Why NFL scouts believe the 2026 QB class drops off sharply after Fernando Mendoza

FootballSports
23 Apr 2026 • 5:30 PM MYT
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Image from: Why NFL scouts believe the 2026 QB class drops off sharply after Fernando Mendoza
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NFL scouts are not down on the 2026 quarterback class because it lacks names, they are down on it because too many of the names still require projection instead of belief.

That is why Fernando Mendoza has separated himself this late in the cycle. He is not viewed as flawless, but he is viewed as the only passer who consistently checks the trust box.

That distinction matters more than raw talent when teams start weighing first-round risk at the league’s most expensive position.

Image from: Why NFL scouts believe the 2026 QB class drops off sharply after Fernando Mendoza
Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

Fernando Mendoza is the only QB teams trust

The split becomes obvious when Touchdown Wire report outlines how teams see traits across the class but struggle to fully trust anyone beyond Mendoza.

That aligns with the broader scouting view. Mendoza’s 2025 production stands out with 41 touchdown passes, six interceptions and a 72 percent completion rate, while his processing and accuracy give teams a clearer projection into NFL structure.

He is not just productive. He is predictable in the right way, which is why evaluators are more comfortable tying a franchise decision to him than anyone else in the group.

Why the 2026 QB class falls apart after QB1

The concern with the rest of the class is not talent, it is reliability. Too many prospects show flashes without sustaining them over a full season or under pressure.

Ty Simpson still carries intrigue, but limited starting experience and an uneven finish leave questions about how quickly he can translate. Drew Allar has size and arm strength, yet accuracy and decision-making remain inconsistent when games tighten.

Carson Beck offers experience and physical tools, but questions around decision speed and whether he can elevate an offense continue to follow him into the draft cycle.

This is why the drop-off feels sharp. Mendoza gives teams a clear starting point. Everyone else still asks them to make a leap.