Chad Pennington
FameRank: 6

"James Chadwick "Chad" Pennington" is a former American football quarterback who played in the National Football League for eleven years. He is currently a color analyst for NFL telecasts on NFL on Fox/Fox. He was drafted by the New York Jets in the first round, as the eighteenth overall selection in the 2000 NFL Draft.

He played college football at Marshall University. Pennington has won the NFL Comeback Player of the Year Award twice, in 2006 and 2008. In 2008, he finished second in MVP voting to Peyton Manning. At the time of his retirement, Pennington was the NFL's all-time leader in career completion percentage at 66.0% among quarterbacks with at least 1,500 pass attempts, being surpassed by Drew Brees during the 2014 season.

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That's what I want our offense to do, not to dwindle away at the end of the year when it's most important.

Our offense needed to step up and give our defense a breather, go down and put points on the board. And that's what we did.

The day I start getting frustrated about a win, I'll retire, ... I'll just quit, because then you don't truly understand what you're in this business to do, and that's to win.

It's always been a comfort zone knowing you have 28 [Martin] behind you. I've seen him play with two sprained ankles, I've seen him play with an MCL, I've seen him play with a tailbone muscle ripped off his tailbone, I've seen a bunch of different things. I had no idea he was hurt. I had no clue; you won't hear a word from him.

Both Laveranues and myself probably had the longest week of anybody, ... We couldn't wait for Sunday to get here to play well and make a difference.

Kevin's pretty fired up. I think we all look forward to the challenge of trying to make this offense work. One good thing is that all my guys take great pride in what they do. They're not sloppy. They want to get it right.

Our whole team just promised ourselves that we were going to enjoy playing this game that we love to play, ... Amidst all the chaos and things said about our team, at the end of the day it doesn't really matter. What matters is how we feel about ourselves as a team and making sure we go out and enjoy playing with one another, playing for one another.

They caught it on radar, I believe.

Wasn't that fitting? That needed to happen, I guess.