Georgia Tech is heading into 2026 with a quarterback room that looks thin on paper, but the bigger question is whether that uncertainty can still fit into an ACC title run.
The Yellow Jackets are set to break in a new starter, and none of the four scholarship quarterbacks on the roster has made a start. Only Alberto Mendoza has even played in multiple games. That kind of inexperience would raise eyebrows anywhere, and it stands out even more in a conference where 12 teams are moving to different quarterbacks than they had in the 2025 season.
Georgia Tech is part of that turnover, and the chaos around the league may actually help its case. SMU, Pittsburgh, NC State, California, and Syracuse are the only ACC teams expected to open with the same quarterbacks they had in the opening weekend of last season. Miami remains the clear favorite, but beyond that, the race to Charlotte looks wide open.
For Georgia Tech, this comes down to trust. Brent Key and Chris Weinke have to make the right call at quarterback, and they have to believe Mendoza can handle the job after what they saw from him in spring.
There’s also some reason to trust the staff’s judgment. Key and former offensive coordinator Buster Faulkner identified Haynes King in the portal and helped develop him into the quarterback he became, so they’ve earned some benefit of the doubt.
Still, Mendoza is not King, especially when it comes to the run game. King was one of the top rushing quarterbacks in the country last season, and a drop-off in that dual-threat element is fair to expect. Even so, Mendoza is viewed as someone who can run the offense well and still bring some mobility to the table.
His strengths are pretty clear: accuracy, decision-making, and movement. The bigger concern is experience, along with the uncertainty at receiver. Georgia Tech is also dealing with a new offensive coordinator and three new starters on the offensive line, which means the quarterback won’t be operating in a fully settled environment.
That said, Mendoza showed enough in spring to make this feel plausible. The bar is not certainty here. It’s whether he can be good enough to win the ACC, and whether the rest of the offense comes together around him.
Around the conference, the quarterback picture is strong but not spotless. Darian Mensah should be outstanding at Miami with the talent around him and after what he showed at Duke last season.
Kevin Jennings has been solid at SMU. Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele flashed plenty as a freshman, Mason Heintschel did too at Pitt, and Steve Angeli was excellent at Syracuse before his season-ending injury.
That leaves room for Mendoza to climb into that group. It is not out of the question for him to reach the same level and push into the top five of ACC quarterbacks. Whether Georgia Tech can turn that into a trip to Charlotte is another matter, and one that will depend on more than just the quarterback position.
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