2025 NFL Draft

2025 NFL Draft Scouting Report: Florida QB Graham Mertz

Graham Mertz Scouting Report

From now until the 2025 NFL Draft, we will scout and create profiles for as many prospects as possible, examining their strengths, weaknesses, and what they can bring to an NFL franchise. These players could be potential top-10 picks, down to Day 3 selections, and priority undrafted free agents. Today, a scouting report on Florida quarterback Graham Mertz.

No. 15 Graham Mertz/QB Florida – 6033, 212 pounds (Redshirt Senior)

MEASUREMENTS

Player Ht/Wt Hand Size Arm Length Wingspan
Graham Mertz 6033/212 9 3/4 31 1/4 76 1/2
40-Yard Dash 10-Yard Dash Short Shuttle 3-Cone
N/A N/A N/A N/A
Broad Jump Vertical Bench Press
N/A N/A N/A

THE GOOD

– Solid NFL size with big hands, short arms help create more compact release
– Gets ball out on time and in-rhythm
– Good accuracy on short/intermediate slants and crossing routes
– Functionally mobile to escape pressure and gain yards on scrambles, “move the sticks” athleticism
– Able to go through progressions and keep eyes/feet connected
– Navigates pocket well and can hitch and climb, doesn’t look to bail and run
– Inconsistent but capable of moving defensive backs with his eyes
– Shows touch and ability to layer throws
– Works to get playmakers the football
– Seemingly recovering quickly from 2024 season-ending knee injury
– Has some experience under center and sells play-action well from pistol
– Tough with strength and leadership
– Athletic bloodlines

The Bad

– Underwhelming physical tools across the board
– Arm strength is below-average, struggles to drive ball and lacks ideal spin on throws
– Deep passes hang and accuracy crumbles on vertical throws, struggling to lead and place
– Shows tunnel vision and misses underneath zone defenders too often, leading to interceptions and breakups
– Inconsistent reads and forces passes where they can’t go (i.e. seam versus MOFC)
– Won’t wow as a runner, gets what’s there
– Accuracy falls apart under pressure
– Only adequate anticipation
– Passes consistently batted at line of scrimmage, suggesting lower arm slot
– Limited upside who lacked ‘wow’ moments
– Laundry list of injuries that follow him since high school, including coming off 2024 torn ACL

Bio

– Turns 25 in December 25
– Career: 50 games with 48 starts, 793-of-1,225 (64.7-percent), 9,099 yards with 64 touchdowns and 31 INTs plus 13 rushing scores (negative-40 career yards)
– Spent 2019-2022 at Wisconsin, transferred to Florida for 2023-2024 seasons
– Four-star recruit from Overland Park, Kansas; chose Wisconsin over Alabama, Notre Dame, Georgia, Ohio State among multiple other power programs; committed to Wisconsin early and kept it despite surge of Power 5 interest
– 2023 at Florida (last full season): 72.9 completion percentage, 2,903 yards with 20 touchdowns and three interceptions
– 2024: 791 yards, six touchdowns and two interceptions across five games and 94 attempts
– Registered 73.7-percent completion rate at Florida; was 59.5-percent at Wisconsin (773 attempts with Badgers)
– Missed two games senior year of high school in 2018 with knee injury
Played through shoulder injury in 2020 with Wisconsin
– Suffered chest injury in 2021 and was briefly evaluated at local hospital; returned following game
– Fractured collarbone in November 2023 after running through multiple players and missed final regular season game
– Suffered concussion in 2024 opener and missed following game
– Suffered 2024 torn ACL in left knee stepping wrong backing up following touchdown pass against Tennessee, missing rest of season; held full throwing session during Florida Pro Day five months post-injury
– Named Kansas Gatorade Player of the Year as high school senior in 2018 after throwing 51 touchdowns; led school to state title as junior
– Set Army All-American Bowl record with five touchdown passes and was named MVP; also threw five touchdowns in first college start against Illinois
– Cited weather, coaching staff, and program history as main reasons for transferring to Florida, replacing Anthony Richardson
– 3.77 weighed high school GPA
– 2024 team captain and selected as such for multiple 2023 games
– Father played football at Minnesota in early 90s and two sisters played D-I basketball

Tape Breakdown

Graham Mertz went from light recruit to high school sensation thanks to breakout junior and senior seasons. Already committed, he stayed local at Wisconsin until coaching changes and lack of success required a change of scenery, transferring to Florida and replacing the draft-declared Anthony Richardson.

Mertz is the polar opposite of Richardson. Much less physically talented. More restrained, more careful, a finesse pitcher who paints the corners compared to a fastball maverick who overwhelms with stuff. Similar to Jaxson Dart, Mertz is accurate to the middle of the field and hits slants and crossers in-stride.

Mertz is functionally mobile and able to escape and elude, enough athleticism to pick up first downs and extend plays. But he isn’t dynamic and is the equivalent to the running back who “gets what’s blocked.” I do like his pocket presence. He’ll occasionally drift at the top of his drop but slides around pressure well, hitching and climbing while keeping his eyes downfield.

He largely plays on schedule and gets the ball out with a quick release. His interception rate was low, though he had some fortunate luck go his way.

Physically, Mertz isn’t dominant. There’s some size but his arm is below-average and he struggles to drive the football. A great example here, unable to fit the ball into this dig route as the defender closes and knocks it away.

But he’s not just missing high-end tools. His deep ball accuracy wanes and he struggles to see defenders out-of-frame. Two examples. First, trying to throw a seam ball against a single-high shell and gets picked (a lack of physical tools also applies here but this is a bad decision). Second, missing an underneath zone defender and nearly gets picked.

Mertz stands in against pressure but his accuracy can really fall off.

We do extensive background research for a reason. While Mertz’s character seems clean and strong, his injury history is a different story. It’s lengthy. From a knee injury in high school to a freak torn ACL with a concussion, broken collarbone, and unreported shoulder injury in-between, there’s a lot to talk about here. Mertz seems to be recovering well from his torn ACL, throwing a 58-pass script at his recent Pro Day, but he’s struggled to stay upright and available throughout his career.

Conclusion

Overall, Graham Mertz looks capable of running the basics of an NFL offense. He’ll take a profit, get the ball out quickly, and move around the pocket better than you’ll see from a lot of college quarterbacks. Mertz fits best in a West Coast system.

But a lack of even average physical tools, inconsistent processing, and a ton of injuries takes him squarely out of starting material. At best, he can be an Aidan O’Connell type (inevitably, Mertz will receive Brock Purdy comps, too) but my NFL comp will land on Brad Kaaya.

Projection: Undrafted
Depot Draft Grade: 5.8MED – Priority Undrafted Free Agent (Undrafted Free Agent)
Games Watched: at South Carolina (2023), vs Georgia (2023), vs Miami FL (2024), at Tennessee (2024)

Previous 2025 NFL Draft Player Profiles
CB Jahdae Barron DL Derrick Harmon QB Quinn Ewers RB Omarion Hampton
RB RJ Harvey EDGE Kyle Kennard WR Luther Burden III RB Ollie Gordon II
WR Tre Harris DL Shemar Stewart DL Walter Nolen OT Will Campbell
WR Tetairoa McMillan DL Rylie Mills WR Jayden Higgins WR Emeka Egbuka
QB Jalen Milroe WR Matthew Golden RB Ashton Jeanty EDGE Nic Scourton
DE Jared Ivey CB Denzel Burke DT Deone Walker WR Isaiah Bond
RB Bhayshul Tuten DT Tyleik Williams WR Xavier Restrepo DT Kenneth Grant
TE Colston Loveland QB Jaxson Dart CB Zy Alexander LB Jalon Walker
TE Tyler Warren QB Kyle McCord RB Tahj Brooks QB Cam Ward
CB Benjamin Morrison OT Josh Simmons CB Azareye’h Thomas RB Kaleb Johnson
EDGE Landon Jackson CB Shavon Revel Jr. DL Ty Robinson QB Will Howard
DL T.J. Sanders CB Trey Amos EDGE Ashton Gillotte DL Darius Alexander
WR Tez Johnson RB Devin Neal OT Emery Jones WR Tai Felton
CB Darien Porter OT Hollin Pierce CB Maxwell Hairston DL Omarr Norman-Lott
WR Ricky White III OG Tate Ratledge S Jaylen Reed RB Cam Skattebo
WR Kyle Williams DL Vernon Broughton WR Jake Bech EDGE Josaiah Stewart
EDGE Abdul Carter RB TreVeyon Henderson QB Riley Leonard RB Damien Martinez
RB Quinshon Judkins WR Jalen Royals OT Kelvin Banks Jr. DL Joshua Farmer
DB Malachi Moore DL Jordan Burch WR Savion Williams DL Alfred Collins
LB Jay Higgins TE Elijah Arroyo DL Shemar Turner OT Josh Conerly
CB Quincy Riley TE Gunnar Helm DB Sebastian Castro WR/CB Travis Hunter
iOL Jack Conley RB Raheim Sanders CB Will Johnson CB Cobee Bryant
WR Pat Bryant OT Anthony Belton EDGE Mykel Williams TE Harold Fannin Jr.
WR Arian Smith DL JJ Pegues RB Trevor Etienne S Xavier Watts
OT Charles Grant DL Nazir Stackhouse CB Tommi Hill OL Donovan Jackson
OT Aireontae Ersery S Malaki Starks EDGE James Pearce Jr. TE Jalin Conyers
WR Jaylin Noel DL Mason Graham WR Elic Ayomanor EDGE Elijah Roberts
CB Upton Stout RB Dylan Sampson DL Tim Smith OG Dylan Fairchild
WR Theo Wease Jr. EDGE Mike Green CB Mello Dotson OT Armand Membou
RB LeQuint Allen EDGE Princely Umanmielen OG Tyler Booker RB DJ Giddens
S Craig Woodson LB Jacob Kiser WR Zakhari Franklin S Nick Emmanwori
TE CJ Dippre LB Danny Stutsman CB Jabbar Muhammad TE Mason Taylor
DT Jordan Phillips LB Kobe King DL Cam Horsley DL Cam’Ron Jackson
DL Jamaree Caldwell LB Jihaad Campbell RB Jordan James OL Wyatt Milum
C Jake Majors DE Jack Sawyer DE Donovan Ezeiruaku WR Chimere Dike
DL Howard Cross III OL Marcus Mbow RB Kalel Mullings S Andrew Mukuba
OG Luke Kandra QB Tyler Shough C Grey Zabel OT Cameron Williams
LB Jamon Dumas-Johnson EDGE Tyler Baron OL Jalen Rivers EDGE JT Tuimoloau
OG Jonah Savaiinaea S Shilo Sanders WR Ja’Corey Brooks CB Jacob Parrish
RB Jacory Croskey-Merritt EDGE Jah Joyner S Kevin Winston Jr. EDGE Oluwafemi Oladejo
LB Teddye Buchanan  LB Cody Simon C Jared Wilson OT Ozzy Trapilo
RB Jaydon Blue LB Carson Schewsinger LB Chris Paul Jr. DT Thor Griffith
WR Antwane Wells Jr. LB Jeffrey Bassa CB Alijah Huzzie DT Jared Harrison-Hunte
EDGE Antwaun Powell-Ryland CB Dorian Strong EDGE Fadil Diggs QB Shedeur Sanders
TE Terrance Ferguson LB Carson Bruener WR Jordan Watkins RB Donovan Edwards
DL CJ West CB Jaylin Smith CB Mac McWilliams OG Miles Frazier
S Hunter Wohler EDGE Ahmed Hassanein WR Elijhah Badger TE Jake Briningstool
QB Brady Cook RET Jacquez Stuart S Jonas Sanker WR Jimmy Horn Jr.
CB Jason Marshall Jr. RB Kyle Monangai DT Aeneas Peebles DL Warren Brinson
EDGE Bradyn Swinson S Billy Bowman Jr. QB Dillon Gabriel EDGE Barryn Sorrell
S Malik Verdon WR Dont’e Thornton RB Breshard Smith OT Chase Lundt
TE Jackson Hawes WR Nick Nash S Lanthan Ransom TE Oronde Gadsden II
WR KeAndre Lambert-Smith OL Jonah Monheim OT Jalen Travis CB BJ Adams
WR Will Sheppard OT Ajani Cornelius DT Kyonte Hamilton DB Robert McDaniel
QB Hunter Dekkers OL Jackson Slater RB Lan Larison LB Aaron Smith
OL Thomas Perry OT Carson Vinson CB Melvin Smith OL Marcus Wehr
TE JJ Galbreath RB ShunDerrick Powell OL Aiden Williams RB Marcus Yarns
DE Rovell Carter CB Isas Waxter OL Gareth Warren RB Tre Stewart
S Keondre Jackson WR Efton Chism II EDGE David Walker QB Cam Miller
OL Clay Webb S TaMuarion Wilson QB Taylor Elgersma QB Tommy Mellott
WR Andrew Armstrong WR Dominic Lovett WR LaJohntay Wester EDGE Elijah Ponder
WR Traeshon Holden S Dan Jackson DL Yahya Black LB Que Robinson
RB Phil Mafah LB Demetrius Knight Jr. RB Woody Marks TE Mitchell Evans
TE Luke Lachey CB Justin Walley RB Antario Brown WR Kaden Prather
QB Zach Zebrowski DL Zeek Biggers TE Anthony Torres EDGE Sai’vion Jones
OL Seth McLaughlin RB Ja’Quinden Jackson DB Jordan Clark OT Gerad Christian-Lichtenhan
RB Jarquez Hunter CB Zah Frazier LB Barrett Carter DB Caleb Ransaw
OL Connor Colby
To Top