I don't know what Diego Pavia is majoring in at Vanderbilt University, other than NFL Prep with a minor in Show Me The NIL Money. But I do know Vandy is a high-gloss academic institution -- the Ivy of the South, some folks call it -- so I assume the kid's got a few healthy brain cells rattling around up there.
If so, they were apparently sleeping off a post-finals toot last weekend.
That's when Indiana's Fernando Mendoza won the Heisman Trophy and Pavia did not, which led Pavia -- who is 24 and goes to Vandy and thus should know better -- to commi an A-list fumble. Like a pissed-off 15-year-old, he fired off a "F*** the voters!" social media post. Then he went out on the town and a photo turned up of him in close proximity to a sign that read "F*** Indiana."
Oopsie.
A day or so later, when he'd come to what passes for his senses, Pavia posted a heartfelt apology that hit all the right atonement notes. He might have actually written it himself. The Blob, however, is putting his money on Pavia's agent, who must have been pissed off himself at his blockhead of a client.
"The hell is wrong with you, son?" is one thing you can imagine him saying.
Pavia, after all, is a quarterback headed for the NFL Draft in four months, and the execs who study potential draftees with sometimes disturbing intensity don't like it when a potential draftee throws a tantrum because he didn't win the Heisman. This is especially true if the potential draftee is a quarterback, the most important position on the field and one in which teams traditionally invest vast goo-gobs of capital.
You blow it with an offensive lineman, there's always another out there. You blow it with a franchise QB, you cost your team millions and usually wind up looking for a new job on top of it.
Everyone remembers a Peyton Manning, a Dan Marino, a John Elway. But they also remember a Ryan Leaf, a Jamarcus Russell, a Johnny Manziel.
Right now Diego Pavia looks more like the latter than the former.
Right now he's likely being judged in NFL front offices the way an acquaintance of mine judged him the other day.
"He's a punk," the acquaintance said.
Now, I'm not sure an NFL GM would say that out loud. But you know more than a few are thinking it.
In other words: Welcome to the sixth round, Diego. Or seventh.