From A Yahoo User:
2016 NFL passing
Andy Dalton 4206 yd 18 td 64.7% (currently a backup)
Eli Manning 4027 yd 26 td 63.0% (currently a backup)
Blake Bortles 3905 yd 23 td 58.9% (currently a backup)
Sam Bradford 3877 yd 20 td 71.6% (out of the league)
Marcus Mariota 3426 yd 26 td 61.2% (currently a backup)
Trevor Siemian 3401 yd 18 td 59.5% (out of the league)
Tyrod Taylor 3023 yd 17 td 61.7% (currently a backup)
Brock Osweiler 2957 yd 15 td 59.0% (out of the league)
Colin Kaepernick 2241 yd 16 td 59.2% (out of the league)
Case Keenum 2201 yd 9 td 60.9% (currently a backup)
Brian Hoyer 1445 yd 6 td (0 int) 67.0 (currently a backup)
Kaepernick wasn't even that good when he was "good".
From a reference book ...
"In psychology, a person who has a martyr complex, sometimes associated with the term "victim complex", desires the feeling of being a martyr for their own sake, seeking out suffering or persecution because it either feeds a perverted psychological need or fills a desire to avoid responsibility for failure.
In some cases, this results from the belief that the martyr has been singled out for persecution because of exceptional ability or integrity. Theologian Paul Johnson considers such beliefs a topic of concern for the mental health of clergy and celebrities.
The desire for martyrdom is sometimes considered a form of masochism. The person, believing themselves supremely talented, and wanting to avoid being held responsible for failing in life, declares themselves a "victim", and wants to invent ways to fail, so they can imagine that their suffering is for a noble cause, greater than common people could understand. Allan Berger, however, described it as one of several patterns of "pain/suffering attention-seeking behavior", including asceticism and egomania."