INDIANAPOLIS — The Combine is weeks away, but let’s cut the noise. We aren’t looking for “projects” or “high-ceiling, low-floor” gambles today. We’re talking about the guys who can walk into an NFL locker room tomorrow, grab a playbook, and start Week 1 without blinking. These are the polished diamonds of the 2026 class.
While the scouts in Indy obsess over 40-yard dash times and broad jumps, the tape tells a different story. We’ve identified five players whose collegiate dominance translates immediately to Sundays. Forget the “developmental” tags. These guys are ready now.
The Franchise Savior: Fernando Mendoza, QB (Indiana)
The Stat that matters: 90.7 PFF Passing Grade (Top 3 FBS)
If you questioned Fernando Mendoza’s decision to leave Berkeley for Bloomington, the gleaming Heisman Trophy on his shelf should be answer enough. Mendoza didn’t just lead the Hoosiers to a national title; he surgically dismantled defenses with a veteran’s poise. His 69% accurate throw rate isn’t just a number—it’s a promise of efficiency.
At 6-foot-5, he has the prototype frame, but it’s his mind that separates him. He processes coverages like a ten-year pro. The Raiders hold the keys to the draft, and with Klint Kubiak fresh off a Super Bowl run in Seattle, Mendoza fits the mold perfectly. Imagine him distributing the rock to Brock Bowers and handing off to Ashton Jeanty. That’s not a rebuild; that’s a reload.
The hometown Hero: Rueben Bain Jr., EDGE (Miami FL)
The Stat that matters: 23.5% Pass-Rush Win Rate
Rueben Bain Jr. is a absolute nightmare off the edge. He spent three years terrorizing the ACC, and while he couldn’t quite drag the Hurricanes past Mendoza’s Indiana in the title game, he left everything on the field. Hall of Famer Jason Taylor’s fingerprints are all over Bain’s technique. You see it in the hand usage—violent, precise, and relentless.
Some scouts will knock his arm length. Let them. Bain compensates with elite leverage and a motor that runs hot for 60 minutes. His 86.2 run-defense grade proves he isn’t just a third-down specialist. He’s a three-down wrecking ball who anchors the edge just as well as he collapses the pocket.
“You don’t teach what Bain has. You can teach a guy to use his hands, but you can’t teach that fire. He plays every snap like he’s personally offended by the offensive tackle.” — Anonymous ACC Offensive Coordinator
The Wall: Francis Mauigoa, OT (Miami FL)
The Stat that matters: 87.0 PFF Pass-Blocking Grade (1st among Right Tackles)
Iron sharpens iron? In Coral Gables, it was more like titanium sharpening titanium. Practicing daily against Rueben Bain Jr. turned Francis Mauigoa into the most technically sound tackle in this class. The American Samoa native is a mountain of a man who moves with terrifying grace.
He allowed almost zero pressure off the right side in 2025. While some teams might try to kick him inside to guard due to his devastating power in the run game (77.1 grade), don’t overthink it. He’s a franchise right tackle. If you need to keep your quarterback upright, you draft Mauigoa, put him on the edge, and forget about the position for the next decade.
The Slot Machine: Makai Lemon, WR (USC)
The Stat that matters: 57% Contested Catch Rate
The Fred Biletnikoff Award winner isn’t the biggest guy on the field. At 5-foot-11, Makai Lemon might get overlooked by teams obsessed with height. That would be a mistake. Lemon plays angry. He attacks the ball in the air like a power forward, hauling in contested catches at a rate that defies physics for a player his size.
Comparisons to fellow Trojan Amon-Ra St. Brown are lazy but accurate. They both share that grittiness and elite route-running ability. Lemon’s 3.13 yards per route run is elite efficiency. He forces missed tackles (21 of them!) and turns short slants into long touchdowns. He’s instant offense for a creative play-caller.
The Unicorn: Caleb Downs, S (Ohio State)
The Stat that matters: 93.6 PFF Overall Grade
Let’s be clear: Caleb Downs is the best football player in the 2026 NFL Draft. Period. He dominated the SEC at Alabama, then transferred to Columbus and dominated the Big Ten. His instincts are alien. He sees the play develop before the quarterback even snaps the ball.
Safeties often slide in the draft due to “positional value,” as we saw with Kyle Hamilton. If Downs falls out of the top 5, it’s criminal. He’s a chess piece—a heavy hitter in the box, a hawk in deep coverage, and a coach on the field. Matt Patricia utilized him brilliantly this past season, showcasing that Downs can run a defense from day one. Unless you are the Raiders at No. 1, you should be sprinting to the podium if he’s available.
What’s Next
The Combine in Indianapolis will shuffle the deck slightly. Expect Lemon to run faster than people think and Mauigoa to put up monster bench press numbers. But don’t let the spandex Olympics fool you. The tape on these five is finalized, and it screams “Pro Bowl.”

