Diego Pavia walked onto a campus that had never won ten games in a single season and promptly made it happen. He finished 2025 as a Unitas Golden Arm winner, an All-American, and a Heisman finalist — one of the most improbable arcs in program history. Now he takes it to the NFL.
Pavia's path is the kind of story that sounds invented: two seasons at New Mexico Military Institute, largely ignored by Power programs, then a methodical climb through the transfer portal that landed him in the SEC. The 2025 season was his coronation. He completed 267 of 378 attempts for 3,539 yards and 29 touchdowns against 8 interceptions, added 862 yards and 10 more scores on the ground, and helped Vanderbilt go 10-2 — a first in program history. The play-by-play data is ruthless in its clarity: 98th-percentile pass success rate, 96th-percentile passing touchdown rate, 95th-percentile EPA per dropback. He was not a system mirage.
The running dimension is the detail that separates him from the pure-pocket tier. At an 85th-percentile rush success rate and 83rd-percentile EPA per carry, Pavia does real damage as a runner — not just as a scrambler eating clock, but as a threat that defensive coordinators have to genuinely account for. He keeps the ball clean (88th-percentile sack avoidance) and extends plays rather than surrendering them.
He leaves Nashville as the most accomplished quarterback in Vanderbilt history — a JUCO walk-on who forced the SEC to take a program seriously for the first time in a generation, won every award that mattered, and made the Heisman finalist stage in the process.
How he plays
Pavia operates at the efficiency ceiling of the college game. His defining numbers are in the decision-making layer: a 98th-percentile pass success rate means he is almost never giving the defense a win on a drop-back, and a 95th-percentile EPA per dropback confirms the production is real, not volume-padded. He completes 70.6 percent of his attempts (95th percentile) without leaning on short-area dump-offs — his average depth of target sits in the 59th percentile, meaning he is working the intermediate and deep game at an elite hit rate. The sack rate (88th percentile) reflects pocket awareness and a quick clock, not just a clean offensive line. When he pulls it down, the threat is genuine: 80th-percentile yards per carry in the play-by-play sample, 83rd-percentile explosive run rate. He does not pad carry totals on designed sneaks.