The 2026 draft conversation has found its spark earlier than expected. For much of the early cycle, the tone around Fernando Mendoza has been calm and confident. TheIndiana quarterback has been treated as the obvious choice at the top of the board, a player whose experience and command made the discussion feel settled before it really began.
That confidence has been echoed by fans and analysts who see Mendoza as the safest bet in a class without many obvious challengers at premium positions. With no defensive end or wide receiver dominating the headlines, quarterback talk has filled the gap. Mendoza became the reference point, the player others were measured against rather than debated alongside.
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That rhythm changed when Brady Quinn offered a different angle while appearing on The Dan Patrick Show. Quinn suggested that Oregon quarterback Dante Moore deserves real consideration for the top pick, citing his upside and physical tools. It was enough to reopen a discussion many assumed was on pause.
“If Dante Moore comes out, I’m not so sure he’s not going to be the #1 overall pick. I think there’s a real argument to be made in his upside, his skillset.
Brady Quinn
Who will be the No. 1 pick in the 2026 NFL Draft? A familiar draft pattern starts to form
The reaction was immediate. Fans pushed back online, dismissing the idea as media-driven speculation. Some argued the timing felt premature, with the college season still unfolding. Others leaned into team context, pointing out that the Las Vegas Raiders currently hold the first pick, followed by the New York Jets, and suggesting that narrative pressure often increases when quarterback-needy teams sit at the top.
This pattern is familiar to anyone who follows the draft closely. A consensus QB1 emerges, then a QB2 is framed as the high-upside alternative. Analysts debate ceilings versus polish, and predictions of a dramatic shakeup follow. These conversations often reshape headlines more than draft boards.
That does not mean Moore lacks a case. Scouts value traits, and Moore’s arm talent and projection keep him firmly in the conversation. But Mendoza’s rsum continues to carry weight. Leadership, consistency, and comfort running an offense remain difficult to ignore during evaluations.
The draft is still months away, and careers are never decided by draft order alone. Quarterbacks taken second have often found greater success than those selected first. For now, though, the 2026 NFL Draft debate has found its first real fault line, and it runs straight through Mendoza and Moore.









