Aaron RodgersBaker MayfieldNFL

2025 NFL Quarterback Rankings Week 11: Preparing for the Epic Sam Darnold vs. Matthew Stafford Showdown

Week 10 of the 2025 NFL season should be remembered for the 10-7 games in prime time that bookended the week. For as bad as Raiders-Broncos was on Thursday night, Eagles-Packers ending 10-7 was equally disappointing as neither team nor quarterback seemed very confident in what they were doing all night.

It was an odd week where only six quarterbacks produced a 65.0 QBR or better, and they were all in the same three games, and that includes Jaxson Dart leaving his game early with a concussion, and Marcus Mariota and Mac Jones kind of padding their numbers in garbage time of losses that weren’t very close in that uninteresting 4:25 window.

But the good news is Week 11 has the best Sunday schedule all season, so hopefully we’ll be treated to something better this weekend.

Each week at 365Scores, we are going to rank all 32 NFL quarterbacks from top to bottom. The methodology is to start with our preseason quarterback rankings from July, which were based on a mixture of career value and recent play. Then each week, we will adjust the rankings to account for the latest game to get a sense of which quarterbacks are performing the best in the 2025 season.

1. Patrick Mahomes, Kansas City Chiefs

Week 10 rank: 1 (0)

The Chiefs (5-4) had a bye week with a huge game coming up in Denver. All eyes should be on the offensive line and if Patrick Mahomes will have his tackles available to face the best pass rush in the NFL this year with a mind-blowing number of sacks (46). Mahomes will have to get rid of the ball quickly this week.

2. Lamar Jackson, Baltimore Ravens

Lamar Jackson #8 of the Baltimore Ravens
(Photo by Michael Owens/Getty Images)

Week 10 rank: 2 (0)

It was a bit of a quiet game for Lamar Jackson as he threw the ball more than usual, threw it faster than usual, but he didn’t get a touchdown pass until the fourth quarter. The Ravens kept settling for field goals early before a fumbled kick return set the offense up on a short field that eventually led to a touchdown.

But it was good to see him get rid of the ball fast against a complex defense and this was the first game all season where he took a single sack despite tying his season high with 29 pass attempts.

We’ll see how he handles the Cleveland defense on the road this week. He lived on short fields in beating them in Week 2, the game where Baltimore’s running game was held to 45 yards, the worst in the Jackson era.

3. Matthew Stafford, Los Angeles Rams

Week 10 rank: 4 (+1)

Matthew Stafford has leaped to the top of the MVP discussion after his third-straight game with at least 4 touchdown passes and no interceptions. In fact, he’s thrown 20 touchdowns to 0 interceptions since Week 4. Stafford leads the NFL in touchdown passes (25) and passing yards per game (269.7) this season.

With such gaudy traditional numbers, why is Stafford’s QBR only 69.2? That’s a solid number but one that ranks No. 6 this year and is below the usual MVP standards.

One of the easiest explanations is that Stafford lacks any rushing value, and QBR is a metric that loves a running quarterback. Stafford has 24 carries for minus-9 yards this year as 16 runs were just kneeldowns. He has 0 successful runs or rushing first downs. He’s scrambled 3 times for 11 yards, and they were all unsuccessful plays on second downs. He’s been stopped twice on quarterback sneaks with a yard to go, and he’s had three aborted snaps he had to get on top of.

That’s why Stafford’s rushing EPA is -4.2 at ESPN, which ranks next to last and only beats out Tua Tagovailoa (-4.3). So, no rushing value is why his QBR isn’t much higher.

But there are other factors at play here too:

  • Stafford has thrown 4 touchdown passes from the 1-yard line – no other quarterback has more than 2 this year.
  • Stafford also leads in touchdown passes of 1-2 yards with 6 (no one else has more than 3), so there is a little padding to the total on plays where teams are usually running the ball (either with the back or the quarterback sneak).
  • Stafford leads the NFL this season on completions (79), attempts (111), and passing touchdowns (12; 3 more than any other player) when using play-action passes, which have been considered a little cheat code for offensive efficiency.
  • Sean McVay’s newest wrinkle is to use more 13 personnel (1 running back, 3 tight ends) to scheme up a lot of wide-open receivers down the field. More open receivers leads to not having a higher CPOE as he ranks 10th in that stat.

Throw in the fact that Stafford’s had great protection, has two prolific No. 1 wide receivers (Puka Nacua and Davante Adams) to throw to, the No. 2 scoring defense, and it’s a fantastic situation in every way outside of he can’t trust his kicking unit.

And I get it. Stafford withered away for a dozen years in Detroit’s dysfunction. He’s been able to show us in Los Angeles what he’s capable of with a competent roster and coaching. But the revisionist history on his career has been something to behold as he was always a volume passer who had some clutch moments in Detroit but could never beat the better teams.

But the double standard we’re seeing at work in 2025 is that if a certain other quarterback was in his Stafford’s current situation, there’s no way they’d be getting MVP hype or credit.

You’re already seeing that play out with Daniel Jones in Indy where he actually was the value-added part of the team (along with rookie tight end Tyler Warren) this year. Sam Darnold isn’t that high in the MVP odds even though he’s gone to Seattle and that team is magically looking like a juggernaut and Jaxon Smith-Njigba is suddenly looking like an All-Pro wideout.

We saw it in San Francisco where people didn’t want to credit Brock Purdy and Jimmy Garoppolo because of Kyle Shanahan’s system. People still don’t like to give credit to Jared Goff for playing in a talented offense with McVay and Ben Johnson calling the shots and using play-action. By the way, these quarterbacks like Jones, Goff, and Darnold are on Stafford’s heels in play-action usage this year. It is a cheat code for quarterback play, and maybe there’s something to using more under-center plays too instead of staying in shotgun constantly.

It’s just very telling that if you throw a few no-look passes, people will worship you and not give you the “system quarterback” label or say your stats are misleading. Just pointing out some facts I’ve noticed about this season as we prepare for a huge game between Stafford’s Rams and Darnold’s Seahawks this Sunday.

Let’s see which defense steps up and makes it harder on these quarterbacks, who have had it on easy street for much of this season.

4. Sam Darnold, Seattle Seahawks

Week 10 rank: 5 (+1)

It’s hard to judge Sam Darnold when he threw just 12 passes against Arizona, and only four of those came after the first quarter. He had a pick and a sack on that tiny number of attempts, but none of it mattered when you get two return touchdowns on defense and are up 28-0 in no time. Darnold continues to thrive with Jaxon Smith-Njigba, and we barely even saw them get to use their new weapon in Rashid Shaheed.

But like Stafford, I want to see how Darnold handles a big game against a quality pass rush. The Rams were his undoing last year in Minnesota as they swept him and sacked him 9 times in that playoff game. Now he gets to see the Rams again this week in a battle for NFC West (and maybe NFL) supremacy this year. Huge game on the road.

5. Josh Allen, Buffalo Bills

Week 10 rank: 3 (-2)

You rarely see Josh Allen play this poorly, but it’s even more shocking to see him down 16-0 late in the third quarter against the Miami Dolphins, a team he has owned his whole career. This is even one of the weakest Miami teams he’s ever played and yet the Bills were up against it all day.

Allen even fumbled after gaining about 15 yards on the Tush Push, which sounds impossible but he did it. He also threw a bad red-zone pick to waste a long drive after he made some great off-script plays.

The Bills (6-3) have had worse losses than this before, including a 9-6 loss in 2021 to the Urban Meyer-coached Jaguars. They still had their most impressive playoff run ever that year, so I’m not sure why the sky is suddenly falling in Buffalo as people are lamenting how Josh Allen will never make the Super Bowl, the Bills need to fire their GM/coach/OC, etc.

But the truth is things have been a little off in Buffalo all year, and they played a very poor game here. Allen needs to play better but turnover regression was always inevitable for this team this year. They’ve overcome it in the past and they’re just going to have to find a way to do it again. Maybe getting back to a more Allen-centric offense and pushing the ball down the field, turnovers be damned, is what they need to do.

6. Daniel Jones, Indianapolis Colts

Week 10 rank: 6 (0)

Sunday in Berlin was a very interesting game for Daniel Jones coming off his 5-turnover day in Pittsburgh. Jones threw a pick before halftime that was really ugly to watch, he fumbled 3 times (lost one), and he took 7 more sacks and 5 sacks in Pittsburgh as the protection has suddenly looked shaky.

It was a rough day, but he still came through with a 19-yard scramble on a crucial 3rd-and-21 late in the game with the Colts down a field goal. Still, this was really the day where Jonathan Taylor stormed past his quarterback as the team’s MVP candidate as he had almost 300 yards and 3 touchdowns, including the longest run of his career and the game-winning touchdown in overtime.

Jones is still leading an offense that’s putting up prolific yards, but he’ll need to cut down on the sacks and turnovers, especially with the Colts coming up in Week 12 after this bye week. But we’re probably done with watching this offense approach the 2007 Patriots on a few statistical levels.

Not that we ever expected him to get there after 17 games.

7. Jared Goff, Detroit Lions

Week 10 rank: 8 (+1)

With Dan Campbell calling the plays, Jared Goff picked apart a bad Washington defense. The Lions scored five touchdowns and three field goals on eight drives before running out the clock. Goff also wasn’t sacked once after some issues with pass protection in last week’s upset loss to Minnesota.

But the kind of games you always want to judge Goff on are the ones like next Sunday night in Philadelphia with a potential No. 1 seed hanging in the balance. Let’s see how he handles that one as the marquee matchups at Green Bay and Kansas City haven’t gone that well for Goff and the Lions this season. We’ve been waiting to see Lions vs. Eagles since last year and we’re finally getting it here.

8. Justin Herbert, Los Angeles Chargers

Week 10 rank: 7 (-1)

It wasn’t the greatest of nights for Justin Herbert against the Steelers. He took another 5 sacks without Joe Alt, he averaged 6.7 yards per attempt even with a great 58-yard play to Ladd McConkey, and he could have easily had a couple of picks if the Steelers had any hands in the secondary.

But if you give Herbert a defense and running game, he’s going to win at a high rate as he did here with a 25-3 lead built into the fourth quarter against the Steelers.

9. Dak Prescott, Dallas Cowboys

 Dak Prescott #4 of the Dallas Cowboys
(Photo by Michael Owens/Getty Images)

Week 10 rank: 9 (0)

The Cowboys (3-5-1) had their bye week and I expect Dak Prescott to play well against the Raiders on Monday night. The team will have a heavy heart in their first game since the tragic loss of teammate Marshawn Kneeland last week.

10. Drake Maye, New England Patriots

Week 10 rank: 10 (0)

The good news is Drake Maye took just a single sack on the road against a veteran defensive play caller in Todd Bowles. This is also the first game in Maye’s career where he threw more than 30 passes in a win. The irony is his 31st attempt was his worst decision of the day when he forced this pick in the end zone on third down instead of taking a sack, running some clock, and adding a field goal to his team’s 21-16 lead.

Hopefully that’s a huge mistake Maye learns from. He also completed just 16-of-31 passes in this game as the Patriots really leaned on huge touchdown plays from rookies. Kyle Williams showed off his speed on a 72-yard touchdown that was largely YAC, and it was rookie back TreVeyon Henderson who stole the show with touchdown runs of 55 and 69 yards to really generate all of the team’s second-half scoring.

You can’t count on those plays again. In fact, Tom Brady spent 19 years as New England’s starter and handed off just twice ever on touchdown runs of 55-plus yards in his career.

They’re making Maye the co-MVP favorite by odds (+300 at FanDuel) with Matthew Stafford, but I just don’t see it yet. Fringe top 10 offense with one of the easiest schedules you’ll ever see, too many sacks, and we’re already seeing his regression on deep ball stats after completing 3-of-11 from 20-plus yards in the last two weeks.

It’s a very good sophomore season so far, but anyone trying to put this on par with 1984 Dan Marino, 1999 Kurt Warner, or 2018 Patrick Mahomes is a snake oil salesman.

11. Jordan Love, Green Bay Packers

Week 10 rank: 11 (0)

We’re seeing a lot of examples this season of quarterbacks struggling when you take away multiple weapons as the Packers were without Jayden Reed (again) and a new injury in tight end Tucker Kraft, who isn’t coming back this year after a torn ACL. Jordan Love struggled, the fumble he lost was terrible, but he also had a fourth-down pass dropped by Bo Melton.

But I didn’t care for Love’s command of the offense, especially in the fourth quarter. There’s no need to rush that fourth-down play in a 10-7 game with plenty of time left, and yet Love did rush the snap and the Eagles were all over it to force a fumble. Just a sloppy game and terrible first half that limited what Green Bay could do on the scoreboard.

12. Baker Mayfield, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Week 10 rank: 12 (0)

Not the sharpest game from Baker out of the bye week, but I think you continue to see the limitations of an offense missing its top running back (Bucky Irving) and two veteran wide receivers (Mike Evans and Chris Godwin). Emeka Egbuka is well ahead of the curve, but he’s still a rookie and a singular receiver.

Mayfield had a few opportunities in the fourth quarter in a 21-16 game and couldn’t pull off his fifth comeback of the season. The schedule isn’t going to lighten up the next few weeks either.

13. Jalen Hurts, Philadelphia Eagles

Week 10 rank: 13 (0)

Well, Jalen Hurts outplayed Jordan Love on Monday night, but that was only by a marginal level. The best thing he did was not take any sacks on the road, though he did fumble on a run in the red zone to end a long drive in the first quarter. But at least he found DeVonta Smith for a 36-yard touchdown pass in the fourth quarter.

But he sailed his last three passes when he had a chance to ice the game, and he leaned on his defense to pull out a 10-7 victory. He’s going to have to be much sharper against Detroit this Sunday night, and I still can’t explain why he refuses to throw to A.J. Brown this year. It makes no sense.

14. Aaron Rodgers, Pittsburgh Steelers

Week 10 rank: 14 (0)

It took 10 weeks but a 41-year-old Aaron Rodgers finally had a poor game for the Steelers. Sure, the stats weren’t there in the Seattle loss in Week 2, but you have to remember his receiver tipped a touchdown pass in the end zone to an interception that day.

Calvin Austin tipped Rodgers’ second interception against the Chargers too on a drop, but even before that drive, Rodgers was completely ineffective. A strong argument for a bottom 3 game in his career as he struggled to eclipse 100 yards, he never looked comfortable all night despite a lack of blitzes, he missed some very big plays down the field with poor throws, and he ran backwards at the goal line for a safety.

It just didn’t work out for him Sunday night, and only a garbage-time touchdown drive in a 25-3 game saved the numbers from being completely disastrous at face value. Still, Rodgers’ 4.5 QBR is the fourth-lowest game in 2025.

Poor games can happen, and it’s probably a miracle it took until Week 10 for it to happen to Rodgers in an offense that has no identity and totally lacks what he desires in a strong wide receiver corps. Now let’s see how he bounces back against a terrible Cincinnati defense that likely won’t have Trey Hendrickson.

15. Jaxson Dart, New York Giants

Week 10 rank: 19 (+4)

A concussion that knocks Dart out of a game was bound to happen this year. He’s been flirting with it since the preseason, and it looks like we’ll just have to accept this part of his game until he better learns to protect himself (while he still can).

It’s a shame because he was playing really well and the Giants had a good shot to win this game had he not been forced to leave it. He continues to thrive even without his best weapons available. That doesn’t mean he lacks any weapons, but you see how things could be even better if he had Cam Skattebo and Malik Nabers for the ride.

He won’t have Brian Daboll anymore going forward after the Giants fired their coach on Monday for poor game management. It looks like Daboll just might be one of those coaches who are better served as a coordinator than the head job. But Dart will make this job more attractive, and hey, who knows, maybe Bill Belichick makes his return to the Giants next year.

He’d have a quarterback (health pending).

16. Caleb Williams, Chicago Bears

Week 10 rank: 18 (+2)

A game like this almost makes me think we need to start keeping a tally of when a quarterback fails on a fourth-down play as another type of turnover in today’s NFL. Caleb Williams had three incomplete passes on fourth down in this game as the Bears kept stalling out against one of the weakest defenses in the league.

But down 20-10 late, he was money on those two touchdown drives to take a 24-20 lead, and it’s not like Jaxson Dart, who left with a concussion, plays defense. Chicago’s defense made sure Williams’ 17-yard scrambling touchdown run stood up as the game winner and the Bears are 6-3.

It’s not very pretty but the Bears are winning the games with Williams and coach Ben Johnson that they always lost with Matt Eberflus as the coach (and Justin Fields as the quarterback). That counts for something.

17. Joe Flacco, Cincinnati Bengals

Week 10 rank: 15 (-2)

The Bengals had a bye week, and the big news was that Joe Burrow is eyeing Thanksgiving as a possible return to action. I guess he got nervous after seeing Flacco pass for 470 yards and 4 touchdowns in that last game and wants to get back in there as soon as possible after turf toe surgery.

18. Jacoby Brissett, Arizona Cardinals

Week 10 rank: 16 (-2)

Seattle is playing super well right now, but Brissett didn’t do many favors for his team with two early strip-sack fumbles going back for touchdowns. He was down 28-0 in the blink of an eye, then spent much of the rest of the game in the Seattle red zone while sparingly getting the job done in a 44-22 loss.

We’ll still see a few more starts from Brissett as Kyler Murray is on injured reserve just in time for a new Call of Duty sequel.

19. Mac Jones, San Francisco 49ers

Week 10 rank: 20 (-1)

Don’t blame Mac Jones for the 42-26 loss to the Rams. The team fell behind 21-0 with the defense getting shredded, Jauan Jennings lost a fumble, and the running game was stuffed on a 4th-and-1. Jones quietly put together a highly-efficient stat line with 33-of-39 passing for 319 yards, 3 touchdowns, and a pick. It just never mattered with the Rams as effective as they were.

20. Bo Nix, Denver Broncos

Week 10 rank: 17 (-3)

Bo Nix is a tough watch right now, and it’s not like the Raiders had some great defense. Nix is fortunate to have a great defense and great offensive line that keeps him clean most of the game every week. He has somehow won eight straight starts in his career when he finishes under 6.0 yards per attempt, which would be impossible if those other team elements weren’t present.

But he’ll get his shot at the Chiefs next week in the biggest game for Denver in the regular season in a solid decade (2015 Super Bowl season).

21. Marcus Mariota, Washington Commanders

Week 10 rank: N/A (Jayden Daniels was No. 21)

You’re not going to beat a team that’s scoring on every drive. But Mariota did a serviceable job with three touchdown drives of solid length. He didn’t have Terry McLaurin back at wide receiver, so that makes the job even harder. The Commanders are just looking onto 2026 now.

22. Tua Tagovailoa, Miami Dolphins

Tua Tagovailoa #1 of the Miami Dolphins
(Photo by Megan Briggs/Getty Images)

Week 10 rank: 28 (+6)

The yo-yo rankings for Tua continues this year. Up one week, down the next. He even threw two picks against Buffalo, but they didn’t end up mattering, and he led the offense to 30 points on a solid day in a huge upset win.

All the great things the Bills did on defense to the Chiefs last week? Didn’t matter against Tua and the Dolphins, who also ran it well against that poor defense. I’m sure Tua will crap the bed his next game, but they’re winning some games here against teams they were supposed to get crushed by and that’s going to lead to some hard decisions for the Miami front office.

23. Michael Penix Jr., Atlanta Falcons

Week 10 rank: 23 (0)

It’s wild to think Michael Penix Jr. is now 0-6 at game-winning drive opportunities despite the fact he took the lead or should have tied the game in 5-of-6 losses, this one included. But that’s why I call him DOOM (Destiny of Ongoing Misfortune), the perfect nickname for an Atlanta quarterback. Might be calling him MF DOOM if this continues, because I can’t believe the Falcons still haven’t won a game since beating Buffalo.

But to be fair, Penix wasn’t very good in this game. He was oblivious on an early strip-sack fumble. He was 12-of-28 passing and should have threw a pick six to Sauce Gardner, but Indy’s new trade acquisition isn’t known for his hands and he dropped the pick.

The running game also took over on the go-ahead drive late in the game before the Colts forced overtime. Penix was gifted a third-down holding penalty in overtime to avoid a three-and-out but did nothing with it before the Colts walked them off with Jonathan Taylor’s touchdown run.

So, it’s the first time Penix lost an overtime game where he actually got to touch the ball.

24. Davis Mills, Houston Texans

Week 10 rank: N/A (C.J. Stroud was No. 22)

Davis Mills had to start for C.J. Stroud (concussion) and it was certainly the least expected 19-point comeback in the fourth quarter in a long time. But he led three straight touchdown drives, including a 93-yard drive to win the game with his scramble with 31 seconds left.

Great effort for Long Neck Mills.

25. Trevor Lawrence, Jacksonville Jaguars

Week 10 rank: 25 (-4)

By all means, the Jaguars should have won that game in Houston after leading by 19 points in the fourth quarter. Lawrence never should have been in a position where he needs a miracle drive in the final 30 seconds and ends up throwing a pick-six under pressure on the final snap.

With that said, it’s not like Lawrence ever did much to earn that big lead. He feasted on short fields – no drives over 59 yards all day – and finished with just 158 passing yards against that stingy defense, which also sacked him 5 times.

Just your typical Lawrence game where if he doesn’t get in a rhythm early, he loses. It’s almost always the case in his career as we’ve pointed out before. You hold him under 60% completions, you have a great chance of winning.

26. Tyler Shough, New Orleans Saints

Week 10 rank: 30 (+4)

I thought Shough’s first start was solid despite the scoreboard against the Rams. But on the road against Carolina, he did even better with 282 yards and 2 touchdowns, hitting on some big plays even after the team traded away his best speed receiver in Rashid Shaheed. He did catch a break when the defensive back fell down on the long touchdown to Chris Olave, but I think Shough is delivering beyond expectations so far.

27. J.J. McCarthy, Minnesota Vikings

Week 10 rank: 24 (-3)

The good news is J.J. McCarthy passed for 248 yards against the Ravens, 90 more yards than he had in any of his first three starts. He had a 62-yard completion early on in the game, but the bad news is he seems to only get worse and more erratic as the games wear on. He also had some ugly picks as he just throws it up at times as a young, inexperienced quarterback will tend to do.

We need to show some patience with him, but with Kevin O’Connell’s history, the talent around McCarthy, and the fact he’s not a true rookie and Sam Darnold is doing so well in Seattle, it makes you crave something better than this.

28. Geno Smith, Las Vegas Raiders

Week 10 rank: 26 (-2)

Geno Smith was a brutal watch in Denver. It’s a tough defense to face, even without Patrick Surtain II at corner, and he had no chance on some of those 6 sacks. But a single 41-yard touchdown drive on 13 drives? Just one completion to Brock Bowers? Unacceptable.

It’s hard to see Smith finishing the season with the hits he’s taking and the lack of production.

29. Bryce Young, Carolina Panthers

Week 10 rank: 27 (-2)

I’m struggling to see the point of this Carolina offense at a point where the NFC South is still winnable. They have gotten some great moments from Rico Dowdle on the ground, but that wasn’t working against the Saints, so you need a quarterback who can actually throw for 200 yards sometimes, and Young just hasn’t been that quarterback all year. He doesn’t seem to want to throw deep, so I’m not sure what the point of drafting a receiver like Tetairoa McMillan was for him.

30. Dillon Gabriel, Cleveland Browns

Week 10 rank: 31 (+1)

The Browns lost but Gabriel wasn’t the worst quarterback in this game (see below). Sure, he only threw for 167 yards and took 6 sacks, but he did throw two touchdowns, no picks or fumbles, and he rushed for 54 yards.

But the offense is very limited, and I don’t see how coach Kevin Stefanski makes it to next season, and I’ll be surprised if there’s not pressure to start Shedeur Sanders to see what they have behind Rookie Option #2. I’ll just say the sacks won’t go away with Sanders playing. In fact, they’ll probably go up.

31. Justin Fields, New York Jets

Week 10 rank: 29 (-2)

Seriously, what is the Jets’ offense this year? Justin Fields has four starts where he didn’t even throw for 55 yards, including two games where he played 100% of the snaps like Sunday against the Browns. They won this game because of the special teams returning two touchdowns in the first quarter, and Breece Hall took a screen pass 42 yards for a touchdown. Otherwise, Fields threw for 12 yards and lost 12 yards on sacks, so he had 0 net passing yards outside of that one play that was all Hall and the blocking.

That even counts as a game-winning touchdown pass since it broke a tie in the fourth quarter. But this is not sustainable, and the Jets need a real quarterback (evergreen sentence).

32. Cam Ward, Tennessee Titans

Week 10 rank: 32 (0)

The bye week spared us from having to watch the Titans in Week 10, but what a tough matchup next with that Houston defense. We’ve already seen the Titans lose 26-0 to them with Cam Ward having a lousy day.

After the way Jaxson Dart and Tyler Shough have played as rookies, we need to see more from Ward. The Titans have 11 touchdowns this year and three of them were returns by the defense and special teams. Show us why you were the No. 1 pick, because I haven’t seen it yet.

Related Articles: