Diego Pavia's phone never buzzed this week, or whatever it is phones do these days. Not on Thursday. Not on Friday. Not even on Saturday, when the last name called in the 2026 NFL Draft was a linebacker from Buffalo named Red Murdock.
That made Murdock this year's Mr. Irrelevant, a title more coveted than it probably should be.
And Vanderbilt's Pavia?
Well, what do you call a Heisman Trophy runnerup who doesn't get drafted at all, and in the hours after the draft ended didn't even get an invite -- not from a single one out of 32 NFL teams -- as an undrafted free agent?
I don't know. Mr. Cautionary Tale, maybe?
Because, listen, it's not just that Pavia is a quarterback who tops out at 5-10 and 198 pounds. It's that Pavia is a quarterback who tops out at 5-10 and 198 pounds, and has a definite Johnny Manziel vibe to him.
Remember him? Johnny Football? The guy who beat Alabama, won the Heisman Trophy as a freshman, and loved to make that money-money-money gesture with his fingers every time he pulled a rabbit out of a hat at Texas A&M?
Manziel got drafted by the Cleveland Browns, where flashy QBs regularly go to become insurance salesmen. The Browns ruin quarterbacks the way most of us eat ice cream. Except in Manziel's case, he kinda did that to himself.
First of all, he wasn't as good as his hype.
Second of all, his hype was, if not entirely manufactured by Manziel himself, at least aided and abetted by him. Self-absorption practically rolled off him in waves, which is why he regularly wound up embroiled in off-the-field ... situations. Hey, he was Johnny Football, dammit. Why couldn't he (fill in off-the-field situation here)?
It only took the Browns two seasons to grow weary of all that. That's the same amount of time it took everyone else in the NFL to grow weary of him, and also to realize he just wasn't very good. Which is why no one else signed him.
He wound up playing in the CFL for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats and Montreal Alouettes, before the CFL kicked him out for violating the terms of his contract. After that he played briefly for some team called the Memphis Express in something called the Alliance of American Football, and later for some team called the Zappers in something called Fan-Controlled Football.
Now, I have no idea if Diego Pavia's career path will track that way. But if Johnny Football is his cautionary tale, Diego Pavia is Cautionary Tale 2.0 -- i.e., "How to guarantee you won't get taken in the NFL Draft."
It wasn't that he couldn't play; like Manziel at A&M, the guy beat Alabama, and he also beat Auburn three times. Vandy went 10-3 last season, with Pavia throwing for 3,539 yards and 29 touchdowns and running for 862 yards and 10 more sixes.
And did it all with, um, let's be polite and call it "swagger." A LOT of swagger.
After beating Auburn for the third time, for instance, he hinted that maybe Auburn coach Hugh Freeze might have fared better against him if Freeze had recruited him.
He also openly campaigned for the Heisman Trophy -- and, when he was beaten out by Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza, he went on social media and posted "(Bleep) all the voters", then partied at a New York nightclub under a sign that read "(Bleep) Indiana."
He later apologized, but the damage was done. NFL teams are almost comically terrified of potential distractions, especially among quarterbacks. And everything about Pavia screamed potential distraction -- even the fact he didn't find it necessary to hire an agent.
Everything about him screamed Johnny Football, in other words.
And thus, for three days, his phone didn't scream at all.