The buzz around Fernando Mendoza isn’t just draft hype anymore; it’s turning into full-blown consensus. With his Pro Day looming, the Indiana star quarterback is stacking endorsements from every corner of the football world. And when your own head coach is leading that charge on national TV, it hits differently.
Indiana’s rise last season wasn’t accidental. It was engineered, led, and ultimately finished by Mendoza’s elite play under pressure. Now, as the 2026 NFL Draft picture sharpens, the narrative is getting louder: This is QB1, and it might not be particularly close.
Curt Cignetti Doubles Down on Fernando Mendoza’s Potential Before Pro Day
Speaking on NFL Network on April 1, Indiana head coach Curt Cignetti didn’t hold back when discussing his star quarterback ahead of his Pro Day. The timing matters, as this is the stretch where narratives can shift. Instead, Cignetti reinforced what scouts already believe: Mendoza is built differently.
“As good as he is, he still will improve immensely and has barely scratched the surface of his potential.”
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Cignetti went deeper, pulling back the curtain on Mendoza’s preparation and mindset—two traits that often separate good prospects from franchise quarterbacks.
“I’ve never been around anybody who has prepared like he did. He wanted to be a great player. Tom Brady was his idol. He did everything in the realm of possibility to be the best he can be and won the Heisman and played his best at the end when games were tight. Went 16-0, probably will be the first one taken in the draft… When the chips are down, plays his very best, respect from his teammates because of the type of competitor he is and how he prepares. Special guy.”
Mendoza’s 2025 campaign wasn’t just productive; it was historic. He led Indiana to a perfect 16-0 season, captured the Heisman Trophy, and led the Hoosiers to a national championship. That résumé alone would lock him into the top tier. But it’s the intangibles, preparation, poise, and late-game execution that are separating him.
Even analytically, the gap is real. PFSN’s CFB QB Impact Rankings gave Mendoza an A grade (93.3), a massive jump from his previous C+. He ranked second overall, while Ty Simpson, recently pushed into the spotlight by ESPN’s Dan Orlovsky, came in at No. 25.
The projection is just as clear. With the Las Vegas Raiders expected to hold the No. 1 pick, Mendoza remains the overwhelming favorite to go first overall. After moving on from Geno Smith, the franchise has all but telegraphed its next move.
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From a scouting standpoint, Mendoza checks every box. At 6-foot-5, 225 pounds, he’s got the prototype frame. His arm talent pops: velocity, layering, and tight-window confidence. He’s decisive pre-snap, sharp post-snap, and operates with a calm that doesn’t flinch in chaos.
Yes, there’s some “arm arrogance” in his game, but that’s often the trait you live with when a QB can see throws others won’t attempt.
