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Ted S. Warren/Associated Press

When you account for 85.7 percent of your team's total offense over 12 games, you should be considered a Most Valuable Player. When you're a quarterback and you lead your team in rushing by 224 yards, you should be considered a Most Valuable Player. When you complete 62.4 percent of your passes and throw 26 touchdowns to just eight interceptions despite an offensive line that, in some spots, wouldn't cut it in the SEC, you should be considered a Most Valuable Player.

And when you welcome the NFL's best team into your stadium and slice up their defense despite the limitations surrounding you, you should definitely be considered a Most Valuable Player. Perhaps the Most Valuable Player.

That's what Seattle's Russell Wilson did to the Philadelphia Eagles in the Seahawks' 24-10 Sunday night win over the Philadelphia Eagles. Not only did Wilson complete 20 of 31 passes for 227 yards and three touchdowns against a Philly defense that was designed to stop him above all, he also added 31 rushing yards on six attempts and made play after play outside of structure that had Eagles defenders shaking their heads and gasping for breath. There are few NFL players who can do more with less than Wilson, and that was never more true than it was against a defense many expected to bottle him up in the pocket and take their shots.

Wilson wasn't the only one who excelled in Week 13. Minnesota's Case Keenum continued his unlikely success story with the Minnesota Vikings. Drew Brees now leads what looks like the NFL's most dangerous offense. Alex Smith made a big comeback, albeit in a loss to the New York Jets, and it was fun to see Kansas City's offense firing on most of its cylinders again.

Our weekly quarterback rankings are decided and written by myself, NFL1000 lead scout Doug Farrar, and quarterbacks scout Mark Schofield. I evaluate all AFC quarterbacks, and Schofield does the same with the NFC quarterbacks.

We combine tape analysis and advanced metrics to give you a sense of which quarterbacks are trending up, down and which are better or worse than their reputations might imply.

The rankings are based on recent performance, but they are also adjusted for opponent, talent around the quarterback and the player's history over the last few years.

Good news for some, bad news for others. Here are the NFL1000 quarterback rankings ahead of Week 14.