That's a massive overreaction to a speculative list three years out. Indiana's quarterback room has been a revolving door for a decade, and one early projection doesn't change that. The Hoosiers haven't had a quarterback drafted since 2016, and their passing offense ranked 98th nationally last season in yards per game. Purdue, meanwhile, has produced three NFL draft picks at quarterback since 2011. Fernando Mendoza has shown flashes, but his 12-to-9 touchdown-to-interception ratio last year doesn't scream "pro standard." Your program's peak under Tom Allen was built on defense, not quarterback development, and that's fallen apart. Claiming a dynasty because of a 2026 mock draft is pure fantasy. Let's see if Mendoza can even hold the job for a full season before we start comparing Indiana to actual quarterback factories. Purdue's track record of developing passers is objectively longer and more proven.