One quarterback just hijacked the entire 2026 NFL Draft conversation in a freezing, windy Mobile showdown. Garrett Nussmeier, still rehabbing from an injury-ravaged season, turned the Senior Bowl into his personal redemption stage—and scouts are losing their minds.
The Comeback Kid Steals MVP in Brutal Trench War
American Team 17, National Team 9. Ugly scoreline, electric implications. LSU’s Garrett Nussmeier opened the game with back-to-back touchdown drives, scrambled for a score himself, and hit Notre Dame’s Malachi Fields for the two-point dagger. He finished 5-of-8 for 57 yards in limited action—but the drops by his tight ends (including an INT on a Wyoming TE gift) only made his poise look better.
Nussmeier told NFL Network he’s “getting better every day.” Translation: the guy who was written off months ago just announced he’s very much in the 2026 QB conversation.
Running Backs Refuse to Stay Buried
While QBs grabbed headlines, the American backfield delivered the real gut punches.
- Kaelon Black (Indiana): 45 yards on eight carries, violent between-the-tackles runs after an uneven practice week.
- Jaydn Ott (Oklahoma): 42 yards and a TD—more than he managed in almost every game last season after transferring from Cal. The former 1,300-yard star reminded everyone why he was once a top recruit.
- J’Mari Taylor (Virginia) and Mike Washington Jr. (Arkansas) added 41 and 26 yards respectively, turning a sleepy game into a highlight reel for overlooked backs.
Hot take: Ott’s performance just resurrected a draft stock that looked dead on arrival.
Defensive Hounds Feast in Low-Scoring Slugfest
Under 500 total yards meant one thing: defenders ate.
- Zion Young (Missouri Edge): Defensive MVP with pressures, a fumble recovery, and constant disruption—cementing his case as a potential first-rounder.
- Bryce Boettcher (Oregon LB): 10 tackles (five more than anyone else), flying sideline to sideline all afternoon.
- Quintayvious Hutchins (Boston College Edge): Three TFLs totaling minus-12 yards.
- Nadame Tucker (Western Michigan): Two sacks, forced fumble, pure chaos.
- Rayshaun Benny (Michigan DT) and Ephesians Prysock (Washington CB) quietly dominated their matchups.
Bottom line: in a game that looked like a defensive struggle on paper, multiple prospects turned it into their personal highlight reel—and just rewrote their draft futures.
The 2026 class just got a lot more unpredictable. Who’s rising? Who’s falling? One cold afternoon in Mobile just changed everything.









