With kickoff still nearly two months away, Pro Football Focus has already put its stamp on the 2026 college football season - and Ohio State quarterback Julian Sayin is sitting at the top of the quarterback board.
Dalton Wasserman and Max Chadwick released their list of the 50 best players entering 2026, and Sayin landed as the No. 1 quarterback and the No. 4 overall player in PFF’s rankings. The appeal is obvious inside PFF’s system: Sayin’s production was built on pure efficiency, not just the usual quarterback traits that tend to grab attention.
The 6-foot-1, 208-pound redshirt freshman put together a huge 2025 season, throwing for 3,610 yards with 32 touchdowns and eight interceptions while leading the nation in completion percentage. He was one of the biggest statistical outliers in the sport, and he’s also the only one of the four 2025 Heisman Trophy finalists returning to college in 2026.
“The redshirt freshman completed 77.0% of his passes, the third-highest completion percentage in college football history, trailing only the 77.4% marks posted by Bo Nix in 2023 and Mac Jones in 2020,” Wasserman and Chadwick wrote. “Sayin's 74.2% accurate throw rate also set the PFF College single-season record.”
Sayin’s road to Columbus was anything but straightforward. He originally committed to Alabama as the No. 3 quarterback prospect in the 2024 class, held that pledge for more than a year and eventually signed with the Crimson Tide. Then came the shock: just over a week after he enrolled, Nick Saban announced his retirement from college football coaching.
That sent Sayin into the NCAA transfer portal, and he ended up at Ohio State toward the end of January. His first year in college was a redshirt season, as he backed up Kansas State transfer Will Howard during the Buckeyes’ national championship run. In four games, Sayin completed five passes for 84 yards and a touchdown and added 24 rushing yards on two carries.
His top target in 2025 was Jeremiah Smith, and PFF has him ranked as the No. 1 player in the country. Smith, widely viewed as a generational talent, caught 87 passes for 1,243 yards and 12 touchdowns from Sayin last season.
Sayin isn’t the only Buckeye near the top of the list, either. Two defenders are ranked ahead of him: Notre Dame cornerback Leonard Moore and Texas edge rusher Colin Simmons.
Moore, who is widely regarded as the best cornerback in college football, posted seven pass breakups and five interceptions in 2025 and earned unanimous All-America honors. Simmons has been just as disruptive off the edge over the last two seasons, and his 12 sacks in 2025 tied for fifth-most in FBS. Like Moore, he picked up All-America recognition from multiple publications.
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