him to Philadelphia where Thomason was selected to the Pro Bowl after three of the next five seasons. Parilli led the Packers in passing in 1958. The fourth pick in the 1952 draft, he led the Boston Patriots to the 1963 AFL title game and was Joe Namath's backup in Super Bowl III. Add the other Packers Hall of Famers and quarterbacks who proved themselves elsewhere and we've now accounted for 73 of the 84 seasons. The Packers also were league members for 11 seasons before official stats were recorded. Red Dunn was their quarterback from 1927-31 after leading the Chicago Cardinals to the 1925 championship and is tied with the likes of Tom Brady and Joe Montana for winning four NFL titles, second on the all-time list to Starr. In the pre-stats era, Dunn also was the NFL's second most prolific passer to Pro Football Hall of Famer Benny Friedman. Charlie Mathys, another member of the Packers Hall of Fame, played quarterback from 1922-26 and handled some of the passing chores. But he contributed more as a receiver while Lambeau, pro football's pioneer of the passing game, was the more productive passer as a halfback in the Box through 1927. Add that era to the totals and the Packers have had an outstanding or potentially outstanding featured passer, whether it be a T-formation quarterback or a quarterback or halfback in the Box, for 84 of their 95 NFL seasons. Admittedly there were maybe a handful of years of growing pains mixed in with some of those players and also some years of downturns due to age. But it's a history no other NFL team comes close to matching. The Packers' other annual passing leaders were Jug Girard (1949), Scott Hunter (1971-72), Jerry Tagge (1973), John Hadl (1974-75), David Whitehurst (1978-79), Randy Wright (1986-87) and Mike Tomczak (1991). Even among that group, Hunter led the Packers to a division title.