All-Time Texans QBs Ranked: Schaub #1, Watson #2

Jeff Driskel

Retired 6 Years In The NFL
🏆 C–USA Newcomer of the Year (2015)
Jeff's
HAIR
7.2
HeyTC AI Rating

Questions about Jeff Driskel or the Texans?

Jeff Driskel Legacy

HEYTC AI
Jeff Driskel, the lanky Florida gunslinger with a rocket arm and legs that could outrun linebackers, embodies the ultimate NFL journeyman QB—sixth-round 49ers pick in '16 who's bounced through a dozen franchises like a pinball, always ready to strap it up when the stars (or injuries) align. What sets him apart? That dual-threat spark from his Louisiana Tech days, where he torched C-USA as Newcomer of the Year, and those gritty relief stints—like his 2018 Bengals takeover, blending bombs with scrambles to keep dreams alive. At 32, still grinding as Washington's No. 3, Driskel's legacy is pure football immortality: the eternal backup who lives for the chaos.

Jeff Driskel Rating Breakdown

Season
Non-Factor
Fantasy
Subpar
Playoffs
Non-Factor
Overall
Cooked
2 years with the Texans

Jeff Driskel Career Stats via Wikipedia

2,394 Pass Yards
0 Touchdowns
0 INTs
58.6% Comp %
7.2 HAIR

Frequently Asked Questions About Jeff Driskel

How does C.J. Stroud compare to Jeff Driskel?

Jeff Driskel’s a Texans footnote with 2,394 career yards and one win in 11 starts, while C.J. Stroud’s the supernova rewriting Houston’s QB history at 23—think franchise savior vs. the reliable clipboards guy who handed off the keys. Driskel’s 58.6% completion and 6.1 yards per pop look pedestrian next to Stroud’s rocket arm; one’s etched in stone, the other’s still drafting chapters.

Is Jeff Driskel in the Pro Football Hall of Fame?

Nah, Jeff Driskel’s not in Canton—no bust waiting for him among the immortals. The sixth-rounder from Louisiana Tech bounced through seven teams, tossing 2,394 yards and 16 TDs over eight years, but zero Pro Bowls or All-Pro nods keep him off the Hall radar. It’s the journeyman life, not the gold jacket club.

What is Jeff Driskel doing now in 2026?

In 2026, Driskel’s holding down the No. 2 QB spot for the Commanders behind Josh Johnson, signing on in December ’25 just in time for their Cowboy clash. At 32, he’s battling undrafted rook Sam Hartman for No. 3 duties while Jayden Daniels and Marcus Mariota lock down the top—classic depth chart limbo, but he’s still suiting up.

How would Jeff Driskel perform in today's NFL?

Driskel’s dual-threat legs—384 rushing yards, 3 TDs—would feast under today’s pass-happy rules with no-huddle tempos and RPO galore, but his 6.1 yards per attempt and 79.4 passer rating scream backup in this air-it-out era. He’d carve spot duty like a poor man’s Taysom Hill, not light up stat sheets.

How does Jeff Driskel compare to Case Keenum?

Both Texans stopgaps, but Driskel’s dismal 7.17 rating across seven games buries Case Keenum’s gritty 16.55 in the same Houston blue jerseys—Keenum at least engineered miracle drives, while Driskel’s 108 yards and one TD felt like watching paint dry. Journeymen unite, yet Keenum’s the comeback kid who stuck the landing.