My man the last five Super Bowl winners were Sam Darnold (fifth team), Jalen Hurts (second round), Pat Mahomes (10th overall, KC traded up from 27th overall), and Stafford (traded for).
No one is coming to save us
Dude, in another thread you argue that it’s all about individual achievements to determine if Jereymiah Love was a good pick, while here you argue that it is about team success if a quarterback is a worthwhile pick. Jalen Hurts and Sam Darnold didn’t even play great in the seasons where they won the Super Bowl. Choose. This way is hypocrisy.
Everything I explain to you here is from 2011-2025.
Franchise QB hit-rate among QB’s drafted in top 10 is between 40-44%, while that number is less than 20% for QB’s drafted between #11-#32.
A franchise QB is here defined by getting a huge second contract (with the team that drafted them). 80+ starts, 4000+ yards passing or 30+ touchdowns in a season, starting 75% of a team’s offensive snaps in a four year-span.
65% of quarterbacks drafted in top 10 get a big second contract with the team drafting them, while about 35% drafted in the rest of round 1 does that.
47% of quarterbacks selected in the top 10 have started more than 80 games for the team drafting them, while that number falls to 35% for quarterbacks in the rest of round 1.
About 60% of quarterbacks drafted in top 10 have gone to at least one Pro Bowl, while the number is 33% for quarterbacks drafted in the rest of round 1.
Pro Bowl is obviously a bit fishy, but QB’s chosen in the top 10 have 8-12% chance of becoming 1st team All-Pro. That number is less than 2% for QB’s drafted in the rest of round 1.
And lastly, let’s include your focus on team success in the calculations. Pro Football-Reference has a metric called “Approximate Value” for a quarterback. It shows how good he is in one number. That number is found through a combination of team offensive success, personal share in that success and recognition for that success (All-Pro’s and Pro Bowl’s). An AV of 15+ is elite-level play, while an AV of 0-5 is bust territory.
Quarterbacks chosen in the top 10 have a 14% chance of multiple 15+ AV-seasons, while quarterbacks chosen in the rest of round 1 have a 6% chance of the same.
Throughout their careers, quarterbacks selected in the top 10 (last ten years) have an AV of more than 70, while quarterbacks selected in the rest of round 1 have an AV of about 66. That might sound like a small difference, but when you combine the entire groups, 4 points less is a massive fall.
By the way, one reason why QBs in top 10 have a much higher AV is because they play longer as shown in the other stats.
The draft is about risk assessment, and as you can understand, the chance of drafting a successful quarterback is drastically bigger in the top 10 compared to the rest of the first round. I am not willing to tank, but when you use statistics to prove your point, at least understand what you are talking about.