There's no denying that Aaron Rodgers of the Green Bay Packers is one of the greatest quarterbacks of all time. The 36-year-old has played his entire 14-year career with the Pack, and he trails only franchise icon Brett Favre in Approximate Value, per Pro Football Reference.

Now, according to a stat compiled by ESPN, Rodgers has another feather in his cap of being a top-tier QB all-time:

As you can see, Aaron Rodgers is No.8 all-time in passing touchdowns on a list that includes luminaries such as Tom Brady, Peyton Manning, Dan Marino, Drew Brees and his predecessor Brett Favre. However, all of those players had the help of multiple first-round draft picks to throw to over the course of their careers.

In Rodgers’s case, he only ever completed one (that’s right, uno) touchdown pass to a first-round pick in his storied 14-year career with the Packers.

That’s a career that accrued eight Pro-Bowl selections, a Super Bowl win and nearly 47,000 yards passing. It’s seemingly impossible that a legend like the Packers great only ever completed a single solitary touchdown pass to a first round pick, but the numbers don’t lie.

Beyond that statistic, Rodgers is extremely high in a wide variety of passing categories in NFL history. The former 24th overall pick is 11th all-time in passing yards per game with 259.4, 13th all-time in yards per pass attempt with 7.7, 13th all-time in passes completed with 3913, 13th all-time in total passing yards with 46,946 and, perhaps most notably, first all-time in NFL history with a 102.4 passer rating.

All of that with only one TD to a first rounder. Remarkable!