American football player (born 2000)
American football player
Jayden Daniels Daniels in 2024
Position: Quarterback Born: (2000-12-18 ) December 18, 2000 (age 24) Fontana, California, U.S.Height: 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) Weight: 210 lb (95 kg) High school: Cajon (San Bernardino, California) College: Arizona State (2019–2021) LSU (2022–2023) NFL draft: 2024: 1st round, 2nd pick
Washington Commanders (2024–present)
Roster status: Active
NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year[ a] (2024)
Pro Bowl (2024)
Heisman Trophy (2023)
Walter Camp Award (2023)
College Football Player of the Year[ b] (2023)
SEC Male Athlete of the Year (2024)
Davey O'Brien Award (2023)
Manning Award (2023)
Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award (2023)
Consensus All-American (2023)
First-team All-SEC (2023)
Passing attempts: 480 Passing completions: 331 Completion percentage: 69.0% TD–INT: 25–9 Passing yards: 3,568 Passer rating: 100.1 Rushing yards: 891 Rushing TDs: 6 Stats at Pro Football Reference
Jayden Daniels (born December 18, 2000) is an American professional football quarterback for the Washington Commanders of the National Football League (NFL). Daniels played three seasons of college football for the Arizona State Sun Devils (2019–2021) and two with the LSU Tigers (2022–2023). Using a dual-threat playstyle, he won the 2023 Heisman Trophy among other college football player of the year awards with 50 total touchdowns and nearly 5,000 total yards.
Daniels was selected by the Commanders with the second overall pick in the 2024 NFL draft. His rookie season is regarded among the greatest in NFL history, with him named Offensive Rookie of the Year after setting the rookie quarterback record for rushing yards in a season and leading the Commanders to their most wins in a season and first NFC Championship Game appearance since 1991. The season also saw Daniels win a game off a Hail Mary play known as the Hail Maryland.
Early life [ edit ]
Daniels at the 2019 Under Armour High School All-America Game
Daniels was born on December 18, 2000, in Fontana, California, and raised in nearby San Bernardino.[ 1] [ 2] He began playing flag football at the age of five and tackle football by seven, briefly playing the cornerback position before moving to quarterback.[ 1] [ 3] He also ran track and played basketball and soccer as a youth before starting his freshman year at Cajon High School in 2015.[ 4] [ 5] Daniels, initially needing a medical note to play due to being considered undersized for the position at 125 pounds (57 kilograms), started on Cajon's varsity team as a freshman. He led the team to the CIF Southern Section (CIF-SS) Inland Division playoffs that year before being eliminated in the semifinals.[ 1] [ 6]
In the first game of his 2016 sophomore season, Daniels broke the little finger of his right throwing hand attempting to recover a fumble but played the rest of the season.[ 7] He set a state record in 2017 with over 6,400 total yards during his junior season, leading Cajon to a Citrus Belt League (CBL) championship and an appearance in the Division 2-AA state finals.[ 8] [ 9] He led Cajon to another CBL championship as a senior in 2018 and an appearance in the CIF-SS Division 3 championship.[ 10] He was named the men's recipient of the Ken Hubbs Award, given annually the top high school athletes in the greater San Bernardino area, following the season.[ 11]
He played 53 games at Cajon and set CIF-SS records with 210 touchdowns[ c] and over 17,600 total yards.[ d] [ 8] [ 11] Daniels also participated in hurdling and the 100-meters, 200-meters, 400-meters, and 4 × 100-meters relay sprints at the school.[ 4] [ 12] He participated in the 2018 Elite 11 quarterback skills competition, sitting out of the finals due to a practice injury, and passed for a game-winning touchdown in the 2019 Under Armour High School All-America Game.[ 13] [ 14] Daniels was ranked a four-star prospect and the top dual-threat quarterback of his class by college recruiting website 247Sports and received 25 college football scholarship offers before choosing the Sun Devils of Arizona State University (ASU) in December 2018.[ 8] [ 15] He graduated from Cajon and enrolled at ASU in January 2019.[ 8]
College career [ edit ]
Arizona State (2019–2021)[ edit ]
Daniels (center ) with the Arizona State Sun Devils playing against the Oregon Ducks in 2019
Daniels was named the starter for the 2019 season after winning a quarterback competition against Joey Yellen in the offseason. He was the first Sun Devils freshman quarterback to start opening week.[ 16] [ 17] He suffered a minor knee injury against the UCLA Bruins and missed the following game.[ 18] Daniels earned player of the week honors after passing for 408 yards and three touchdowns in an upset win against the Oregon Ducks.[ 19] He was named the most valuable player of the 2019 Sun Bowl in a win over the Florida State Seminoles.[ 20] Daniels set the Sun Devils' freshman total-yards record and was named a semifinalist for the Football Writers Association of America freshman of the year award.[ 21] [ 22]
In the 2020 season, Daniels and the Sun Devils played only four games because of the COVID-19 pandemic.[ 23] He led the Pac-12 in completion percentage (65.4) the following season and the team to an appearance in the 2021 Las Vegas Bowl.[ 24] [ 25] After the season, several of the team's coaches were fired after an NCAA investigation into COVID-related recruiting violations. Daniels entered the transfer portal in February 2022.[ 26] His mother Regina was later implicated in helping arrange unofficial visits for recruits by paying for flight tickets.[ 27]
LSU (2022–2023)[ edit ]
Daniels won the Heisman Trophy with the LSU Tigers in 2023 after accounting for 50 touchdowns and nearly 5,000 total yards.
Daniels transferred to Louisiana State University (LSU) to play for the Tigers in March 2022.[ 28] He beat out Garrett Nussmeier and was named the starter for the 2022 season opener.[ 29] He led the Tigers to an appearance in the 2022 SEC Championship Game against the Georgia Bulldogs.[ 30] Daniels, playing on a sprained ankle, left the game after being sacked by Jalen Carter late in the second quarter.[ 30] [ 31] He returned for the 2023 Citrus Bowl, catching a touchdown pass thrown by wide receiver Malik Nabers in a 63–7 win over the Purdue Boilermakers.[ 32] Daniels was named a semifinalist for the Davey O'Brien Award and voted the team's most valuable player after accounting for 28 touchdowns and nearly 3,800 total yards.[ 33] [ 34]
Daniels was named a team captain for the 2023 season.[ 35] In a game against the Alabama Crimson Tide, he sustained a concussion from a hit by Dallas Turner.[ 36] Daniels returned the following week against the Florida Gators, becoming the first player in Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) history to have 350 passing and 200 rushing yards in a game.[ 37] He tied another SEC record a week later against the Georgia State Panthers with eight touchdowns.[ 38]
For the season, Daniels threw for 40 touchdowns and rushed for 10, led the NCAA with nearly 5,000 total yards, and set the FBS single-season passer rating record. His performance earned him the 2023 Heisman Trophy among other college football player of the year awards, making him the third LSU player to win the Heisman behind Billy Cannon in 1959 and Joe Burrow in 2019.[ 39] Daniels sat out of the 2024 ReliaQuest Bowl in January to prepare for the NFL draft.[ 40] He played 55 career games in college, finishing top ten in FBS history with 16,000 total yards and the only with 12,000 passing yards and 3,000 rushing yards.[ 41]
Statistics [ edit ]
See also: Arizona State and LSU football statistical leaders
College statistics
Year
Team
Games
Passing
Rushing
Total
GP
Record
Cmp
Att
Pct
Yds
Avg
TD
Int
Rtg
Att
Yds
Avg
TD
Yds
TD
2019
Arizona State
12
8–4
205
338
60.7
2,943
8.7
17
2
149.2
125
355
2.8
3
3,298
20
2020
Arizona State
4
2–2
49
84
58.3
701
8.3
5
1
145.7
33
223
6.8
4
924
9
2021
Arizona State
13
8–5
197
301
65.4
2,380
7.9
10
10
136.2
138
710
5.1
6
3,090
16
2022
LSU
14
10–4
266
388
68.6
2,913
7.5
17
3
144.5
186
885
4.8
11
3,798
28
2023
LSU
12
9–3
236
327
72.2
3,812
11.7
40
4
208.0
135
1,134
8.4
10
4,946
50
Career[ 42]
55
37–18
953
1,438
66.3
12,749
8.9
89
20
158.4
617
3,307
5.4
34
16,056
123
Professional career [ edit ]
Pre-draft measurables
Height
Weight
Arm length
Hand span
6 ft 3+ 5 ⁄8 in (1.92 m)
210 lb (95 kg)
32+ 1 ⁄2 in (0.83 m)
9+ 3 ⁄8 in (0.24 m)
Values from LSU's Pro Day[ 43] [ 44]
Washington Commanders [ edit ]
See also: 2024 Washington Commanders season
Daniels in his first game with the Washington Commanders in 2024. That season, he set the NFL record for most rushing yards by a rookie quarterback.
Daniels was selected second overall by the Washington Commanders in the 2024 NFL draft.[ 45] He was the second of six quarterbacks (QB) taken in the first round, tying the 1983 draft for the most in NFL history.[ 46] In the offseason, Daniels and former LSU teammate Malik Nabers received training from the league on its gambling policy for proposing a friendly $10,000 bet on who would be named Offensive Rookie of the Year.[ 47] [ 48] He acquired uniform number 5 in a deal with Tress Way, who had worn it with the team since 2014.[ 49] Daniels signed his four-year rookie contract, worth $37.75 million fully guaranteed, on June 14, 2024.[ 50] He was named the Commanders' starting quarterback by the end of training camp.[ 51]
Daniels scored two touchdowns against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in his NFL debut, with his first win occurring the following week against the New York Giants.[ 52] [ 53] In September, he set the NFL rookie completion percentage record (91.3%) against the Cincinnati Bengals on Monday Night Football and was named Offensive Rookie of the Month after completing the highest percentage of passes (82.1%) over a four-game span in NFL history.[ 54] [ 55] Daniels suffered a rib cartilage injury on the opening drive against the Carolina Panthers in October, sitting out the remainder of the game.[ 56] He returned the following week against the Chicago Bears, throwing a game-winning 52-yard Hail Mary pass as time expired to wide receiver Noah Brown on a play known as the Hail Maryland.[ 57]
Daniels finished the regular season with the most rushing yards (891), highest points per game (28.5), and highest completion percentage (69%) by a rookie quarterback in NFL history.[ e] [ 58] [ 59] He also had a rookie-record 12 touchdown passes in the fourth quarter or overtime during the season, with five of them occurring in the final 30 seconds or overtime being the most by any player since 1970.[ 60] The Commanders finished with a regular season record of 12–5 , their best since 1991, with Daniels selected to the 2025 Pro Bowl Games.[ 61] Entering the 2024–25 playoffs as the sixth-seed, the Commanders had their first postseason win in nearly two decades in games over the Buccaneers and Detroit Lions before being eliminated by the Philadelphia Eagles in the NFC Championship Game.[ 62] [ 63] With 14 total wins on the season, Daniels tied Ben Roethlisberger for the most in a season by a starting rookie quarterback while having the most passing yards, passing touchdowns, and rushing yards by a rookie quarterback in the playoffs.[ 64] [ 65] His season is regarded among the greatest by a rookie in NFL history,[ 66] [ 67] [ 68] [ 69] with him named the Offensive Rookie of the Year and finishing seventh in NFL MVP voting.[ 70]
Statistics [ edit ]
Regular season statistics
Year
Team
Games
Passing
Rushing
Total
Fumbles
GP
GS
Record
Cmp
Att
Pct
Yds
Y/G
Lng
TD
Int
Sck
Rtg
Att
Yds
Avg
Y/G
Lng
TD
Yds
TD
Fum
Lost
2024
WAS
17
17
12−5
331
480
69.0
3,568
209.9
86
25
9
47
100.1
148
891
6.0
52.4
46
6
4,459
31
5
0
Career[ 71]
17
17
12−5
331
480
69.0
3,568
209.9
86
25
9
47
100.1
148
891
6.0
52.4
46
6
4,459
31
5
0
Postseason statistics
Year
Team
Games
Passing
Rushing
Total
Fumbles
GP
GS
Record
Cmp
Att
Pct
Yds
Y/G
Lng
TD
Int
Sck
Rtg
Att
Yds
Avg
Y/G
Lng
TD
Yds
TD
Fum
Lost
2024
WAS
3
3
2−1
75
114
65.8
822
274.0
58
5
1
4
97.9
35
135
3.9
45.0
19
1
957
6
0
0
Career[ 72]
3
3
2−1
75
114
65.8
822
274.0
58
5
1
4
97.9
35
135
3.9
45.0
19
1
957
6
0
0
Awards and highlights [ edit ]
Daniels is the only college football player to pass for 350 yards and rush for 200 in the same game, doing so against the Florida Gators in 2023.
College [ edit ]
Awards
Heisman Trophy (2023)[ 39]
Walter Camp Award (2023)[ 73]
AP College Football Player of the Year (2023)[ 74]
Sporting News College Football Player of the Year (2023)[ 75]
Davey O'Brien Award (2023)[ 76]
Manning Award (2023)[ 77]
Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award (2023)[ 78]
Consensus All-American (2023)[ 79]
SEC Male Athlete of the Year (2024)[ 80]
SEC Offensive Player of the Year (2023)[ 81]
Best College Athlete, Men's Sports (2024 ESPYs)[ 82]
First-team All-SEC (2023)[ 83]
2022 LSU Tigers MVP[ f] [ 33]
2019 Sun Bowl MVP[ 20]
7× SEC Offensive Player of the Week[ g] [ 84]
2× Pac-12 Offensive Player of the Week[ h] [ 19] [ 85]
Records
FBS single-season passer rating record: 208.0 (2023)[ 39]
Only FBS player with 12,000 passing and 3,000 career rushing yards[ 41]
Only FBS player with 350 yards passing and 200 yards rushing in a game[ 37]
SEC single-game touchdowns: 8; tied with Joe Burrow (2023)[ 38]
SEC single-game total yards: 606 (2023)[ 37]
LSU career quarterback rushing yards: 2,019[ 84]
LSU single-season total yards: 4,946 (2023)[ 84]
LSU single-season quarterback rushing yards: 1,134 (2023)[ 84]
LSU single-season quarterback rushing touchdowns: 11 (2022)[ 84]
Arizona State freshman passing yards: 2,943 (2019)[ 21]
NFL [ edit ]
Awards
Offensive Rookie of the Year (2024: AP[ 86] • PWFA[ 87] • The Sporting News [ 88] • Pepsi[ 89] )
Pro Bowl (2024)[ 61]
NFC Offensive Player of the Week (2024: Week 3[ 55] )
Offensive Rookie of the Month (September 2024)[ 54]
Rookie records
Most wins in a season: 14; tied with Ben Roethlisberger[ i] [ 64]
Quarterback rushing yards in a season: 891[ 59]
Completion percentage in a season: 69%[ 58]
Most Rookie of the Week awards in a season: 11[ j] [ 90]
Postseason passing yards: 822[ 65]
Postseason passing touchdowns: 5[ 65]
Postseason rushing yards: 135[ 65]
Single-game completion percentage: 91.3%[ k] [ 91]
Commanders rookie total yards: 4,459[ 92]
Commanders rookie passing yards: 3,568[ 92]
Player profile [ edit ]
Daniels is considered a dual-threat quarterback for his vision and accuracy as a passer and his speed and ability to evade defenders as a runner,[ 4] [ 93] [ 94] with his style of play compared to Lamar Jackson and Randall Cunningham.[ 95] [ 96] His calm demeanor and composure, particularly in late-game situations, are also regarded as strengths.[ 97] [ 98] [ 99] Daniels' physique is described as "slender" and "lanky" at 6 feet 4 inches (1.93 metres) tall and weighing around 210 pounds (95 kilograms).[ 7] [ 93] [ 98] He cites Kobe Bryant, Michael Vick, Donovan McNabb, and Reggie Bush as early inspirations, choosing 5 as his uniform number after McNabb and Bush.[ 3] [ 100] [ 101] Daniels uses virtual reality (VR) as part of his training, using software designed by German developer Cognilize that incorporates custom game plans and allows for speed adjustments and opposing players, teams, and their stadiums to be represented.[ 102] [ 103] He began the practice at LSU in 2023 and continued to use the technology in the NFL.[ 104] Daniels warms up before games with a basketball; he learned the routine from childhood friend and fellow NFL quarterback C. J. Stroud and cites it as helpful preparation as footballs feel smaller and lighter afterwards.[ 100]
Personal life [ edit ]
Daniels' mother Regina Jackson in 2024
Daniels was born to Javon "Jay " Daniels , who was a college football cornerback for the Washington Huskies and Iowa State Cyclones in the late 1990s, and Regina Jackson , who became an NFLPA-certified agent in 2024.[ 105] [ 106] He has an older sister named Bianca.[ 105] Daniels' paternal grandparents died of COVID-19 in early 2021.[ 107] He is Christian and is open about his faith.[ 108] [ 109]
Daniels earned an undergraduate degree from Arizona State in December 2021 and pursued a Master of Liberal Arts degree at LSU.[ 5] [ 110] [ 111] In college, he signed name, image, and likeness (NIL) deals with Raising Cane's, Powerade, Beats by Dre, and Urban Outfitters.[ 112] [ 113] [ 114] Daniels was featured on The Money Game: LSU , a six-part NIL-focused docuseries by Prime Video that followed him, Angel Reese, Flau'jae Johnson, Livvy Dunne, Alia Armstrong, and Trace Young through LSU's 2023–24 sports season.[ 115] [ 116] He signed an apparel and footwear deal with Nike in April 2024.[ 117] [ 118]
San Bernardino mayor Helen Tran declared January 20, 2024, "Jayden Daniels Day" and presented him with the key to the city; Cajon High School's football stadium was also renamed after Daniels.[ 119] He threw the ceremonial first pitch at a Washington Nationals baseball game in June 2024.[ 120] The following month Daniels, alongside Dunne and Lil Wayne, presented the Best Play Award to Lamar Jackson at the 2024 ESPYs.[ 82]
Notes [ edit ]
^ AP • PFWA • Sporting News
^ AP • Sporting News
^ 170 passing and 40 rushing
^ 14,007 passing and 3,635 rushing
^ Minimum 100 attempts and seven starts
^ Officially called the Charles McClendon Most Valuable Player Award
^ 2022 Week 8, 10; 2023 Week 3, 4, 6, 11, 12
^ 2019 Week 13; 2021 Week 5
^ 12 regular season and 2 playoff wins
^ Weeks 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 13, 15, 16, and 17
^ Minimum of 20 attempts. Also a Commanders franchise record.
References [ edit ]
^ a b c Fortier, Sam (September 6, 2024). "Is Jayden Daniels the one?" . The Washington Post . Retrieved September 6, 2024 .
^ Cruz, Rene Ray De La (January 24, 2025). "San Bernardino County-born quarterback Jayden Daniels one win away from Super Bowl LIX" . Daily Press . Retrieved March 30, 2025 .
^ a b Rabino, Hod (July 20, 2019). "In My Own Words: Jayden Daniels" . ASUDevils.com . Rivals.com. Archived from the original on December 29, 2024. Retrieved December 29, 2024 .
^ a b c Alexander, Wilson (December 5, 2023). "An LSU quarterback has never run like Jayden Daniels. Here's what sets him apart" . NOLA.com . The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate. Archived from the original on May 7, 2024. Retrieved May 7, 2024 .
^ a b Brugler, Dane. "The Beast: 2024 NFL Draft Guide" (PDF) . The Athletic . p. 6. Archived (PDF) from the original on April 11, 2024. Retrieved April 14, 2024 .
^ Rizk, Gabriel (November 27, 2015). "CIF FOOTBALL: Heritage controls Cajon in 24-15 semifinal win" . The Press-Enterprise . Retrieved September 7, 2024 .
^ a b Fortier, Sam (August 20, 2024). "Will Jayden Daniels protect himself? The Commanders are counting on it" . The Washington Post . Retrieved August 20, 2024 .
^ a b c d Gardner, Michelle (December 13, 2018). "Jayden Daniels picks Sun Devils over offers from Alabama, Ohio State, Georgia and dozens of others" . The Arizona Republic . Archived from the original on May 6, 2024. Retrieved June 5, 2024 .
^ Sabedra, Darren (December 15, 2017). "State champs! Serra beats Cajon, wins Division 2-AA crown" . The Mercury News . Archived from the original on August 20, 2024. Retrieved August 20, 2024 .
^ Robin, Brian (November 23, 2018). "Cajon football falls to Sierra Canyon in CIF-SS Division 3 title game" . The San Bernardino Sun . Retrieved August 20, 2024 .
^ a b Murphy, John (May 21, 2019). "Cajon's Daniels, Grand Terrace's Flores win Ken Hubbs awards" . The San Bernardino Sun . Archived from the original on April 29, 2024. Retrieved April 14, 2024 .
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^ Stampini, Luke (July 3, 2018). "247Sports' final ranking of the Elite 11 QBs" . 247Sports . Archived from the original on November 10, 2021. Retrieved June 5, 2024 .
^ "ASU signee Jayden Daniels steals the show at Under Armour All-America Game" . The Arizona Republic . January 4, 2019. Archived from the original on December 12, 2023. Retrieved May 27, 2024 . He finished 9 of 13 for 101 yards, and his second touchdown pass was the winning score and elevated him to the top perch for the week.
^ "Jayden Daniels recruiting profile" . 247Sports . Archived from the original on April 29, 2024. Retrieved June 5, 2024 .
^ Karpman, Chris (August 12, 2019). "True freshman Jayden Daniels wins QB job for Sun Devils" . 247Sports . Archived from the original on May 28, 2024. Retrieved May 22, 2024 .
^ Bonagura, Kyle (August 13, 2019). "ASU names true freshman Daniels starting QB" . ESPN . Retrieved January 25, 2025 .
^ Gardner, Michelle (November 11, 2019). "ASU quarterback Jayden Daniels' status against Oregon State still undecided" . The Arizona Republic . Archived from the original on May 22, 2024. Retrieved May 22, 2024 .
^ a b Layman, Matt (November 25, 2019). "ASU's Jayden Daniels earns 2 Pac-12 honors after win over Oregon" . Arizona Sports . KTAR-FM. Archived from the original on September 29, 2023. Retrieved November 14, 2023 .
^ a b Bloomquist, Bret (December 31, 2019). "ASU quarterback Daniels wins Sun Bowl MVP award" . El Paso Times . Archived from the original on September 19, 2020. Retrieved January 1, 2020 .
^ a b Anderson, Jake (January 4, 2020). "By the numbers: Arizona State QB Jayden Daniels' freshman season" . Arizona Sports . KTAR-FM. Archived from the original on September 29, 2023. Retrieved November 14, 2023 .
^ "Jayden Daniels Named Semifinalist for FWAA's Shaun Alexander Freshman of the Year Award" . thesundevils.com . December 23, 2019. Archived from the original on May 6, 2024. Retrieved May 6, 2024 .
^ "ASU ends season at Oregon State, says it won't participate in a bowl game" . Arizona Sports . December 20, 2020. Retrieved December 20, 2020 .
^ WDSU Digital Team (March 6, 2022). "LSU football adds transfer Jayden Daniels to 2022 roster" . WDSU . Archived from the original on May 6, 2024. Retrieved May 6, 2024 .
^ "Allen, Wisconsin hold off Arizona State in Las Vegas Bowl" . ESPN . Associated Press. Archived from the original on May 5, 2024. Retrieved May 5, 2024 .
^ Sallee, Barrett (February 17, 2022). "Jayden Daniels enters transfer portal: Arizona State's star QB to explore options, per report" . CBS Sports . Archived from the original on December 12, 2023. Retrieved May 29, 2024 .
^ Gardner, Michelle (October 3, 2024). "Mother of Commanders QB Jayden Daniels implicated in ASU recruiting scandal" . USA Today . Retrieved October 12, 2024 .
^ Nagy, Zack (April 10, 2022). "LSU QB Jayden Daniels Says Transferring "Best Thing I Could've Done" " . Sports Illustrated . Archived from the original on May 5, 2024. Retrieved November 12, 2023 .
^ Sallee, Barrett (September 4, 2022). "Jayden Daniels wins LSU QB job: Arizona State transfer to start for Tigers in season opener, per reports" . CBS Sports . Archived from the original on May 25, 2023. Retrieved May 5, 2024 .
^ a b Wolk, Benjamin (July 17, 2023). "Brian Kelly, LSU players explain what was learned from SEC title loss and what it takes to close gap on UGA" . 247sports . Archived from the original on May 28, 2024. Retrieved May 5, 2024 .
^ Scarborough, Alex (November 27, 2022). "LSU QB Jayden Daniels in walking boot, but avoided serious ankle sprain" . ESPN . Archived from the original on May 22, 2024. Retrieved May 22, 2024 .
^ Murschel, Matt (January 2, 2023). "LSU dominates Purdue 63-7 to claim Citrus Bowl win" . Chicago Tribune . Archived from the original on May 5, 2024. Retrieved May 5, 2024 .
^ a b "Daniels Named Football MVP at Annual Awards Show" . LSU Sports . December 12, 2022. Archived from the original on September 30, 2023. Retrieved April 14, 2024 .
^ "Daniels Among 21 Semifinalists for Davey O'Brien Award" . LSUSports.net . LSU Tigers. November 15, 2022. Archived from the original on May 5, 2024. Retrieved May 5, 2024 .
^ Nettuno, Tyler (August 29, 2023). "LSU names team captains for the 2023 season" . LSU Wire . USA Today. Archived from the original on June 4, 2024. Retrieved June 4, 2024 .
^ "Jayden Daniels in concussion protocol after exiting LSU loss" . ESPN . Associated Press. November 5, 2023. Archived from the original on May 22, 2024. Retrieved May 22, 2024 .
^ a b c "Jayden Daniels makes history with 606 yards, 5 TDs in LSU win" . ESPN . Associated Press. November 12, 2023. Archived from the original on July 21, 2024. Retrieved July 20, 2024 .
^ a b Nettuno, Tyler (November 18, 2023). "Jayden Daniels matches SEC touchdowns record in big LSU win over Georgia State" . LSU Tigers Wire . USA Today. Archived from the original on July 21, 2024. Retrieved July 20, 2024 .
^ a b c Alexander, Wilson (December 9, 2023). "Jayden Daniels claims the Heisman Trophy, becoming 3rd winner in LSU history" . NOLA.com . The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate. Archived from the original on May 13, 2024. Retrieved May 13, 2024 .
^ Rittenberg, Adam (December 18, 2023). "LSU's Jayden Daniels to enter NFL draft, skip bowl game" . ESPN . Archived from the original on January 8, 2024. Retrieved January 8, 2024 .
^ a b "Jayden Daniels is the first player ever to achieve these passing and rushing milestones" . NOLA.com . The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate. November 11, 2023. Archived from the original on April 29, 2024. Retrieved April 14, 2024 .
^ "Jayden Daniels" . College Football Reference . Sports Reference. Retrieved October 7, 2024 .
^ Edholm, Eric (March 27, 2024). "2024 NFL Draft: What We Learned from LSU's pro day" . NFL.com . Archived from the original on March 28, 2024. Retrieved March 27, 2024 .
^ "2024 LSU Football Pro Day" . LSUSports.net . LSU Tigers. March 25, 2024. Archived from the original on May 28, 2024. Retrieved March 27, 2024 .
^ Keim, John (April 25, 2024). "Jayden Daniels to Commanders with No. 2 pick in NFL draft" . ESPN . Archived from the original on April 26, 2024. Retrieved April 26, 2024 .
^ Alper, Josh (April 25, 2024). "Six quarterbacks in first round ties NFL record" . Pro Football Talk . Archived from the original on April 30, 2024. Retrieved April 30, 2024 .
^ Maske, Mark (August 22, 2024). "Jayden Daniels, Malik Nabers given multiple sessions on NFL gambling rules" . The Washington Post . Retrieved August 26, 2024 .
^ Stapleton, Art (September 13, 2024). "From teammates to rivals: Malik Nabers, Jayden Daniels cherish bond as 'brothers for life' " . NorthJersey.com . North Jersey Media Group. Archived from the original on September 20, 2024. Retrieved September 13, 2024 .
^ Keim, John (May 9, 2024). "Commanders' Tress Way gifts No. 5 jersey to Jayden Daniels" . ESPN . Archived from the original on September 1, 2024. Retrieved September 1, 2024 .
^ Gonzales, Christian (June 14, 2024). "Commanders sign QB Jayden Daniels, No. 2 overall pick, to rookie contract" . NFL.com . Archived from the original on June 14, 2024. Retrieved June 14, 2024 .
^ Pereles, Zachary (August 19, 2024). "Commanders' Jayden Daniels named starting QB for Week 1 vs. Buccaneers; how top draft pick earned No. 1 job" . CBS Sports . Retrieved August 19, 2024 .
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^ Bonnette, Michael (July 9, 2024). "Jayden Daniels Named SEC Male Athlete of the Year" . lsusports.net . Archived from the original on July 11, 2024. Retrieved July 11, 2024 .
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^ "Daniels PFWA Rookie and Offensive Rookie of the Year, Verse Defensive Rookie of the Year; 2024 All-Rookie Team named" . Pro Football Writers of America . January 21, 2025. Retrieved January 21, 2025 .
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^ Gardner, Michelle (March 6, 2022). "Former Arizona State quarterback Jayden Daniels headed to LSU" . Arizona Republic . Archived from the original on May 28, 2024. Retrieved April 14, 2024 .
^ "August 2022 CCACSA Student-Athletes of the Month" . LSU Sports . August 4, 2022. Archived from the original on April 30, 2024. Retrieved April 14, 2024 .
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^ Darcey, Reed; Riley, Koki; Rabalais, Scott (September 11, 2024). "Amazon released 'The Money Game' docuseries about LSU and NIL. Here are the main takeaways" . NOLA.com . The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate. Retrieved September 14, 2024 .
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^ Gaydos, Ryan (June 9, 2024). "Commanders' Jayden Daniels' ceremonial first pitch goes awry before Nationals game" . Fox Sports . Archived from the original on July 8, 2024. Retrieved July 9, 2024 .
External links [ edit ]
Washington Commanders roster
Active
0 Mike Sainristil
1 Deebo Samuel
2 Marshon Lattimore
4 Frankie Luvu
5 Jayden Daniels
8 Brian Robinson Jr.
10 Tress Way
11 Luke McCaffrey
13 K. J. Osborn
15 Sam Hartman
17 Terry McLaurin
18 Marcus Mariota
19 Chris Moore
20 Quan Martin
26 Jeremy McNichols
30 Austin Ekeler
31 Kazmeir Allen
34 Michael Wiley
35 Percy Butler
36 Chris Rodriguez Jr.
37 Bobby Price
38 Kevon Seymour
39 Jeremy Reaves
40 Tyler Owens
41 Colson Yankoff
45 Dominique Hampton
47 Zane Gonzalez
48 Ben Nikkel
50 Andre Jones Jr.
51 Bobby Hart
54 Bobby Wagner
57 Nick Bellore
58 Jordan Magee
60 Michael Deiter
61 Julian Good-Jones
63 Tyler Biadasz
64 Sheldon Day
67 Nick Allegretti
69 Tyler Ott
71 Andrew Wylie
72 Viliami Fehoko
73 Trent Scott
74 Brandon Coleman
75 Chris Paul
76 Sam Cosmi
78 Laremy Tunsil
82 Ben Sinnott
83 Tyree Jackson
85 Noah Brown
86 Zach Ertz
87 John Bates
88 Cole Turner
90 Javontae Jean-Baptiste
92 Dorance Armstrong
94 Daron Payne
95 Jer'Zhan Newton
96 Jalyn Holmes
99 Clelin Ferrell
-- Lawrence Cager
-- Anim Dankwah
-- Demetric Felton
-- Michael Gallup
-- Allan George
-- Eddie Goldman
-- Will Harris
-- Nate Herbig
-- Noah Igbinoghene
-- Josh Johnson
-- Jonathan Jones
-- Javon Kinlaw
-- T. J. Maguranyanga (Int. )
-- Jacob Martin
-- Norell Pollard
-- Foster Sarell
-- Mike Strachan
-- Deatrich Wise Jr.
Links to related articles
AP NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year winners
1967: Farr
1968: McCullouch
1969: Hill
1970: Shaw
1971: Brockington
1972: Harris
1973: Foreman
1974: Woods
1975: M. Thomas
1976: White
1977: Dorsett
1978: Campbell
1979: O. Anderson
1980: Sims
1981: Rogers
1982: Allen
1983: Dickerson
1984: Lipps
1985: Brown
1986: Mayes
1987: Stradford
1988: Stephens
1989: Sanders
1990: Smith
1991: Russell
1992: Pickens
1993: Bettis
1994: Faulk
1995: Martin
1996: George
1997: Dunn
1998: Moss
1999: James
2000: M. Anderson
2001: A. Thomas
2002: Portis
2003: Boldin
2004: Roethlisberger
2005: Williams
2006: Young
2007: Peterson
2008: Ryan
2009: Harvin
2010: Bradford
2011: Newton
2012: Griffin III
2013: Lacy
2014: Beckham Jr.
2015: Gurley
2016: Prescott
2017: Kamara
2018: Barkley
2019: Murray
2020: Herbert
2021: Chase
2022: Wilson
2023: Stroud
2024: Daniels
Heisman Trophy winners
1935: Berwanger
1936: Kelley
1937: Frank
1938: O'Brien
1939: Kinnick
1940: Harmon
1941: B. Smith
1942: Sinkwich
1943: Bertelli
1944: Horvath
1945: Blanchard
1946: G. Davis
1947: Lujack
1948: D. Walker
1949: Hart
1950: Janowicz
1951: Kazmaier
1952: Vessels
1953: Lattner
1954: Ameche
1955: Cassady
1956: Hornung
1957: Crow
1958: Dawkins
1959: Cannon
1960: Bellino
1961: E. Davis
1962: Baker
1963: Staubach
1964: Huarte
1965: Garrett
1966: Spurrier
1967: Beban
1968: Simpson
1969: Owens
1970: Plunkett
1971: Sullivan
1972: Rodgers
1973: Cappelletti
1974: A. Griffin
1975: A. Griffin
1976: Dorsett
1977: Campbell
1978: Sims
1979: C. White
1980: Rogers
1981: Allen
1982: H. Walker
1983: Rozier
1984: Flutie
1985: B. Jackson
1986: Testaverde
1987: Brown
1988: Sanders
1989: Ware
1990: Detmer
1991: Howard
1992: Torretta
1993: Ward
1994: Salaam
1995: George
1996: Wuerffel
1997: Woodson
1998: R. Williams
1999: Dayne
2000: Weinke
2001: Crouch
2002: Palmer
2003: J. White
2004: Leinart
2005: Bush
2006: T. Smith
2007: Tebow
2008: Bradford
2009: Ingram II
2010: Newton
2011: Griffin III
2012: Manziel
2013: Winston
2014: Mariota
2015: Henry
2016: L. Jackson
2017: Mayfield
2018: Murray
2019: Burrow
2020: D. Smith
2021: Young
2022: C. Williams
2023: Daniels
2024: Hunter
Walter Camp Award winners
1967: Simpson
1968: Simpson
1969: Owens
1970: Plunkett
1971: Sullivan
1972: Rodgers
1973: Cappelletti
1974: Griffin
1975: Griffin
1976: Dorsett
1977: MacAfee
1978: Sims
1979: White
1980: Green
1981: Allen
1982: H. Walker
1983: Rozier
1984: Flutie
1985: B. Jackson
1986: Testaverde
1987: Brown
1988: Sanders
1989: Thompson
1990: Ismail
1991: Howard
1992: Torretta
1993: Ward
1994: Salaam
1995: George
1996: Wuerffel
1997: Woodson
1998: R. Williams
1999: Dayne
2000: Heupel
2001: Crouch
2002: Johnson
2003: Fitzgerald
2004: Leinart
2005: Bush
2006: T. Smith
2007: McFadden
2008: McCoy
2009: McCoy
2010: Newton
2011: Luck
2012: Te'o
2013: Winston
2014: Mariota
2015: Henry
2016: L. Jackson
2017: Mayfield
2018: Tagovailoa
2019: Burrow
2020: D. Smith
2021: K. Walker III
2022: C. Williams
2023: Daniels
2024: Hunter
1998: R. Williams
1999: Dayne
2000: Heupel
2001: Grossman
2002: Banks
2003: White
2004: Leinart
2005: Bush
2006: T. Smith
2007: Tebow
2008: Bradford
2009: Suh
2010: Newton
2011: Griffin III
2012: Manziel
2013: Winston
2014: Mariota
2015: McCaffrey
2016: Jackson
2017: Mayfield
2018: Murray
2019: Burrow
2020: D. Smith
2021: Young
2022: C. Williams
2023: Daniels
2024: Hunter
1942: Sinkwich
1943: Bertelli
1944: Horvath
1945: Blanchard
1946: G. Davis
1947: Lujack
1948: D. Walker
1949: Hart
1950: Janowicz
1951: Kazmaier
1952: Vessels
1953: Lattner
1954: Cassady
1955: Cassady
1956: McDonald
1957: Crow
1958: Cannon
1959: Cannon
1960: Bellino
1961: Ferguson
1962: Baker
1963: Staubach
1964: Butkus
1965: Anderson & Grabowski
1966: Spurrier
1967: Beban
1968: Simpson
1969: Owens
1970: Plunkett
1971: Sullivan & Marinaro
1972: B. Jones
1973: Hicks
1974: A. Griffin
1975: A. Griffin
1976: Dorsett
1977: Campbell
1978: Sims
1979: C. White
1980: Green
1981: Allen
1982: H. Walker
1983: Rozier
1984: Flutie
1985: B. Jackson
1986: Testaverde
1987: Brown
1988: Sanders
1989: Hagen
1990: Ismail
1991: Howard
1992: M. Jones
1993: Ward
1994: Salaam
1995: Frazier
1996: Wuerffel
1997: Woodson
1998: R. Williams
1999: Dayne
2000: Weinke
2001: Crouch
2002: Palmer
2003: J. White
2004: A. Smith
2005: Bush
2006: T. Smith
2007: Tebow
2008: Harrell, Bradford & McCoy
2009: Ingram II
2010: Newton
2011: Griffin III
2012: Manziel
2013: Winston
2014: Mariota
2015: Mayfield
2016: L. Jackson
2017: Mayfield
2018: Tagovailoa
2019: Burrow
2020: D. Smith
2021: Young
2022: C. Williams
2023: Daniels
2024: Hunter
Davey O'Brien Award winners
1981: McMahon
1982: Blackledge
1983: S. Young
1984: Flutie
1985: Long
1986: Testaverde
1987: McPherson
1988: Aikman
1989: Ware
1990: Detmer
1991: Detmer
1992: Torretta
1993: Ch. Ward
1994: Collins
1995: Wuerffel
1996: Wuerffel
1997: Manning
1998: Bishop
1999: Hamilton
2000: Weinke
2001: Crouch
2002: Banks
2003: White
2004: White
2005: V. Young
2006: Smith
2007: Tebow
2008: Bradford
2009: McCoy
2010: Newton
2011: Griffin III
2012: Manziel
2013: Winston
2014: Mariota
2015: Watson
2016: Watson
2017: Mayfield
2018: Murray
2019: Burrow
2020: Jones
2021: B. Young
2022: Duggan
2023: Daniels
2024: Ca. Ward
Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award winners
1987: McPherson
1988: Peete
1989: Rice
1990: Erickson
1991: Weldon
1992: Torretta
1993: Ward
1994: Barker
1995: Frazier
1996: Wuerffel
1997: P. Manning
1998: McNown
1999: Redman
2000: Weinke
2001: Carr
2002: Palmer
2003: E. Manning
2004: White
2005: Leinart
2006: Quinn
2007: Ryan
2008: Harrell
2009: McCoy
2010: Tolzien
2011: Luck
2012: Klein
2013: McCarron
2014: Mariota
2015: Cook
2016: Watson
2017: Rudolph
2018: Minshew
2019: Burrow
2020: Jones
2021: Pickett
2022: Duggan
2023: Daniels
2024: Sanders
Manning Award winners
2004: Leinart
2005: V. Young
2006: Russell
2007: Ryan
2008: Tebow
2009: McCoy
2010: Newton
2011: Griffin III
2012: Manziel
2013: Winston
2014: Mariota
2015: Watson
2016: Watson
2017: Mayfield
2018: Murray
2019: Burrow
2020: Jones
2021: B. Young
2022: Bennett
2023: Daniels
2024: Ward
Offense
QB Jayden Daniels
RB Ollie Gordon II
RB Cody Schrader
WR Marvin Harrison Jr.
WR Malik Nabers
WR Rome Odunze
TE Brock Bowers
C Jackson Powers-Johnson
OT Joe Alt
OT Olu Fashanu
OG Cooper Beebe
OG Zak Zinter
Defense
DE Jonah Elliss
DE Laiatu Latu
DT Jer'Zhan Newton
DT T'Vondre Sweat
LB Payton Wilson
LB Dallas Turner
LB Edgerrin Cooper
CB Cooper DeJean
FS Malaki Starks
SS Xavier Watts
Special teams
K Graham Nicholson
P Tory Taylor
AP Travis Hunter
Southeastern Conference (SEC) Athlete of the Year
Male
1976: Glance
1977: Seivers
1978: Givens
1979: King
1980: Macy
1981: Gaines
1982: Belue
1983: Walker
1984: Hoage
1985: Clark
1986: B. Jackson
1987: Bennett
1988: Perdue
1989: D. Thomas
1990: Kessler
1991: O'Neal
1992: O'Neal
1993: Mashburn
1994: Williamson
1995: Helton
1996: Wuerffel
1997: Wuerffel
1998: Manning
1999: Couch
2000: Bouknight
2001: Boeker
2002: W. Davis
2003: Cragg
2004: Cragg
2005: Lochte
2006: Carter
2007: Price
2008: Tebow
2009: Tebow
2010: Ingram II
2011: J. P. Smith
2012: A. Davis
2013: Manziel
2014: Reed
2015: Benintendi
2016: Lawson
2017: Rooker
2018: Dressel
2019: Holloway
2020: Burrow
2021: D. Smith
2022: Young
2023: Crews
2024: Daniels
Female
1984: Caulkins
1985: Hauschild
1986: Gillom
1987: Leatherwood
1988: Torres
1989: Gordon
1990: Foster
1991: Charles
1992: Goetze
1993: Haislett
1994: Haislett
1995: Hansen
1996: Roundtree
1997: Johnson
1998: Holdsclaw
1999: Holdsclaw
2000: Kowal
2001: Yoder
2002: Pickens
2003: L. Thomas
2004: Rice
2005: Coventry
2006: Augustus
2007: Abbott
2008: Parker
2009: Kupets
2010: S. Jackson
2011: Hoffman
2012: Pancake
2013: Schmitt
2014: Rogers
2015: Haeger
2016: Sloan
2017: Williams
2018: Wilson
2019: Fassi
2020: Harris
2021: Lilley
2022: Boston
2023: Thomas
2024: Valby
Arizona State Sun Devils starting quarterbacks
Cecil Coleman (1947–1949)
Dave Graybill (1954–1956)
John Hangartner (1956–1958)
Fran Urban (1959)
Joe Zuger (1959–1961)
John Jacobs (1962–1963)
John Torok (1963–1964)
John F. Goodman (1965–1966)
Ed Roseborough (1967–1968)
Joe Spagnola (1968–1970)
Danny White (1971–1973)
Grady Hurst (1971)
Dennis Sproul (1974–1977)
Mark Malone (1978–1979)
Mike Pagel (1978, 1980–1981)
Todd Hons (1982–1983)
Jeff Van Raaphorst (1984–1986)
Daniel Ford (1987–1988)
Paul Justin (1988–1990)
Bret Powers (1990–1991)
Grady Benton (1992–1993)
Garrick McGee (1992)
Troy Rauer (1992)
Jake Plummer (1993–1996)
Ryan Kealy (1997–2000)
Jeff Krohn (2000–2001)
Andrew Walter (2001–2004)
Sam Keller (2004–2005)
Rudy Carpenter (2005–2008)
Danny Sullivan (2009)
Samson Szakacsy (2009)
Steven Threet (2010)
Brock Osweiler (2010–2011)
Taylor Kelly (2012–2014)
Mike Bercovici (2014–2015)
Manny Wilkins (2016–2018)
Brady White (2016)
Dillon Sterling-Cole (2016)
Jayden Daniels (2019–2021)
Joey Yellen (2019)
Emory Jones (2022)
Trenton Bourguet (2022–2023)
Jaden Rashada (2023)
Drew Pyne (2023)
Jalin Conyers (2023)
Cam Skattebo (2023)
Sam Leavitt (2024)
Jeff Sims (2024)
LSU Tigers starting quarterbacks
Ruffin Pleasant (1890–1893)
Samuel Gourrier
Frank Godchaux (1897)
John J. Coleman
Doc Fenton
Lawrence Dupont
Roy Benoit
Ike Carriere
Hank Stovall
Joe Lawrie
Bert Yates
Bill May (1935–1936)
Young Bussey (1939)
Leo Bird
Andy Kosmac (1942)
Gene Knight (1943)
Y. A. Tittle (1945–1947)
Charles Pevey (1948)
Carroll Griffith (1949)
Lee Hedges (1950)
Jim Barton (1951)
Norman Stevens (1952)
Al Doggett (1953–1954)
M. C. Reynolds (1955)
Win Turner (1956–1957)
Warren Rabb (1958–1959)
Jimmy Field (1960–1962)
Lynn Amedee (1961)
Pat Screen (1963–1965)
Nelson Stokley (1966)
Fred Haynes (1967–1968)
Mike Hillman (1969)
Buddy Lee (1970)
Bert Jones (1971–1972)
Mike Miley (1973)
Billy Broussard (1974)
Pat Lyons (1975–1976)
Steve Ensminger (1977–1979)
David Woodley (1978–1979)
Alan Risher (1980–1982)
Robert Mahfouz (1980)
Jeff Wickersham (1983–1985)
Tommy Hodson (1986–1989)
Mickey Guidry (1986–1988)
Sol Graves (1990)
Chad Loup (1991–1992)
Jesse Daigle (1991)
Jamie Howard (1993–1995)
Melvin Hill (1994–1995)
Herb Tyler (1996–1998)
Craig Nall (1999)
Josh Booty (2000)
Rohan Davey (2001)
Matt Mauck (2002–2003)
Rick Clausen (2002)
Marcus Randall (2004)
JaMarcus Russell (2005–2006)
Matt Flynn (2007)
Ryan Perrilloux (2007)
Andrew Hatch (2008)
Jordan Jefferson (2009–2011)
Jarrett Lee (2011)
Zach Mettenberger (2012–2013)
Anthony Jennings (2013–2014)
Brandon Harris (2015–2016)
Danny Etling (2016–2017)
Joe Burrow (2018–2019)
Myles Brennan (2020)
T. J. Finley (2020)
Max Johnson (2020–2021)
Jontre Kirklin (2021)
Jayden Daniels (2022–2023)
Garrett Nussmeier (2023–2024)
2024 NFL draft first-round selections
Caleb Williams
Jayden Daniels
Drake Maye
Marvin Harrison Jr.
Joe Alt
Malik Nabers
JC Latham
Michael Penix Jr.
Rome Odunze
J. J. McCarthy
Olu Fashanu
Bo Nix
Brock Bowers
Taliese Fuaga
Laiatu Latu
Byron Murphy II
Dallas Turner
Amarius Mims
Jared Verse
Troy Fautanu
Chop Robinson
Quinyon Mitchell
Brian Thomas Jr.
Terrion Arnold
Jordan Morgan
Graham Barton
Darius Robinson
Xavier Worthy
Tyler Guyton
Nate Wiggins
Ricky Pearsall
Xavier Legette
Second overall NFL draft picks
1936: R. Smith
1937: Goddard
1938: McDonald
1939: Luckman
1940: McAfee
1941: Kimbrough
1942: J. Wilson
1943: Muha
1944: Harder
1945: Duhart
1946: D. Jones
1947: G. Davis
1948: Minisi
1949: Rauch
1950: Burk
1951: Williams
1952: Richter
1953: Vessels
1954: McHan
1955: Boydston
1956: Morrall
1957: Arnett
1958: Crow
1959: Bass
1960: Izo
1961: Snead
1962: Gabriel
1963: Stovall
1964: Brown
1965: Willard
1966: Mack
1967: C. Jones
1968: B. Johnson
1969: Kunz
1970: McCoy
1971: Manning
1972: White
1973: B. Jones
1974: Matthews
1975: White
1976: Niehaus
1977: Dorsett
1978: Still
1979: Bell
1980: L. Jones
1981: Taylor
1982: Cooks
1983: Dickerson
1984: Steinkuhler
1985: Fralic
1986: Casillas
1987: Bennett
1988: N. Smith
1989: Mandarich
1990: Thomas
1991: Turner
1992: Coryatt
1993: Mirer
1994: Faulk
1995: Boselli
1996: Hardy
1997: Russell
1998: Leaf
1999: McNabb
2000: Arrington
2001: L. Davis
2002: Peppers
2003: Rogers
2004: Gallery
2005: Brown
2006: Bush
2007: C. Johnson
2008: Long
2009: J. Smith
2010: Suh
2011: Miller
2012: Griffin III
2013: Joeckel
2014: Robinson
2015: Mariota
2016: Wentz
2017: Trubisky
2018: Barkley
2019: Bosa
2020: Young
2021: Z. Wilson
2022: Hutchinson
2023: Stroud
2024: Daniels
2025: Hunter
Washington Commanders first-round draft picks
Formerly the Boston Braves (1932), Boston Redskins (1933–1936), Washington Redskins (1937–2019), and Washington Football Team (2020–2021)
Riley Smith (1936)
Sammy Baugh (1937)
Andy Farkas (1938)
I. B. Hale (1939)
Ed Boell (1940)
Forest Evashevski (1941)
Spec Sanders (1942)
Jack Jenkins (1943)
Mike Micka (1944)
Jim Hardy (1945)
Cal Rossi (1946, 1947)
Harry Gilmer (1948)
Lowell Tew (1948)
Rob Goode (1949)
George Thomas (1950)
Leon Heath (1951)
Larry Isbell (1952)
Jack Scarbath (1953)
Steve Meilinger (1954)
Ralph Guglielmi (1955)
Ed Vereb (1956)
Don Bosseler (1957)
Don Allard (1959)
Richie Lucas (1960)
Norm Snead (1961)
Joe Rutgens (1961)
Ernie Davis (1962)
Pat Richter (1963)
Charley Taylor (1964)
Charlie Gogolak (1966)
Ray McDonald (1967)
Jim Smith (1968)
Art Monk (1980)
Mark May (1981)
Darrell Green (1983)
Bobby Wilson (1991)
Desmond Howard (1992)
Tom Carter (1993)
Heath Shuler (1994)
Michael Westbrook (1995)
Andre Johnson (1996)
Kenard Lang (1997)
Champ Bailey (1999)
LaVar Arrington (2000)
Chris Samuels (2000)
Rod Gardner (2001)
Patrick Ramsey (2002)
Sean Taylor (2004)
Carlos Rogers (2005)
Jason Campbell (2005)
LaRon Landry (2007)
Brian Orakpo (2009)
Trent Williams (2010)
Ryan Kerrigan (2011)
Robert Griffin III (2012)
Brandon Scherff (2015)
Josh Doctson (2016)
Jonathan Allen (2017)
Daron Payne (2018)
Dwayne Haskins (2019)
Montez Sweat (2019)
Chase Young (2020)
Jamin Davis (2021)
Jahan Dotson (2022)
Emmanuel Forbes (2023)
Jayden Daniels (2024)
Washington Commanders 2024 NFL draft selections
Jayden Daniels
Jer'Zhan Newton
Mike Sainristil
Ben Sinnott
Brandon Coleman
Luke McCaffrey
Jordan Magee
Dominique Hampton
Javontae Jean-Baptiste
Washington Commanders starting quarterbacks
Formerly the Boston Braves (1932), Boston Redskins (1933–1936), Washington Redskins (1937–2019), and Washington Football Team (2020–2021)
Hank Hughes (1932)
Jim Musick (1933)
Steve Hokuf (1934)
Pug Rentner (1934–1935)
Bill Shepherd (1935)
Eddie Britt (1936)
Ed Smith (1936)
Sammy Baugh (1937–1952)
Bill Hartman (1938)
Frank Filchock (1938–1939, 1941, 1944)
Jim German (1939)
Roy Zimmerman (1942)
George Cafego (1943)
Jim Youel (1946–1947)
Jack Jacobs (1946)
Tommy Mont (1948)
Harry Gilmer (1949–1951)
Eddie LeBaron (1952–1953, 1955–1959)
Jack Scarbath (1953–1954)
Al Dorow (1954–1956)
Ralph Guglielmi (1955, 1958–1960)
Eagle Day (1960)
Norm Snead (1961–1963)
Sonny Jurgensen (1964–1974)
Dick Shiner (1965)
Jim Ninowski (1968)
Billy Kilmer (1971–1978)
Randy Johnson (1975)
Joe Theismann (1976–1985)
Mike Kruczek (1980)
Jay Schroeder (1985–1987)
Ed Rubbert (1987)
Doug Williams (1987–1989)
Mark Rypien (1988–1993)
Stan Humphries (1990)
Jeff Rutledge (1990)
Rich Gannon (1993)
Cary Conklin (1993)
Heath Shuler (1994–1995)
John Friesz (1994)
Gus Frerotte (1994–1998)
Jeff Hostetler (1997)
Trent Green (1998)
Brad Johnson (1999–2000)
Jeff George (2000–2001)
Tony Banks (2001)
Shane Matthews (2002)
Patrick Ramsey (2002–2005)
Danny Wuerffel (2002)
Tim Hasselbeck (2003)
Mark Brunell (2004–2006)
Jason Campbell (2006–2009)
Todd Collins (2007)
Donovan McNabb (2010)
Rex Grossman (2010–2011)
John Beck (2011)
Robert Griffin III (2012–2014)
Kirk Cousins (2012–2017)
Colt McCoy (2014, 2018–2019)
Alex Smith (2018, 2020)
Mark Sanchez (2018)
Josh Johnson (2018)
Case Keenum (2019)
Dwayne Haskins (2019–2020)
Kyle Allen (2020)
Ryan Fitzpatrick (2021)
Taylor Heinicke (2021–2022)
Garrett Gilbert (2021)
Carson Wentz (2022)
Sam Howell (2022–2023)
Jayden Daniels (2024–present)