Troy Huhn

Bio

Height 6'4"
Weight 215 lbs
Hometown San Marcos, CA
High School Mission Hills
Rating ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Recruiting

⭐⭐⭐⭐ Class of 2026
#309 National
0.9047 Rating

Scouting Report

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

Troy Huhn is a 6-foot-4.5, 215-pound pro-style quarterback from Mission Hills (San Marcos, CA) and one of the top signal-callers in the 2026 class, carrying a 0.9047 composite and a four-star grade (#309 national). A prototypical West Coast pocket passer with an Elite 11 Finals invite and 30-plus varsity starts, he projects as a high-floor developmental QB whose anticipation, mechanics, and frame outweigh marginal questions about raw arm strength.

Physical Profile

Huhn owns a true prototype quarterback build at 6-4.5 and 215 pounds with a long, lean frame that still has clear room to add 15-20 pounds of functional mass without sacrificing mobility. The height gives him natural throwing lanes over interior pressure, and his clean, repeatable lower-half mechanics let him transfer weight efficiently from under center and from depth. He is a functional rather than dynamic athlete — adequate pocket mobility to climb and reset, but he wins with timing and platform consistency, not off-script creation.

Play Style

Huhn is a clinical timing-and-rhythm passer who is at his best working off play-action and structured drop-back concepts. On film he plays with clean feet, processes quickly, and uses trajectory and anticipation to layer throws into intermediate windows, getting the ball out early and on schedule. He manages an offense like a coach's son — decisive, efficient, low-turnover — but leans on accuracy and timing rather than driving the ball or improvising when the first read is covered.

Strengths

  • Elite anticipation and ball placement — completed 70% (165-of-234) for 2,015 yards and 19 TD to just 6 INT as a junior, throwing receivers open and releasing before breaks rather than waiting for separation
  • Pro-style operational readiness — over 30 varsity starts coordinating a 5- and 7-step-drop attack, with proven play-action command and the ability to work under center, a rare and translatable trait at the high school level
  • Prototype frame and clean pocket footwork — 6-4.5 with smooth, compact mechanics and quiet feet that hold up under pressure, giving him a very high developmental floor

Areas to Improve

  • Raw arm strength and velocity on out-breakers and deep comebacks — analysts (Greg Biggins) note he throws with touch and trajectory more than power, which can be exposed against NFL-caliber closing speed and tight college windows
  • Off-platform and second-reaction playmaking — projects as a rhythm passer who needs structure; must improve at extending plays and creating outside the pocket as defenses speed up at the Power Four level

College Projection

A developmental Power Four quarterback who profiles as a likely redshirt-then-compete arc. His pro-style background and operational maturity shorten his learning curve relative to spread-only QBs, but he'll need a year or two in a college strength program to add velocity and mass before he's ready to win a starting job. Realistic ceiling is a multi-year Power Four starter in a timing-based system; floor is a reliable high-major backup. Note his recruitment reopened after decommitting from Penn State following James Franklin's firing, with Virginia Tech (where Franklin landed) plus Michigan, Ohio State, Kansas State, and Stanford in pursuit.

NFL Outlook

As a four-star with a prototype frame and rare anticipation, Huhn has a Day 3 / priority-free-agent developmental NFL ceiling if his arm strength catches up to his processing. The traits scouts covet — height, clean mechanics, timing, pro-style command — are present, but the lack of high-end velocity and off-script ability are the exact limiters that cap pocket passers at the next level. His draft outcome hinges almost entirely on physical development in a college program over the next three years.

Best Fit

A timing-based, play-action-heavy pro-style or West Coast offense that lets him operate on rhythm from under center and from depth, with a strong run game and a developmental QB room that affords him a redshirt year to add weight and arm strength. He is a poor fit for a pure run-first spread-option scheme that demands a dual-threat creator.

Player Comparison

Myles Jack UCLA • Jacksonville Jaguars/Pittsburgh Steelers 82% match

Jack was a versatile 6'1" 245lb prospect who could play multiple positions and was ranked as a top-300 national recruit. Like this prospect, Jack's elite ranking reflected his exceptional athleticism and instincts that translated across defensive positions, making him valuable as both a linebacker and safety hybrid before focusing on linebacker in college.