The
Denver Broncos selected Griese in the third round of the
1998 NFL Draft. He began his career as a third-string back up to
Bubby Brister and
John Elway. He became a
Super Bowl champion in 1998, though he spent most of the season on the sidelines. Following Elway's retirement in 1999, Griese became the Bronco's starting quarterback. Griese earned a 75.6
passer rating during his first season as starter, but improved the year later by raising it to 102.9. His efforts merited him an invite to the
2000 Pro Bowl.
Griese has consistently completed a high percentage of his passes. He has had four seasons with a better than 64% completion rate, including one year (2004) when he completed 69.3% of his passes. Nevertheless, he has yet to establish himself as one of the elite quarterbacks of the league, due to injuries, subpar arm strength and a penchant for interceptions. At Denver, he was released and replaced with former Cardinals starter
Jake Plummer. He was later signed to the
Miami Dolphins and then to the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers. His stint with the Dolphins, where his father
Bob Griese was a legend, was brief. Griese was given the starting job when the Dolphins starting quarterback
Jay Fiedler got injured. Griese had an excellent start as a Dolphin, passing for 3 touchdowns and 0 interceptions in a blowout victory against San Diego. But he was less impressive in later games which was caused by a lack of pass protection and a weak offensive line and was benched for more mobile Jay Fiedler, who himself would later lose the job.
He was able to perform well for the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and provided a catalyst for the jumpstart of the Tampa offense. Griese helped them to their only victories in 2004 with a 97.5 QB rating and to a 5-1 record in 2005 before succumbing to a torn ACL. Griese was cut by the Buccaneers in 2006 after his injury to his
knee in order to free up money for the
salary cap. On
March 21 2006, he signed a five year contract with the
Chicago Bears.
After signing with the Bears, Griese saw limited action. Though he fared better than
Rex Grossman during the 2006 Pre-Season, coach
Lovie Smith decided to keep Griese as the Bears’ second string quarterback. He took late fourth quarter snaps at the end of major victories. Though Grossman started every Bears game in the 2006 season, Smith allowed Griese some extended gametime during week fifteen, after the Bears had clinched home-field advantage throughout the playoffs. In a game against the
Detroit Lions, Griese completed six of nine passes for 51 yards, which set up several game-winning
Robbie Gould field goals. Smith called on Griese to relieve a struggling Grossman for the second half of the final regular season game against the
Green Bay Packers. However, Griese did not fare a lot better, completing 5 of 15 passes for 124 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions. While some Chicagoans questioned Grossman’s ability to lead the Bears to the
Super Bowl, Smith stood by Grossman, and declared him the team's starter throughout the playoffs. The Bears went on to win the
2006 NFC Championship, but lose
Super Bowl XLI to the
Indianapolis Colts.
After Grossman struggled during the first three outing of the
2007 Chicago Bears season, Smith turned to Griese to lead the team.
http://www.nfl.com/news/story?id=09000d5d802abff2&template=with-video&confirm=true In his first outing as a Bears starter, Griese threw two touchdowns and three interceptions in a losing effort against the
Detroit Lions.http://www.nfl.com/gamecenter/boxscore?game_id=29247&displayPage=tab_box_score&season=2007&week=REG4
The next week, he lead the Bears to a game winning drive against the
Philadelphia Eagles. Griese lost the starting job to Grossman after sustaining an injury against the
Oakland Raiders during week ten.
http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/recap?gid=20071111013 Ironically, Griese replaced Grossman again later in the season, after Grossman sustained a knee injury against the
Washington Redskins.http://www.usatoday.com/sports/football/2007-12-07-2991930527_x.htm