Sometimes, can’t-miss options end up missing.

Remember that can’t-miss draft in 2015, with Jameis Winston going to the Buccaneers at No. 1 overall and Marcus Mariota to the Titans at No. 2?

Both quarterbacks were Heisman Trophy winners. Both led their respective teams to the College Football Playoff — Winston’s defending BCS champion Florida State team losing to Mariota’s Oregon Ducks in the semifinals of the first College Football Playoff following the 2014 season.

Both were poised to join the NFL and lead their respective pro teams to sustained success. And now, nearly five years later, you know what Winston and Mariota have brought to Tampa Bay and Tennessee?

Not enough based on their rich draft capital.

The Buccaneers haven’t made the playoffs since they drafted Winston, who has a 23-37 record as a starter. The Titans made the playoffs once with Mariota, in 2017, won one playoff game and have never finished better than 9-7 with him.

This is not what you’re looking for with the top two picks of a draft.

This is a cautionary tale of sorts for the likes of the Dolphins, who are in an apparent “Tank for Tua” mode this season to ensure they have the No. 1-overall pick and the opportunity to take Alabama quarterback Tagovailoa. The drafting of Winston and Mariota was proof that can’t miss sometimes misses.

Neither Winston nor Mariota will play Sunday. Mariota was benched in favor of Ryan Tannehill last week’s dismal 16-0 loss to the Broncos, against whom he was 7-of-18 for 63 yards and two interceptions in the first half. And Winston, who’s on a bye this week, probably deserves to be benched after turning the ball over six times (five INTs and a lost fumble) in last Sunday’s loss to Carolina in London.

Probably part of the reason Bucs coach Bruce Arians won’t bench Winston right now is because his No. 2 quarterback, Ryan Griffin, has never taken an NFL snap.

Both the Buccaneers and Titans are 2-4 and will have franchise-altering decisions to make after the season about whether to bring their franchise quarterbacks back after five seasons of disappointment. Both Winston and Mariota are in the team-option year of their respective rookie deals. If the teams cut bait, they’ll both be seeking another franchise quarterback just five years after believing they’d found one.

Though Winston had been on a good stretch before last week (nine TD passes and just two INTs in the previous three games), he has 10 INTs this season, behind only Cleveland’s Baker Mayfield for the most in the league. Winston’s 68 career INTS are the most of any quarterback since 2015, as are his 87 turnovers.

But at what point — if ever — does Winston stop turning the ball over? And, at what point does enough become enough for the Buccaneers?

As for Mariota, who on Sunday against the Chargers will back up Tannehill (who failed as the franchise quarterback hope in Miami), who knows how long his benching lasts?

In the Super Bowl era, there have been seven instances when quarterbacks been selected with the first two picks in the draft and never have both picks completely failed.

Most recently, Jared Goff with the Rams and Carson Wentz with the Eagles went with the first two picks in 2016, and that looks to have worked out so far.

In 2012, the Colts picked Andrew Luck first and the Redskins drafted Robert Griffin III second. Though Luck’s career ended this season because of injuries, he was one of the best when healthy. So, one out of two worked there. Griffin is now a backup for the Ravens.

In 1999, Tim Couch (Cleveland), Donovan McNabb (Philadelphia) and Akili Smith (Cincinnati) went with the first three picks, and McNabb was the only of those three to work out.

In 1998, Peyton Manning went first to the Colts and Ryan Leaf went second to the Chargers and you know the rest.

In 1993, the Patriots picked Drew Bledsoe at No. 1 and had success with him while the Seahawks picked Rick Mirer at No. 2 and he floundered.