Latest Lamar Jackson Respect Check Says Everything Louisville Fans Felt

As the NFL season approaches, Lamar Jackson's impressive inclusion in PFF's top 3 quarterback rankings challenges Colin Cowherds exclusion, spotlighting the resilience and dynamic abilities of this former MVP.

Pro Football Focus’ latest quarterback rankings made one thing clear: Lamar Jackson still belongs in the elite tier, no matter what Colin Cowherd said.

The former Louisville star checked in at No. 3 on PFF’s list of the NFL’s top 32 quarterbacks heading into the 2026 season, a sharp contrast to Cowherd’s recent top 10 that left Jackson out entirely. For a player who has already built a résumé as one of the league’s most dangerous quarterbacks, that omission raised plenty of eyebrows.

PFF’s evaluation leaned heavily on the same traits that have defined Jackson for years. Dalton Wasserman and Max Chadwick noted that he “continued to punish defenses that brought pressure, earning a 91.9 PFF passing grade against the blitz, while his 88.9 play-action passing grade ranked third. As a runner, he remained one of the NFL's most dynamic quarterbacks, posting a 78.6 rushing grade that ranked seventh among his peers.

Perhaps most importantly, Jackson never lost his ability to attack the most valuable areas of the field, earning a 93.5 PFF passing grade on intermediate throws between the numbers and a 94.3 mark on deep throws between the numbers - a hallmark of his game dating back to Louisville.”

That kind of production helps explain why PFF kept Jackson near the top even after what the source described as a 2025 season that “wasn’t his best.” The bigger picture still matters.

In 2024-25, Jackson put together a historic campaign, becoming the first NFL quarterback to throw 40-plus passing touchdowns and fewer than five interceptions in a single season. He also became the first quarterback in league history to throw for over 4,000 yards and rush for over 900 yards in the same season.

The numbers from that year were outrageous even by Jackson’s standards: a 119.6 passer rating, which the source says is the fourth-best in NFL history.

And that wasn’t even the first time he’d stacked up a season worthy of MVP hardware. Before that, Jackson won his second MVP trophy after throwing for 3,678 yards, 24 touchdowns and posting a 102.7 rating.

So while Cowherd’s ranking sparked the debate, PFF’s list settled it in a more familiar way. Jackson landed behind only Josh Allen and Joe Burrow, with Patrick Mahomes at No. 4 and Matt Stafford at No.

  1. For a two-time MVP coming off a season the source says was below his standard, No. 3 still looks a lot more like reality than omission from the top 10.

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