Fernando Mendoza, Indiana's junior quarterback, appears in 87% of early 2026 mock drafts going to Las Vegas in Round 1. Two other franchises—Cleveland and the New York Giants—occupy the same quarterback-needy tier in projection models published this week. The convergence is not sentiment. It is arithmetic.
The three teams carry $142 million in dead cap exposure from prior quarterback decisions through the 2025 season. Las Vegas holds $44.7M in guarantees to Jimmy Garoppolo and Aidan O'Connell contracts. Cleveland owes Deshaun Watson $73M through 2026 regardless of performance. The Giants absorbed $23.4M accelerating Daniel Jones's exit. All three contracts expire or become tradeable ahead of the April 2026 draft, aligning financial windows with talent availability.
Mendoza threw 38 touchdowns against 9 interceptions in 2024, posting a 71.2% completion rate in Big Ten play. His projection to Las Vegas reflects scheme fit—offensive coordinator Luke Getsy ran similar timing concepts in Chicago—and Vegas holding an estimated top-five pick after a 4-12 finish. Mock consensus places Mendoza between selections 3-7, a range that requires no trade-up capital for teams already positioned there.
The quarterback market dynamics underpinning these projections extend beyond the three flagged teams. League-wide, 11 starting quarterbacks enter 2025 on contracts expiring before the 2026 draft, the highest one-year turnover pool since 2018, when Baker Mayfield, Sam Darnold, and Josh Allen entered together. That draft class reset franchise timelines; Cleveland, the New York Jets, and Buffalo committed $512M in subsequent extensions. The 2026 class offers similar reset potential for teams whose prior bets failed.
What separates this cycle is the public coordination. General managers historically obscured draft intentions; now mock drafts function as negotiating documents. When Mendoza appears in 14 consecutive projections to the same team, his NIL valuation adjusts, his agent's leverage builds, and competing franchises begin pre-draft trade calibration. The Giants hold the No. 3 pick in current models; if they pass on a quarterback, Cleveland at No. 5 knows New York either signed a veteran or plans to trade down, narrowing the decision tree.
Sponsorship implications trail six months behind these personnel signals. Jersey sales spiked 23% for teams drafting quarterbacks in the top five over the past decade, per Fanatics data. Caesars Sportsbook holds naming rights to the Superdome, where the 2026 draft occurs; quarterback selections in the top ten historically drove 40% higher same-day betting handle than skill-position picks. If three quarterbacks go in the first seven selections, the draft broadcast delivers measurably higher engagement, which translates to measurably higher sponsor ROI.
The Raiders' stadium situation adds a second-order wrinkle. Allegiant Stadium opened in 2020 with $1.9B in construction debt. Gate revenue depends on season-ticket renewals, which depend on optimism. Las Vegas averaged 61,092 paid attendance in 2024, 12th in the league, down 8% from the stadium's inaugural season. A franchise quarterback selection provides the narrative anchor for a renewal campaign launching in May 2026, three weeks after the draft.
Cleveland's calculus is messier. The Watson contract runs through 2026 with a no-trade clause, but the clause expires if Cleveland misses the playoffs in 2025, which current projections expect. That creates a six-month window to move Watson before the draft, eating dead cap but clearing $46M in 2027 space. The front office needs Watson tradeable to make Mendoza viable, which means Watson needs to play well enough in 2025 to generate a bidder. The incentives tangle.
College quarterback compensation forms the third leg. Mendoza reportedly secured $1.8M in NIL deals for 2024. If he projects as a top-five NFL pick, that figure climbs to $3M+ for his 2025 college season, per NIL valuation models. Agents now negotiate mock draft placement as part of NIL pitches, creating feedback loops where projection drives valuation drives projection. The mock draft is no longer speculative; it is a pricing mechanism.
The 2026 draft occurs April 29-May 1 in New Orleans. Coordinator hires conclude by mid-February, clarifying scheme fits. The NFL Scouting Combine runs February 24-March 2, where Mendoza's hand size and release metrics will be measured to the tenth of an inch. The real question is whether three teams draft quarterbacks or whether two jump early and the third pivots to a veteran trade, flooding the market with displaced starters and resetting the whole board.