How Successful Are First-Round NFL Quarterbacks?

Duke quarterback Daniel Jones poses with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell after the New York Giants selected Jones in the first round at the NFL football draft, Thursday, April 25, 2019, in Nashville, Tenn.
(Jeff Haynes/AP Images for Panini)

When your favorite NFL team doesnโ€™t have a solution at quarterback, itโ€™s one of sportsโ€™ emptiest feelings. In the modern NFL, without competent quarterback play, virtually every franchise is automatically doomed.ย 

Thus, the common consensus is: Find a quarterback, figure the rest out later.

More often than not, teams will want to use major draft capital to find a young, cheap quarterback. That means directly deploying a first-round draft pick or trading a set of picks to move up into the first round. Hopefully, the use of such heavy draft capital solves the problem.

But hereโ€™s the problem with that strategy.

Are we even sure first-round quarterbacks are good?

How Successful Are First-Round NFL Quarterbacks?

As it turns out, maybe the entire premise of drafting a first-round quarterback is overrated. Drafting a guy in the first-round has turned out to be, for the most part, a 50/50 proposition.ย 

Letโ€™s go through an exercise. My colleague Nick Hennion recently outlined all the NFL Draft first-round quarterbacks that have been selected since 2019.ย 

Letโ€™s ignore the 2024 picks and sort the rest into three buckets. Iโ€™ll try to be mildly conservative with my prognostication here, but you still might disagree with where I slot some of these guys. Letโ€™s just go with it.ย 

Bucket 1: Young Quarterbacks Who Look Like Theyโ€™ll Be Successful:

  • CJ Stroud (Texans, 2023)
  • Trevor Lawrence (Jaguars, 2021)
  • Joe Burrow (Bengals, 2020)
  • Tua Tagovailoa (Dolphins, 2020)
  • Justin Herbert (Chargers, 2020)
  • Jordan Love (Packers, 2020)
  • Kyler Murray (Cardinals, 2019)

Bucket 2: Busts & Backups

  • Anthony Richardson (Colts, 2023)
  • Kenny Pickett (Steelers, 2022)
  • Zach Wilson (Jets, 2021)
  • Trey Lance (49ers, 2021)
  • Mac Jones (Patriots, 2021)
  • Dwayne Haskins (Commanders, 2019)

Bucket 3: Your Mileage May Vary

  • Bryce Young (Panthers, 2023)
  • Justin Fields (Bears, 2021)
  • Daniel Jones (Giants, 2019)

As Iโ€™ve accounted for things, thatโ€™s 16 first-round quarterbacks taken from 2019-23. Seven look like theyโ€™ll be successful, while six appear to be busts.ย 

And thatโ€™s being pretty generous with the bust tag, mind you. I would label Jones as mostly a failure despite his career stats, since no team other than the Giants would have continued to let him start that many years in the turnover-prone modern NFL.ย 

Young came on strong in the latter part of the 2024 season and may have turned a corner for his professional career.

Fields still has a lot of defenders and shouldnโ€™t be fully saddled with the fatal sins of the Bears and Steelersโ€™ offenses. (Bad news for him: The Jetsโ€™ offense probably wonโ€™t be much better this year.)

If you take the sample size back further than 2019, youโ€™ll see similar results. Drafting a quarterback in the first round is essentially a 50/50 proposition. And sadly, the odds are probably even worse if youโ€™re a bad organization with bad talent evaluators.ย 

None of this means you shouldnโ€™t draft a quarterback at all, mind you, or that youโ€™d be better off trying to make something happen with some kid from Central Arkansas State thatโ€™s available in the seventh round.ย 

But if your favorite squad is burning its first-round pick on a quarterback, maybe wait a beat before getting too attached. About half the time, heโ€™ll probably flame out in about three years.

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About the Author

Chase Kiddy

Read More @chaseakiddy

Chase Kiddy is a writer for BetMGM and co-host of The Lion's Edge, an NFL and college football podcast available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and everywhere else. He has also written for a number of print and online outlets, including the Richmond Times-Dispatch, Washington Post, Daily News-Record, and HERO Sports. His first novel, Cave Paintings, is in development.

Chase Kiddy is a writer for BetMGM and co-host of The Lion's Edge, an NFL and college football podcast available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and everywhere else. He has also written for a number of print and online outlets, including the Richmond Times-Dispatch, Washington Post, Daily News-Record, and HERO Sports. His first novel, Cave Paintings, is in development.