LAS VEGAS — The speculation ends now. The Las Vegas Raiders aren’t just looking for a quarterback; they are hunting a savior. Following a scorching performance that delivered Indiana its first-ever National Title, quarterback Fernando Mendoza has officially seized the projected No. 1 overall pick in CBS Sports’ latest 2026 NFL Mock Draft. The Hoosier sensation didn’t just manage games in the College Football Playoff; he dominated them, throwing eight touchdowns with zero interceptions and a silly 74.6% completion rate.
The Top 10: Defense Rules, But Mendoza Is King
While Mendoza grabs the headlines, the trenches defined the rest of the top ten. The Senior Bowl in Mobile last week proved critical for big men looking to cash in this April.
1. Las Vegas Raiders: QB Fernando Mendoza (Indiana)
Vegas needs a franchise face, and Mendoza fits the bill. His pocket presence during the CFP run was nothing short of surgical. He turned 50-50 balls into guarantees and led a program with zero championship pedigree to the promised land. That’s the leadership the Raiders crave.
2. EDGE Arvell Reese (Ohio State)
A 6-foot-4, 240-pound wrecking ball. Reese transitioned to outside linebacker in 2025 and terrified Big Ten quarterbacks. He tallied 69 tackles and 6.5 sacks, tying for 12th in the conference. His burst off the edge screams top-tier NFL production.
3. OT Francis Mauigoa (Miami)
If you want to keep your quarterback upright, you draft Mauigoa. The Hurricanes allowed a measly 1.25 sacks per game with him anchoring the line. At 330 pounds, he owns an anchor that pro defensive ends will hate. His 1.2% pressure rate allowed was the gold standard in the FBS.
4. Tennessee Titans: EDGE Rueben Bain Jr. (Miami)
The Titans need juice on the defensive line, and Bain brings a flood. He nearly willed Miami to a title with 9.5 sacks (third in the ACC) and a forced fumble. He plays with a leverage advantage that makes him a nightmare to block one-on-one.
5. WR Carnell Tate (Ohio State)
Forget the debate. CBS Sports plants its flag on Tate as WR1. Even while splitting targets with Jeremiah Smith, Tate snagged 51 balls for 875 yards and nine scores. Zero drops in two seasons? That’s reliability you can bank on.
6. OT Spencer Fano (Utah)
Fano is a technician. In 749 snaps, he gave up zero sacks. While lighter at 302 pounds, his mobility allows him to pull and destroy linebackers at the second level. Some scouts see a guard; smart teams just see a starter.
7. EDGE TJ Parker (Clemson)
Parker exploded in 2024 with 11 sacks and kept the heat high in 2025 with five more sacks and three fumble recoveries. His explosiveness forces offensive coordinators to slide protection his way, opening lanes for everyone else.
8. RB Jeremiyah Love (Notre Dame)
Running backs aren’t dead; they just need to be electric. Love racked up 21 total touchdowns in 2025, a Notre Dame record. With 1,372 yards on the ground and hands soft enough to catch 27 passes, he is a three-down weapon ready for Sunday.
9. DL Caleb Banks (Florida)
Banks is the ultimate “bet on traits” pick. He missed most of 2025 with a foot injury, but his Senior Bowl tape dropped jaws. At 6-foot-6 with 35-inch arms, he possesses a catch radius and disruption halo that you simply cannot teach.
10. EDGE David Bailey (Texas Tech)
Bailey is a disruptor. He lived in the backfield with 19.5 tackles for loss and 14.5 sacks. Ask Oregon about him—he single-handedly wrecked drives in their CFP quarterfinal clash with nine tackles and two TFLs.
“You watch the film, and the guy doesn’t blink. Fourth quarter, title on the line, everyone else is hyperventilating, and Mendoza looks like he’s ordering lunch. That’s the trait. You can’t coach the ice in his veins.” — Anonymous AFC Scout on Fernando Mendoza
Draft War Room Implications
This shakeup signals a shift in philosophy. Teams are valuing high-floor offensive linemen like Mauigoa and Fano earlier than expected, likely a reaction to the sack epidemics plaguing the league last season. For the Raiders, the path is clear: draft Mendoza and build the fortress. For teams picking in the teens like the Falcons or Vikings, the run on edge rushers early (Reese, Bain, Parker, Bailey) means they might need to trade up if they want premium pass rush help. The Senior Bowl risers like Caleb Banks and Lee Hunter (rising to No. 28) prove that late-season tape is moving the needle more than ever.

