The quarterback spotlight in college football never really dims, but in 2026 it feels brighter than ever. NIL money, the transfer portal and sky-high expectations have turned the position into the center of the sport’s offseason conversation, and a handful of passers are walking into the year with boom-or-bust written all over them.
Some of these quarterbacks have already flashed star power. Others are still trying to turn raw talent into consistency. And for a few, the question isn’t whether they can make big plays - it’s whether they can do it when the pressure is highest.
DJ Lagway is one of the most fascinating names on the list. After a rocky run at Florida, he’s now looking for a reset at Baylor.
The former five-star recruit showed the kind of arm talent and playmaking ability that made him one of the country’s premier prospects, but the inconsistency never really left. Turnovers were a major problem, and he threw 14 interceptions last season.
Now he’ll work with Baylor offensive coordinator Jake Spavital in an Air Raid system, hoping to clean up the mistakes and remind everyone why Gator fans were so excited about him early on.
Demond Williams Jr. created some offseason drama when he briefly entered the transfer portal after first saying he would return to Washington. In the end, he stayed with the Huskies and will continue alongside offensive mind Jedd Fisch.
Williams’ first full season as the starter included some huge performances, and his ability to hurt defenses with both his arm and his legs was obvious. But Washington’s biggest games exposed some of the gaps in his game.
If he wants to move into the top tier at the position, he has to carry that production into the moments that matter most.
Bryce Underwood is in a different kind of pressure cooker. He started for a power program as a true freshman last season, and the results weren’t what Michigan hoped for.
That said, the situation around him late in the year wasn’t exactly stable. Quarterbacks often take their biggest leap from year one to year two as starters, and that’s the jump Michigan is banking on now.
With Kyle Whittingham arriving and an almost completely new coaching staff around him, the program’s top priority is turning Underwood into the quarterback they paid for.
John Mateer showed two completely different faces last season. Before his injury, he looked like a Heisman frontrunner.
After returning, he looked like a different player altogether. Now he enters his third season as Oklahoma’s starter with offensive coordinator Ben Arbuckle, and the expectations are enormous.
The Sooners’ ceiling this year is tied directly to Mateer, and that range could stretch from middle-of-the-pack SEC team to legitimate national title contender.
Katin Houser is another quarterback who could swing a season in a big way. He’s headed to Illinois to replace Luke Altmyer, and his résumé gives you both sides of the argument.
At Michigan State, he had a rough stretch as a starter in 2023. At East Carolina, he has been much more productive, including a 3,300-yard passing season last year.
Illinois may end up getting either version, and which one shows up will go a long way toward deciding how high the Fighting Illini can climb.
Austin Simmons also enters a new chapter after earning praise from Lane Kiffin last season. He opened the year as the starter before an early injury opened the door for Trinidad Chambliss, and even as Chambliss took off, Kiffin made it clear Simmons would get the job back once healthy. That confidence followed him into his new stop at Missouri, where expectations will be heavy after the Tigers moved on from Beau Pribula.
Nico has already lived through the extremes of quarterback life. He led a team to the College Football Playoff one season, then started for a team that won just three games the next.
Even with the criticism he faced last year, he still delivered several strong outings and helped UCLA put together a three-game winning streak in the middle of the season. This time around, he’ll have a cleaner runway, no outside noise, and a coaching staff led by new head coach Bob Chesney, who brings a proven winning track record.
Avery Johnson has been waiting for his breakout for a while now. Since Kansas State moved on from Will Howard - who later won a national title at Ohio State - the spotlight has been on Johnson to become the guy.
He’s flashed plenty, but the consistency has been missing. In 2026, it all comes to a head in his senior season, and he’ll reunite with new Wildcats head coach Collin Klein, who was his OC and QB coach during Johnson’s freshman year.
That system fits him well, and the stage is set for him to finally put it all together.
Pitt’s Mason Heintschel is coming off a strong first run as a starter. He took over midway through last season, then guided the Panthers to a 6-3 record in his nine starts while throwing for more than 2,000 yards and 16 touchdowns.
Now the bar rises. He has nearly a full season of experience, a full offseason as the starter and a bigger burden on offense with major changes coming to Pitt’s defense.
The upside is obvious, but the sophomore slump is real, too.
And then there’s Arch Manning, the biggest name in the sport and maybe the biggest pressure point, too. He had a slow start in his first year as the starter last season, but he settled in late and finished strong.
That ending has only raised the expectations for 2026. The spotlight will be on every snap, but he now has experience, and some of the pressure that hung over him last year should be gone.
That could let him play looser, freer and with the confidence he showed down the stretch in the 2025 season.
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Vic Markov fits that same tradition, though his place in Husky lore goes well beyond what happened on Saturdays. He was later recognized on the programs Centennial Team and earned a spot in the College Football Hall of Fame in 1976, a reminder that Washingtons past is built on more than just draft boards and pro rosters. The story leaves one of the most compelling chapters of his life just offstage, which only adds to the sense that this history runs deeper than a simple list of football accomplishments. [Read more 🡒]
