Jayden Maiava Left USC Fans With New NFL Questions This Summer

At the Manning Passing Academy, rising stars CJ Carr and Julian Sayin eclipsed USC's Jayden Maiava, raising questions about his NFL potential.

USC quarterback Jayden Maiava entered the Manning Passing Academy with the kind of invitation that usually puts a player in good company. The camp ran from June 25 through June 28 in Thibodaux, Louisiana, and Maiava was there as a counselor alongside 19 other NFL prospects and rising stars. That meant elite alumni access and high-level coaching, but it also meant the spotlight was on him.

And in this case, that spotlight seemed to drift toward other quarterbacks.

Among the group, USC’s rivals CJ Carr and Julian Sayin were the names that stood out most. Carr, the Notre Dame quarterback, came away with the biggest lift. Tyler Horka of Blue and Gold News and On3 reported that Carr was chosen to go first for nearly every drill so he could serve as the model for the rest of the campers.

“It was wild to see what's between his ears, in terms of the game of football, and then to watch him throw the football. Whether it was the one-on-one’s, whether it was the Eli and Peyton stuff…that was the indicator, when Eli and Peyton know who the guy is,” NFL Draft analyst Todd McShay said during his latest podcast. “In terms of just hitting targets and being on, Carr jumped out to me in every way, shape or form.”

Sayin also used the camp to help his stock. After the loss to Indiana in the Big Ten Championship game and a rough showing against Miami in the College Football playoffs, he flashed the traits that had people interested in the first place: deep-ball accuracy, clean mechanics and a bigger frame.

Maiava, meanwhile, did not get the same kind of buzz. Cooper Petagna of CBS Sports said the USC quarterback’s arm strength did not stand out during his reps.

“Somewhat of a mechanical thrower, the ball doesn't jump out of his hand -- especially when surrounded by peers -- and he can struggle to generate consistent velocity into the intermediate and deep parts of the field,” Petagna wrote. “An intriguing name bandied about for the 2027 NFL Draft, arm strength figures to be a big question mark heading into next season.”

Maiava also dropped off On3’s “MPA Standouts” list. Trinidad Chambliss came in at No.

3, Arch Manning at No. 5, John Mateer at No.

6, Marcel Reed at No. 8 and Kamario Taylor at No. 10.

The SEC had five players on the list, while the Big 12 placed two, with Drew Mestemaker at No. 7 and Conner Weigman at No. 11.

Sleepers such as Jerry Kaminski also made noise.

None of it changes Maiava’s final season by itself, but it does ding his standing in a crowded quarterback conversation. The 2027 NFL Draft is expected to include names like Carr, Sayin, Manning, Mateer, Dante Moore, LaNorris Sellers, Mestemaker, Darian Mensah, Chambliss and CJ Baily. Other quarterbacks such as Josh Hoover, Sam Leavitt, DJ Lagway, Drake Lindsey and Nico Iamaleava could also declare.

With NIL and so many quarterbacks in the mix, plenty of those players may decide to stay in college another year. Maiava already passed on the 2026 NFL Draft to play his final season at Southern Cal, and after Manning Passing Academy, the path ahead looks a little less clean than it did going in.

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