Let’s be honest: if you’re walking into an NFL combine looking to impress scouts at 5’7, you’re already swimming upstream. That said, football isn’t played in a vacuum. It’s messy. It’s emotional. It rewards instincts, toughness, and timing. And sometimes, a player slips through the cracks because we’re too busy measuring shoulders and inseams instead of heart and brain.
Quarterback Height Trends: What the Numbers Say (And Don’t Say)
Over the last 20 years, NFL starting quarterbacks have averaged between 6’2 and 6’4. Of the 32 Week 1 starters in 2023, only one—Dak Prescott—was listed under 6’0, and even he’s widely believed to be closer to 6’1. The median height? Around 6’3. That’s not random. Coaches prefer taller QBs for sightlines over massive offensive and defensive lines. A taller quarterback sees more of the field pre-snap, avoids having passing lanes swatted, and throws over the top of collapsing pockets. But—and this is the big but—height doesn’t correlate directly with draft success, win rate, or career longevity. Consider this: from 2000 to 2015, only four quarterbacks shorter than 6’0 started a playoff game. Since then, that number hasn’t changed much. So the pipeline is narrow. Yet when a short QB does break through, they often outperform expectations. Russell Wilson made seven Pro Bowls. Drew Brees, listed at 6’0 but likely smaller, threw for over 57,000 yards. Size didn’t stop them. It just made the climb harder.
And that’s where people don’t think about this enough: the scouting process isn’t just about skill. It’s about risk tolerance. A 6’4 pocket passer with a cannon is a known archetype. A 5’7 dual-threat is a prototype outlier. Coaches fear the unknown. They’d rather bet on a tall guy with average mobility than a shorter one with elite vision and release speed. But because systems evolve—hello, Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs’ chaos offense—we’re seeing more room for unconventional builds. That said, 5’7 is still two inches below even the shortest accepted “viable” threshold. At that point, you’re not just fighting defenders. You’re fighting decades of institutional bias.
The NFL’s Height Ceiling—Is It Real or Imagined?
You can count on one hand the number of quarterbacks under 5’10 who’ve started multiple games in the NFL since 1980. Flutie. Kordell Stewart (listed at 6’0, probably not). Maybe Randall Cunningham, who was fast as hell and played like a video game cheat code. The data is still lacking on true sub-5’8 QBs because they rarely get past college recruiting. Scouts see 5’7, assume reach issues, poor pocket presence, and easy pickings for edge rushers. But here’s the rub: arm length and release mechanics matter more than raw height. A quick, compact delivery can nullify height disadvantages. And in today’s game, where mobile QBs extend plays, height becomes less about vision and more about survivability.
College vs. Pro: Where 5’7 Might Actually Work
In college football, especially in spread or run-heavy systems, shorter quarterbacks aren’t anomalies. Lamar Jackson was 6’3 but played like he was 5’7 in terms of how often he scrambled. Then there’s someone like Bailey Zappe at Western Kentucky—listed at 6’0, but effective in a pass-happy system. At 5’7, you’d need elite rushing ability, pinpoint accuracy on slants and screens, and a coach willing to design an offense around your strengths. The CAA, Big Sky, and even some FCS programs have had success with smaller QBs. But the jump to the NFL? That changes everything. The windows shrink. The rushers are faster. The margins for error vanish. So while 5’7 might work in a triple-option system at Montana State, it’s a different planet in Arrowhead Stadium on third-and-long with Chris Jones charging up the middle.
The Hidden Advantages of a Shorter Quarterback
Let’s flip the script. Being 5’7 isn’t all downside. For one, lower center of gravity means better balance when taking hits. A taller QB can get upended by a glancing blow. A shorter one? They stay grounded, keep their eyes downfield, and sometimes fire off a runner while falling. And because they can’t rely on height to see over the line, they often develop sharper pre-snap reads. They learn to anticipate protection breakdowns before they happen. They master timing and rhythm because they have to. A tall QB might wait an extra half-second for a lane to open. A 5’7 guy? He’s already pulling the ball down and running before the guard gets beat.
Then there’s the psychological edge. You think defenders respect a 5’7 quarterback? At first, no. They smirk. They over-pursue. They cheat up, expecting a quick throw or a duck. But when that guy zips a 25-yard out route with touch, or scrambles for 15 yards on third-and-8, the tone shifts. Suddenly, he’s not a curiosity. He’s a problem. And that’s exactly where the underdog mentality becomes a weapon. We saw it with Doug Flutie in the USFL. We saw it with Russell Wilson in Seattle. The disrespect fuels them. They play angry. They play fast. They play like they’ve got something to prove—because they do.
Mobility vs. Pocket Presence: The 5’7 QB’s Tightrope Walk
Mobility can mask a lot of flaws. But relying on your legs is a double-edged sword. You gain yards. You extend drives. You make highlight reels. But you also take hits. And over time, those hits add up. Cam Newton, built like a freight train at 6’5, missed games due to wear and tear. Imagine a 5’7 QB taking the same punishment. The issue remains: can a shorter quarterback win from the pocket consistently? Because eventually, every mobile QB faces a defense that bottlenecks the escape lanes. The Ravens under John Harbaugh will stack the box, force you to throw from a clean pocket, and dare you to beat them over the top. That’s when height—and arm strength—become unavoidable.
Which explains why so many successful shorter QBs thrive in hybrid systems. Think Mike Leach’s Air Raid: quick throws, minimal dropbacks, zero reliance on deep over-the-middle reads. Or Chip Kelly’s old Oregon offense: run-pass options, misdirection, tempo. In those systems, a 5’7 QB could survive—maybe even thrive. But ask them to go play in a West Coast system with seven-step drops and intermediate crossers? That’s a different challenge. You’re not just throwing over rushers. You’re fitting the ball into tight windows where a half-inch of extra reach might mean the difference between a completion and an interception.
5’7 vs 6’2: A Realistic Comparison of Quarterback Profiles
Let’s compare two hypothetical QBs. QB A: 5’7, 190 pounds, 4.5 40-time, 40-inch vertical, quick release, high football IQ. QB B: 6’2, 220 pounds, average mobility, strong arm, solid decision-making. In a spread college offense, I’d take QB A every time. He’s faster, smarter, and better in space. But move them both to the NFL. Now QB A has to face Myles Garrett, who’s 6’4 and can swat passes at their peak. Now QB B can step up, see over the line, and fire into coverage with velocity. The gap widens. That said—stats show that from 2015 to 2022, quarterbacks under 6’0 averaged only 0.8 more sacks per game than their taller peers. Why? Because pocket movement and awareness matter more than height alone. So while the taller QB has structural advantages, the shorter one can compensate—just not completely.
And here’s something people overlook: release point isn’t just about height. It’s about mechanics. A QB with a three-quarters delivery can get the ball out fast, even if they’re short. Think Drew Brees. His compact windup allowed him to throw with immediacy. A taller QB with a slow, looping motion might actually be more susceptible to pressure. So it’s not height per se—it’s how you use it (or work around it).
Frequently Asked Questions
Has a 5’7 quarterback ever played in the NFL?
Not as a starter, and not in the modern era. The closest was Doug Flutie at 5’10, and even that was considered unusually short. There have been undrafted free agents listed at 5’7 who attended camps—like Jeff Garcia, who was rumored to be shorter than his 6’0 listing—but none sustained a career. The CFL has been more forgiving; Flutie won three Grey Cups there. But in the NFL, where margins are razor-thin, 5’7 has never broken through. Honestly, it is unclear if it ever will—unless the game evolves into something even more mobile and system-driven than it is today.
Can a short quarterback succeed in college football?
Absolutely. KJ Jefferson at Arkansas is 6’3. But before him, there was Antonio Henton at Sam Houston State—5’11 and a dual-threat dynamo. At the FCS and Division II levels, you see more variety. A 5’7 QB with elite speed and decision-making could dominate in the right offense. The problem? Recruiting. High school scouts rarely push short QBs to Power Five programs. They get steered toward Division II or NAIA schools. So the pipeline dries up before it starts. But because development is possible, we can’t rule it out. Look at Jack Plummer at Purdue—listed at 6’3, but he wasn’t a five-star recruit. Talent finds a way. Just not easily.
Does height affect a quarterback’s draft stock?
You bet it does. Since 2000, only 12 quarterbacks under 6’0 have been drafted. None in the first two rounds. Most went in the later rounds or as undrafted free agents. Height isn’t the only factor—arm strength, accuracy, and poise matter—but it’s a gatekeeper. Scouts use it as a quick filter. And that’s where the system fails. Because we’re far from a world where scouts prioritize film over measurables. A 5’7 QB with 90th percentile decision-making might get ignored because he can’t reach the top shelf in the weight room. That’s not just unfair. It’s short-sighted.
The Bottom Line
Is 5’7 too short for a quarterback? In the NFL, yes—practically speaking. The physical and cultural barriers are too high. But in other leagues? In certain systems? With the right tools? Maybe not. I am convinced that football undervalues cognitive traits in favor of physical ones. We fetishize height, arm strength, and 40 times while ignoring processing speed, adaptability, and leadership. A 5’7 quarterback would need to be exceptional in every other way to get a shot. And even then, the odds are stacked. But let’s not pretend height is destiny. The game has changed before. It can change again. Until then, 5’7 remains on the fringes—more myth than reality, but not impossible. Just really, really hard.