How NFC East teams rank at the TE position heading into 2023

TEs might be an afterthought to some, but top teams have them and the NFC East is in an arms race. | From @cdpiglet

Previously an afterthought, tight ends seem to be en vogue among the league’s best teams. Almost all of the true contenders seem to have tight ends who are matchup problems for opposing defenses. The Kansas City Chiefs have Travis Kelce, the San Francisco 49ers have George Kittle, the Philadelphia Eagles are starting Dallas Goedert, and Rob Gronkowski has Super Bowl victories for both the New England Patriots and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

NFC East teams seem to understand this. In addition to the Eagles with a top-five TE in Goedert, New York went out and got Darren Waller to pair with 2022 rookie, Daniel Bellinger. Dallas spent a second-round draft pick to add to a TE room that looks to have incredible potential. So how do they rank in comparison to each other?

Is there any fantasy football value among Cowboys tight ends?

What will life after Dalton Schultz look like among Dallas’ tight ends?

On the heels of a 78-808-8 effort in 2021, the Dallas Cowboys placed the franchise tag on Dalton Schultz, who looked to be emerging as a top-tier, pass-catching tight end. Schultz reportedly spurned a three-year extension and played out the tag, hauling in 57 passes for 577 yards and five TDs over 15 appearances last season. He then ended up settling for a one-year deal with the Houston Texans in March.

Schultz’s departure creates a camp battle between a pair of returning options in Jake Ferguson and Peyton Hendershot, and rookie Luke Schoonmaker. Let’s look at all three players to see which one(s), if any, deserve fantasy consideration.

Peyton Hendershot has unique opportunity to be Cowboys’ latest UDFA success

Hendershot might be the most talented pass-catching option on in his position group, but he still has to earn on-field opportunities. | From @ReidDHanson

The 2023 offseason was a critical time for the Cowboys second-year tight end Peyton Hendershot. After establishing himself as a dynamic receiving option as a rookie, the former UDFA hoped to take on a bigger role in Year 2. Working in his favor was the departure of TE1, Dalton Schultz.

Working against him was one of the top TE draft classes in recent memory. It seemed unavoidable; Hendershot’s role on the Cowboys in 2023 would likely hinge on who Dallas drafted to join the TE ranks.

With so many gifted pass-catching TEs in the draft, it was perfectly possible Hendershot could fall further down the pecking order than where he started in 2022.

Multiple prospects projected as better receiving options than Schultz, and if the Cowboys drafted one of them, Hendershot could see even less opportunities than he saw as a rookie.

Cowboys TE Hendershot questionable to return

The Cowboys tight end room took a hit early in Tampa Bay, with their impressive UDFA suffering a thigh injury. | From @CDBurnett7

Editor’s note: Hendershot returned later in the second quarter.

The Cowboys and Buccaneers are out of the gates as both offenses find rhythm, and Dallas may be without one of their secret weapons. Tight end Peyton Hendershot suffered a thigh injury during the first quarter in Tampa Bay and is questionable to return to the game.

As an undrafted free agent, Hendershot exceeded expectations and has three touchdowns on the year while adding some edge to the offense in a deep tight end room. If he’s unable to return Dallas will continue to rely on Dalton Schultz and Jake Ferguson, with the former already scoring a touchdown in this wild card matchup.

WATCH: Kellen Moore isolates Jags DE, Cowboys rook finds end zone

Dak Prescott was perfect on the Cowboys’ third drive, extending the lead to double digits in Jacksonville. | From @cdburnett7

The Jaguars’ surrenders the sixth-most yards per game with 368.7 and the Cowboys have capitalized on it early. With 13 minutes left in the second quarter, Dallas has 144 yards and a double-digit lead.

Quarterback Dak Prescott took over the reins after the run game delivered the first touchdown, and he was a perfect 5-for-5 on the Cowboys’ third drive for 56 yards and forced a defensive pass interference for 17 yards to add onto the yardage. On the first play in the red zone, Prescott attacked a pass rusher in coverage with a anticipation throw to tight end Peyton Hendershot, who had the ball drop right into his hands in the end zone.

Hendershot is an undrafted free agent, but he’s made his presence felt as the third-string tight end. Jake Ferguson is inactive in Jacksonville, so Hendershot was given the opportunity and delivered. With plenty of time left in the first half, the Cowboys have a 14-0 lead and can play their own style of football.

Cowboys tight ends fear monetary fine for Whac-A-Mole stunt, Dak Prescott promises help

The Cowboys’ tight ends came up with a TD celebration that could draw a fine; Dak Prescott told them they would get help if it happens. | From @ToddBrock24f7

After a sloppy first half that looked like an awkward Thanksgiving get-together, the Cowboys tight ends took over after intermission, playing the role of the fun uncles who assume control of game night and make sure everyone leaves with a smile.

Dalton Schultz and Peyton Hendershot scored all three of the Cowboys’ second-half touchdowns, while Schultz and Jake Ferguson combined to catch all seven of their total targets from quarterback Dak Prescott and contribute 88 receiving yards in the 28-20 win over the New York Giants.

By the end of the evening, it felt like the tight ends- along with fourth-stringer Sean McKeon- were simply toying with the Giants. So it was perhaps fitting that the foursome ganged up for a group celebration after Hendershot’s two-yard rushing score that kicked it old school all the way back to the Chuck E. Cheese days.

Ferguson, the rookie out of Wisconsin, says he came up with the Whac-A-Mole idea upon seeing the iconic red kettles in the end zones AT&T Stadium.

“I think we just saw the kettle and we were brainstorming in the tight end room, like, ‘What can we do? I think we can pop up and down.'” Ferguson explained. “I was like, ‘What about if all three of us are in there, we just play Whac-A-Mole?’ Because we knew Peyton had that play in for a couple of weeks, and we knew he was going to get in there and have an opportunity.”

That all four tight ends were on the field together made the moment even better. The celebration, of course, recalled a mid-December game in 2016 when running back Ezekiel Elliott leaped into the kettle after scoring on a run versus Tampa Bay. He drew a 15-yard penalty.

I definitely have to give them their props,” Elliott said Thursday night of his teammates’ more elaborate sequel. “They topped me. They topped my kettle celebrations. I’m a little jealous they didn’t let me in on it. But I love those tight ends; we’ve got a hell of a tight end room. All four of them are playing great ball.”

In 2018, Elliott upped the ante by dropping $21 cash in the kettle after a Thanksgiving Day touchdown against Washington. Later in the same game, he picked up Prescott and deposited him in the bucket, too. He was flagged again and subsequently fined $13,369 by the league for unsportsmanlike conduct.

Thursday’s new kettle celebration wasn’t flagged on the field. And the team’s leaders told the tight ends not to worry about any monetary punishments that may be levied.

“It was great,” Prescott told reporters of the Whac-A-Mole stunt. “The guys told me about it earlier in the week. They were worried about getting fined or getting a penalty. We said, ‘Make sure you are up two touchdowns. We have a couple of guys that can help with the fines, so go for it.'”

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Prescott goes 8-for-8 with Cowboys’ TEs in National Tight Ends Day win: ‘Let’s feed them all’

Peyton Hendershot got the gift of Prescott’s first TD pass of 2022 to celebrate the unofficial holiday; Dalton Schultz played through pain. | From @ToddBrock24f7

It may have sneaked up most casual fans once again, but the Cowboys certainly didn’t forget about National Tight Ends Day. And while they didn’t take part in any formal recognition of the league-celebrated unofficial holiday, Dak Prescott and Co. ended up letting their talented group share the spotlight during Week 7’s win over Detroit.

It was a grass-roots effort from George Kittle and the San Francisco 49ers that turned the fourth Sunday in October into National Tight Ends Day over the past several years. And while it was purely coincidental, the Cowboys had a whopping four of theirs in uniform for their meeting with the Lions, a team that just happens to be coached by Dan Campbell, himself a former Cowboys tight end.

While Sean McKeon didn’t see much action on offense (just two snaps), the other three Cowboys tight ends were heavily involved in the 24-6 Dallas victory, with Prescott going 8-for-8 in his passes to Dalton Schultz, Jake Ferguson, and Peyton Hendershot. The trio was responsible for 61 receiving yards and a score; Hendershot was on the other end of Prescott’s first touchdown throw of the 2022 season, in the quarterback’s highly-anticipated return to the field.

“What’s funny is actually, the flat to the right’s the first read,” Prescott explained in his postgame press conference. “And then Jake’s the second read. When I looked at him he was covered, and then I just see Peyton in the back of the end zone doing a jumping jack. And I throw it. They were giving me stuff when I get back to the sideline, like, ‘Oh, you didn’t throw it to Jake because he scored last week?'”

Now both rookies have a score on their short but promising pro resumes. According to Patrik Walker of the team website, it’s the first season in Cowboys history that two rookie tight ends have scored touchdowns.

“It had a little something sweet to it,” the undrafted Hendershot admitted of hauling in his first six-pointer on the holiday honoring his position, “but I’m just thankful regardless.”

The first Cowboy to congratulate Hendershot in the end zone after the score? Ferguson, of course.

“It’s [National] Tight End Day,” Prescott smiled, “so let’s feed them all. It’s just great for two young guys.”

Schultz didn’t find the end zone- and hasn’t yet this season- but he did log five receptions for 49 yards. He also managed to overcome another hit to his right knee.

The franchise-tagged starter first suffered a PCL sprain in Week 2. He missed the team’s next game, returned for Week 4 but didn’t record a catch, and then re-aggravated the knee against Los Angeles in Week 5. He was a late scratch last week in Philadelphia and was back in action on Sunday, though it looked like he may not last the whole contest.

The Stanford product was dragged down awkwardly in the first quarter by Detroit linebacker Alex Anzalone and stayed on the turf for several minutes. He was able to return, vowing to play through the injury as long as he is able.

“I knew something was going to happen, and then the worst thing happened,” Schultz said Sunday, per Michael Gehlken of the Dallas Morning News. “I was like, ‘Ahh, that’s ball.’ You run the risk of doing that every time you go out there. …[The knee] is finally getting to the point where it’s manageable, and hopefully it just keeps getting better and better as the weeks go on.”

He’ll look to repeat his weekly ramp-up to gameday once again as Chicago comes to town next Sunday, and hopefully continue to build on the rapport that he and Prescott have developed over the tight end’s five years in Dallas.

“Schultz is a guy that just, going back to his time coming in, has always been ready to work. He’s always been communicating and just trying to get on the same page,” Prescott explained. “I’d say we took a big step this offseason. We spent a lot of time together, whether it be [working on] routes, whether it just be personal or whatever it is. And I just think it shows. I have a lot of trust in him; we see the defense the same way. He’s important to this team, he’s important to that tight end room in growing those young guys.”

Even if it means letting the kids reap all the glory on National Tight Ends Day.

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Six points with David Dorey

Friday’s quick look at six fantasy items to know

Week 2 saw the return of scoring with seven teams topping 30 points and Tua Tagovailoa tossing for 469 yards and six touchdowns in a thrilling comeback win over the Ravens, who choked on a 35-14 lead in the fourth quarter. Week 1 saw so many teams come out rusty and unprepared. Week 2 was marked with exciting comebacks and plenty of fantasy points.

We’ve already lost Trey Lance for the year, and Dak Prescott returns anywhere from this week to November, depending on who you ask. After two weeks, there are fantasy stars from 2021 that haven’t been seen much.

Here’s six things to think about this weekend:

1.) Let’s draft WR,WR,WR,WR, RB – Had a feeling, checked it out, and was correct. The decline in rushing is significant. I compared the stats for fantasy positions between 2021 and 2022 through the first two weeks of each season. There was really no statistically significant change from last year except one position. I’ll include the full table at the bottom. But for running backs:

RB RUN RYD RTD Target Catch CYDS CTD FF Pts
2021 1,472 6,359 55 426 330 2,554 18 1,659
2022 1,294 5,651 27 423 324 2,249 16 1,372
-178 -708 -28 -3 -6 -305 -2 -287
Drop 12% 11% 51% 1% 2% 12% 11% 17%

 

None of the positions varied other than running backs. The decline in the number of runs (12%), rushing yards (11%), and rushing touchdowns (51%) was noticeably skewed. Rushing tends to rise at the end of the season with bad weather games, but can we even rely on that anymore?

2.) Da Bears – They have been unbelievably bad on offense through two games and rant at or near the bottom in almost all fantasy categories other than running back. There is no way that this will continue. Week 1 was in the rain against the 49ers, and they won. It meant nothing. They ran well versus the Packers with 170 yards and both touchdowns. But the passing game was even worse – 7-of-11 for 70 yards and an interception. HC Matt Eberflus’ offense is being  installed and was in tough venues and conditions for two games. This week, the Bears host the Texans. This is likely their weakest matchup of the year.

Darnell Mooney and Cole Kmet combined for only two catches and four yards but the first two games can be explained away. Eberflus has spoken to the need to involve Kmet and Mooney and they should be force-fed this week. They are also waiting for rookie speedster Velus Jones (4.3 40-time) to heal his hamstring and stretch the field. The Bears have two road games to follow, so this is the week to take advantage. This is the week they have to show at least a return to last year, if not actual progress.

3.) Kyle Pitts – I speak for all the other Pitts owners who spent a third-round pick. We did not sign up for  consecutive 2-19-0 stat lines. It’s been brought up to the still-calm HC Arthur Smith and he said that Pitts is every bit as much a part of the game plan as fantasy leaguers hope, but coverages have allowed other players to do more – like Drake London’s 13 catches for 160 yards and a score over two games.  He said there have been plenty of plays where Pitts was the first read. The first games were versus the Saints and at the Rams. Both are above-average defenses. Pitts’ final game in 2021 was versus the visiting Saints and he turned in just two catches for eight yards. Smith said, “The ball will find him. He’s going to break out here again, and we’re going to win because of it.”

Stat rankings are hardly reliable this early, but Pitts faced the current No. 2 and No. 5 defenses versus tight ends. The Seahawks this week are No. 24. He’ll be better this week as were the Broncos (7-85) and the 49ers (1-38, TD) who played without George Kittle. If Pitts turns in another 2-19 game, then it is reasonable to start breathing into a bag. But no need to  hyperventilate yet.

4.) Cowboys receivers – It was bad enough losing Dak Prescott for a few weeks or so. But now Dalton Schultz is not a lock to play on Monday night which would bring in a tag team of rookie tight ends of Jake Ferguson and Peyton Hendershot. Last year, Schultz turned in 79 yards in each meeting. But the receiving picture is further compounded with the return of Michael Gallup who has undergone full practices. He may be on a pitch count, but the receivers could use more help.

The question is how the Cowboys handle Gallup. Noah Brown is a fifth-year receiver that just now has been a part of the game plan. He leads the Cowboys with ten catches for 159 yards and the lone receiver touchdown of the year. He should remain in the slot, but the Cowboys need to get CeeDee Lamb into the endzone and not outplayed by a fifth-year depth receiver.

5.) Malik Willis – The Titans were dominated by the Bills last Sunday night and they finally benched Ryan Tannehill after he threw for only 117 yards, two interceptions and a 32.7 QB rating (if you just throw one incompletion and stop, you get a 36.9). He gave way to the third-round pick Malik Willis. It’s no changing of the guard, yet, and Tannehill remains the starting quarterback. But the Titans are 0-2 and if they rack up many more losses, then Wilson could get a start.

Whenever they do rely on him, the offense will change with a quarterback that ran for over 800 yards in each of his last two season in Liberty. And that probably depresses the passing production. Tannehill needs to connect with Robert Woods (5-52) better and throw a score to anyone other than a No. 2 running back. Poor blocking is leaving Derrick Henry less productive, so the Titans need to get back on track these next few weeks. This is a team that is struggling and pulling down the fantasy fortunes of their best players.

6.) Irv Smith – The Vikings tight end opened the year with no catches on two targets. Justin Jefferson took over in the win against the Packers. But in Week 2, Smith accounted for eight targets – second to only Justin Jefferson. And he caught the lone touchdown in the loss to the Eagles. It is notable that while Jefferson was being contained, neither Adam Thielen nor K.J. Osborn saw an uptick in their targets. The Vikings play the Lions this week and Jefferson should be a lock to do well. But Smith’s usage will say a lot about how this new offensive scheme regards Thielen and Osborn.

 

Below are the total from the first two weeks of 2021 vs. 2022.

QB RUN RYD RTD PASS CMP PYDS PTD FF Pts
2021 273 1,194 16 2,235 1,489 16,585 108 1,477
2022 270 1,075 10 2,234 1,435 15,526 105 1,364
(3) (119) (6) (1) (54) (1,059) (3) (113)
RB RUN RYD RTD PASS CMP PYDS PTD FF Pts
2021 1,472 6,359 55 426 330 2,554 18 1,659
2022 1,294 5,651 27 423 324 2,249 16 1,372
(178) (708) (28) (3) (6) (305) (2) (287)
TE RUN RYD RTD PASS CMP PYDS PTD FF Pts
2021 3 14 0 456 311 3,311 33 842
2022 10 93 1 441 283 2,918 18 698
7 79 1 (15) (28) (393) (15) (143)
WR RUN RYD RTD PASS CMP PYDS PTD FF Pts
2021 45 316 1 1,286 852 10,839 58 2,322
2022 66 441 1 1,296 822 10,329 71 2,331
21 125 0 10 (30) (510) 13 10

 

Cowboys snap counts and positional grades from final preseason exam

Who played, how much and how well from Dallas’ final preseason test. The stars sat as the youngsters staked their claim to roster spots. @ProfessorO_NFL breaks it all down.

The Dallas Cowboys finished their 2022 preseason campaign with a 2-1 record after an exciting 27-26 victory over the Seattle Seahawks.  With a final roster cut looming on Tuesday, several young players had one final chance to solidify their roster spot on the Cowboys final 53 man roster.

The team had its share of highs and lows throughout the game but injuries were a bigger factor this week especially in the secondary with three players suffering injuries.

The defense forced five takeaways via four interceptions and one fumble recovery while the offense protected the football for a turnover margin of +5. With two weeks of report cards in the books we will finalize each positional grade to give our final grades for preseason.

Cowboys 2nd-round pick Sam Williams one of 3 stars of the game vs Seahawks

Youth was once again served as the Cowboys rested their starters and stars, but these three were stars for the night. | From @CDPiglet

The Dallas Cowboys came back from a double-digit deficit to secure a one-point victory over the Seattle Seahawks Friday night, closing their exhibition schedule with a 2-1 record. Nobody, whether it was the young players working for a spot on the roster, the coaching staff, or even starting quarterback Dak Prescott cared it was a preseason game. It was an exciting team victory, and hopefully a propeller into the regular season as well.

This game was great for the fan experience at AT&T Stadium as well. It had soul-snatching hits, turnovers galore,  clutch touchdown receptions and drama all the way to the last minute.

It’s unknown how much of the 53-man roster was decided before a snap was even taken, but the Cowboys had multiple players fighting to make a good impression, and many of them made plays. Interceptions from bubble players like Israel Mukuamu, Nahshon Wright, Markquese Bell, and Juanyeh Thomas are just some examples. Only three players can be the stars of the game though, so which ones stepped up the most?