The 2025 NFL season was dominated by first-round quarterbacks with old veterans like Matthew Stafford and a new generation featuring Drake Maye and Caleb Williams taking center stage.
The playoffs should be no different with a record-tying 12 of the 14 teams that qualified for the postseason set to use a first-round pick as their starting quarterback. The only year in the Super Bowl era with two or fewer non first-round QBs starting a playoff game came in 2024 when Jalen Hurts and Russell Wilson did it.
The NFL set a record this season with 219 of the 272 games won by a quarterback who was drafted in round one, besting the mark of 204 set the previous year.
And the record isn't about a longer season or more teams as the 80.5% of games won by a first-round quarterback easily the highest since the start of the common draft in 1967. The only other season with more than 70% of games won by a first-round QB came in 2024 when the rate was 75%.
The rate was less than half of games as recently as 2008 and down at 23% in 2001, when Tom Brady first became a starter in New England a year after being a sixth-round pick.
The only outlier will be the wild-card game on Sunday in Philadelphia when San Francisco's former seventh-round pick Brock Purdy takes on former second-rounder Hurts and the Eagles.
Those teams have shown there is an alternate path to success as Hurts and Purdy have represented the NFC in the last three Super Bowls. But unless the winner of that game also wins the divisional round, this season will join the 2010 season as the only ones in the Super Bowl era with all four starting QBs in the conference title game being first-rounders.
This postseason will feature four quarterbacks picked first overall with Stafford and Carolina's Bryce Young facing off in the 13th playoff matchup of No. 1 pick quarterbacks in the Super Bowl era. Williams and Jacksonville's Trevor Lawrence are the other two top picks.