It’s a well known fact that Aaron Rodgers is extremely good at football. In the past few years he’s become the model of efficiency. He possesses an unnatural skillset, including (but not limited to) nearly flawless pocket presence, field vision, arm strength, accuracy, and strategic command of the field. It all amounts to what is, statistically, the greatest stretch of quarterback play in history.

On Sunday, against the Bears, Rodgers and his Packer offense ripped apart the depleted Chicago defense. Rodgers completed 18 of 23 passes for three touchdowns (no picks) and a cozy QB rating of 140.5. Those three touchdowns not only won the game for Green Bay, but were extremely significant from a statistics standpoint.

With those three added scores, Aaron Rodgers has now thrown 229 touchdowns in his career, 28th most in NFL history. To go with those touchdowns, he has thrown only 57 interceptions. This is absurd. Consider the players above and below him on the touchdown list. Steve Young sits right above him, with 232 touchdowns. Young also threw 107 interceptions: almost twice as many. Below Rodgers is Carson Palmer, who has thrown 155 interceptions to go with his 227 touchdowns.

Rodgers is now the only quarterback in history to have a touchdown to interception ratio of 4.0 or higher. He was already the only quarterback with a TD/INT ratio of over three. In addition to his general excellence in yardage (he’s got the third best Yards per Attempt mark of all time), his ratio of touchdowns to interceptions almost literally jumps off the chart.

Slacker Tom Brady has the second best ratio of all time. With 396 touchdowns and 143 interceptions, his ratio is a putrid 2.77. Peyton Manning (ratio of 2.26) would have thrown 103 fewer interceptions in his career if he had reached his 530 touchdowns with the same efficiency as Rodgers.

If Rodgers can keep up this outrageous level of play, he will absolutely merit consideration alongside Brady, Manning, and Joe Montana (ratio 1.96) as the greatest quarterback of all time. For now, Rodgers could throw 25 straight interceptions without a touchdown and still have the best ratio of all time, though we should consider that extremely unlikely.