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Concealed Republican > Blog > Politics > Diego Pavia Doubles Down in Indianapolis, Says He “Don’t Care” What Anyone Thinks Ahead of His Throwing Session
Politics

Diego Pavia Doubles Down in Indianapolis, Says He “Don’t Care” What Anyone Thinks Ahead of His Throwing Session

Jim Taft
Last updated: February 28, 2026 12:02 am
By Jim Taft 6 Min Read
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Diego Pavia Doubles Down in Indianapolis, Says He “Don’t Care” What Anyone Thinks Ahead of His Throwing Session
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Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia arrived at the NFL scouting combine with his reputation already packed in his carry on, and he is not pretending otherwise.

Pavia said he plans to throw for scouts on Saturday in Indianapolis, and he made it clear he is not changing his approach now that he is in front of NFL decision makers. “One thing about me is I don’t care what people think about me,” Pavia said.

Pavia’s name has drawn attention for reasons that go beyond arm talent. He became one of the more polarizing figures in college football during the 2025 season, and the combine interviews did not sound like a player trying to soften that edge. He called some of the criticism “clickbait,” saying it comes from media trying to generate attention.

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The on field resume is easy to summarize: Pavia led Vanderbilt to a 10-3 record, which marked the first 10-win season in school history. That season turned the Commodores into a national story, and it also put Pavia on the draft radar as a quarterback with a nontraditional path and a personality that is hard to miss.

The off field headlines followed late. Pavia finished second in the Heisman Trophy voting and later issued an apology after a social media post that included the phrase “F-All THE VOTERS.” That line became part of the conversation around him, even as he framed his demeanor as a leadership strength rather than a liability.

At the combine, Pavia said the traits that sometimes draw criticism also helped him at Vanderbilt. He said his confidence comes from being “constantly counted out,” including early in his career when he started in junior college. He said that underdog background is part of what teams ask about and part of what he believes works in his favor.

“I feel like a lot of teams love the tenacity, the fight,” he said. “The life of an underdog, that’s for sure. And, so, they ask questions. But you go back, you look at my record, ain’t nothing on my record.”

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He also tried to reframe how people interpret his confidence. “I just want everyone to know what’s true about me is I’m humble and I get my confidence from my process. And if you saw how much I put into this, you would see where I get my confidence,” Pavia said.

One evaluation issue will be unavoidable for scouts and coaches: size. Pavia measured under 5-foot-10 at the combine, and his height will be treated as a major factor in how teams project him as an NFL quarterback.

Pavia did not dodge the topic. He leaned on the level of competition he played against and argued that the jump to Sundays will not be as foreign as critics suggest. “I would just say turn on the tape,” Pavia said. “It’s not like we’re not playing these guys that are going first-round, second-round [picks] on Saturdays in the SEC. So, the SEC and the Big Ten probably have the most guys getting drafted in the first, second round. So, we’re playing those guys and ain’t nothing going to change.”

That statement sits at the heart of his pitch in Indianapolis. Pavia is not presenting himself as a project who needs to be protected from the level of competition. He is presenting himself as someone who already lived in it, won in it, and does not plan to shrink his personality to fit a preapproved quarterback template.

His throwing session Saturday will be a practical checkpoint after the interviews. Pavia will get a chance to show the arm strength and timing that teams need to see from any quarterback prospect, while evaluators weigh the rest of the package: production, leadership style, decision making, and how his measurables fit the league’s long-standing preferences at the position.

The combine is designed to create clarity. In Pavia’s case, the clarity so far is that he is not interested in running from what made him a headline in college football, even with NFL front offices now holding the notebooks.

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