Arch Manning has been the most anticipated NFL Draft prospect ever since he joined the Texas Longhorns out of high school. Now that the 2026 NFL Draft cycle is here, he’s eligible for the first time, and he’s already viewed as a QB1 candidate by some.
Is the QB1 hype premature for Manning, or is some excitement warranted for the former five-star prospect? Below, we’ll look at some of his tape and discern where he’s at as a prospect.
Arch Manning Is a Confounding NFL Draft Declaration Case
Manning has only started two games in his collegiate career. He has less than 100 career pass attempts and less than 1,000 career passing yards to this point. Manning’s also never started a game against a team with a winning record, let alone a ranked opponent.
All this — combined with the fact that Manning’s declaration is far from a certainty — and the hype train is still chugging full steam ahead. He’s one of the projected favorites to go No. 1 overall. Those projections fail to factor in the amount of uncertainty present, favoring only pedigree and prestige.
It makes sense that Manning would declare if he plays as expected. He was the top recruit in the 2023 class and a consensus five-star talent. He has prototypical size, athleticism, and arm talent at 6’4″, 225 pounds.
Manning is the unquestioned starter in a talent-packed, well-structured Steve Sarkisian offense that has produced NFL-caliber QBs in the past. If he produces like many believe he can with the support at his disposal in Austin, Manning very well could be in the early first-round conversation by December.
In that situation, more often than not, we see prospects strike while the iron is hot. But Manning’s declaration case isn’t a routine one. He’s the nephew of Peyton Manning and Eli Manning — both of whom stayed in college for all four years before going No. 1 overall in their respective NFL Draft cycles.
Seeing through college to its conclusion has been part of the Manning value system, and Arch himself has no monetary incentive to declare, either. He’s the highest-valued NIL athlete in all of college athletics with a $6.6 million valuation — not much less than what he’d make in his first year as a rookie if he were selected with the first pick.
The youngest Manning has expressed contentment with his standing at Texas, and according to ESPN’s Field Yates, there’s a feeling among scouts that Manning could defy prevailing expectations and stay at the collegiate level.
“The word from people that have been down there visiting Texas for scouting visits has been that they expect Arch to be there for two more seasons,” Yates said on “The Adam Schefter Podcast.”
“Will that prevail? We’ll see, but that has been the sentiment that scouts have been gathering when they spend time around the Texas program this past season.”
For this reason, many in the scouting space have shown apprehension toward studying Manning. Why do the summer scouting work if he’s barely played and is more likely to stay in school through 2026?
A compelling counterargument can be made, however. If it’s possible that Manning could take a leap and potentially become the No. 1 overall pick, then it makes sense to study and understand his current standing as an NFL Draft prospect — to see how far he has to climb in 2025 to bring that outcome to fruition.
Below, we took to the tape, gathered information about Manning’s prospect profile, and how he projects in his current form.
Manning’s Current Standing as a 2026 NFL Draft Prospect
Manning’s film is sparse to this point, but the film that is available easily displays his talent. Watching his game against Mississippi State — one of just two starts by Manning in relief of Quinn Ewers in 2024 — Manning’s five-star pedigree pops off the screen.
Against the Bulldogs, Manning completed 26 of 31 pass attempts for 325 yards, two touchdowns, and no interceptions, and he also ran for 33 yards and another score. His final TD was one of his best throws, and it displays the velocity, arm elasticity, and layering ability he has as a thrower.
This is the throw that essentially ices the game for Texas. Excellent layering from Arch on the trips right deep post against single-high. pic.twitter.com/sOVCY123cc
— Ian Cummings (@IC_Draft) April 29, 2025
Manning’s raw talent as a passer is one trait that makes him such a compelling prospect. That comes in tandem with his athleticism and creation capacity.
Manning is a stellar athlete at his size, and he can use that athleticism to create both inside and outside the pocket. Below, you can view his longest run against Mississippi State, where he used his quick acceleration and speed in open space to stretch the field.
This is a good glimpse of what Arch Manning’s pocket mobility looks like at its best.
Good depth discipline on the dropback. Free rusher is picked up by the RB. Manning slides and steps up into the pocket, stays in-sync mechanically, and hits his crossing receiver in-stride. pic.twitter.com/lm7F4xLXq2
— Ian Cummings (@IC_Draft) April 29, 2025
The early first-round passers are always separated by their arm talent and athleticism — the raw talent that both raises their floor amidst adversity and raises their ceiling as roster elevators. Manning has that raw talent, but he’s still growing beyond it.
An important benchmark for an NFL quarterback is being able to anticipate windows. This is a skill that helps NFL QBs sift through the noise in coverage, stay on schedule, and hit tight windows. And it’s a skill that Manning is still developing. He’s not a consistent anticipator at this point in his career, and this can cause delays and broken plays.
This is where you’d like to see Arch Manning develop. I don’t think he’s a consistently anticipatory passer comfortable with tight windows yet.
He has the backside dig for a fleeting moment here, but he either doesn’t diagnose it, or simply hesitates. Takes a sack. pic.twitter.com/MBkWjswZDW
— Ian Cummings (@IC_Draft) April 29, 2025
In addition to his anticipation and processing ability, Manning also needs further development with his throwing mechanics. His release, while very free-flowing and elastic, can be uncontrolled, and his footwork can be sporadic and inefficient, with inconsistencies in base width. This can affect both his shoulder alignment and hip torque on release.
Off a rudimentary grade, with just two starts as a sample size, Manning grades as a definite early-round candidate based on projection. But he’s not a first-round prospect yet, let alone an unquestioned first overall pick. That’s to be expected with such little experience; it’s not a knock on the legacy QB.
Manning has the requisite size, athleticism, arm talent, and toughness to be a No. 1 overall pick. But as of now, he still needs to develop more consistent anticipation and field vision, a more consistent trigger, more dependable release footwork, and better short-range precision.
Betting markets have jumped on the Manning legacy train, but evaluators and those familiar with the scouting process have poured their share of cold water on his 2025 campaign, with reason.
Is it safe to assume Manning will grow? Perhaps. But he needs more production and more refinement as a prospect before he can truly enter the No. 1 overall pick discussion. Even then, it’s not a sure thing that he’ll declare, and he could have competition if he does.
That’s the tricky part with Manning. No matter what you think or feel, we’re ultimately in “wait and see” mode. The potential energy is assuredly there. We just have to be patient, see how it plays out, and keep tabs with his development along the way.
what Arch Manning shuold do is focus on the 2025 season first