The air inside NFL war rooms feels different heading into the 2026 NFL Draft. For years, the league obsessed over track-star speed at wideout and lean, hybrid safeties. But as the clock ticks toward Thursday night, the conversation has shifted to bulk. Specifically, the kind of bulk that can run a 4.4 and catch a seam route in traffic. Modern NFL Draft tight end prospects are no longer just blockers; they are the chess pieces coordinators use to humiliate smaller defenses.
Offenses are tired of seeing nickel packages on every down. To fight back, they are getting heavy. We saw the Seattle Seahawks and Los Angeles Rams bully opponents last year by keeping three tight ends on the field. They forced defenses to choose: stay small and get trampled in the run game, or bring in linebackers and get torched by a mismatch in the air. It’s a brutal cycle that has made the tight end position the most valuable Swiss Army knife in football.
Bears head coach Ben Johnson knows this better than anyone. Last season, Chicago lived in heavy personnel, running over 500 plays with multiple tight ends. Johnson’s offense found a groove by pairing veteran Cole Kmet with Colston Loveland, the 2025 first-round sensation. “Sometimes 12 personnel will do the trick, other times 13 will do it,” Johnson said during a recent press availability. “Having that versatility is hard to find. When you have it, it opens Pandora’s box.”
The Statistical Explosion of the Big Man
The numbers back up the eye test. Tight end usage hasn’t just grown; it has exploded. Last year, the league saw more offensive snaps from the position than at any point in the last two decades. Defenses are retreating, and offenses are filling that space with 250-pound athletes who move like point guards.
| Metric (2025 Season) | Total Value | Historical Context |
|---|---|---|
| Total Offensive Snaps | 48,102 | 20-Year League High |
| Total Receptions | 2,866 | NFL Record |
| Receiving Yards | 29,072 | 37% Increase vs. 2006 |
| 3+ TE Plays (13 Personnel) | 1,897 | 33% Increase vs. 2024 |
The Los Angeles Rams are the primary culprits in this trend. They broke the system last year by running 331 plays with three or more tight ends. That shattered the previous high mark of 204 set by Cleveland years ago. Sean McVay essentially told the league that if they wanted to play with five defensive backs, he would simply bring more muscle to the party.
Kenyon Sadiq and the New Breed of Athlete
If you want to know why scouts are drooling this week, look at Kenyon Sadiq. The Oregon product didn’t just show up to the Combine; he took it over. Watching him run was like seeing a glitch in the simulation. He clocked a 4.39-second 40-yard dash. That isn’t just fast for a tight end—it’s faster than most of the starting cornerbacks who will try to cover him this fall.
I’ve got the speed and athleticism and hands to receive and catch balls and be a threat on offense. You need guys that can do both. There’s a shortage of true Y tight ends that can block and catch, and that’s where I bring value.
— Sam Roush, Stanford Tight End Prospect
The depth behind Sadiq is equally impressive. Vanderbilt’s Eli Stowers posted a 45.5-inch vertical jump that left the stadium silent. These aren’t the “extra offensive tackle” tight ends of the 1990s. These are vertical threats who happen to be large enough to move a defensive end off his spot. The scouting combine saw 27 tight ends invited this year, a massive jump from the usual crop, signaling that college programs are finally catching up to the NFL’s demand.
Dictating the Terms of Engagement
Atlanta Falcons General Manager Ian Cunningham sees this as a power struggle. “Especially when you get a guy like Colston Loveland or Kyle Pitts, it gives you another weapon,” Cunningham noted. “It helps dictate the defense. It allows a lot of flexibility.”
That flexibility is the core of the 2026 draft strategy. Teams aren’t just looking for a player; they are looking for a way to force the defense into a “lose-lose” scenario. If a team drafts a player like Sadiq or Stowers, they aren’t just adding a pass-catcher. They are adding the ability to change their entire offensive identity without making a single substitution.
As we approach the podium on draft night, don’t be surprised when the “big boys” go early. The league has realized that in the battle between speed and power, the winner is usually the guy who has both. The 2026 class has plenty of both.

