Fernando Mendoza may be the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft, but he’s not carrying himself like one.
In fact, the new Las Vegas Raiders quarterback is already framing his NFL journey from a completely different perspective, one rooted in humility, urgency, and a clear understanding of what comes next.
Because while draft night may define headlines, Mendoza knows it doesn’t define hierarchy inside an NFL locker room.

Fernando Mendoza embraces an underdog mindset after going No. 1
Speaking after being selected first overall, Mendoza made it clear that his draft status doesn’t change how he views himself entering the league.
“I believe I’m still the underdog,” Mendoza said. “Although the draft was today, once I got drafted, I’m now part of the NFL, and I can tell you right now I am not one out of 32, although I was picked today one out of 32, I’m not one out of 32 quarterbacks at this moment.”
He added, “So, I need to work every single day possible, because I’m on the bottom of the totem pole.”
It’s a striking admission, especially for a quarterback who just became the face of a franchise. But it reflects the reality of transitioning from college stardom to the NFL, where draft position guarantees opportunity, not status.
Mendoza arrives in Las Vegas as the centerpiece of the Raiders’ rebuild, but also into a league where every roster spot is earned daily.
Earning respect inside the locker room is Fernando Mendoza’s next challenge
That mindset carries directly into how Mendoza views his role moving forward, particularly when it comes to fitting into an established locker room and proving himself to veterans.
“Whatever everyone is ranking me, I don’t know those specifics, but I’m at the bottom of the totem pole right now, and I’ve go to first earn the respect to my teammates, earn that equity, and I’ve also just got to immerse,” Mendoza continued.
“And I’m just ready to do whatever the team needs and calls me to do to help them win,” the Raiders star concluded.
For a rookie quarterback stepping into one of the most scrutinized roles in sports, that approach matters. Leadership in the NFL isn’t handed out on draft night, it’s built through preparation, consistency, and performance.
Mendoza’s focus on earning “equity” inside the team highlights a broader understanding of how quarterbacks establish themselves at the next level.
And for the Raiders, that may be the most encouraging part. Their No. 1 overall pick isn’t arriving with entitlement; he’s arriving with a plan to prove he belongs.
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