Diego Pavia made his own bed, don’t feel bad for him

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Diego Pavia made his own bed, don’t feel bad for him

Diego Pavia’s story is one of the most remarkable in recent college football history. A zero-star recruit who won a junior college national title, transferred twice, sued the NCAA for an extra year of eligibility, and then led Vanderbilt to…

Diego Pavia made his own bed, don’t feel bad for him

Diego Pavia’s story is one of the most remarkable in recent college football history. A zero-star recruit who won a junior college national title, transferred twice, sued the NCAA for an extra year of eligibility, and then led Vanderbilt to…

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Diego Pavia’s story is one of the most remarkable in recent college football history. A zero-star recruit who won a junior college national title, transferred twice, sued the NCAA for an extra year of eligibility, and then led Vanderbilt to its first 10-win season ever. He threw for 3,539 yards and 29 touchdowns, rushed for 862 more yards, and finished second in Heisman voting. The football resume is genuinely extraordinary.

And yet, here we are. Undrafted. Not even signed as an undrafted free agent. Just a tryout invite to the Baltimore Ravens’ rookie minicamp. Some people want you to feel sorry for him. Don’t.

MORE: Deion Sanders reacts to Diego Pavia going undrafted in 2026 NFL Draft

Let’s start with the facts no one can dispute. Pavia measured in at 5-foot-9 and 7/8 inches at the NFL Scouting Combine, shorter than any quarterback in the league and more than two inches shorter than the next-closest player. His arm tested as average at best. His 40-yard dash time of 4.76 seconds wasn’t going to make any scout sit up straighter. At his pro day, he connected on just three of twelve deep passes graded as “on-time and on-target.”

For comparison, Kyler Murray, one of the few undersized quarterbacks to thrive in the NFL, came in as one of the most explosively athletic prospects in draft history. Pavia is not that. He’s a smart, accurate, extremely competitive football player whose game was built for college football’s structure, not the NFL’s.

Going undrafted based on his physical profile alone would have been entirely understandable. Plenty of college legends never make it to the next level. That’s just football.

But here’s the thing: Pavia didn’t even make it to undrafted free agency. Teams passed on signing him at all. And that’s where his own choices come in.

After losing the Heisman Trophy to Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza, Pavia was photographed at a New York City nightclub next to a sign reading “F— Indiana.” He then posted on social media, “F— ALL THE VOTERS.” He later apologized, but the damage was done, and scouts noticed.

Former NFL safety Tyrann Mathieu put it bluntly on a podcast: too many podcasts, too many unflattering public moments. That’s not the profile teams want when they’re already taking a flier on an undersized quarterback fighting for a roster spot. Fair or unfair, we all saw what bad optics did to Shedeur Sanders’ draft stock last year.

Then there’s the strip club. TMZ obtained video of Pavia throwing cash at a dancer at an Albuquerque gentlemen’s club until 5 AM, in March, just weeks before the draft. Was he obligated to spend every night studying film? Of course not. But keeping up appearances matters when you’re trying to convince 32 NFL front offices that you’re a serious professional.

And none of this is new behavior. While at New Mexico State, Pavia trespassed onto rival New Mexico’s practice field and urinated on it. These are unforced errors.

Pavia’s football story deserves to be celebrated. His college career was genuinely one for the history books, and his competitive spirit is something few players can match. The narrative of a zero-star recruit rewriting the record books at one of the SEC’s perennial doormats is legitimately inspiring.

But inspiration doesn’t erase accountability. Pavia enters the NFL process with real physical limitations that were always going to make this difficult. He then layered on top of those limitations a series of self-inflicted wounds that made teams hesitant to even hand him a contract.

He has a shot in Baltimore, so he can still prove people wrong. But if his path to the NFL turns out to be harder than it needed to be, Diego Pavia has only himself to blame for part of that.

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