
Imago
AP Photo/Jack Dempsey, File

Imago
AP Photo/Jack Dempsey, File
Essentials Inside The Story
- John Elway's Netflix promo game turned spicy fast when he repeatedly chose Joe Montana and casually dismissed Terry Bradshaw
- The tension only grew when Elway eventually picked Tom Brady over Montana
- The irony hits hard, as the same Terry Bradshaw Elway brushed aside once handed him the Lombardi Trophy
Netflix just released a new documentary about John Elway’s life, from the grind to the glory. Naturally, Broncos Country leaned in. While promoting the show, the Broncos icon joined a quick game. The game involved simple choices between big names. However, one moment sent a ripple through football history and caught Terry Bradshaw right in the middle.
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Netflix shared the clip as part of the rollout, where Elway sat back and played quarterback roulette. First up, Patrick Mahomes or Joe Montana. Without hesitation, he rode with Montana. After that, the names kept coming. Peyton Manning, Lamar Jackson, and Steve Young were next. Still, Elway did not budge. Each time, Montana stayed on top.
Then came Terry Bradshaw. At that point, most expected a pause. After all, the resumes match up in rare air. Instead, Elway doubled down. He stayed with Montana and then dropped the line that set everything off.
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“No doubt, Joe Montana. Terry Bradshaw’s way down on my list,” he said.
That one sentence flipped the mood and fired up Steeler Nation fast.
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So why the hard line? Elway framed his picks with Super Bowl success. That is what made the take sting. Bradshaw owns four Super Bowl titles with the black and gold, the same as Montana. Because of that, the dismissal felt sharp.
Bradshaw was the engine of the Steelers’ dynasty in the Steel City during the 1970s. He won Super Bowls XIII and XIV with MVP honors. His raw totals, which look light today, include 27,989 passing yards and 212 touchdowns. Still, compared to his era, those numbers carried real weight and real wins at Acrisure Stadium.
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Even more, Bradshaw delivered when it mattered most. He completed 58 percent of his throws in Super Bowl wins. Still, Elway clearly does not see him as a top option in his personal hierarchy. That much is clear. But where does he rank himself?
John Elway ranks himself as the #1 quarterback
As the game rolled on, the stakes somehow got higher. After the Bradshaw moment, John Elway faced the ultimate fork. Joe Montana or Tom Brady. This time, he pivoted and chose Brady. Then came the final twist. Brady or himself. Without blinking, the Broncos legend picked No. 7 in orange and blue. Broncos Country heard that loud and clear.
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However, the contrast jumped out right away. Elway finished with two Super Bowl rings. Brady has seven. Even Bradshaw has four with the black and gold. Still, Elway did not flinch. He offered his reasoning with full confidence.
“I always said I would never trade my ability for anybody else, and so I’m going to take me,” he said after the pick.
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To him, context mattered. And if you know his story, the ring count almost feels incomplete.
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Elway entered the league in 1983 and quickly carried the Broncos into the spotlight. Between 1985 and 1989, he dragged the team to three Super Bowls in four years. Each one ended in heartbreak. After that, the franchise wandered for years, searching for answers at Empower Field at Mile High before one last window opened late in his career.
Finally, it all clicked. In the 1997 season, Elway led Denver to a 31-24 win over the Green Bay Packers. He was 37 years old but still hungry. So he came back for one more run. In 1998, the Broncos went back-to-back. Just like that, Elway rode off as a champion and retired on top.
And here is the twist that ties it all together. When Elway won that second title in early 1999 and earned Super Bowl MVP, the man who handed him the Lombardi Trophy on stage was none other than Terry Bradshaw.
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