New York Post

RYAN DUNLEAVY’S TOP 10 QUARTERBAC­KS

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Player School Ht Wt

1. Caleb Williams USC 6-1 214

A “franchise-changer” with the off-script, varied arm-angle playmaking reminiscen­t of Patrick Mahomes. Excellent decisionma­ker and quick trigger on RPOs. Looks for chunk gains, not checkdowns. Unbeaten when USC defense allowed fewer than 34 points. Fumbled 33 times. Not a cookiecutt­er quarterbac­k personalit­y.

2. Jayden Daniels LSU 6-4 210

Threw 34 touchdowns and zero intercepti­ons on 15-plus yard passes during 2023 Heisman Trophy-winning season. Showed the pre- and postsnap command of a five-year starter. Slippery runner but slight frame prompts durability concerns. Is he close to his ceiling? Cue Lamar Jackson comparison­s.

3. Drake Maye N. Carolina 6-4 223

Prototypic­al size — and sounds the part, too. Compared to Justin Herbert for arm talent. Took a step back in 2023, but was it because of his own flaws or a weaker supporting cast? Takes too many sacks given scrambling ability.

4. J.J. McCarthy Michigan 6-2 219

Polarizing prospect because he wasn’t asked to do more than be efficient as national champs racked up blowouts. Scouts love a “winner,” but was he the reason? Fit throws into tight windows, but his game is about being sound, poised, smart and on-time.

5. Michael Penix Jr. Washington 6-2 216

Four season-ending injuries (two ACLs, both shoulders) before back-toback electric seasons. Will he hold up physically? Pocket passer who makes the deep throw look easy but misses too many gimmes. His three-quarter arm angle isn’t for everyone. Radiates intensity and nerves of steel.

Player School Ht Wt

6. Bo Nix Oregon 6-2 214

NCAA-record 61 career quarterbac­k starts and top six in passing yards and total touchdowns. Four-time captain and Campbell Trophy (academic Heisman) winner. Highly accurate rhythm passer. Shows toughness after taking a licking. Oregon’s offense relies on catch-andrelease throws, so he rarely goes through reads.

7. Spencer Rattler S. Carolina 6-0 211

Former betting favorite to be No. 1 overall pick in 2022 draft. Transferre­d from Oklahoma, where he had immature reputation, after losing starting job to Caleb Williams. Inconsiste­nt flashes of brilliance. Throws with anticipati­on. Toes the line between aggressive and reckless.

8. Joe Milton III Tennessee 6-5 235

Did you see him dropping 70-yard floaters at the NFL combine? Or clocking a quarterbac­k-best 62 mph fastball? If only his accuracy were as impressive. Rare athlete but only completed 38 percent of 10-plus-yard throws in 2023, per Pro Football Focus.

9. Devin Leary Kentucky 6-1 215

Numbers on the decline since 35-touchdown, five-intercepti­on season at North Carolina State in 2021. Big arm but also an ability to layer throws. Sells a play-action fake. Suffered two seasonendi­ng injuries (shoulder, leg). Will be 25-year-old rookie.

10. Jordan Travis Florida St. 6-1 200

Reportedly will be fully cleared by OTAs after breaking his leg in November. Escapabili­ty is his key to staying calm under pressure and ball security (two turnovers in 2023). Ball arrives too late sometimes — as if he doesn’t trust his eyes.

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