Kirk Herbstreit Fernando Mendoza Pat McAfee
Credit: Silver & Black Today/Sportsnaut

Kirk Herbstreit watched Fernando Mendoza play more football than just about anybody on a national microphone and he’s seen enough.

Tuesday on the Pat McAfee Show, the ESPN college football analyst compared the new Raiders quarterback’s learning curve to two Hall of Famers and tossed in a tease that Raider Nation is going to chew on all summer.

“You know why you believe in him? Because he’s going to beat you with his mind,” Herbstreit said. “There aren’t a whole lot of guys that know the game and understand the game well enough to see pre-snap movement in the NFL, the complexities of half the defense playing this coverage and the other half playing something else.”

Then he dropped the comp that’s going to live on sports radio for the next month.

“He may need some time. I mean, Troy Aikman, Peyton Manning, everybody needs time to adjust to the speed of the game,” Herbstreit told McAfee. “But he is going to be a game manager. He’s going to be a distributor. And his X factor is he moves better than I think a lot of people want to give him credit for.”

Pump the brakes if you want. Herbstreit didn’t say Mendoza is Manning. He said the adjustment timeline for elite quarterbacks isn’t instant. There’s a difference. But the names alone tell you where the ceiling lives in Herbstreit’s head.

Herbstreit Not Alone in Praise for Fernando Mendoza

pat mcafee fernando mendoza las vegas raiders
Feb 6, 2026; San Francisco, CA, USA; Pat McAfee on the Pat McAfee Show set at the Super Bowl LX media center at the Moscone Center. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Pat McAfee, who covered plenty of Indiana games over the last two seasons, was right there with him. And he wasn’t subtle about it.

“Every ball is a tight spiral,” McAfee said. “Yeah, we watched him throw during TV timeouts. We watched him throw during games; we watched him throw on the sideline with his brother. We watched him almost take Curt Cignetti’s head off whenever he was warming up. Every ball is a dart, every single one.”

This wasn’t an isolated take either.

Mel Kiper Jr. has been beating this drum for a month. The ESPN draft analyst called Mendoza “a cross between Peyton Manning and Matt Ryan” earlier this spring and made the point that the Indiana season didn’t manufacture this kid out of thin air. Mendoza was getting first-round buzz off his Cal tape back in August before he ever threw a pass for the Hoosiers.

Then, Bleacher Report’s analytics team weighed in this week with what might be the most useful framing for Raider Nation. Their range of outcomes for Mendoza spans from Ryan Tannehill on the floor to Peyton Manning on the ceiling.

Tannehill won 22 games over two seasons in Tennessee and dragged the Titans to within a quarter of a Super Bowl. That’s the worst-case scenario being floated. The worst case.

Read that again.

Klint Kubiak Managing Fernando Mendoza Expectations Like a Pro

NFL: Las Vegas Raiders Head Coach Klint Kubiak Introductory Press Conference
Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Klint Kubiak has been smart about all of this. He’s said publicly he’d rather Mendoza sit behind Kirk Cousins for a year and learn the offense before getting thrown to the wolves. Owner Mark Davis cracked open the door earlier this week by calling Mendoza “potentially the starting QB,” but the soft consensus is still that Cousins gets Week 1.

None of that changes what Herbstreit, McAfee, Kiper and Bleacher Report all just laid out in the span of one news cycle.

The kid is wired differently. The arm is real. The processing speed is the trait that scouts can’t teach. And the comparisons coming from national voices who don’t owe the Raiders a thing keep landing in the same neighborhood.

Manning. Aikman. Matt Ryan.

Raider Nation has spent over two decades waiting for a quarterback worth pinning the franchise to. The national media just told them they might finally have one.

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Scott Gulbransen, a jack-of-all-trades in sports journalism, juggles his roles as an editor, NFL , MLB , Formula 1 ... More about Scott Gulbransen