INDIANAPOLIS — Diego Pavia is the ultimate wild card in the 2026 NFL Draft. The Vanderbilt quarterback didn’t just break records last fall; he shattered the traditional mold of a pro prospect. After dragging the Commodores to a 10-win season and finishing second in the 2025 Heisman voting behind Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza, the 24-year-old arrived at the NFL Scouting Combine with a massive chip on his shoulder.
But front offices aren’t just looking at his 3,192 passing yards or his 36 total touchdowns from the 2025 season. They want to know if they can trust him to lead a professional locker room.
The Elephant in the Room
At Friday’s media availability, reporters hammered Pavia with questions about his off-field antics. The Albuquerque native spent six years in college football, bouncing from New Mexico Military Institute to New Mexico State, and finally to Vanderbilt after a fiery—and victorious—legal battle with the NCAA to keep his eligibility.
Despite an incredible 47-22 overall record as a starter, his December social media post attacking Heisman voters left a sour taste. Days later, fans spotted him at a club partying with a “F— Indiana” sign—a direct shot at Mendoza, who led the Hoosiers to a national title just weeks later. When pressed on his maturity, Pavia chose humor over a standard PR defense.
“Coach Lea always preached that your frontal lobe isn’t fully developed until you’re 25. I just turned 24, so I got like 360 more days to go.”
— Diego Pavia, Vanderbilt Quarterback
The room chuckled, but NFL general managers rarely laugh off character concerns. A scout sitting near the front row scribbled furiously in a notebook the moment Pavia delivered the punchline. You could feel the tension cut through the massive convention center hall. Teams love his grit, but they fear his unpredictability.
Confidence or Arrogance?
Pavia threw for 12,899 yards and 114 touchdowns across his college career. He added another 4,210 yards and 46 touchdowns on the ground. The production is undeniable. He processes defenses at lightning speed and thrives in chaos.
He defended his mindset, insisting that his fiery persona translates to winning football. “I want them to know, and the future teammates that I do have, that, game on the line, I got you. Don’t worry about it,” Pavia told CBS Sports. “I think people get caught up in my confidence for arrogance. But my confidence comes from my preparation… That’s what boosts me to have that extra edge on Saturday.”
Pavia plans to throw passes during Saturday’s drills but will save the rest of his athletic testing for Vanderbilt’s pro day on March 18. Standing just under 5-foot-10, he already fights an uphill battle against NFL size thresholds. He cannot afford to let maturity red flags drop him completely off draft boards.
Draft Implications / What’s Next
Pavia projects as a Day 3 pick. Teams looking for a gritty, high-IQ backup will give him a long look. His ability to manipulate the pocket and deliver under pressure makes him an intriguing stash candidate. If he aces the private team interviews this weekend and proves the Heisman outburst was a temporary lapse in judgment, he could solidify a spot in the fifth or sixth round.
The tape shows a warrior. The interviews must show a professional.

