Noah Grubbs

Bio

Height 6'4"
Weight 205 lbs
Hometown Lake Mary, FL
High School Lake Mary
Rating ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Recruiting

⭐⭐⭐⭐ Class of 2026
#378 National
0.8976 Rating

Scouting Report

A
90 / 100 Ceiling 90 • Floor 82
year 1 contributor NFL Rd 5

Noah Grubbs is a 6-foot-4, 205-pound pocket-passing quarterback from Lake Mary (FL) and a four-star Notre Dame signee ranked #378 nationally with a 0.8976 composite. A rare four-year varsity starter in one of Florida's largest classifications (7A), he capped his career by leading Lake Mary to the 2025 7A state title on a last-second Hail Mary touchdown. He projects as a developmental-but-high-floor passer with the prototype frame and touch arm to start at the Power Four level.

Physical Profile

Grubbs has the prototypical modern pro-style quarterback build at 6-4, 205, with a projectable frame that should comfortably carry another 10-15 pounds at the college level without sacrificing mobility. The height gives him natural throwing lanes over interior pressure and lets him survey the full field from the pocket. He is described by 247Sports' Andrew Ivins as a 'fluid mover in the pocket' — not a dual-threat runner, but athletic enough to climb, slide, and reset platform to extend plays. Arm strength is solid rather than elite; he wins more on anticipation and touch than raw velocity at this stage.

Play Style

Grubbs is a true pocket manager who operates with rhythm and timing rather than improvisation. On film he is at his best in a play-action-heavy attack, using ball-fakes to manipulate second-level defenders and then dropping accurate touch throws into open grass. He climbs and resets in the pocket fluidly and trusts his eyes to work through progressions. The flip side: when the structure breaks down and pressure arrives clean, his ball security and decision-making become inconsistent — he can force throws or get sped up rather than taking the check-down. His game is built on anticipation, placement, and command of the offense, not off-platform arm talent.

Strengths

  • Clean, repeatable throwing mechanics that allow him to layer the ball to all three levels — a touch passer who drops it into intermediate windows and on the sideline rather than relying on arm talent to fit everything in
  • Elite experience and football IQ: a four-year starter against top-tier Florida 7A competition, with the poise to deliver in the highest-leverage moment (game-winning state-title Hail Mary), signaling rare mental processing and clutch composure for a high schooler
  • Projectable 6-4 frame with pocket fluidity and play-action production — his best, most explosive throws come off boot/play-action, suggesting he reads run-action defenses well and can be schemed into chunk plays

Areas to Improve

  • Decision-making and turnover avoidance under duress — scouting notes flag that mistakes and turnovers spiked when opponents 'cranked up the pressure,' meaning he must speed up his internal clock and improve pre-snap pressure diagnosis against college blitz packages
  • Arm strength and velocity on tight-window and deep-out throws — he's a touch thrower now and needs to add functional zip (via added mass and lower-body torque) to consistently challenge NFL-caliber coverage windows

College Projection

Expect a redshirt-and-develop path at Notre Dame. Grubbs profiles as a 2-3 year developmental quarterback who needs to add strength, refine his pressure response, and sit behind the depth chart before competing for snaps — likely a backup/spot-starter by year two or three and a potential multi-year starter by his junior/senior season if the velocity and decision-making mature. His high floor (experience, frame, mechanics) makes him a safe scholarship investment even if his ceiling depends on physical development.

NFL Outlook

As a four-star with prototype size and clean mechanics, Grubbs has a credible developmental NFL trajectory, but it is entirely projection-dependent on arm-strength growth and his ability to handle pressure cleanly. If he adds velocity and trims the turnovers that surfaced against elite competition, he profiles as a late-round flyer or priority free agent with backup upside. Realistically a Day 3 / camp-arm ceiling at this stage — the frame and processing are draftable traits, but he needs a strong college body of work to climb boards.

Best Fit

A timing- and rhythm-based pro-style or West Coast scheme with a heavy play-action component maximizes Grubbs — exactly the structured, NFL-style offense Notre Dame runs. He fits a program that will let him sit, develop physically, and protect him with a strong run game and clean pocket early. He is a poor fit for a spread/RPO scrambling offense that asks the QB to win primarily off-script; he needs structure, defined reads, and a play-action menu to play to his strengths.

Player Comparison

Mike Evans Texas A&M • Tampa Bay Buccaneers 82% match

Evans entered college at 6'5" 225 lbs with a similar lean but projectable frame to this prospect's 6'4" 205 lb build. Both were highly-rated 4-star recruits from competitive Florida high school programs who possessed the size and athletic ability to develop into elite players at the next level, though Evans had more defined positional skills coming out of high school.