Quenton Nelson is still right there among the NFL’s best interior offensive linemen, even if the top spot has started to drift out of reach.
ESPN’s annual rankings put the Indianapolis Colts guard at No. 2 at his position, a reminder that Nelson remains one of the league’s most respected blockers as he heads into his ninth NFL season. The list is built by Jeremy Fowler and shaped by input from 70 NFL executives, coaches and scouts, with research, interviews and film study from Matt Bowen also feeding into the process.
Nelson’s play still backs up the reputation. Among guards this season, he finished fourth in Pro Football Focus’ pass-blocking efficiency and fourth in run-blocking grade. He also brings a résumé that few interior linemen can match: eight Pro Bowls and six All-Pro selections.
The feedback from league evaluators was strong, even with a little acknowledgment that he is no longer the unquestioned No. 1.
“Some drop-off but still elite,” an NFC executive told Fowler. “[He] was No. 1 for a long time, but the Smiths (Tyler and Trey) and [Quinn] Meinerz are on his heels.”
Fowler described Nelson as a “beacon of consistency” for Indianapolis, and voters still see him as “very much an anchor” up front at age 30.
“Can anchor, bend, wide,” an AFC exec told Fowler. “Not as dominant as before but better than he was in 2024.”
Nelson is also entering the final year of his current contract, and ESPN’s Bill Barnwell recently noted that his next deal could make him the highest-paid guard in the NFL.
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