Quarterback by Committee, Part 1: The Best Late-Round QBBC for 2026

Jun 18, 2026
Quarterback by Committee, Part 1: The Best Late-Round QBBC for 2026

Late-round quarterback is usually the right strategy. It just has a failure rate nobody likes to talk about.

You wait on the position, take your guy somewhere after pick 100, and feel great about the value. Then he hurts his foot in Week 5, or hits a stretch of three road games against top-10 pass defenses, or just plays like the QB15 he was drafted to be. Now you're back on the wire every Tuesday, hoping to stream the right guy.

Quarterback by Committee (QBBC) keeps most of the savings and takes out most of the risk. The idea isn't complicated: instead of one late-round quarterback, you draft two, and you start the better matchup every week. If one of them gets hurt, you've still got a reasonable starter. If one of them has a brutal matchup, the other guy is probably startable, especially if you plan your committee well.

The payoff is bigger than just insurance. Pair the right two quarterbacks and the combined weekly output lands in solid-to-elite QB1 territory, for the price of two picks you were going to spend on backup running backs or receivers. Last year, the QB5 finished around 317 points. Several of the tandems below exceed that line comfortably, and you're getting there without burning a top-75 pick on the position. I'm using Underdog ADP to evaluate these QBBC pairs.

Note: This article should be especially helpful for best ball managers looking to build a productive committee using low draft capital.

Background

To rank the pairs, I needed a week-by-week look at every quarterback, not just a season total. So I took each quarterback's season projection and prorated it across the schedule using look-ahead team implied totals—the Vegas-derived points each offense is expected to score in a given week. A quarterback in a Week 9 shootout gets a bump for that environment; a quarterback in a low-total slog gets docked for it.

Some of those look-ahead lines aren't posted yet. For any game without a number, I estimated the matchup using 2025 QB adjusted fantasy points allowed—how generous or stingy that defense was to the position last season. It's a placeholder, and I'll update the pairs as the real lines filter in over the summer.

From there, the committee math is straightforward. For every pair, each week you start whichever quarterback the model likes better, and you add up those weekly winners across the season. That's the number in the table.

QBBC Pair Explorer

Before I get to my favorites, here's the tool. The QBBC Pair Explorer lets you pick an anchor quarterback and see his best partners, or leave it blank to see the overall board. You can also set how early you're willing to take your second QB.

QBBC Pair Finder: 2026
Best QB-by-committee tandems by projected points (start the better matchup each week). Pick an anchor QB, or leave blank for the overall board. Set how early your second QB can come off the board.
Anchor QB
Second QB no earlier than





# Pair Proj pts Comb. ADP PO data
No pairs match these settings.
Per-start scoring: each QB's projection is divided by expected games played, so weekly values reflect production when starting. Rounds assume 12 teams. pair leans on an estimated playoff week (15–17) where the Vegas line isn't posted yet. the two QBs share a bye week.

Default is set to a second QB no earlier than Round 10, which is the version of this strategy I'd actually run: spend one middle-round pick on a quarterback you like, then wait and take the partner later on.

Who to Target

A few names do most of the heavy lifting at the top of the board, though I’ll be doing a full take on the Goff Gambit in Part 3.

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