Quarterback Class
Early-round talent: A
Mid-round: B+
Late-round: A-
Overall grade: A-
Safest Pick: Sam Darnold, USC
Normally, this is a pretty easy choice for me, but it was difficult this year. There is no Carson Wentz, Jameis Winston or Marcus Mariota in this draft class. I think all of the top-five quarterbacks of Rosen, Darnold, Allen, Jackson and Mayfield carry some serious risk. I ruled out Rosen because of questionable intangibles and durability. Allen has accuracy issues and needs development, plus is making a huge jump in competition. Jackson has accuracy and weight issues. Mayfield I will hit on below.
In my opinion, Darnold is the cleanest prospect. He has excellent intangibles as a worker, leader and competitor. General managers who were to USC to scout Darnold in person said they think he has an "it factor" to him. As a quarterback, Darnold is an accurate passer, which is the No. 1 trait needed to succeed in the NFL. He has mobility and can make excellent passes off script. Darnold has a strong-enough arm, and I think that his issues with fumbles and interceptions can be improved upon in the NFL. In my opinion, Darnold is the safest quarterback prospect in the 2018 NFL Draft class to turn into a quality pro starter.
Biggest Bust Potential: Baker Mayfield, Oklahoma
There are a number of concerns with Mayfield that lead me to making him this pick. At 6-foot, Mayfield is shorter than ideal, and I think he could have issues reading NFL defense. He flashed issues reading defenses in college and at the Senior Bowl. One big area of improvement for him is his footwork, because he gets happy feet in the pocket. One college scouting director told me that Mayfield's feet are terrible and that he will need a lot of development there for the NFL. A NFC general manager said they have concerns about how Mayfield will perform when teams force him to stay in the pocket. That was visible in the second half of Oklahoma's loss to Georgia. Throughout his college career, Mayfield beat up on a lot of weak Big XII defenses, and he is going to see a huge jump in defensive talent in the NFL.
Quarterback Rankings by Attributes
Accuracy:
- Sam Darnold
- Josh Rosen
- Baker Mayfield
- Luke Falk
- Mason Rudolph
- Lamar Jackson
- Josh Allen
Recap: Darnold is the most consistently accurate quarterback in this draft class, consistently throwing passes with good placement. His passes are very catchable for his receivers, and he can fit them into windows between defenders. Typically, Darnold has good ball placement and is very precise in the short to intermediate part of the field.
Rosen is an accurate passer as well. For a college quarterback going to the NFL, Rosen has impressive footwork, and that leads to him throwing the ball accurately with good placement. With his timing and precision, Rosen is an accurate passer who can fire the ball through tight windows for completions.
One of Mayfield's most impressive strengths as a passer is being able to locate the ball well and throw receivers open. He is very good with his timing and trajectory on passes to hit receivers on the run and set them up for lots of yards after the catch. Mayfield is very skilled to loft in touch passes downfield and throws a very catchable ball. He can be an accurate passer with good ball placement.
Falk's best strength could be his accuracy. He was a precision passer for Washington State and consistently located his balls well. Falk will have to transition to a pro-style offense, and his windows are going to get a lot smaller. Rudolph has shaky accuracy. There are times when he makes excellent throws and others when he misses inaccurately. He also can have issues with poor placement downfield.
Jackson has to improve his accuracy. There are times when he makes brilliant throws with perfect accuracy and ball placement, but he is inconsistent. Jackson is more accurate, however, than his completion percentage indicates. Poor receivers consistently dropped well-thrown passes, and that kept Jackson from completing 60 percent of his passes in 2017. Still, Jackson can have an issue with his feet when he throws due to transferring too much weight to his front foot with his back foot off the ground. That leads to him sailing passes and making overthrows. Jackson has to improve his accuracy and footwork for the NFL. Landing with a good quarterback coach and offensive coordinator could lead to the accuracy and footwork issues being resolved.
Allen is the least accurate passer of this group, but I think he will improve his accuracy in the NFL. He got better with his accuracy and ball placement during the week of Senior Bowl practices. I think Allen's accuracy could be good enough to succeed in the NFL, but I don't think he is a accurate passer naturally. It could be a case where Allen is similar to some other big quarterbacks like Josh Freeman and Blake Bortles. They have a big-time skill sets, but are not naturally accurate. That is a concern with Allen.
Arm Strength:
- Josh Rosen
- Josh Allen
- Lamar Jackson
- Sam Darnold
- Luke Falk
- Mason Rudolph
- Baker Mayfield
Recap: The quarterback with the strongest arm doesn't always mean that much, but in this group, the top three all have very strong arms. Of them, Rosen stands out with the way the ball explodes out of his hand and the tightness of his spiral. Rosen has an elite arm that can make all the throws required with the ability to beat good coverage with the velocity of his passes. His powerful arm is very unique, and he will instantly be among the strongest arms in the NFL.
Allen has a very powerful arm that can make all the throws required with an easy ability to get vertical. At the Senior Bowl, Allen threw some frozen ropes, displaying a cannon arm. Jackson also has special arm talent. With just a flick of his wrist, Jackson can push the ball deep down the field with ease. He has very easy and smooth arm strength. In conjunction with his great mobility, Jackson can make throws from a variety of platforms that other quarterbacks can only make in their dreams.
Darnold doesn't have elite arm strength or a cannon, but his arm is above average. Falk, Rudolph and Mayfield have average arm strength for the NFL.
Field Vision:
- Sam Darnold
- Josh Rosen
- Lamar Jackson
- Josh Allen
- Luke Falk
- Baker Mayfield
- Mason Rudolph
Recap: Darnold and Rosen are the best of this group, as they are skilled at reading defenses and working through their progressions to find the open receivers. Darnold gets the nod for first place because he shows an excellent ability to keep his eyes downfield while using his feet to move around and buy time.
When staying in the pocket, Jackson displays some field vision to move his eyes and work off his primary read. Allen is inconsistent and needs more experience, but he also uses his eyes and doesn't always turn to his running skills when his first read is covered.
The bottom trio of Falk, Mayfield and Rudolph all enter the next level with field-vision problems. Falk will throw into coverage; he has problems reading defenses and seeing the field.
Mayfield has problems reading defenses when forced to stay in the pocket, and that is going to be something he will have to work on in the NFL. Rudolph is shaky at going through his progressions and reading defenses. His problems with field vision and anticipation go hand-in-hand with him holding onto the ball too long for the NFL. He got away with that at Oklahoma State playing against terrible Big XII defenses, but those issues with field vision and anticipation are going to be problems for Rudolph as a pro.
Decision-Making:
- Baker Mayfield
- Josh Rosen
- Lamar Jackson
- Mason Rudolph
- Luke Falk
- Josh Allen
- Sam Darnold
Recap: None of these quarterbacks were particularly bad in their decision-making. Mayfield was very good in 2017, having only six interceptions. At the Senior Bowl, Mayfield was very cognizant of ball security as he checked down many passes. Rosen has room for improvement in decision-making, but it isn't a weakness heading into the NFL.
While Jackson has a very flashy style of play with some jaw-dropping highlight-reel moments in every tape, he is pretty steady in his decision-making. He could stand to improve some decisions as a passer, but he isn't careless with the football. He also makes good decisions as a runner to protect himself with slides or veering out of bounds. Jackson's decision-making could get better, but it wasn't bad during his sophomore or junior years.
Rudolph generally was solid in decision-making. He threw nine interceptions in 2017, but should have thrown a lot more as he was fortunate with the amount of bad Big XII defensive backs who dropped potential picks.
Allen and Darnold are in the rear here as their decision-making needs improvement. Both of them made some panic mistakes. Darnold can have stretches of making terrible decisions, and that led to his fumbles and interceptions, but then he can flip the script and be superb for stretches. Getting more consistent with his decision-making to yield better ball security is the No. 1 point of improvement for Darnold entering the NFL.
Mobility:
- Lamar Jackson
- Baker Mayfield
- Josh Allen
- Sam Darnold
- Josh Rosen
- Luke Falk
- Mason Rudolph
Recap: The top-four quarterbacks in this group all have good mobility. Of the top quarterback prospects for the 2018 NFL Draft, Jackson has the most athletic ability and dual-threat danger to give defenses huge problems. Jackson is an amazing athlete with incredible mobility, speed, and moves to rip up defenses with his feet. From a skill-set perspective, he is very similar to Michael Vick. Jackson is extremely fast and explodes down the field when he takes off on the run. Jackson can take off when plays break down and is a threat to score from anywhere on the field by just using is feet and his elusive running in the open field. In the open field, he is a shifty runner who weaves around defenders with excellent moves in the open field to juke would be tacklers. He is a dynamic and electric runner for the NFL.
Mayfield has excellent mobility to dodge sacks, escape pressure and extend plays with his feet, plus he throws well on the run. Mayfield also can pick up critical yards on the ground and adds the value of being a dangerous threat on third-and-short or third-and-manageable.
Allen is a big body with excellent strength to shed tackles. Routinely, you would see plays of Allen using his stature and power to shove off defensive linemen and then using his feet to escape trouble. From there, he can throw well on the run, yet is also dangerous to run through the defense. On those plays, Allen looks like a young Ben Roethlisberger. Allen is a good athlete with running ability to get downfield. He will be a good running threat in the NFL to pick up some yardage with his feet. With his mobility and stature, Allen is hard to sack and shows real toughness in the pocket.
While Darnold is not a running quarterback, he is functional to avoid sacks and will move around to help his offensive line and receivers. He made a number of really nice plays during the past two years when things went off script as Darnold got creative to move the ball for his offense. Routinely, Darnold would buy time with his feet and then make an accurate throw downfield with the rush closing in on him. He regularly showed good poise to keep plays alive.
The bottom trio all lack mobility for the NFL. Rosen will move around to buy time and does a nice job of climbing the pocket, but in the NFL, he won't beat defenses or run away from defenders with his mobility and speed. Falk is similar to Rosen. Rudolph is not very athletic for the NFL.
Intangibles:
- Sam Darnold
- Josh Allen
- Mason Rudolph
- Luke Falk
- Lamar Jackson
- Baker Mayfield
- Josh Rosen
Recap: Overall, Darnold, Allen, Rudolph and Falk were said to have quality intangibles, per team sources. Darnold's intangibles drew rave reviews from sources across the league who went through USC. Allen, Rudolph, and Falk all interviewed well at the Senior Bowl, and teams like the character of those three prospects.
Jackson does not have bad intangibles. He is said to be a good kid who isn't a trouble maker. He can be too much of one of the guys, and some team sources would like to see him emerge as more of a commanding leader.
Mayfield has mixed intangibles. He has leadership potential for the NFL, and his fighting style of play can lift those around them. However, he also has some maturity concerns and had some off-the-field issues during his collegiate career.
A well-known negative factor about Rosen is the concerns with his intangibles. There has been talk in the scouting community about Rosen having bad intangibles and being disliked by his teammates at UCLA, especially during his early time with the Bruins. Team sources said that Rosen worked at improving his relationships with his teammates over his final year and half, and that progress was made on that issue.
Former teammates of Rosen have told staff at their NFL teams that Rosen was okay, but they weren't enthusiastic about Rosen or gushing about him as a teammate. Team sources told me that Rosen was know for being a hard partier at UCLA and that some of his choices on how he parties gives them concern considering he is supposed to be the face of a franchise and set the leadership example in the locker room.
Rosen comes from a wealthy background and grew up differently than the vast majority of players in the NFL. He could have issues connecting with and leading all parts of the locker room. With his upbringing, Rosen is quick to speak his mind, and that may cause some conflicts for him in the locker room, within the organization, and with the media. Rosen's intangibles may end up being a hinderance in him maximizing his great arm talent.