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NFL QBs facing the most pressure heading into the 2026 season
Houston Texans quarterback C.J. Stroud. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

NFL QBs facing the most pressure heading into the 2026 season

There's no position in sports under more of a microscope than an NFL starting quarterback. The success of a franchise relies on the quarterback more than any other player on the roster. But that doesn't mean every NFL quarterback is under an equal amount of pressure. 

As NFL teams prepare for training camps, here are five quarterbacks dealing with more pressure than their peers heading into the 2026 season. 

Lamar Jackson, Baltimore Ravens 

A year removed from putting up career-high numbers in 2024, Jackson endured a 2025 season filled with injuries and disappointing play. He only threw for 2,549 yards and ran for 349, his lowest total on the ground in any season of his career. 

Fast forward to being months away from his ninth season with the Ravens, his first with a new head coach, and Jackson still has a lot to prove

A two-time NFL MVP still trying to get his team over the hump and into a Super Bowl, Jackson needs to be at his best for Baltimore to have a chance to contend in a crowded AFC.

The biggest question that looms over Jackson is if he can still incorporate his athleticism, and if not, can he have success as mostly just a pocket passer at this point in his career? 

Jalen Hurts, Philadelphia Eagles

Unlike Jackson, Hurts has accomplished a level of team success that would buy most quarterbacks time and respect. Hurts, however, still finds himself being doubted.

Coming off an up and down season in 2025, granted still only being two years removed from a Super Bowl title, Hurts will have to try to get back to form without his top weapon after A.J. Brown was traded to the New England Patriots.

His completion percentage, yards per pass and quarterback rating were all below his normal standards in 2025. 

Joe Burrow, Cincinnati Bengals

Burrow's statistics and play on the field suggest he's one of the best quarterbacks in the game, but he's not aways able to be on the field. With availability always a concern for the 29-year-old Burrow, some are already starting to wonder if his career will go down as a big "what if?" story. 

He's already led the Bengals to one Super Bowl appearance, doing so in only his second year. But since that time, he's only led Cincinnati back to the playoffs once. He's also only played in a full season worth of games once.

After the Bengals retained his top targets in Ja'Marr Chase and Tee Higgins, Burrow believes the 2026 Bengals can be special. But for that to happen, he will have to uphold his end of the bargain - staying healthy. He only played in eight games last fall. 

If healthy, Burrow should be candidate to win his first league MVP and maybe even his third Comeback Player of the Year Award. 

Dak Prescott, Dallas Cowboys 

Being fair to Prescott, he showed he can perform to an elite level in his two most recent healthy seasons (2023, 2025). He surpassed 4,000 passing yards and reached 30 touchdown passes in both seasons. 

But being the starting quarterback and captain of the Dallas Cowboys comes with constant pressure and being judged off things often beyond his control, and, of course, winning at a high level, something the historic franchise hasn't done since the mid 1990s. And until he improves on his 2-5 playoff record, there will always be Cowboys fans who refuse to embrace Prescott. 

Needing to get the ball to George Pickens as he fights for a new contract and needing to manage the media firestorm that comes with leading the Cowboys, Prescott has to have a big 2026 or the noise may reach a new high. 

C.J. Stroud, Houston Texans 

In April, the Texans exercised the fifth-year option on Stroud. What they didn't do was present him with a new massive contract extension to ensure he stays a Texan for life. That shows the pressure the second overall pick from the 2023 NFL Draft is under as he enters his fourth year in the NFL. 

Stroud has shown signs of regression since being named Offensive Rookie of the Year. As a rookie, he threw for 4,108 yards and only five interceptors. But in 2025, he tossed for just 3,041 yards and turned the ball over 10 times off eight picks and two fumbles. 

Still good enough to lead the Texans to playoffs, the consistent early-career decline has led to questions about whether Stroud should be the future of Houston moving forward, especially while alongside one of the league's top defenses.  

It's possible Stroud's historically great rookie year placed the bar at an unreasonable level, but in a league that tends to cycle through quarterbacks on a yearly basis, 2026 will dictate if he stays as a budding star or is forced to rehabilitate his career elsewhere. 

Honorable mention: Kyler Murray, J.J. McCarthy, Trevor Lawrence, Justin Herbert 

Mike J. Asti

Mike Asti is an experienced media personality and journalist with a vast resume and skillset, most notably from time with TribLIVE Radio and WPXI-TV. Asti now serves as the Managing Editor of WV Sports Now, where he leads the coverage of WVU sports. He has also covered the Steelers, Penguins, Pirates and other teams within the Pittsburgh market

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