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Analyzing 10 years of first round TE production


FireChans

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With Kincaid as OUR first round TE, I thought it would be useful to draw a historic comparison with the production that other first round TE's have made their rookie seasons.

 

Kyle Pitts - 68 rec 1026 yards 1 TD

TJ Hockenson - 32 rec 367 yards 2 TD

Noah Fant 40 rec 562 yards 3 TD

Hayden Hurst 13 rec 163 yards 1 TD

OJ Howard 26 rec 432 yards 6 TD

Evan Engram 64 rec 722 yards 6 TD

David Njoku 32 rec 386 yards 4 TD

Eric Ebron 25 rec 248 yards 1 TD

Tyler Eifert 39 rec 445 yards 2 TD

 

At first glance, woof. Obviously the 2 notable productive TE's, Engram and Pitts stand out.  But both were heavily targeted, 115 for Engram and 110 for Pitts. When looking at the Bills offense, Knox (who will likely remain TE1) has averaged ~57 targets per year.  Assuming Diggs/Davis/Knox are receiving the lion's share of targets again (which they should be), what do you all think is a reasonable expectation for the rookie next year?


I would be pleasantly surprised with a 40 catch 400 yard couple TD season.  I am expecting closer to 30-300.

 

Obviously rooting for him to be Travis Kelce/Mark Andrews/George Kittle born again as a rookie. But the history of the position doesn't support that being the case.

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Just now, Warcodered said:

I think the fact that they aren't exactly planning on him being used as your typical TE and more as a receiving weapon in the mold of Beasley might make this less relevant for him.

So like a Mike Gesicki?

 

Rookie year, Mike had 22 rec for 202 yards and 0 TDs.

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2 minutes ago, Warcodered said:

I think the fact that they aren't exactly planning on him being used as your typical TE and more as a receiving weapon in the mold of Beasley might make this less relevant for him.


plenty of those guys are pass catchers. If there are about 4500 yards and 35 or so TDs to go around I think he’s 4-500 and 5 of those.


Knox similar. Davis close to 1k, diggs closer to 14-1500, and the remainder of the depth guys and backs for 1000

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TE is a steep learning curve for a rookie & few make much of an impact their first season. But looking at that list, the 2 who stand out, Pitts/Engram, are not true Y-TEs. They're technically F-TEs, but really just big WRs. Their learning curve is mainly route running, since they rarely inline block. Kincaid is in the same mold, he needs to learn the playbook & routes, he should be up to speed much quicker than a traditional TE would. He probably won't be working with Kromer on blocking, he'll be with the receivers.

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I think Kincaid is treated more like a jumbo slot receiver and Knox will stay in-line and block half the time.

 

If the defense plays in nickel to put a db on him, I'd move him back in-line and run it. If they put a lb on Kincaid, I'm confident in his ability to get open. 

 

I think 500 yards is realistic if he stays healthy.

Edited by Allen2Diggs
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5 minutes ago, MPL said:

Who were the quarterbacks throwing to these guys? How did these offenses perform overall throughout the course of the season? Did these teams have a top 10 passing attack? 


why would he discuss that?  That would only refute this thread that was made to throw shade at his favorite team

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4 minutes ago, NewEra said:


why would he discuss that?  That would only refute this thread that was made to throw shade at his favorite team


when you consider how bad some of these offenses were and how bad some of the quarterbacks were, this list is actually kind of encouraging 

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1 hour ago, FireChans said:

With Kincaid as OUR first round TE, I thought it would be useful to draw a historic comparison with the production that other first round TE's have made their rookie seasons.

 

Kyle Pitts - 68 rec 1026 yards 1 TD

TJ Hockenson - 32 rec 367 yards 2 TD

Noah Fant 40 rec 562 yards 3 TD

Hayden Hurst 13 rec 163 yards 1 TD

OJ Howard 26 rec 432 yards 6 TD

Evan Engram 64 rec 722 yards 6 TD

David Njoku 32 rec 386 yards 4 TD

Eric Ebron 25 rec 248 yards 1 TD

Tyler Eifert 39 rec 445 yards 2 TD

 

At first glance, woof. Obviously the 2 notable productive TE's, Engram and Pitts stand out.  But both were heavily targeted, 115 for Engram and 110 for Pitts. When looking at the Bills offense, Knox (who will likely remain TE1) has averaged ~57 targets per year.  Assuming Diggs/Davis/Knox are receiving the lion's share of targets again (which they should be), what do you all think is a reasonable expectation for the rookie next year?


I would be pleasantly surprised with a 40 catch 400 yard couple TD season.  I am expecting closer to 30-300.

 

Obviously rooting for him to be Travis Kelce/Mark Andrews/George Kittle born again as a rookie. But the history of the position doesn't support that being the case.

 

So there's a few obvious questions here:

 

1) even though these are all obviously first round picks, there's probably a need to normalize by playing time.  In addition to time lost for injuries playing a role, the other players on the roster play a role - for example, OJ Howard was playing with Cameron Brate at TE, who was getting a larger share of the targets (77 vs 39).

 

2) once normalized for playing time, context matters.  We all love to believe that 1st round = guaranteed success, but of course that's not true.  Only about half of 1st round players develop into good NFL contributors (not stars - just good contributors)  So for context, if you compare the production of 1st round WR in their 1st year, how does that match up?  I'll give an example: 6 WR were drafted in the 1st round last year.  2 (Drake Londin, Garrett Wilson and Chris Olave) had >70 receptions for >800 yds.  Two (Treylon Burks and Jahan Dotson) had moderate production (>30 receptions, >400 yds).  One squibbed (Jameson Williams, 1 reception for 41 yds).

 

3) then of course, for the TE role, it's reasonable to ask "what role were these TE asked to play, and as receivers, who was throwing to them?"  So I think you're gonna see more variation in receiving production at the TE position than at the WR position, depending upon the role (F vs Y TE)

 

OK, for Kincaid, it seems to have been pretty clearly stated by Beane that they envision him as a "big slot".  Then the question becomes, "what would be a good contribution from that position?"  As a slot receiver last year, McKenzie's contribution of 42 receptions on 65 targets for 423 yds and 27 1st downs was pretty generally considered "not good enough".  That's 28 yds and 2 1D per game.  Beasley's final season in 2022 contributed 43 ypg and ~2 1D per game, and also represented a drop off for him.  Overall in his Buffalo years, Beasley contributed 5 receptions/game on about 7 targets/g and 51 ypg and more like 2.6 1D per game.  In Dallas, it was lower with 3 receptions/g on 4 targets per game, 32 ypg.

 

The Bills picked this guy specifically because of his "elite" hands and reported ability to find the gaps in zone coverage.  I think a contribution similar to McKenzie's (42 receptions, 420 yds) would be a good floor.  I think we'd like to see more Beasley-in-Dallas type production, 50 receptions, 540 yds.  Of course, a lot depends upon how much he sees the field.  Beasley was only on the field maybe 55% of the snaps overall during his time in Dallas, more like 65-70% in Buffalo.

Edited by Beck Water
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TE is one of those spots where it takes often a year or two to start realizing their full potential, likely due to the complexity of the position and blocking requirements at this level. Still I’m hoping for 600-800 yards and atleast 5 TDS, as he is the top TE prospect in a very strong class.  
Considering what the Bills have done with Knox, who had a whopping 39 Catches for 605 yards and zero TDS in his entire collegiate career, I’m excited to see what Kincaid does in this offense. I mean the dude had almost half of Knox’s entire college catch total in one game vs USC…  

 

This was already the #2 scoring offense in all of the NFL last year (though you’d never believe this any time the name Ken Dorsey is uttered around here), and the flexibility the DK’s allows Dorsey is going to give opposing defenses nightmares. How do you know if it’s a power package or are they going to split one/both guys out and go 3/4 wide?  I think the rookie makes his presence known early and often as DCs won’t know how to gameplan for this new wrinkle in the Bills offense.

Edited by Dr.Mantis_Toboggan
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1 hour ago, FireChans said:

With Kincaid as OUR first round TE, I thought it would be useful to draw a historic comparison with the production that other first round TE's have made their rookie seasons.

 

Kyle Pitts - 68 rec 1026 yards 1 TD

TJ Hockenson - 32 rec 367 yards 2 TD

Noah Fant 40 rec 562 yards 3 TD

Hayden Hurst 13 rec 163 yards 1 TD

OJ Howard 26 rec 432 yards 6 TD

Evan Engram 64 rec 722 yards 6 TD

David Njoku 32 rec 386 yards 4 TD

Eric Ebron 25 rec 248 yards 1 TD

Tyler Eifert 39 rec 445 yards 2 TD

 

At first glance, woof. Obviously the 2 notable productive TE's, Engram and Pitts stand out.  But both were heavily targeted, 115 for Engram and 110 for Pitts. When looking at the Bills offense, Knox (who will likely remain TE1) has averaged ~57 targets per year.  Assuming Diggs/Davis/Knox are receiving the lion's share of targets again (which they should be), what do you all think is a reasonable expectation for the rookie next year?


I would be pleasantly surprised with a 40 catch 400 yard couple TD season.  I am expecting closer to 30-300.

 

Obviously rooting for him to be Travis Kelce/Mark Andrews/George Kittle born again as a rookie. But the history of the position doesn't support that being the case.

 

My concern is more about Dorsey, in fact, all about Dorsey.  I love Kincaid the prospect as a weapon, but Dorsey last year IMHO struggled bad with getting the talent on the roster properly involved in the offense.  With the slot being a struggle all year, we didn't feature Knox more or try and get Shakir more established.  Cook and Hines were brought in to be pass catching RB's then we didn't use Cook much that way and Hines got 11 total touches only.  

 

But...there is more optimism here I think than most the cases above.  In all those cases, they were drafted to be the teams primary TE.  We already have a primary TE, and Kincaid was drafted to be a weapon primarily and more of a big slot.  Beane jokingly called it 11.5 personnel.  So I think there is more opportunity to get Kincaid involved in the offense given that will be his primary role.  

 

The one good thing though is we have a 1st & 4th round pick invested in Kincaid.  Pressure is on for Dorsey to get him involved.


The reality is this team has a lot of mouths to feed and there is only 1 football.  So I think 40-50 receptions, 450-600 yards and 4-6 TD's feels like a reasonable expectation year 1.  We still have Diggs, Davis, Knox, Sherfield, Shakir, Harty, and our RB's that will all be involved in the pass game.   He has the potential to put up that 1000 yard season of course, just might be hard with all these other guys here too.  

Edited by Alphadawg7
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1 hour ago, NewEra said:

So like Mark Andrews?  So like Travis Kelce?

 

your MO is so predictable.   

Mark Andrews wasn't drafted in the first round.  Neither was Kelce.

 

For reference:

 

Mark Andrews rookie season - 34 rec 552 yards 3 TD's

 

Travis Kelce rookie season - 1 GP 0 target 0 rec 0 TD's.

 

George Kittle rookie season - 43 rec 515 yards 2 TD's

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I don't think it's logical to just look at first-round TE stats. A new first-round TE is more likely replicate the production of a third or fifth-round guy, than the other way around.

If we drafted a TE in the fifth, no one would look at 1st-round TE production but logic does work the other way.

 

For historically great TE production in a rookie season see here:

https://www.statmuse.com/nfl/ask/most-receiving-yards-by-a-rookie-tight-end-in-a-season

 

Since 2010, there have been 8 TEs with at least 500 yards in their rookie season. However, 6 of those had fewer than 600 yards with one having 722 (Engram) and one with 1,026 (Pitts).

Kincaid is more than capable of joining that plus-500-yards list.

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14 minutes ago, FireChans said:

Mark Andrews wasn't drafted in the first round.  Neither was Kelce.

 

For reference:

 

Mark Andrews rookie season - 34 rec 552 yards 3 TD's

 

Travis Kelce rookie season - 1 GP 0 target 0 rec 0 TD's.

 

George Kittle rookie season - 43 rec 515 yards 2 TD's

And either was Mike Gesicki—— the guy that you referenced.  This is too funny and just so predictable.  Every thread

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13 minutes ago, NewEra said:

And either was Mike Gesicki—— the guy that you referenced.  This is too funny and just so predictable.  Every thread

I mean, Mike Gesicki is the poster child of “not being used in the traditional TE role.”

 

which you are well aware of. You’re just mad which seems like a personal problem.

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1 hour ago, FireChans said:

With Kincaid as OUR first round TE, I thought it would be useful to draw a historic comparison with the production that other first round TE's have made their rookie seasons.

 

Kyle Pitts - 68 rec 1026 yards 1 TD

TJ Hockenson - 32 rec 367 yards 2 TD

Noah Fant 40 rec 562 yards 3 TD

Hayden Hurst 13 rec 163 yards 1 TD

OJ Howard 26 rec 432 yards 6 TD

Evan Engram 64 rec 722 yards 6 TD

David Njoku 32 rec 386 yards 4 TD

Eric Ebron 25 rec 248 yards 1 TD

Tyler Eifert 39 rec 445 yards 2 TD

 

At first glance, woof. Obviously the 2 notable productive TE's, Engram and Pitts stand out.  But both were heavily targeted, 115 for Engram and 110 for Pitts. When looking at the Bills offense, Knox (who will likely remain TE1) has averaged ~57 targets per year.  Assuming Diggs/Davis/Knox are receiving the lion's share of targets again (which they should be), what do you all think is a reasonable expectation for the rookie next year?


I would be pleasantly surprised with a 40 catch 400 yard couple TD season.  I am expecting closer to 30-300.

 

Obviously rooting for him to be Travis Kelce/Mark Andrews/George Kittle born again as a rookie. But the history of the position doesn't support that being the case.

 
If Kincaid puts up these stats, I’d be happy with it.  Knox didn’t even put up those stats his first two seasons.  There’s other mouths to feed in this offense.  Kincaid hopefully adds another dimension that also helps boost the rest of the offense too.

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2 hours ago, FireChans said:

With Kincaid as OUR first round TE, I thought it would be useful to draw a historic comparison with the production that other first round TE's have made their rookie seasons.

 

Kyle Pitts - 68 rec 1026 yards 1 TD

TJ Hockenson - 32 rec 367 yards 2 TD

Noah Fant 40 rec 562 yards 3 TD

Hayden Hurst 13 rec 163 yards 1 TD

OJ Howard 26 rec 432 yards 6 TD

Evan Engram 64 rec 722 yards 6 TD

David Njoku 32 rec 386 yards 4 TD

Eric Ebron 25 rec 248 yards 1 TD

Tyler Eifert 39 rec 445 yards 2 TD

 

At first glance, woof. Obviously the 2 notable productive TE's, Engram and Pitts stand out.  But both were heavily targeted, 115 for Engram and 110 for Pitts. When looking at the Bills offense, Knox (who will likely remain TE1) has averaged ~57 targets per year.  Assuming Diggs/Davis/Knox are receiving the lion's share of targets again (which they should be), what do you all think is a reasonable expectation for the rookie next year?


I would be pleasantly surprised with a 40 catch 400 yard couple TD season.  I am expecting closer to 30-300.

 

Obviously rooting for him to be Travis Kelce/Mark Andrews/George Kittle born again as a rookie. But the history of the position doesn't support that being the case.

The most valid comp on that list is Pitts, because of the way, Kincaid is expected to be used. And Pitts QB in 2021 was kind of a broken down Matt Ryan as a QB.  Not saying Pitts is the floor. But it is not be shocking for Knox and Kincaid to have 1400 yds between then and 12 TDs between them. 

Edited by Chaos
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17 minutes ago, FireChans said:

I mean, Mike Gesicki is the poster child of “not being used in the traditional TE role.”

 

which you are well aware of. You’re just mad which seems like a personal problem.

course diss GIF
but he’s not a first round pick…. Just like Travis Kelce and Mark Andrew’s…. Which was the point of this thread AND your reply to my rebuttal.  
 


 

 

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2 hours ago, FireChans said:

With Kincaid as OUR first round TE, I thought it would be useful to draw a historic comparison with the production that other first round TE's have made their rookie seasons.

 

Kyle Pitts - 68 rec 1026 yards 1 TD

TJ Hockenson - 32 rec 367 yards 2 TD

Noah Fant 40 rec 562 yards 3 TD

Hayden Hurst 13 rec 163 yards 1 TD

OJ Howard 26 rec 432 yards 6 TD

Evan Engram 64 rec 722 yards 6 TD

David Njoku 32 rec 386 yards 4 TD

Eric Ebron 25 rec 248 yards 1 TD

Tyler Eifert 39 rec 445 yards 2 TD

 

At first glance, woof. Obviously the 2 notable productive TE's, Engram and Pitts stand out.  But both were heavily targeted, 115 for Engram and 110 for Pitts. When looking at the Bills offense, Knox (who will likely remain TE1) has averaged ~57 targets per year.  Assuming Diggs/Davis/Knox are receiving the lion's share of targets again (which they should be), what do you all think is a reasonable expectation for the rookie next year?


I would be pleasantly surprised with a 40 catch 400 yard couple TD season.  I am expecting closer to 30-300.

 

Obviously rooting for him to be Travis Kelce/Mark Andrews/George Kittle born again as a rookie. But the history of the position doesn't support that being the case.

 

There were 5 TE's drafted before Knox, none of them are still with the team that drafted them.  Gronk was drafted in 2nd, Kittle 3rd, and Kelce 5th (may have those 2 reversed??)

 

TE IMO is the 2nd hardest position to project other than QB.

 

Having said that, sounds like the Bills plan to use him more like a slot receiver so makes me less worried.  Likely the biggest thing he'll need to improve is his blocking.

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3 minutes ago, NewEra said:

course diss GIF
but he’s not a first round pick…. Just like Travis Kelce and Mark Andrew’s…. Which was the point of this thread AND your reply to my rebuttal.  
 


 

 

Yeah, he's a player comp.  It's not moving the goalposts when I'm not even having a discussion with you lmao.  What are the "goal posts" that you even have here?  Besides:

 

image.thumb.png.8cf628f4addc66082e5ad0832914fea3.png

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2 hours ago, FireChans said:

With Kincaid as OUR first round TE, I thought it would be useful to draw a historic comparison with the production that other first round TE's have made their rookie seasons.

 

Kyle Pitts - 68 rec 1026 yards 1 TD

TJ Hockenson - 32 rec 367 yards 2 TD

Noah Fant 40 rec 562 yards 3 TD

Hayden Hurst 13 rec 163 yards 1 TD

OJ Howard 26 rec 432 yards 6 TD

Evan Engram 64 rec 722 yards 6 TD

David Njoku 32 rec 386 yards 4 TD

Eric Ebron 25 rec 248 yards 1 TD

Tyler Eifert 39 rec 445 yards 2 TD

 

At first glance, woof. Obviously the 2 notable productive TE's, Engram and Pitts stand out.  But both were heavily targeted, 115 for Engram and 110 for Pitts. When looking at the Bills offense, Knox (who will likely remain TE1) has averaged ~57 targets per year.  Assuming Diggs/Davis/Knox are receiving the lion's share of targets again (which they should be), what do you all think is a reasonable expectation for the rookie next year?


I would be pleasantly surprised with a 40 catch 400 yard couple TD season.  I am expecting closer to 30-300.

 

Obviously rooting for him to be Travis Kelce/Mark Andrews/George Kittle born again as a rookie. But the history of the position doesn't support that being the case.

 

1 hour ago, MPL said:

Who were the quarterbacks throwing to these guys? How did these offenses perform overall throughout the course of the season? Did these teams have a top 10 passing attack? 


Well you had Matt Ryan, Matt Stafford (twice), Eli Manning, Andy Dalton, Lamar Jackson in there. Multiple pro bowlers, a league MVP, multiple top 10 offenses and perhaps even a Hall of Famer or 3.

Is that not good enough?

Edited by BullBuchanan
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1 hour ago, Southern_Bills said:

30-300 and 3 TDs would be a success in this offense. 

 

And don't discount it, we are most likely talking about 20 first downs and 3 red zone TDs. That can win quite a few games considering we are always a play away...besides the Bengals game last year.

 

I absolutely disagree, given the statements from Beane about the role they believe he can fill as a "big slot" who has some of the Beasley-like skills to find the gaps in zone coverage, but with a different body type.

 

If that's what they expect, then even McKenzie level production of 42/420 yds and 5 TD would be a bit of a disappointment.

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1 hour ago, KDIGGZ said:

Wait so it's not a good idea to trade up for a TE (especially when you already have one that you don't use)? That can't be right. Beane can do no wrong


Great teams get to draft great players and that helps them stay great teams even without top-15 picks. 
 

Who do you think was available that will be a better player over the next five years? I don’t see anyone.

 

Maybe because the only game I watched was against USC, or maybe because I have been watching so much Kelce the last few years. 
 

Knox or past utilization of TEs are bad reasons to select an inferior player. So if you don’t love this pick, name the player for the record so we can all cycle back. 
 

Everyone who was here years ago was on Ngata over Whitner, Orakpo over Maybin, but I think we got the best player we could and am excited. 
 

Before the pick was made I was really hoping for Kincaid and think he is by far the best pick we could have made. 

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17 minutes ago, Chaos said:

The most valid comp on that list is Pitts, because of the way, Kincaid is expected to be used. And Pitts QB in 2021 was kind of a broken down Matt Ryan as a QB.  Not saying Pitts is the floor. But it is not be shocking for Knox and Kincaid to have 1400 yds between then and 12 TDs between them. 

That would be awesome but also absolutely shocking.

 

Mostly because I'm assuming you don't think that it's going to be like the Chiefs last year when Kelce had 1300 and Noah Gray had 300.

 

That would probably be a top 5 TE duo statline in NFL history.

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Just now, FireChans said:

That would be awesome but also absolutely shocking.

 

Mostly because I'm assuming you don't think that it's going to be like the Chiefs last year when Kelce had 1300 and Noah Gray had 300.

 

That would probably be a top 5 TE duo statline in NFL history.

TD number is on the high side, but i think the yardage number is realistic. 

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5 minutes ago, Koufax said:


Great teams get to draft great players and that helps them stay great teams even without top-15 picks. 
 

Who do you think was available that will be a better player over the next five years? I don’t see anyone.

 

Maybe because the only game I watched was against USC, or maybe because I have been watching so much Kelce the last few years. 
 

Knox or past utilization of TEs are bad reasons to select an inferior player. So if you don’t love this pick, name the player for the record so we can all cycle back. 
 

Everyone who was here years ago was on Ngata over Whitner, Orakpo over Maybin, but I think we got the best player we could and am excited. 
 

Before the pick was made I was really hoping for Kincaid and think he is by far the best pick we could have made. 

The point by the OP is that this guy can have a great year by TE standards and it won't amount to much production at all. He might be great but who cares if he only has 400 yards receiving? That's not pushing us over the edge towards super bowl contention

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11 minutes ago, FireChans said:

Yeah, he's a player comp.  It's not moving the goalposts when I'm not even having a discussion with you lmao.  What are the "goal posts" that you even have here?  Besides:

 

image.thumb.png.8cf628f4addc66082e5ad0832914fea3.png

It is moving the goalposts when you use first round pick as the premise for your post…… then YOU bring up Mike Gesicki…..and then rebut Kelce and Andrews because they weren’t 1st round picks….. which Gesicki wasn’t either.  
 

have fun being you.

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