For much of Tim Tebow's career, particularly in the NFL, he has been a polarizing force when it comes to fan opinion. The two camps seem evenly and defiantly split, with one half saying Tebow is an inaccurate passer and therefore a terrible quarterback and the other half saying that while he might be unorthodox, Tebow is simply a winner and his intangibles trump his completion percentage.

After finally getting a chance to watch a full Tebow game last night, we have come to this conclusion: Tebow is not a terrible quarterback or a winner. Tebow is a terrible quarterback AND a winner.

It is no longer possible to objectively argue either point. Denver's offense last night, before their final drive, was somewhere between atrocious and unwatchable. They gained 134 yards before that final drive. They were abysmal on third down. They started four possessions inside New York territory that ended in PUNTS. Tebow missed wide open receivers. He missed reads. He threw long, he threw wide and he threw wobbly. And the only reason he even had a chance in the end -- as has been the case in three of his four victories, when the Broncos have allowed 15 points or fewer -- was Denver's defense put up a mighty stand. They even gave him seven points on a pick-six to tie the game at 10-10.

But down 13-10 with about 6 minutes to play, Tebow took the ball in terrible field position, from his own 5, and undeniably took over. He led Denver on a 95-yard drive, accounting for 92 of those yards himself either on the ground (57) or through the air (35), capped by a 20-yard TD run with a minute remaining. It was a spectacular moment, and Tebow earned it.

The problem for Denver is that these two undeniable Tebow forces are almost certainly always going to be in competition with one another. He is flat-out not a good passer. He is pretty much a terrible QB when it comes to the things we think of a conventional NFL quarterback doing, and that will cost Tebow and the Broncos dearly many times and put them in holes from which it will be difficult to escape. But his knack for making everyone around him believe he can rescue them at the end -- and delivering, as he's shown so far -- will continue to make him valuable and interesting.

He's yet to complete 50 percent of his passes in any game this season, yet he's 4-1 as a starter. Logic, and our best guess, would dictate the inaccuracy will catch up to him at some point and Tebowmania will crash hard. But he's made enough magic so far that we wouldn't bet the house.