Joe Burrow's NFL Ranking Says Everything About Bengals' Biggest Fear

Explore how the 2025 NFL season reshaped the league's quarterback landscape, spotlighting unexpected standouts and enduring elite performances.

The NFL’s quarterback hierarchy took some hits in 2025, but the top of the list stayed familiar. Injuries reshuffled the middle, Matthew Stafford turned age 37 into a banner year, and Patrick Mahomes still owns the No. 1 spot even after a season that ended far too soon. Here’s how the league’s best stack up heading into 2026.

Patrick Mahomes remains the standard in Kansas City, even with a year that never fully got off the ground. He finished with 3,587 passing yards, 22 touchdowns and 11 interceptions, and he also had to do more on the ground than usual because of a thin backfield, setting career highs with 422 rushing yards and five rushing scores.

His PFF grade was his lowest since 2020, and the season ended in Week 15 against the Chargers when he tore his ACL and LCL and had surgery the next day. That loss sent the Chiefs to their first playoff-less finish of his career.

Still, Mahomes added another line to his résumé in Week 4, when he became the youngest and fastest quarterback to 250 career touchdown passes at 30 years and 11 days old in his 116th game, passing Aaron Rodgers to the mark. With three Super Bowl titles and six straight AFC Championship Game appearances through 2024, he keeps the top spot.

Josh Allen sits right behind him after another season that showed exactly why his dual-threat game keeps him in the elite tier. The 2024 MVP threw for 3,668 yards with 25 touchdowns and 10 interceptions, and he led all quarterbacks with 14 rushing scores.

He was the only player in the league to top 3,000 passing yards and 500 rushing yards. Buffalo’s run ended with a 33-30 overtime loss to Denver in the divisional round, a result that cost Sean McDermott his job.

Allen heads into 2026 under new coach Joe Brady, with DJ Moore added by trade and a surgically repaired foot expected to be ready by Week 1.

Lamar Jackson’s season was shaped by availability more than anything else. A hamstring injury took away four games and the rushing burst that has long defined his best football, and Baltimore slid to 8-9.

Even so, Jackson still produced 2,549 passing yards, 21 touchdowns and seven interceptions, and he posted a 91.9 PFF grade against the blitz. He finished strong, too, connecting with Zay Flowers on go-ahead throws of 50 and 64 yards in Pittsburgh.

The Ravens’ 8-9 record ended John Harbaugh’s 18-year run, and new coach Jesse Minter has said he’ll look to lighten the load on Jackson.

Joe Burrow’s year went sideways in a hurry after a Week 2 sack in Jacksonville. The Grade 3 turf toe injury he suffered that day required surgery and cost him nine games, and Cincinnati went 3-7 without him.

He returned on Thanksgiving and closed the year with 1,809 passing yards, 17 touchdowns and five interceptions over eight starts. Burrow still flashed like an MVP candidate when healthy, including a four-touchdown game in Buffalo and a 309-yard, four-score outing in Miami.

The Bengals have shut down trade talk and plan to build around him in 2026.

Matthew Stafford made age 37 look like a launch pad. He won his first MVP after leading the league with 4,707 passing yards and 46 touchdowns, the latter a Rams single-season record and 12 more than any other quarterback, while throwing just eight interceptions.

His 109.2 passer rating was the best of his 17 seasons. Stafford kept it going in the playoffs, throwing for 936 yards and six touchdowns over three games before Los Angeles fell 31-27 to Seattle in the NFC Championship Game.

A one-year, $55 million extension in May keeps him in place ahead of rookie Ty Simpson.

Justin Herbert had one of the toughest jobs in the league and still kept the Chargers moving. Los Angeles lost Joe Alt and Rashawn Slater to season-ending injuries, Herbert took 54 sacks, second-most in the NFL, and yet he still helped the Chargers win 11 games.

He finished with 3,727 passing yards, 26 touchdowns and 13 interceptions, while also setting a career high with 498 rushing yards. He played the final month with a broken left hand after surgery on Dec. 1, then saw his postseason drought continue in a 16-3 wild-card loss at New England, his third playoff exit without a win.

Mike McDaniel takes over the offense in 2026.

Dak Prescott rounds out the group after leading the league in passing yards. He threw for 4,552 yards on 600 attempts and 404 completions, with 30 touchdowns and 10 interceptions across all 17 games.

In a November win over Philadelphia, he passed Tony Romo to become the Cowboys’ career passing leader. But all that production didn’t translate to January, and Dallas finished 7-9-1 and missed the postseason.

The offseason picture in Dallas includes George Pickens back on the franchise tag, Javonte Williams returning, and Prescott entering another year under second-year head coach Brian Schottenheimer.

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