When the NFL Draft kicks off tonight, there's little consensus as to where Kentucky quarterback Will Levis will be selected. One wild rumor circulating this week has him going No. 1 to Carolina. No. 2 to Houston is possible. Another has him slipping out of the top 10 and being drafted by the Patriots. A polarizing prospect.

If you place the most stock in size and arm strength, Levis might be your guy. (Check the picture; he's a monster.) At 6-foot-4 and 229 pounds, he's bigger than any of the expected first-round quarterbacks (Bryce Young, C.J. Stroud, Anthony Richardson) but the very raw Richardson. And I think he has the strongest arm (it's either him or Richardson), with him seeming to zip the ball in to his receivers effortlessly, able to do so without planting his feet or getting set.

But that arm strength might get him into trouble at times, influencing him to attempt throws that are better not made. He threw 13 interceptions as a junior and 10 more as a senior. Those numbers don't seem terribly high until you consider that he wasn't running a pass-happy offense. Last year he averaged a modest 26 pass attempts and 219 yards per game. His interception rate of 3.5 percent on those attempts was 3rd-highest among first-round quarterbacks in their final year of college in the last 20 years, better than only Jameis Winston (who's continued to struggle in this regard as a pro) and Jordan Love (TBD).

Table shows final year of college passing stats for all first-rounders (and expected first-rounders) in the last 20 years, sorted by interception rates.

INTERCEPTION RATES FOR 1ST-ROUND QUARTERBACKS, 2004-2023
PlayerSchoolComAttPctYdsTDIntInt%
Jameis WinstonFlorida State30546765.3390725183.9%
Jordan LoveUtah State29347361.9340220173.6%
Will LevisKentucky18528365.4240619103.5%
J.P. LosmanTulane25142259.5307733143.3%
Vince YoungTexas21232565.2303626103.1%
Johnny ManzielTexas A&M30042969.9411437133.0%
Deshaun WatsonClemson38857967.0459341172.9%
Matt RyanBoston College38865459.3450731192.9%
Ryan TannehillTexas A&M32753161.6374429152.8%
Anthony RichardsonFlorida17632753.825491792.8%
Mark SanchezSouthern California24136665.8320734102.7%
Jake LockerWashington18433255.422651792.7%
Sam DarnoldSouthern California30348063.1414326132.7%
Trevor LawrenceClemson23133469.231532492.7%
Christian PonderFlorida State18429961.520442082.7%
Justin FieldsOhio State15822570.221002262.7%
Matthew StaffordGeorgia23538361.4345925102.6%
Jason CampbellAuburn18827069.627002072.6%
EJ ManuelFlorida State 26338768.0339723102.6%
Aaron RodgersCalifornia20931666.125662482.5%
Cam NewtonAuburn18528066.128543072.5%
Andrew LuckStanford28840471.3351737102.5%
Jared GoffCalifornia34152964.5471943132.5%
Blake BortlesCentral Florida25938267.835812592.4%
JaMarcus RussellLouisiana State23234267.831292882.3%
Lamar JacksonLouisville25443059.1366027102.3%
Brandon WeedenOklahoma State40856472.3472737132.3%
Daniel JonesDuke23739260.526742292.3%
Eli ManningMississippi27544162.4360029102.3%
Josh AllenWyoming15227056.318121662.2%
Josh RosenUCLA28345262.6375626102.2%
Josh FreemanKansas State22438258.629452082.1%
Ben RoethlisbergerMiami (Ohio)34249569.1448637102.0%
Jay CutlerVanderbilt27346259.130732191.9%
Carson WentzNorth Dakota State13020862.516511741.9%
Blaine GabbertMissouri30147563.431861691.9%
Kyler MurrayOklahoma26037769.043614271.9%
Matt LeinartSouthern California28343165.738152881.9%
Patrick MahomesTexas Tech38859165.7505241101.7%
Sam BradfordOklahoma32848367.947205081.7%
Tim TebowFlorida21331467.828952151.6%
C.J. StroudOhio State25838966.336884161.5%
Dwayne HaskinsOhio State37353370.048315081.5%
Brady QuinnNotre Dame28946761.934263771.5%
Baker MayfieldOklahoma28540470.546274361.5%
Robert Griffin IIIBaylor29140671.742933761.5%
Philip RiversNorth Carolina State34848372.044913471.4%
Kenny PickettPittsburgh33449767.243194271.4%
Justin HerbertOregon28642866.834713261.4%
Mitchell TrubiskyNorth Carolina30444768.037483061.3%
Bryce YoungAlabama24538064.533283251.3%
Alex SmithUtah21431767.529523241.3%
Tua TagovailoaAlabama18025271.428403331.2%
Joe BurrowLouisiana State40252776.356716061.1%
Mac JonesAlabama31140277.445004141.0%
Joe FlaccoDelaware33152163.542632351.0%
Teddy BridgewaterLouisville30342771.039703140.9%
Paxton LynchMemphis29644366.837762840.9%
Marcus MariotaOregon30444568.344544240.9%
Zach WilsonBrigham Young24733673.536923330.9%
Trey LanceNorth Dakota State19228766.927862800.0%

Notably, there are a couple of guys at the bottom of this table (Zach Wilson, Paxton Lynch) who have also flopped. Matt Ryan, near the top, had a pretty nice career. But it's something that will affect how teams view Levis; definitely more careless with the football than the guy most expect will go No. 1, Young.

I like Levis; the physical tools are there, and I believe mistakes can be corrected by strong coaching staffs. I am hoping he ends up with the right team who can develop him properly. Carolina would be a nice spot, but since I don't think that will happen, the Colts would be a good location. New head coach Shane Steichen deserves a lot of credit for his work with Jalen Hurts; he also was offensive coordinator for Justin Herbert in his rookie season. Levis isn't the kind of runner Hurts is (few are) but best not to overrate his negative rushing yards a year ago; he was dealing with a turf-toe injury. The previous season he rushed for 376 yards and 9 touchdowns, so there's some dual-threat potential.

The way teams covet franchise quarterbacks these days, I don't think he's falling out of the top 5 picks (and maybe he won't get by Houston, whose new offensive coordinator, Bobby Slowik, had worked as an assistant in San Francisco the last few years). We will find out tonight.

--Andy Richardson