On Saturday, I wrote that Alex Smith had turned his career around in a remarkable fashion. In his first 44 starts, he lost 28 times. And after a win on Sunday, Smith has lost just 28 times in his last 95 starts! That made me wonder: which quarterbacks have turned their careers around in a similar fashion?

To measure this, I calculated each quarterback’s actual career winning percentage from 1950 through 2016 along with their adjusted winning percentage. What was the adjustment for? Well each start gets weighted more heavily than the last one. So for a quarterback with 100 starts, his last start gets a weight of 100, his second-to-last start gets a weight of 99, his third-to-last start a weight of 98, and so on. His second start gets a weight of two, and his first start gets a weight of just one. In other words, this is heavily skewed towards starts that come later in a quarterback’s career.

By this measure, Smith’s adjusted career winning percentage (including his three starts this year) is 0.669, which is 0.075 higher than his actual winning percentage of 0.594. That’s pretty significant, but it’s not the largest disparity. That title goes to Billy Kilmer, who had a terrible record with the Saints but a very good with the Redskins. He had an actual career winning percentage of just 0.539, but weighted for games that came later, it was 0.632, an increase of 0.092.

The 179 quarterbacks who started at least 50 games (from 1950 to 2016) are listed below. Smith ranks as the 5th biggest “late bloomer” on the list.

The man who replaced Smith in San Francisco, Colin Kaepernick, ranks 2nd from the bottom ahead of only Marc Bulger. The former Rams star began his career with a 28-11 record, 17 games over .500, but went 13-43 — 30 games under 5.00 — the rest of his career.