LANCE MEDOW: Everyone's entitled to their opinion, but let's face it, there's really only one correct answer to this question. In 1986, Lawrence Taylor won NFL MVP, Defensive Player of the Year, led the league in sacks (20.5), was named to the Pro Bowl, earned first-team All-Pro honors and helped the Giants win their first-ever Super Bowl title. He's just one of two defensive players (Vikings defensive tackle Alan Page – 1971) in NFL history to win MVP and Defensive Player of the Year in the same season, and the only defensive player to be unanimously voted league MVP.

I'd like you to list another Giant who had that dominant of a season and capped it off with both individual and team hardware. Taylor was responsible for more than one-third of his team's sacks (59) that season. He recorded six multi-sack games and wreaked havoc against every single opposing quarterback. Thanks in part to Taylor's dominant season, the Giants posted a 14-2 record and claimed the top seed in the NFC and ultimately cruised past the Niners, Redskins and Broncos en route to winning the Super Bowl. Taylor even returned an interception 34 yards for a touchdown in the Divisional Round against San Francisco. The Giants Bracket Challenge highlights a number of impressive individual seasons, but none come close to what Taylor accomplished in 1986. It's not just the best individual season in team history. It's arguably one of the greatest individual seasons in NFL history.