At this point, the general consensus is that New England Patriots signal-caller Tom Brady is the greatest quarterback of all-time.

The man has won five Super Bowls (which is already more than any other quarterback in NFL history) and will have the opportunity to win his sixth on Feb. 3 when the Patriots take on the Los Angeles Rams in Brady's ninth Super Bowl appearance.

As if we needed any more evidence that Brady is the greatest ever, the game-winning drive he orchestrated against the Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC Championship Game this past weekend just served as more proof.

Former Denver Broncos quarterback John Elway, who won two Super Bowls himself, said that Brady's performance against the Chiefs just solidified what we already knew: Brady is the greatest quarterback to ever set foot on the gridiron:

Only two other signal-callers in NFL history have won four Super Bowls: Joe Montana and Terry Bradshaw.

Brady passed both of them two years ago when he led the Patriots back from a 25-point deficit against the Atlanta Falcons, rallying New England to a thrilling 34-28 overtime win.

This year will represent Brady's third straight trip to the Super Bowl, marking the first time he has done that in his illustrious career.

The 41-year-old received criticism from fans and media pundits all season long, as numerous lackadaisical performances had many believing that Father Time was finally overtaking Brady.

Then, the playoffs rolled around, and, well, you know the rest of the story.

Brady and the Patriots will take on the Los Angeles Rams in the Super Bowl.