Patrick Mahomes’ place in the quarterback conversation has been so secure for so long that a No. 4 ranking should feel almost surreal. But that’s exactly where Pro Football Focus put him ahead of the 2026 season, slotting Josh Allen, Joe Burrow and Lamar Jackson ahead of the Chiefs star.
The ranking arrives alongside PFF’s 2026 NFL QB Annual, which digs into every starting quarterback with a statistical lens. And with Mahomes, the old debate is back in focus: does PFF value what he does, or does its grading system miss the point entirely?
PFF’s own explanation leans hard into the idea that Mahomes has built a huge chunk of his production on clean execution rather than consistently difficult throws. The line they used to frame his profile was blunt: " Since becoming the starter in 2018, Mahomes has been the NFL's most dangerous quarterback on routine, scheme-generated throws, leading the league with 94 touchdowns on zero-graded passes since 2019 - 30 more than the next-closest quarterback"
That’s the heart of the disagreement. To PFF, a quarterback is only rewarded when he does something above the baseline.
If he makes the throw the offense is designed to create, that’s neutral. Chiefs fans, naturally, see a touchdown as a touchdown and think a system that calls 94 of them “zero-graded” is missing something obvious.
For years, Mahomes’ brilliance and Kansas City’s results made the argument feel academic anyway. From 2018 through 2024, the Chiefs reached seven straight AFC Championship Games, played in five Super Bowls and won three. Mahomes was the engine for all of it, piling up NFL records, MVPs and Super Bowl MVPs while sitting at the center of the league’s biggest run.
Then came the slide. After a disappointing showing in Super Bowl LIX, the Chiefs followed with the worst season of the Mahomes era.
Mahomes was still good, but his numbers dipped again, continuing a trend that started in 2023, and the dynasty run finally hit the wall. To make matters worse, he suffered the most significant injury of his NFL career, blowing out his knee and missing the final four games of the season.
PFF’s numbers do at least acknowledge that Kansas City wasn’t exactly helping him out. The outlet noted that "His 5.12 yards per attempt on zero-graded throws was a career low" and that "his 75.2 clean-pocket passing grade was nearly 10 points below his previous career low." In plain English, even the easy stuff wasn’t producing the way it once did, and even with protection, Mahomes wasn’t finding much separation around him.
That’s why this ranking lands differently now than it would have a year or two ago. When the Chiefs were winning everything, Mahomes’ spot at the top of these lists was hard to challenge because the results backed him up. Now, after a down year and a major injury, PFF can line its grades up with its ranking without much pushback from the record.
Still, the bigger question hangs over the whole exercise: what is a quarterback ranking supposed to measure? If it’s just last season’s performance, then Mahomes at No. 4 is defensible.
If it’s about projecting 2026, the injury and the uncertainty around Kansas City’s supporting cast make the case for someone else easier to sell. But if the list is really about who is most talented, or who you’d want leading your team if everything else were equal, Mahomes still has the strongest argument.
Allen, Burrow and Jackson are all elite quarterbacks. Nobody is pretending otherwise.
But Mahomes has matched them with his own highlight reel and then separated himself where it counts most: the postseason, the Super Bowl, and the ability to win when the pressure is highest. That’s the part PFF’s grading system still doesn’t seem built to capture.
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