With the first Sunday of the 2016 NFL season in the books, Stats & Info takes a look at the best and worst QB performances from Week 1 so far, through the lens of ESPN's Total Quarterback Rating (QBR).

You can find the complete list of Total QBR data from Week 1 here.

Top 3

Jameis Winston: 90.3 Total QBR

Winston posted the highest QBR in Week 1 thanks to four touchdown passes, joining Steve DeBerg (1987) as the only Tampa Bay Buccaneers with at least four passing touchdowns in a season opener.

Winston started slowly, going 3-for-7 for 15 yards in the first quarter, but was dominant in the second and third quarters, completing 19 of 24 passes for 261 yards and all of his touchdowns. His final touchdown pass was a 45-yarder to Mike Evans that traveled 44 yards in the air. Last year, Winston was 1-for-15 targeting Evans on passes 30 or more yards past the line of scrimmage.

Winston's 90.3 QBR is his highest in a game since Week 13 of last season, when he had a 90.6, also against the Falcons. In fact, three of his four highest single-game QBRs have come against Atlanta.

Matthew Stafford: 89.6 Total QBR

Stafford completed 31 of 39 passes (79.5 percent) on Sunday, his third-highest completion percentage in a game and the third-highest in Detroit Lions history among players with at least 30 pass attempts, according to Elias Sports Bureau research.

Stafford led one of the many fourth-quarter comebacks on Sunday; the Lions kicked a game-winning field goal with four seconds remaining. Stafford was 9-for-11 for 119 yards and a touchdown in the fourth quarter, including 3-for-4 for 50 yards on the Lions' final drive of the game.

Andrew Luck: 89.4 Total QBR

Just behind Stafford was Luck, who also had an impressive fourth quarter. Luck was 11-for-16 in the fourth quarter, including 6-for-6 for 59 yards and a touchdown on the Indianapolis Colts' final drive of the game to give them the lead.

For the game, Luck completed 8 of 14 passes on throws of more than 15 yards downfield Sunday, tied for his most such completions in his career. Luck completed 32.4 percent of those passes last season, 32nd among 35 qualified quarterbacks.

According to Elias Sports Bureau research, Lions-Colts was the second season opener in NFL history featuring opposing quarterbacks with 300 passing yards, three passing touchdowns and no interceptions. The other was a 2011 opener between Aaron Rodgers and Drew Brees.

Bottom 3

Robert Griffin III: 22.2 Total QBR

Griffin had by far the worst performance on Sunday by QBR, costing his team 3.2 expected points overall, twice as many as any other qualified quarterback. It's Griffin's worst QBR since Week 12 of 2014 against the San Francisco 49ers, when he posted a 10.5.

Griffin completed 12 of 26 passes (46.3 percent), the only qualified quarterback on Sunday with a completion percentage under 50 percent. He particularly struggled in the second half, completing 3 of 11 passes (27.3 percent), the second-lowest second-half completion percentage in a game in his career (12.5 percent versus Chiefs in Week 14 of 2013).

Ryan Tannehill: 36.1 Total QBR

Tannehill was not able to do much against the Seattle defense, completing 16 of 29 passes for 186 yards. Of those 29 attempts, 23 went 5 or fewer yards downfield, including 11 at or behind the line of scrimmage. Tannehill was 1-for-5 on passes traveling 15 or more yards downfield, but that includes a drop by Kenny Stills on a pass traveling 53 yards in the air.

Thanks in part to five sacks, Tannehill averaged 4.4 yards per dropback on Sunday, the second-lowest among qualified quarterbacks in Week 1 (Tyrod Taylor, 4.0).

Russell Wilson: 41.0 Total QBR

Wilson attempted a career-high 43 passes Sunday. It was the first time in his career his team won when he attempted 40 or more passes in a game. Wilson averaged 6.0 yards per attempt Sunday, a lower figure than he had in any game last season.

Part of the reason was that Wilson's average pass traveled 4.7 yards downfield, the third-shortest of his career.