The NFL’s season of ridiculous takes is in full swing, and Chris Simms is leading the pack.

Simms ranked Patriots quarterback Tom Brady — yes, six-time Super Bowl-winning Tom Brady, who won his most recent championship in February — ninth on his top-40 NFL quarterbacks list last week. Unsurprisingly, some folks had problems with that, including Kurt Warner.

The former Super Bowl champ turned NFL Network analyst responded on Twitter with a simple, “Are u kidding me???” and Simms, who also ranked Drew Brees No. 10 on the list, clapped back.

“I’m way deeper in the weeds in all these subjects than Kurt Warner,” Simms said last week on WEEI. “I’ve seen him on the NFL channel like once in the past 50 days.”

On the same radio station Tuesday, Warner chose to keep his criticism to the ranking itself, as opposed to getting personal.

“I’m not worried about the shots,” Warner said. “That is the nature of the business now. It seems like everyone who doesn’t agree with someone, you take shots at someone. It’s just agreeing and making your (argument). I obviously had Tom Brady No. 1. I don’t know how with the way he continuously has success, continuously has his team in championship form, continues to make plays in the biggest moments — you don’t have to have him No. 1. No problem. I can see some arguments with why you would move him down, but to have him nine or 10 on the list, it’s just to be crazy.”

Brady, who will be 42 next season, showed little sign of slowing down last season. He threw for more than 4,300 yards with 29 touchdowns and got the Patriots through a postseason gauntlet. Though the Patriots may need to start thinking of life without him, there’s not much indicating Brady is about to fall off a cliff.

“The problem I have is I am not saying Chris doesn’t do his work or have reasons for it, I just find it hard to give someone credibility when they have Drew Brees, who set a record in completing 73 percent of his passes, and then Tom Brady who won the Super Bowl, having them way down at nine or 10 on the list,” Warner said. “It’s hard for me to understand.”