Mendoza Bros. Spotlight: Alberto to GT | Analysis by Brian Moineau

Georgia Tech lands Alberto Mendoza: the portal move that keeps the Mendoza name in the ACC spotlight

You know that feeling when a plot twist lands faster than the final seconds of a close game? One day Indiana is celebrating a Heisman winner and a national title, the next day Georgia Tech announces a commitment from the Heisman winner’s younger brother. Alberto Mendoza’s decision to transfer to the Yellow Jackets is the kind of offseason moment that redraws depth charts and sparks instant “what if” conversations.

Why this matters beyond a single roster move

  • Alberto isn’t just “Fernando’s little brother.” He’s a 6-2, athletic QB who showed real promise in relief at Indiana — efficient passing, a few timely throws and the kind of dual-threat flashes ACC coaches covet.
  • Georgia Tech just finished 9–4 in 2025 and needs a quarterback to replace Haynes King. Adding a young QB with game experience and a winning pedigree accelerates their timeline.
  • For Georgia Tech, this is both a talent pickup and a recruiting signal: Brent Key is willing to be aggressive in the portal to speed the program’s trajectory.

A quick snapshot of Alberto’s background

  • High school: Christopher Columbus (Miami, FL), the same South Florida pipeline that produced his brother Fernando.
  • At Indiana: Played mostly as a backup in 2025, appearing in nine games. Notable stat line: completed 18-of-24 for 286 yards, five TDs and one interception, plus 190 rushing yards and a rushing TD. Those numbers came in limited opportunities but showed accuracy and playmaking instincts.
  • Transfer timeline: Entered the transfer portal in the winter window following Indiana’s national title run and committed to Georgia Tech on January 20, 2026.

What Georgia Tech gets (and what to watch)

  • Immediate competition: Alberto arrives with college reps and a winning culture close to home. He won’t be an automatic starter — Georgia Tech still has returning players and incoming transfers — but he presents a realistic path to the job if he adapts to the system quickly.
  • Mobility and efficiency: In spot duty, Alberto demonstrated a high completion rate and the ability to pick up yards with his legs. That profile fits well with modern ACC offenses that prize quick decision-making and the threat of QB movement.
  • Development upside: At 6-2 and still young, Mendoza has room to add polish. Georgia Tech’s coaching staff will be judged on how quickly they can turn those flashes into consistent performance against ACC defenses.

Ripple effects for Indiana and the Mendoza family narrative

  • Indiana’s offseason quarterback carousel keeps spinning. With Fernando expected to turn pro after capturing the Heisman and the national title, Indiana had already added portal talent (Josh Hoover). Alberto looking elsewhere is understandable — he’s chasing playing time and a chance to build his own legacy.
  • Storylines sell. Fernando’s Heisman and the Hoosiers’ Cinderella run dominate headlines, and Alberto’s move feeds into the human interest angle: two brothers, two different paths after a shared season of ultimate success.

Where the risk and reward lie

  • Risk for Georgia Tech: Portal commits aren’t guaranteed fits. Chemistry, learning a new offense and adapting to ACC speed are immediate hurdles. If Alberto doesn’t win the job, Tech still needs to replace production at QB.
  • Reward for Georgia Tech: If he develops into a reliable starter, this could be a low-friction, high-upside win — a player with practice-room familiarity with a championship-winning culture and the confidence that comes from being part of a top program.

The broader college-football lens

  • The Mendoza story is another illustration of how transfers and family ties shape roster construction today. Power is shifting toward players who can move for opportunity, and programs that move quickly in the portal gain competitive advantage.
  • It’s also a reminder that star seasons (and Heismans) don’t freeze rosters. Momentous wins often spark roster churn — players reassess their roles, coaches retool, and the cycle repeats.

Final thoughts

Alberto Mendoza’s commitment to Georgia Tech is more than a neat offseason headline. It’s a strategic play by the Jackets to add a young, experienced quarterback with a winning background — and it offers Mendoza a clearer path to carve his own identity away from an inevitable comparison to Fernando. If the coaching staff can accelerate his comfort in the offense, this could be an understated offseason win for both player and school. Either way, the Mendoza name will continue to be one to watch in 2026.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Purdy’s Five-TD Night Puts Niners Near 1 | Analysis by Brian Moineau

Night of the Purdy Party: How Brock Put the 49ers One Win From the 1-Seed

There are nights when a quarterback doesn’t just play — he takes over the script. On Sunday Night Football, Brock Purdy did exactly that. After a shaky first throw, he rallied to account for five touchdowns (three passing, two rushing) and guided the San Francisco 49ers to a 42-38 win over the Chicago Bears, setting up a winner-take-all Week 18 clash with the Seattle Seahawks for the NFC’s top seed.

This wasn’t tidy. It wasn’t pretty. It was electric, messy, and magnificent — the kind of primetime game that reminds you why football is an emotional sport. Purdy’s performance didn’t just win a game; it extended momentum, ratcheted expectations, and made the 49ers’ late-season narrative impossible to ignore.

Why this game matters beyond the scoreboard

  • The 49ers improved to 12-4 and now control the path to the NFC’s No. 1 seed — beat Seattle in Week 18 and they finish with home-field advantage and a first-round bye.
  • Purdy’s five-touchdown output marked his second straight game with that many TDs, a rare streak that puts him in historical company.
  • The game showcased both San Francisco’s offensive fireworks and defensive vulnerabilities — a reminder that the 49ers’ ceiling is sky-high but not without risk.

What Purdy showed under pressure

Early in the game Purdy’s first pass went the wrong way — a pick-six — and it felt like a potential saboteur for the night. Instead, he flipped the script.

  • Poise: Purdy repeatedly converted third downs and escaped from pressure to keep drives alive. Those off-schedule plays defined the late-game push.
  • Dual-threat explosiveness: He finished with 303 passing yards and two rushing TDs, becoming the first 49ers QB to have 300+ yards, three pass TDs and two rushing TDs in a single game (team research highlighted after the win). That versatility turns play-calling from a plan into a problem for defenses.
  • Clutch: The decisive 38-yard touchdown to Jauan Jennings with 2:15 left was a clean, aggressive strike — the kind of throw that separates good games from signature wins.

Head coach Kyle Shanahan’s postgame praise calling Purdy an “assassin” and saying he was “playing as good as it gets” wasn’t hyperbole. The game mattered in context: it followed a stretch where Purdy had elevated his play and now heads into a season-deciding showdown carrying real momentum.

The big-picture 49ers: offense humming, defense raising questions

This was a team win, but it wasn’t without blemishes.

  • Offense: Christian McCaffrey returned with a huge night (140 rushing yards and a TD), the receiving corps made key plays, and even backup tight end Jake Tonges stepped up in George Kittle’s absence. The attack looked balanced and explosive.
  • Defense: Allowing 38 points to a Bears team led by rookie quarterback Caleb Williams spotlighted persistent coverage and pressure issues. San Francisco’s defense made enough key plays late, but this unit will need steadier work against Seattle’s attack next week.
  • Health and toughness: The 49ers took hits in the trenches and showed resilience; Purdy escaped a few dangerous moments that could have swung the game had things gone differently.

In short: an offense capable of torching any defense, paired with a defense that can be flaky in stretches. That combination makes them thrilling but also fragile.

Moments that mattered

  • The pick-six early could have derailed the Niners; instead Purdy’s response set the tone for the rest of the night.
  • Purdy’s 3rd-and-long completions and late scramble to keep the final drive alive were game-defining.
  • The 38-yard TD to Jennings with 2:15 left — the dagger that ultimately separated the two clubs.

A look ahead: what the Week 18 showdown will decide

  • If the 49ers beat the Seahawks in Week 18 (Saturday night), they clinch the NFC West, snag the No. 1 seed, secure a first-round bye, and earn home-field advantage — potentially all the way to the Super Bowl if they keep winning.
  • The margin for error is razor-thin: Purdy’s recent run gives San Francisco offensive confidence, but the defense must clean up mismatches against Seattle’s weapons.

A few quick stat nuggets

  • Purdy: 24-of-33, 303 passing yards, 3 passing TDs, 1 INT, plus 6 rushes for 28 yards and 2 rushing TDs (game totals as reported after the matchup).
  • The 49ers reached 12-4 and have the opportunity to clinch the NFC’s top seed with a win next week.
  • Purdy became one of the few quarterbacks in the Super Bowl era to record five offensive TDs in back-to-back games, a feat last done by Russell Wilson in 2020.

My take

This was a defining primetime moment for Brock Purdy and the 49ers’ offense. Purdy’s growth from mid-round prospect to an elite manager-of-chaos has been rapid and intoxicating to watch. The offense is dialed in; the defense is worrisome but still capable of clutch plays. If San Francisco can patch the defensive holes and Purdy keeps producing at this level, they won’t be a one-week wonder — they’ll be the team everyone has to beat in January.

If you’re a 49ers fan, savor the Purdy magic but don’t get complacent. If you’re watching the NFC playoff picture, keep an eye on Levi’s Stadium — the 49ers controlling the 1-seed would completely reshape postseason paths.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.