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Two-Thirds Through the Season, the MVP Race Has Taken Shape

Hunter Tierney 's profile
By Hunter Tierney
November 29, 2025
Two-Thirds Through the Season, the MVP Race Has Taken Shape

We’ve hit that sweet spot on the NFL calendar where the noise and early overreactions have mostly burned off. Two-thirds of the way through the season, MVP talk isn’t just hot takes anymore — it’s starting to feel real. Records matter. Slumps matter. Those random Thursday nighters in October you barely remember? They matter too.

And right now, the MVP picture has sorted itself into a pretty clear shape.

There are five names you can talk about with a straight face:

  • Matthew Stafford

  • Drake Maye

  • Jonathan Taylor

  • Patrick Mahomes

  • Josh Allen

But if we’re being honest — and not just box-score shopping on a Sunday night — it really feels like a two-man racebetween Stafford and Maye.

Taylor’s putting up the kind of season that would’ve broken the sport 20 years ago. Mahomes and Allen still have that “what if he just rips off six insane games in a row?” fear factor. But based on what’s actually happened, not what we’re scared might happen, this thing is drifting toward a head‑to‑head between the 37‑year‑old playing the cleanest ball of his life and the young quarterback who dragged New England out of the mud.

How the MVP Field Quietly Shrunk to Two

In September, the MVP conversation always starts wide. It’s the time of year when every fanbase can talk themselves into their quarterback being “one hot month away” from sneaking into the MVP picture. A couple of big fantasy weeks, a primetime win, maybe a weird game where someone hangs 400 yards on a division rival — suddenly half the league feels sneaky in the mix if a few bounces go their way.

But once Thanksgiving shows up, all that noise starts to fade. The weather gets colder, the sample size gets bigger, and the excuses get thinner.

  • Jonathan Taylor has the monster numbers and the weekly highlights, but he’s playing a position voters treat like extra credit at this point.

  • Patrick Mahomes and Josh Allen both live in that weird MVP limbo where everyone knows how terrifying they can be, but neither has the record or the season‑long efficiency you usually need to actually win the award.

Is that fair? Not really. But is it how MVP voting has worked for the past decade? Absolutely. The award has become a two‑lane highway, and unless you’re an elite quarterback on a top‑three seed, you’re basically trying to merge into traffic with your hazard lights on.

To really understand how this thing looks heading into the final six weeks, you have to start with the guy at the top.

Matthew Stafford: Efficiency, Experience, and a Rams Team That Just Won’t Blink

Nov 16, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA; Los Angeles Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford (9) throws a pass during the second half against the Seattle Seahawks at SoFi Stadium.
Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

If you were drawing up a classic MVP case in 2025, it would probably look a lot like what Matthew Stafford is doing right now.

He’s sitting on 30 passing touchdowns with just 2 interceptions, which looks like a typo in 2025 with how aggressive teams throw the ball. That kind of split doesn’t happen by accident, and it definitely doesn’t happen by dinking and dunking your way through games.

There’s some real historical weight here, too. Only a handful of quarterbacks have ever gone through an 11‑game stretch with 30‑plus TDs and fewer than 5 picks. When you’re in a group with players like Brady and Rodgers in MVP seasons, voters tend to notice.

Then there’s the streak: 27 touchdowns in a row without an interception. His last pick came on the first drive of Week 3 against the Eagles.

He’s not leading the league in passing yards the way Maye is, but he’s comfortably near the top of that list while being absurdly efficient with the chances he gets. It’s volume plus efficiency, not one or the other.

The Rams’ Part in This

MVP is a quarterback award, but it’s still tied to winning. That part hasn’t changed. You can put up all the video‑game numbers in the world, but if your team is wobbling around .500, voters start squinting at your resume pretty hard. When you’re talking most valuable, the league has pretty much agreed that you need to be the guy driving a top seed — Joe Burrow from last year would be a perfect example.

And on that front, the Rams have absolutely held up their end.

They’re right in the mix for the No. 1 seed in the NFC, sitting at 9–2, riding a six‑game win streak that hasn’t felt fluky or lucky. These aren’t those ugly wins where you walk out thinking, man, that easily could’ve gone the other way. The Rams are controlling games. They’re dictating how teams have to defend them.

Stafford hasn’t had to drag a broken roster to relevance the way some past MVP candidates have, but he’s still clearly the engine. Everything the Rams do well offensively starts with him. The timing, the protections, the pre‑snap adjustments, the rhythm throws that keep drives alive, the perfectly timed deep shots… it all runs through a quarterback who’s seeing the field like a guy who’s been doing this for a decade and a half.

What’s been most impressive is how steady it all looks. When defenses heat him up, he knows exactly where the answers are. When they play soft and make him be patient, he’s perfectly fine taking the underneath stuff and living to see the next snap. When it’s time to hit the gas, he’ll uncork a 30‑yard strike like he just flipped a switch.

They’ve beaten good defenses. They’ve won tight moments. They’ve handled the pressure that comes with trying to stay on top of a conference that’s suddenly way deeper than people expected. And through all of it, Stafford has played with this calm, almost surgical style — like a guy who’s completely in control of the whole operation, never rushed, never shaken, and never letting the game speed up on him.

Why He’s Pulled in Front

If you zoom out, three things have really separated Stafford from the rest of the field over the last few weeks — and none of them require wild hypotheticals. It’s just been obvious, week after week:

  1. He’s stacking clean games. No weird three‑pick meltdowns, no stretches where he really even looks out of rhythm. Even on the days where the stat line isn’t earth‑shattering, he’s steady.

  2. He’s had statement wins. That blowout over Tampa wasn’t just a nice win — it was one of those games where you could feel the conversation shift in real time. You know the type: the broadcast starts making MVP graphics, Twitter starts arguing about his place in the race, and by Monday morning, it feels like he went from slight favorite to near lock.

  3. Everyone else has taken turns slipping. Maye’s had his fair share of turnovers this season. Taylor finally ran into a defensive front that didn’t let him breathe. Mahomes and Allen have both had plenty of uncharacteristic afternoons where the turnovers and losses start stacking up.

None of this is complicated. Stafford’s not leading this race because he’s the sentimental favorite or because people want to give the old guy a lifetime achievement award. He’s leading it because he’s checking every box voters actually care about: elite play, smart play, steady play, and a team sitting right near the top of the conference. He’s doing the MVP thing every single week — and he’s not giving anybody a reason to look elsewhere.

Drake Maye: Breaking the “Patriots Are Done” Narrative

Nov 9, 2025; Tampa, Florida, USA; New England Patriots quarterback Drake Maye (10) warms up before a game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Raymond James Stadium.
Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

If Stafford is the polished, efficient veteran favorite, Drake Maye is the chaos factor that refuses to go away.

The Patriots were not supposed to be here. They were supposed to be rebuilding, figuring things out, maybe annoying some teams late in the year if the defense stayed nasty. Instead, Maye has taken an incredible jump from Year 1 to Year 2, and now New England is 10–2 with a real shot at the AFC’s top seed.

You don’t do that by accident.

The Volume King

Where Stafford has the cleaner TD‑to‑INT line, Maye has the raw yardage crown — and he’s earned it. He currently leads the NFL in passing yards, sitting north of 3,100 already, and it’s not the empty‑calorie kind of production you sometimes see when a young quarterback is just dumping everything short. He’s attacking all levels of the field. New England isn’t protecting him with training‑wheels throws — they’re trusting him to push the ball, stretch defenses, and make real NFL reads.

His completion percentage hanging in the low 70s is impressive on its own (and league-leading), but it gets even more legit when you factor in how often the Patriots actually let him fire. He’s pairing accuracy with real intent, hitting intermediate and deep windows that force corners to turn and chase instead of squatting on routes.

He’s also added a little extra on the ground — nearly 300 rushing yards and a couple of scores — and the value there goes beyond the numbers. He’s not being used as a designed runner. He’s simply punishing defenses when they turn their backs in man coverage or get too deep into their drops. It keeps drives alive, and it’s one more layer that defenses now have to account for every Sunday.

The Turnover Gap

If you’re looking for the cleanest separator between Maye and Stafford right now, it really does come down to turnovers. Everything else between them is close enough that you can argue either side depending on what matters more to you — volume vs. efficiency, upside vs. steadiness — but this is the one area where there’s no real debate.

Maye has thrown six interceptions, and while that number isn’t alarming for a young quarterback with a ton of responsibility, a few of them have come in moments where he clearly trusted his arm a little too much or tried to squeeze something into a window that just wasn’t there. It’s not a crisis, but it’s the kind of thing that sticks in voters’ minds when they start the two.

The real question is how much weight that’ll carry if Maye keeps stacking yards, keeps close with the touchdowns, and keeps the Patriots in contention for the AFC’s best record. Some voters care deeply about turnovers; some care more about overall impact. Maye’s job over the next month is to make that gap smaller so the conversation becomes about everything else he does at a high level.

The Patriots’ Surge and the Schedule Edge

New England has ripped off nine straight wins, and none of it feels manufactured or lucky. They aren’t leaning on defensive touchdowns or opponents melting down in the fourth quarter. They look like a team that has figured out how to play winning football week after week — and Maye is a huge part of that.

This offense finally looks organized. The protection makes sense. The route concepts fit what Maye does well. They’re not crossing their fingers hoping the defense drags them across the finish line every Sunday. Instead, they’ve had multiple games where Maye is undeniably the best player on the field, taking control of drives, converting tough third downs, and giving the Patriots an offensive pulse they simply didn’t have a season ago.

Then there’s the schedule, which is quietly one of the biggest factors in this entire race.

New England has one of the softest remaining schedules among all the serious contenders. There are still tough matchups sprinkled in — Buffalo and Baltimore will both test them — but compared to the minefield the Rams have to navigate, the Patriots’ path is smoother. If New England keeps stacking wins while L.A. grinds through a tougher slate, that absolutely shifts how voters see things.

What Maye Needs to Steal It

Maye’s path to actually passing Stafford is pretty clear:

  • Keep the Patriots at or near the top of the AFC.

  • Hold onto the passing yards lead.

  • Avoid a mini‑slump where the picks spike.

  • Deliver one or two “everyone’s watching” performances down the stretch — those national window games where the MVP chatter spills all over social the next morning.

A 13‑ or 14‑win Patriots team with the league’s leading passer at quarterback is going to be hard for anyone to ignore. The remaining stretch gives Maye a real chance to build his case, sharpen up the few rough edges he still has, and put pressure on Stafford in a race that still feels closer than the betting odds might suggest.

If he does that and Stafford has even one ugly Sunday, this race tightens in a hurry.

Right now, though, Maye feels like the strong No. 2 who’s waiting for a mistake, not the guy setting the pace.

Jonathan Taylor: The Superstar Stuck in a Quarterback Award

Nov 23, 2025; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Indianapolis Colts running back Jonathan Taylor (28) runs against Kansas City Chiefs safety Bryan Cook (6) in the second half at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium.
Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images

Let’s just get something out of the way: Jonathan Taylor is playing at an MVP level. Not “MVP‑adjacent,” not “nice season for a running back” — actual MVP value for his team.

He leads the league in basically everything you’d want a bell‑cow to lead in:

  • Rushing yards (well over 1,100 already).

  • Rushing touchdowns (15 and counting).

  • Explosive runs (29 of those).

  • Now second in yards per carry (thanks to Jhamyr Gibbs' 200 rushing yard day).

He’s sitting on 17 total touchdowns, breaking games open with long runs, and carrying an offense that leans on him as the primary problem the defense has to solve.

The Colts are 8–3 and in control of their division, and you can’t really tell their story without starting with Taylor.

So why doesn’t it feel like he’s truly in this thing?

The Saquon Problem

Saquon Barkley not winning MVP last year told us everything we needed to know about how voters see this award now.

Barkley put up a year that would’ve broken the voting system 10–15 years ago. He didn't get the all-time rushing record essentially because they chose not to, created basically all of their explosive offense, and he still finished behind two quarterbacks.

That’s the backdrop Taylor is dealing with. He’s not just trying to beat out Stafford and Maye — he’s trying to fight against a voting pattern that, at this point, feels basically baked into the award. MVP has slowly drifted into this unofficial title of “Best Elite Quarterback on One of the Top Three Seeds.” It’s not written anywhere, but year after year, that’s how the ballots shake out. And for a running back, the expectations have quietly climbed to an almost impossible place.

The bar is brutally high:

  • You probably need to flirt with 2,000 rushing yards.

  • You probably need 20‑plus touchdowns.

  • Your team almost has to win 13 or more games.

  • And you still need the quarterback field to feel underwhelming.

Taylor’s checking most of those boxes from a production standpoint. The issue is that the top quarterbacks this year aren’t underwhelming at all — they’re actually putting together great seasons of their own.

Taylor’s Actual Case

If you dropped this season into a vacuum — no history, no voting trends, no quarterback bias — Taylor would absolutely look like an MVP. It’s not just the counting stats; it’s how much he bends defenses the moment he steps on the field.

He’s the heartbeat of a run‑heavy, physical Colts offense that doesn’t function the same way without him. Defensive coordinators have to call games differently because of him. Safeties creep down earlier than they want to. Linebackers take that extra aggressive first step. Corners get stuck on islands they’d rather avoid because the Colts are forcing extra bodies into the box.

And even with everyone keying on him, he’s still ripping off explosive plays. This isn’t a grind-it-out season where he’s plowing ahead for three yards just to keep the offense on schedule. He’s broken multiple 80‑plus‑yard runs, he’s hitting the edges with real burst, and he’s turning routine plays into chunk gains at a rate that shouldn’t be possible when defenses are selling out to stop him.

He’s also been the Colts’ most reliable source of stability. When Daniel Jones has an off day, Taylor keeps them alive. When the defense bends, Taylor bleeds the clock and flips the field. When the Colts need someone to settle a drive, he’s the one touching the ball.

And the Colts’ remaining schedule? It’s no joke. Every single team left on their slate is .500 or better, which means nothing is being handed to them. If Indy closes strong, it won’t be because they had it easy — it’ll be because Taylor carried them through a gauntlet.

Why He’s Probably Playing for Offensive Player of the Year

The frustrating truth is that Taylor is almost certainly the clubhouse favorite for Offensive Player of the Year, not MVP.

And that’s really what OPOY has turned into — the unofficial nod that says, “You were unbelievable, you carried your team, you were must‑see TV… but we’re still giving MVP to a quarterback.” It’s not exactly fair, and it definitely isn’t a reflection of how valuable Taylor actually is to the Colts. It’s just where the award has drifted over the years.

For Taylor to actually break through and win MVP, a very specific — and honestly pretty unrealistic — chain of events has to line up:

  • The Colts need to finish hotter than both the Rams and Patriots, to the point where 12–5 or even 13–4 is on the table.

  • Taylor has to keep scoring like he has been and push the counting stats into territory where voters feel guilty ignoring him.

  • And Stafford and Maye both have to stumble, not just a little, but enough that people start looking around for an entirely different kind of story. While also hoping Mahomes and Allen don't do anything spectacular. 

None of that is technically impossible, but it’s an awfully narrow path.

Patrick Mahomes: The Ceiling Pick Without the MVP Resume (Yet)

Nov 23, 2025; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) runs against Indianapolis Colts defensive tackle Adetomiwa Adebawore (95) in the second half at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium.
Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images

Any time the MVP conversation circles back to Patrick Mahomes, there’s this natural instinct to keep him in the mix. He’s built up so much trust over the years that even when the season isn’t going perfectly, people hesitate to push him out of the picture.

And that’s really the only reason he’s still comfortably sitting in every top‑five list right now. If you stripped away the name and just looked at the season on paper, he’d feel more like a long shot than someone truly knocking on the door.

The State of the Chiefs

Here’s the straightforward truth: being 6–5 is not where you want to be if you’re trying to win MVP. Historically, voters have not been kind to great players on teams hovering around the Wild Card line. When your team is floating outside the top of the conference, the leash gets shorter, and every mistake feels twice as loud.

Kansas City has been all over the place this year. Some weeks, the offense flashes shades of the old firepower — quick strikes, rhythm, confidence. Other weeks, everything feels disjointed. Drives stall. Routes don’t mesh. Balls hit the turf. It’s been a messy mix of drops, miscommunication, and timing issues that we’re not used to seeing from this group.

Some of that lands on the supporting cast, some of it lands on Mahomes, and some of it is just the reality of an offense trying to reinvent itself on the fly. But no matter the reason, it all ends up on the table when people start talking MVP.

The Numbers and the Frustration

Mahomes’ season hasn’t been bad — far from it. The numbers are solid:

  • Just under 3,000 passing yards.

  • 18 passing touchdowns.

  • A handful of rushing scores.

But solid isn’t usually enough for this award, especially when you’re someone who’s set the bar as high as Mahomes has. Seven interceptions isn’t a crisis, but several of them came during stretches where the offense already felt out of sync. It adds weight to the frustration because they often happen in games where Kansas City can’t afford the extra hurdle.

Yes, the highlight plays are still there. He’ll still drop a ridiculous touch throw between two defenders or fire something across his body that makes you sit up a little straighter. Those moments remind you exactly why he’s Mahomes.

But MVP isn’t about the handful of jaw‑droppers anymore. It’s about being consistently excellent from September through December. And this season, the consistency just hasn’t been what it needs to be.

What keeps his name alive is the reality that his ceiling is higher than almost anyone else’s. If Kansas City suddenly catches fire, goes on a 6–1 or 7–0 run, and Mahomes finishes with something like 35 touchdowns while dragging the Chiefs into a top seed, then the whole tone of the conversation shifts.

But that’s the key — it has to actually happen on the field before anyone can treat it like part of the resume.

What a Mahomes MVP Push Would Require

For Mahomes to seriously work his way back into this race, a lot has to break just right for him:

  • The Chiefs would need to heat up in a hurry and finish something like 5-1 or 6-0.

  • The offense has to clean up the turnovers and the stretches where nothing seems to work, because those are the moments that have dragged down both his numbers and their record.

  • And somewhere along the way, Stafford or Maye — maybe both — would have to stumble, giving the field an opening that hasn’t existed for most of the year.

Right now, that’s more of a long‑shot scenario than a realistic expectation. It’s not impossible — Mahomes has pulled off late‑season magic before — but it’s asking for several major shifts all at once.

Josh Allen: The Human Roller Coaster Still on the Board

Nov 20, 2025; Houston, Texas, USA; Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen (17) walks off the field after a play during the game against the Houston Texans at NRG Stadium.
Credit: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

If Mahomes is the wildcard name everyone keeps half an eye on, Josh Allen is the weekly roller coaster — the player who can look unstoppable one Sunday and unbelievably frustrating the next, sometimes within the same quarter. That unpredictability is part of what makes talking about him in the MVP race so complicated. You know the ceiling is there, but the week‑to‑week ride isn’t always smooth.

Allen is coming off an MVP season where we thought we had gotten off this roller coaster, and that alone creates a different kind of pressure. Voters rarely give the award to the same player in back‑to‑back years unless there’s no other choice. To stay in that conversation, you have to clearly outplay the field, and so far, he hasn’t done close to that.

The Highs Are Still Wild

When Allen is on, there might not be a more explosive player in football. He’s already sitting at 28 total touchdowns18 through the air and 10 on the ground — which perfectly fits the style Buffalo leans into. Their offense works best when he’s in full command, picking apart coverages with his arm and punishing defenses with his legs when they get too comfortable.

And he’s had some massive performances. That monster outing against Tampa, where he accounted for six touchdowns and turned the game into a personal showcase, is exactly the type of performance that keeps him in this race. When he finds that rhythm, he gives you the full spectrum — tight-window throws over the middle, deep shots down the sideline, and physical runs near the goal line that almost feel unfair.

The Problem: The Lows Have Come Too Often This Year

The lows have been a little too loud this year to gloss over. Allen has already thrown seven interceptions and put the ball on the ground a few times, and those mistakes have come in spots where Buffalo really couldn’t afford them. There’ve been stretches — not just a throw here or there — where one aggressive decision shifts the entire feel of the game. And in a season where the other top MVP candidates are playing exceptionally clean football, those moments stand out even more.

Buffalo sitting at 7–4 doesn’t do him any favors either. They’ve been competitive, but they’re chasing New England in the AFC East and already dropped the first head‑to‑head matchup to Maye. When voters start lining up the resumes side by side, the differences show up pretty quickly:

  • Maye and Stafford both have fewer turnovers.

  • Maye and Stafford both have the better record.

  • Maye and Stafford have both been much better throwing the deep ball.

  • Maye has more total yards.

  • Stafford has the efficiency edge.

Allen ends up in this middle ground — absolutely talented enough to go toe‑to‑toe with anyone, but not consistent enough this season to clearly jump ahead of the other contenders. The flashes are still unbelievable, but the weekly swings have made it harder for him to build the kind of steady MVP case that Stafford and Maye have put together.

Why He Still Deserves a Mention

Even with all that, it would be a mistake to completely dismiss him. Everyone in the league knows exactly what he’s capable of when he hits that top gear. If Buffalo catches fire and Allen strings together a run of sharp, turnover‑free football, things could shift quickly.

He’s close enough in total production to stay in the conversation. It’s just that the combination of record, turnovers, and the natural hesitation to reward the same player twice in a row makes it a much tougher hill for him to climb compared to Stafford or Maye.

All stats courtesy of NFL Pro.

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