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        Kenyon Sadiq Fantasy Overview

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        Kenyon Sadiq
        Player Profile

        TE NYJ

        Height

        6'3"

        Weight

        241 lbs.

        Experience

        0 yrs.

        Bye

        13

        Birthday

        Mar 04, 2005

        Age

        21.3

        College

        Oregon

        NFL Draft Pick

        2026 - Rd 1, Pk 16

        Fantasy Rankings & Projections

        Fantasy Rankings

        Weekly
        BYE -
        Season
        TE {{playerPageAppVar.projectionForRestOfSeason && playerPageAppVar.projectionForRestOfSeason.rank[selectedScoringConfig.fantasyPtsKey] ? playerPageAppVar.projectionForRestOfSeason.rank[selectedScoringConfig.fantasyPtsKey] : "-"}}
        Dynasty
        TE8

        2026 Projections

        Rec Rec Yds Rec TDs Fantasy Pts
        {{fullPreSeasonProjection ? fullPreSeasonProjection.rec_catch.toFixed(1) : '0'}} {{fullPreSeasonProjection ? fullPreSeasonProjection.rec_yds.toFixed(1) : '0'}} {{fullPreSeasonProjection ? fullPreSeasonProjection.rec_tds.toFixed(1) : '0'}} {{fullPreSeasonProjection ? fullPreSeasonProjection[selectedScoringConfig.fantasyPtsKey].toFixed(1) : '0'}}

        DS 3D Projection

        Kenyon Sadiq's Preseason Player Analysis

        2025 Role & Results

        Production & Fantasy Finishes

        Sadiq broke out in his third Oregon season, leading the Ducks with 51 receptions, ranking second on the team in receiving yards (behind sixth-round Raiders WR Malik Benson), and leading all FBS tight ends with 8 TD catches.

        He accounted for modest shares of the Oregon passing offense, though:

        • 16.2% of receptions
        • 14.7% of yards
        • 25.8% of TDs

        Sadiq’s 11.0 yards per catch ranked just sixth among Ducks with 10+ catches for the year. Interestingly, that per-catch average came down from his sophomore year (12.8) despite Sadiq jumping from a 2.1-yard average depth of target to 9.2, according to Pro Football Focus.

        His 1.88 yards per route also ranked sixth among the same group of Ducks and marked a decline from the 2.14 Sadiq posted in 2024. Among 53 FBS TEs who drew at least 40 targets last season, Sadiq tied for a mere 17th in yards per route. Nine draft classmates at the position beat him.

        Historical Production & Trends

        Sadiq caught just five balls as a 2023 true freshman, following that with 24 catches as a sophomore. That tied him with RB Noah Whittington for sixth on the team, well behind lead TE Terrance Ferguson. The 2025 Round 2 pick of the Rams posted a 43-591-3 receiving line in 12 games during his final college season.

        That marked Ferguson’s third straight campaign with at least 32 receptions.

        Sadiq saw the share of his time spent in the slot increase each season through college, while his inline and out-wide splits each declined:

        Injury History & Durability

        Sadiq finished college with a fairly clean medical history. Jets HC Aaron Glenn did reveal this offseason, though, that the rookie TE would be having a hernia repaired and that he played through the issue in his final Oregon season.

        The recovery’s not expected to keep Sadiq out of training camp or affect his regular-season preparation.

        2026 Opportunity & Projection

        Projected Role & Competition

        Let’s start with what Glenn said just after his team drafted Sadiq (per Coachspeak Index):

        “With Kenyon Sadiq, we’re gonna be able to dictate, as far as the defense is concerned, are you gonna be in base, are you gonna be in nickel? There are so many positions that he can play for us. That’s gonna make us be able to open up the offense. Frank Reich has a really, really good vision for this player. It’s gonna be exciting to have him and the rest of those tight ends in the game at the same time.”

        Now let’s break that all down …

        1) It can’t possibly be a bad thing for Sadiq’s immediate usage that his OC had a “vision” for the player before the team drafted him 16th overall. That points to a significant rookie-year role, although it doesn’t necessarily tell us how fantasy-friendly a role that will be.

        2) “So many positions” obviously hints at the Jets moving Sadiq around the formation. That still falls short of projecting his playing time, but it does suggest the team will try to put him on the field as much as it can. Sadiq spent more snaps as a run blocker than a receiver through his first two college seasons, and nearly as many (275 blocking, 285 in route) even in his breakout campaign. PFF rated him solidly as a run blocker. So we’re not looking at a receiving-only TE.

        3) “The rest of those tight ends” is interesting. We’d have bet on more 2-TE sets for the Jets this season, with Sadiq joining 2025 second-round pick Mason Taylor. But “the rest of those tight ends” ropes in at least Jeremy Ruckert (a 2022 third-rounder) as well, and perhaps Jelani Woods and FB/TE Andrew Beck.

        Big plans overall for the position in the new offense should be good news for the best receiving prospect among Jets tight ends. And the Jets drafting him 16th overall certainly points to them viewing him that way.

        But we can’t know for sure yet that the historically undersized Sadiq -- 21st-percentile height and 15th-percentile weight among Combine TEs -- is ready for a full-time NFL role.

        And his target share will be a total guess with so many new pieces coming together for the Jets. Add that QB Geno Smith is coming off a poor 2025 and that Reich’s past two offenses (2023 Panthers and 2022 Colts) have disappointed badly, and we should all approach the 2026 Jets with some apprehension.

        Paths to Ceiling

        Sadiq’s best-case outlook for 2026 finds him trailing only WR Garrett Wilson in target share. That’s possible, with WRs Adonai Mitchell and Omar Cooper Jr., and RB Breece Hall as his primary competition.

        There’s room for Sadiq to earn enough targets in such a role to approach TE1 territory, but he’d need plenty of team passing volume and at least a mild rebound from Geno Smith. A difference-making fantasy outcome would also require some combo of improved yardage efficiency (vs. his final college season) and TD luck.

        Last year’s Jets had only two players exceed 11.0 yards per catch and totaled just 15 TD receptions.

        Risk Factors

        Sadiq doesn’t face scary target competition but is part of a significantly upgraded skill-position group. We’ll see how he, Taylor, and the rest of those tight ends fit together. We’ll also see how dominant a share of targets Garrett Wilson retains under the new OC. He has ranked among the league’s biggest target hogs through four seasons.

        The rookie TE’s scoring efficiency would also suffer if he remains a short-range target. In that case, he’d need either more volume or dynamic after-catch production to boost his fantasy numbers.

        Advanced Stats

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