Dylan Raiola’s move from Nebraska to Oregon comes with a strange kind of label attached to it: one of the most accomplished quarterbacks in the transfer pool, yet only the No. 28 transfer in ESPN’s updated rankings.
That placement stands out even more because six other quarterbacks were slotted ahead of him: LSU Tigers’ Sam Leavitt, Miami Hurricanes’ Darian Mensah, Oklahoma State Cowboys’ Drew Mestemaker, Auburn Tigers’ Byrum Brown, Indiana Hoosiers’ Josh Hoover and Penn State’s Rocco Becht.
On paper, the ranking seems to lean heavily toward immediate 2026 starters. Raiola, after all, is not expected to open the season as Oregon’s No. 1 quarterback, with Dante Moore choosing to return to Eugene instead of entering the 2026 NFL Draft, where he was projected as the No. 2 overall pick. But that framing misses plenty of what Raiola already brings to the Ducks.
His freshman year at Nebraska was no small thing. Raiola stepped in right away in the Big Ten, threw for 2,819 yards, led all FBS freshmen and set Nebraska’s freshman passing record. He also helped the Cornhuskers get to their first bowl game since 2016.
There’s a real long-game element to his fit at Oregon, even if he’s not the headline starter in 2026. He gives Dan Lanning a major fallback option for next season, but he also gets time to settle in, learn the offense and build chemistry with the roster. If things break the way Oregon hopes, Raiola could be positioned as a ready-made starter by 2027, with a chance to keep the Ducks rolling toward the College Football Playoff.
Raiola has already lived under a bright spotlight. He came into college as a former five-star recruit, flipped from Georgia to Nebraska and made an immediate impact. This offseason in Eugene, that same poise has shown up again.
He has been open about how humbling it is to move into a reserve role, but he has also made clear how much he likes the opportunity ahead of him. Raiola has talked about the chance to work with Oregon’s playmakers, including receivers Evan Stewart and Dakorien Moore, while being pushed by the coaching staff to prepare for a larger role down the line.
That mindset says plenty about why Oregon wanted him. Raiola could have chased a starting job elsewhere, but instead chose a developmental path with the Ducks. It’s a sign of confidence in his own timeline, and it gives Oregon an elite insurance policy at quarterback.
Even with a season cut short by injury, Raiola still completed 72 percent of his passes in 2025 during his sophomore year. That efficiency only adds to the case that his ceiling is higher than the ranking suggests.
Lanning said Oregon is challenging Raiola in new ways.
“You always have to have somebody up and ready. And there's been a lot of guys in that room that are performing really well, but it's been good growth for Dylan, we're asking to do things he's never been asked to do.
He has the talent to do it all. He's a very intelligent player," Lanning said.
Raiola is also competing in a crowded quarterback room that includes junior Brock Thomas, who won the backup job last season, redshirt freshman Akili Smith Jr., sophomore Ryder Hayes and redshirt freshman Mark Wiepert.
Oregon’s recent quarterback track record gives the pitch even more weight. Moore’s success after a redshirt season behind former Ducks star quarterback Dillon Gabriel has become a useful blueprint, and the program can also point to the development of now-Cleveland Browns quarterback Dillon Gabriel and now Denver Broncos quarterback Bo Nix as proof that the system works.
Raiola still has two years of eligibility left, and that alone makes the ranking feel light for a player who has already produced at a high level and still has plenty of runway in Eugene.
Oregon opens the 2026 season on Sept. 5 against Boise State at Autzen Stadium in Eugene.
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