Every summer, quarterback rooms get inflated by optimism. The depth chart looks cleaner, the backup looks more polished, and suddenly everybody is talking like the whole operation is bulletproof.
But the rooms that really matter are the ones that can handle a bad break without falling apart. That’s the standard here: not just who has the star at the top, but who has the kind of insurance that keeps the season on track.
Oregon sits at the top of that conversation because Dante Moore made the kind of decision that changes the entire picture. He passed on an estimated $50 million in guaranteed money by skipping the 2026 NFL Draft and returning to Eugene, where he threw for 3,565 yards and 30 touchdowns at a 71.8% clip last season. “I feel I can still learn so much more,” Moore told ESPN when he announced his decision on SportsCenter.
And the Ducks didn’t stop there. Dylan Raiola is waiting behind him after starting 22 games at Nebraska over two seasons and completing 72.4% of his passes in 2025 before a broken fibula ended his year.
Raiola is fully healthy and expected to redshirt in 2026 while learning behind Moore, a path that mirrors the one Moore followed behind Dillon Gabriel in 2024. Dan Lanning called Raiola “a cerebral player that can make the throws” this spring.
No other program can match that combination of a projected top-two NFL Draft pick at QB1 and a former five-star, 22-game starter as the backup.
Ohio State has its own loaded setup, led by Julian Sayin. He put together a huge 2025 season as a redshirt freshman, leading the nation in completion percentage at 77% and finishing second in passer rating at 177.46.
Sayin threw for 3,610 yards and 32 touchdowns, earned a Heisman Trophy finalist nod, and helped guide the Buckeyes to a 12-0 regular season. Behind him, Tavien St.
Clair made a strong impression in the 2026 spring game, throwing for 166 yards and hitting five-star freshman Chris Henry Jr. on a 40-yard touchdown.
“I had meetings with (quarterbacks coach Billy) Fessler and (head coach Ryan) Day prior to this spring,” St. Clair said. “That was something they wanted to see from me and that was something I wanted for myself as well, just to be more confident.”
Texas also brings real stability, starting with Arch Manning. He finished 2025 with 3,163 yards, 26 touchdowns and seven interceptions, and he closed strong after a rough start.
Over his final stretch, he went 114 of 176 with nine total touchdowns and only two interceptions. Behind him, KJ Lacey came out of spring practice as the clear No. 2, not MJ Morris.
Steve Sarkisian said, “That's what you hope for in a developmental year from a quarterback perspective.” Morris, who has stops at Coastal Carolina, Maryland and NC State, is third, while five-star freshman Dia Bell is expected to redshirt.
Houston’s room has a veteran starter and a premium future answer. Conner Weigman completed 204 of 319 passes for 2,475 yards and 21 touchdowns in his first full healthy season since leaving Texas A&M, then finished by winning Texas Bowl MVP after throwing for 236 yards and a rushing score in a win over LSU.
He comes back in 2026 instead of entering the NFL, and the Cougars also have Keisean Henderson, the top overall recruit in the 2026 class. Henderson is expected to redshirt and learn, while Weigman has already taken him under his wing.
“He's a special player,” Weigman said. “He can literally do whatever he wants on a football field.”
LSU rounds out the group with Sam Leavitt at the top. He threw for 4,513 yards and 34 touchdowns over two seasons at Arizona State before a Lisfranc foot injury ended his 2025 season in October.
Lane Kiffin still made him the No. 1 target in the transfer portal, and Leavitt is now fully cleared and up to 216 pounds heading into fall camp. Kiffin called him an “NFL mindset quarterback from a preparation standpoint” during a summer appearance on Tyrann Mathieu’s show.
Husan Longstreet, a former USC five-star, is the backup after completing 13 of 15 passes for 103 yards and running for two touchdowns on just 44 career snaps. That gives LSU a healthy starter and a developmental option with real efficiency already on the board.
The list of top quarterback rooms is about more than the name at the top. It’s about whether the second and third options can actually survive the season if the job changes hands. These five rooms have that kind of answer.
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Sam Leavitt arrived at LSU as one of the headline additions in the Tigers transfer haul, a quarterback with experience, production and the kind of ceiling that made his move from Arizona State matter well beyond depth-chart chatter. He had already started four games in Tempe, and his fit in Baton Rouge was one of the first things people circled when LSU put together its top-ranked transfer class.
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It is still a long road from middle school to signing day, which is exactly why Sanders approach matters as much as the recruiting buzz. He already has offers from Ole Miss and Texas A&M, and the early attention is only likely to grow from here, but he has said he wants to stay humble and keep working because opportunities this early can vanish as quickly as they arrive. [Read more 🡒]
