MIAMI — For the second straight year, the biggest game in college football will be decided by a quarterback who wasn't on the roster the year before.
Heisman-winning Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza arrived in Bloomington in December 2024 following three years at California. Carson Beck transferred to Miami in January 2025 with one year of eligibility remaining after five years at Georgia.
Last January, a similar story was being told. Notre Dame quarterback Riley Leonard had transferred in from Duke, and Ohio State acquired Will Howard after four years at Kansas State. Both signal-callers had proven success elsewhere and adapted to new systems well enough to lead their respective teams to the national championship game.
The occasional one-off success story has now become a broader trend, raising the question of whether transfer quarterbacks are the fastest path to the national championship.
Indiana coach Curt Cignetti says there's no time to wait for development in this day and age in college football. Winning requires immediate action.
''It would be nice to have a guy for a few years,'' Cignetti said. ''But when you've got a chance to get a guy that can play winning football that's been through the wars, that's the way… To me, it's an easy decision. You've got to win every year. Now, there's no, ‘Oh, in five years we'll be good.' That was a long time ago."
Transfer quarterbacks leading teams on championship runs isn't entirely new. Joe Burrow accomplished a somewhat similar feat in 2019, though it was his second season at LSU and he didn't have prior starting experience at Ohio State. Jake Coker did the same for Alabama in 2015. Stetson Bennett's path was even more unconventional — initially a preferred walk-on at Georgia, he transferred to a JUCO for a year before returning as the Bulldogs' starter and winning back-to-back national championships in 2022 and 2023.
It's not that Beck didn't have the patience to wait his turn, it's that his time in Athens had come and gone.