Of all four NFC East teams, which has the best grouping of quarterbacks?

That's the question Chris Chase of Fox Sports posed, and the results for Dallas Cowboys fans aren't bad, according to him at least.

Chase has the Dallas trio of Tony Romo, Dak Prescott and Kellen Moore as the 12th best unit in the NFL. His sarcastic reasoning why they're ranked where they are is below:

Given the excitement over the Dallas Cowboys drafting Ezekiel Elliott, there's a legitimate chance Roger Goodell just cancels the 2016 season and awards the Super Bowl to the Cowboys, you know, because top-four running backs always pan out and the Cowboys never fare poorly in the playoffs.

The Cowboys beat out the Washington Redskins by one spot (they were 13th best) and lost out to the New York Giants by one spot (11th). But all of those teams pale in comparison to the Philadelphia Eagles. They were dead last in Chase's rankings.

"Congratulations, Warner Bros." Chase said, "Batman vs. Superman won't be the only high-priced disaster of 2016. The Eagles quarterbacking situation is the worst thing to happen to Philadelphia since, well, the previous half-century of professional football."

Before the team traded up in the draft to take Carson Wentz, Philadelphia signed Sam Bradford to a two-year, $35 million deal with $22 million guaranteed. They also signed free agent Chase Daniel to a three-year, $21 million deal with $12 million guaranteed.

That's all in addition to the projected $26.7 million deal Carson Wentz will get as the No. 2 pick in the draft.

NY Daily News writer Gary Myers was recently on SportsDay's "Ballzy" podcast and said the following about the Eagles:

"[I]t defies logic that you commit that kind of money to these players and then empty out your drafts for two years, or even into the third year, for a kid from North Dakota State. You either do one or the other. I thought at the time that they signed Bradford, and I wrote this, that it was great news for the Giants that the Eagles had committed to Bradford for two more years because I don't think he's very good. Chase Daniel is just a backup who started like three games in seven years. Twelve million dollars for a backup is a lot. If that's the decision they made even after they made that trade with Miami to move up to the eighth pick, you didn't figure they'd jump up to get a quarterback and they'd take something of a more immediate need. I don't understand how you make both of those moves."

Read more here.