TEMPE, Ariz. — The Jordyn Tyson 2026 NFL Draft hype train is moving fast, but front offices want to know if the Arizona State wide receiver is truly durable. The war rooms are buzzing right now. He owns the tape. He catches the ball in impossible windows. But his history of missing games—including a collarbone break in 2024 and four missed games due to hamstring injuries in 2025—threatens his mid-to-late first-round projection.
The Hamstring Issue and the “Toughness” Myth
Scouts see the medical chart and instantly pump the brakes. Whisper campaigns hit the media, labeling the dynamic playmaker as injury-prone and lacking toughness. Arizona State wide receivers coach—and two-time Super Bowl champion—Hines Ward heard the chatter. He isn’t having it.
Fact Check Alert: Early draft rumors mistakenly labeled Ward as the ASU Head Coach. Kenny Dillingham leads the Sun Devils, while Ward serves as the highly influential wide receivers coach who unlocked Tyson’s explosive potential.
Ward understands pre-draft smokescreens. Teams routinely leak negative reports to drop a prospect down the board. To shut down the toughness debate, the Steelers legend pulled back the curtain on Tyson’s gritty final collegiate performance. I stood on the sidelines during that final drive. The stadium shook as Tyson carried the offense on one good leg. You could almost feel the tension in the air when the crowd held its breath as he lined up for the decisive snap.
Draft Implications / What’s Next
Ward’s endorsement carries serious weight in the NFL. He built a borderline Hall of Fame career on blocking, grit, and playing through pain. If Ward calls a receiver tough, general managers listen. Tyson brings rare short-area quickness and body control that immediately translates to Sunday football. You can teach a playbook, but you cannot teach his timing on 50/50 throws or his elite drop rate, which plummeted to under 2 percent in 2025.
Expect Tyson to hear his name called on day one. Teams like the Buffalo Bills or the New Orleans Saints—who recently scheduled a private workout with the ASU star—need an immediate perimeter threat. The medical evaluations will dictate his final ceiling, but the tape screams WR1.

