NFL MVP Ballot: Real Production, Real Pressure, Real Value
We’ve hit that sweet spot in the season — the point where the MVP talk stops being a guessing game and starts feeling real. A third of the year’s in the books, and the usual “best quarterback on the best team” formula isn’t cutting it. The league’s too balanced, too unpredictable. Some of the preseason favorites have cooled off, a few stars have been fighting through injuries, and a handful of surprise names have forced their way into the spotlight.
This isn’t about box‑score glamour or fantasy stats. It’s about who’s solving the hard problems on Sundays. When the game gets tight and every fan at home knows what’s coming — who’s still making it work?
Here’s how my MVP ballot looks if we voted today.
1) Baker Mayfield — Tampa Bay Buccaneers
From “bridge quarterback” to “closer.” The formula late in games has been simple: make sure there’s time on the clock and the score’s within reach, and Baker will handle the rest.
Tampa looks like a completely different team when the lights get bright in the fourth quarter. Baker’s playing with that perfect mix of stubbornness and calm, the kind of confidence that only comes from years of trial and error. When the first read’s dead, he’s not panicking. He’s resetting his feet, trusting his eyes, and finding something on the move. Those second‑reaction throws on third‑and‑8, those lasers into tight windows with the game on the line — that’s where you feel his growth the most.
He’s not forcing chaos anymore; he’s controlling it. And that’s new territory for him. The current staff has done a great job leaning into what he does best — those quick rollouts, those layered play‑action looks — while still giving him simple, rhythm throws that keep him in command. He’s staying aggressive without crossing that line into reckless.
This isn’t some out‑of‑nowhere hot streak, either — Baker’s been steadily playing strong, mistake‑free football ever since Tampa made him the guy. He’s been the same confident version week after week, and that consistency is exactly why the locker room trusts him in every big moment.
The Plays That Stick
Every MVP run has signature moments, and Mayfield already has a year's worth:
Third‑and‑14 Houdini vs. 49ers. This might be the defining moment of his season so far. On 3rd and 14, Baker had pressure flying at him from both edges, somehow spun out of a sure sack, and scrambled for the first down. Before fans even had time to catch their breath, he came right back and dropped a 45‑yard dart to rookie Tez Johnson for a touchdown. It wasn’t just athletic improvisation — it was pure control. He reset the drive, took advantage of the coverage shell, and threw a ball that required perfect timing and touch.
Fourth‑and‑10 scramble vs. Texans. Early in the year, down late in Houston, Tampa needed a miracle. With 1:24 left and the season’s early momentum hanging in the balance, Baker turned a broken 4th‑and‑10 into a 15‑yard run that kept the Bucs alive. Three plays later, they punched in the winner. Stop him there, and they would've lost the game. Instead, it became the spark that’s defined this run.
Week 5 vs. Seahawks: the record‑setter. That game was Baker in full command — 29 of 33 passing, 379 yards, 2 touchdowns, no picks, and a passer rating north of 134. It was the most accurate game in franchise history for a quarterback with 30 or more attempts, and it wasn’t built on checkdowns. He mixed quick game efficiency with downfield aggression and led yet another game‑winning drive. That’s MVP DNA on display.
Context Matters
He hasn’t been babysat by perfect circumstances either. The offense around him has been a revolving door — wideouts limping in and out of the lineup, a banged‑up O‑line that’s needed reshuffling almost weekly, and a run game that’s been more stop‑and‑start than steady. Yet every time they’ve needed someone to steady the ship, it’s been Baker doing the patchwork.
He’s keeping drives alive when the ground game stalls and turning busted plays into momentum-shifting statements. That’s what makes his run so impressive. He’s out‑playing the chaos around him and fixing problems before they turn into headlines, and that’s exactly the kind of value this award is supposed to recognize.
What Keeps Him No. 1
He’s got the clutch resume that usually anchors an MVP campaign. What makes it even more compelling is where Tampa’s sitting right now: the Bucs have a pretty clean path to the NFC’s No. 1 seed if they handle their business. If that holds and Baker keeps stacking game‑winning drives while protecting the football, it’s going to be hard for voters to justify anyone else. This is starting to feel like his race to lose.
2) Drake Maye — New England Patriots
Second‑year leap, grown‑man throws. The kid isn’t just along for the ride — he’s steering the whole thing.
Maye’s been stacking real-deal throws, not stat-padding stuff. Every week he’s ripping passes that most quarterbacks wouldn’t even think about attempting — tight-window ropes over linebackers, deep sideline shots against bracket coverage, and those moonballs down the seam that make you watch the replay five times.
And the best part? These aren’t garbage-time fireworks. The Patriots have won a string of games they probably would’ve lost the last few years — close, grind-it-out matchups where one third-down throw decides whether you win or lose.
He’s doing all this without any real safety net, too. There’s no real run game to lean on, no elite offensive line bailing him out. The ground game’s been serviceable, at that's putting it nicely, which means the offense runs through his eyes and his right arm.
Look at the splits — third down, deep passes, two-minute drills — he’s not just surviving, he’s thriving. The numbers say he’s efficient, but the film says he’s methodically explosive.
The Traits That Pop
Pocket movement with purpose. He doesn’t drift into sacks or panic when the pocket gets tight. You can almost see the calm in his drop — climb, reset, eyes still scanning, shoulders quiet, like a guy who's been around for a couple decades, not a couple of years. That poise has turned potential losses into highlight throws.
Ball placement outside the numbers. It’s not just about completing passes; it’s about putting the ball where only his guy can touch it. He loves testing those boundary throws, and they're paying off. Defenses start guarding the sidelines, and boom — the middle opens wide later.
Explosive accuracy. Maye’s deep balls aren’t just pretty, they’re timed perfectly. He’s hitting receivers in stride so they can actually finish the play. That kind of precision turns big gains into six points, and it’s what’s separating him from the rest of the young guns.
Winning the Division Is Crucial
They may be leading that division right now, but let’s be real — that top spot in the AFC East isn’t a lock. They’re going to have to fight like hell to fend off the Bills if Maye wants to keep his name in this race. Winning the division isn’t just a bonus for him — it’s the key to even being in the final MVP conversation. I love what he’s doing, but it’s hard to imagine his numbers holding up against some of the high-powered quarterbacks who end up winning their divisions. If he does, though, and the Patriots actually stay on top, there's no reason his name shouldn't get brought up at the end of the year.
3) Bijan Robinson — Atlanta Falcons
If a non‑QB can actually crash this party, it’s Bijan: run game identity, receiver‑level flashes, and weekly explosives that swing games. But the truth is — there’s no real chance he wins this thing. The MVP has basically become a quarterback-only award at this point, and that’s a shame. I’ve always felt it should be voted on differently, where value isn’t tied strictly to who’s under center. If it were, Bijan would have a legitimate shot. Still, my ballot, my choice — and he’s more than earned these flowers.
He’s not just the engine; he’s the shape of the offense. Atlanta builds entire game plans around his gravity — jet motion to tug linebackers, lining him up in the slot, screen, traps, all of it — then they steal explosive plays to other guys because of the attention he's attracting.
Bijan’s numbers back up every bit of the eye test. He’s tied for the league lead in yards per carry among qualified running backs, sits third in yards after contact, and somehow averages around 14 yards per catch when they split him out wide. Because of that, he's got the second most targets on his team, getting about 25% of the passes thrown his way.
That’s absurd efficiency for a guy touching the ball as often as he does. When a defense does everything right and he still manages to get 12 yards with the line stonewalled, that’s the definition of value.
The Realistic Path
I hate to be this blunt about it, but there simply isn’t one. If Saquon didn’t win it last year after nearly breaking the all-time single-season record, there’s no realistic path for Bijan to walk away with this thing. That’s just the unfortunate reality of how this award works now — it’s become a quarterback-only club.
But that doesn’t mean his season shouldn’t be celebrated. He’s been electric, consistent, and absolutely central to everything Atlanta does. I just wish the voting actually reflected that kind of value, because if it did, Bijan would be right there at the top of the conversation.
4) Patrick Mahomes — Kansas City Chiefs
Mahomes just keeps that steady drumbeat going while Kansas City rebuilds around him on the fly. Take him off the roster and the entire operation falls apart. He’s sixth in the league in passing yards and, six games in, still somehow leads his team in rushing yards. That’s definitely not ideal for the Chiefs, but it underlines just how much of their offense still lives and dies with him.
It’s easy to get numb to the Mahomes experience because he makes the ridiculous look routine. But the truth is, he’s still the most reliable offensive engine in football. He’s the floor and the ceiling all at once — the guy who can check into the perfect play on one snap and turn a busted one into magic on the next. Even when his receivers were still figuring things out earlier in the year, he was protecting the ball, manipulating defenses with his eyes, and manufacturing explosive plays without forcing it.
Over the last few weeks, things have started to look more like the version of the Chiefs we’re used to seeing. The formations make sense again, the middle-of-the-field throws are back on schedule, and that scramble-drill connection with his receivers has tightened up. When Kansas City needs a drive, it still feels inevitable — and that says everything you need to know about his value.
And just to make life harder for everyone else on this list, Mahomes has done all this without his top weapon. Rashee Rice coming back this week should inject some instant juice into the offense and give them the underneath option they’ve desperately needed. He’s sitting at four on my ballot now, but if history’s any indicator, give it a month — he’ll probably be right back at the top.
The Voter Reality
Voter fatigue is real — “another year of Mahomes being awesome” just doesn’t sound exciting anymore, and that’s kind of the problem. He’s been so consistently great for so long that people almost take it for granted.
But the production is there — the numbers stack up, the wins keep coming, and he’s still doing more for his team than anyone not named Baker. If Kansas City keeps racking up victories and he stays near the top in total touchdowns with a clean turnover sheet, voters might not have a choice but to shrug and say, “Yeah, it’s Mahomes again.”
5) Sam Darnold — Seattle Seahawks
Sometimes MVP arguments aren’t about flash — they’re about being quietly, relentlessly right. That’s Darnold right now. He’s not out there trying to play hero ball; he’s just running the offense exactly how it’s supposed to be run and doing it at an elite level.
Seattle isn’t asking him to be a magician; they’re asking him to take what’s there and punish defenses when they make mistakes. And he’s doing it with surgical precision. He’s third in the league in passing yards, third in passer rating, and first in yards per attempt.
You can feel the confidence building every week. The coaching staff’s calling deeper concepts earlier in downs, knowing he’ll either take the 50/50 shot outside or work the high‑low underneath. When teams try to take away the go‑ball, he doesn’t force it — he lives on outbreakers that keep the offense humming. It’s not always highlight‑reel football, but it’s grown‑man quarterbacking — the kind of steady excellence that wins over a locker room before it wins over voters.
The Skeleton of the Breakout
Timing with JSN and the seam game. The ball’s out before the break — that’s chemistry and trust, built fast for a guy in his first year in Seattle. But it's a lot like what we saw last season in Minnesota, where Darnold’s timing and anticipation were off the charts. You can tell he brought that same approach here, meshing quickly with Jaxon Smith-Njigba and mastering the seam game that gives this offense its rhythm.
Pocket courage. He’s hanging in to deliver layered throws instead of bailing at the first hint of color. He’s seeing pressure better and trusting his protection more, something he struggled with early in his career.
Selective aggression. He’ll take the layup on first down, then come back and hunt one on second-and-short, the same blend of confidence and patience that made his 2024 season so impressive. The numbers prove it: over 4,300 yards, 35 touchdowns, and a 102.5 rating last year—and now he’s somehow improved on that efficiency in a new uniform. That’s what makes this run special. He’s not reinventing himself; he’s building on the foundation of the best football he’s ever played.
The Clutch Gene Isn't There Yet
He’s still writing the clutch chapter, and right now it’s got a couple of pages he’d probably like to tear out. An interception two minutes into a game doesn’t carry the same weight as one with two minutes left — and that’s the part he’s still learning to master.
Those two big late turnovers this season have stung because they flipped momentum right when Seattle needed calm. He’s got to start finding ways to finish strong, to handle the pressure without letting it snowball. If he starts closing out games the way he manages the first 58 minutes, this quiet rise could turn into a full-on top‑three run before this thing's said and done.
Honorable Mentions
Josh Allen — Buffalo Bills
Josh Allen’s still really good — no one’s denying that. He’s got that same rocket arm, that same ability to flip a game in one throw, and the Bills still go as he goes. But he doesn’t have the gaudy stat line this year, and that matters when the field is this crowded.
He’s middle of the pack in passing yards, hasn’t been quite as explosive through the air, and the last two losses made it hard for me to wedge him into the top five just because of his name.
The ceiling’s still outer space — no one manufactures explosive touchdowns both on schedule and off script quite like Allen — but the turnovers crept back and Buffalo’s offense hit a choppy patch against pressure. He’s not far off the pace, but the reality is that unless the season is flawless, voters rarely hand out back‑to‑back MVPs.
Dak Prescott — Dallas Cowboys
The stat case for Dak is legit — volume, accuracy, and stretches of football where he’s looked like a guy playing darts with a rocket launcher. He’s put up MVP‑level numbers, no question.
The problem is, the team just isn’t good enough right now. That’s not on him; it’s on a defense that’s been a weekly rollercoaster. Fair or not, MVP voters treat sub‑.500 stretches like a bouncer at the velvet rope, and it’s tough to get in when your defense keeps letting everyone else score.
If Dallas can start stacking wins and the defense stops bleeding yards, Dak moves from honorable mention to an actual spot in the MVP conversation in no time.
Two‑Parter: Daniel Jones and Jonathan Taylor — Indianapolis Colts
Both of them deserve real credit — Jones has been the steady hand, showing controlled aggression and timely scrambles, while Taylor’s back to his old self, punishing bad run fits and ripping off chunk plays like clockwork. They both absolutely belong in the MVP conversation on their own merits.
But history hasn’t been kind to teammates sharing the spotlight. When two players on the same team are both cooking, voters tend to split the credit — and the votes. One guy’s success becomes the reason for the other’s, and before long, they cancel each other out. It’s not a knock on either of them; it’s just how this award always seems to work.
All stats courtesy of NFL Pro.