Nick Foles no longer has a strong market for his services as the majority of quarterback-needy teams in the NFL have filled their starting spots via free agency or put themselves in a high-enough draft position to select their franchise signal caller in six weeks. The trade market for Foles has dried up, despite the Philadelphia Eagles quarterback having a better resume than Sam Bradford, Case Keenum, or Teddy Bridgewater...all of which have signed free agent deals with other teams.

Why the Arizona Cardinals, Denver Broncos, and New York Jets took a chance on those players listed above instead of a Super Bowl MVP in Foles is anyone's guess, but Fox Sports 1 analyst Cris Carter has the answer. Foles isn't a starting quarterback, and teams know that.

"I don't think Philadelphia believes they can win the Super Bowl with any backup quarterback. I believe only a quarterback that knows what they're doing. They got very, very fortunate last year," Carter said on First Things First. "I don't believe there is a market for Nick Foles. Sam Bradford is a more accomplished player than Nick Foles.

"Nick Foles is not a starter in the NFL. We can keep trying to make him one, but there is no market for Nick Foles. Nick Foles played two good games, so now we're getting ready to trade him to some other team. I don't see any team out there who wants him. There's not a place where he can be the starter."

If a team wants to win football games, Nick Foles and his postseason resume has to be considered (which was more than a two-game sample). Foles had a postseason for the ages while filling in for Carson Wentz, completing 72.6 percent of his passes for 971 yards, six touchdowns, one interception, and a 115.7 passer rating. In the Super Bowl, Foles took home MVP honors after going 28-of-43 for 373 yards, three touchdowns, and a 106.1 passer rating.

Nick Foles has the highest postseason passer rating and completion percentage in NFL history.

Foles has played four career postseason games, completing 71.9 percent of his passes for 1,166 yards, eight touchdowns, one interception, and a 113.2 passer rating. He has the highest playoff completion percentage and playoff passer rating in NFL history.

In the second half of four postseason games, Foles has completed 77.4 percent of his passes for 544 yards, five touchdowns, and a 130.4 passer rating. He left each game with a fourth quarter lead, going 3-1 in those contests. He also has a fourth quarter comeback in Super Bowl 52.

Foles' second half postseason runs have been extraordinary (38-of-47, 442 yards, 4 TD, 0 INT, 134.7 rating this playoffs), and a vital reason why the Eagles hoisted their first Vince Lombardi Trophy.

In comparison, Bradford doesn't have any postseason stats, because he's never played in a postseason game. Bradford has never finished a season which he's played seven or more games with a winning record, with his best mark coming at 7-7 with the Eagles in 2015.

There is no comparison between Foles and Bradford. Foles is the better quarterback and clearly has the resume to prove it.

"Nick Foles is not a starter in the NFL. We can keep trying to make him one, but there is no market for Nick Foles." — @criscarter80 pic.twitter.com/ZBFdeAWoga — First Things First (@FTFonFS1) March 20, 2018

NOTE: Foles has a 22-17 career record, completed 60.1 percent of his passes for 61 touchdowns and 29 interceptions, for an 87.4 passer rating. That's still better than Bradford, who has a 34-45-1 record, completed 62.1 percent of his passes for 101 touchdowns, 57 interceptions, and an 85.1 rating.