Patriots draft profile: Kenyon Sadiq is a mismatch waiting to happen
· Yahoo Sports
Before a drop off in the playoffs, Hunter Henry was arguably the New England Patriots’ most reliable offensive skill position player during the 2025 season. But while he is set to return for a sixth season with the organization, it very well is in the market for more options at tight end: heading toward the season with Henry, Julian Hill, C.J. Dippre and Marshall Lang as the position group is, frankly, insufficient.
Luckily for the Patriots, this year’s NFL Draft offers a variety of options to bolster the tight end room. One among them clearly stands above the rest, though.
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Hard facts
Name: Kenyon Sadiq
Position: Tight end
School: Oregon (Jr.)
Opening day age: 21 (3/4/2005)
Measurements: 6’3 1/8”, 241 lbs, 31 1/2” arm length, 10” hand size, 4.39s 40-yard dash, 43 1/2” vertical jump, 11’1” broad jump, 26 bench press reps, 9.52 Relative Athletic Score
Experience
Colleges: Oregon (2023-25)
Career statistics: 42 games (14 starts) | 1,187 offensive snaps, 488 special teams snaps | 100 targets, 80 catches (80.0%), 892 receiving yards (11.2/catch), 11 TDs, 8 drops | 9 carries, 42 yards (4.7/carry) | 2 kickoff returns, 28 yards (14.0/return) | 3 special teams tackles, 1 blocked punt | 4 penalties (incl. 0 declined/offset)
Accolades: First-team All-Big Ten (2025), Big Ten Tight End of the Year (2025), Second-team All-American (2025)
Starting out as a running back and safety, Sadiq’s career took off after he transferred to Skyline High School in Idaho Falls, ID, and made the move to wide receiver. He became a highly-decorated player, who helped Skyline win three straight state titles and was named Idaho High School Football Player of the Year as a senior in 2022.
A four-star college recruit, he received scholarship offers from high-level schools such as Michigan, Colorado, Texas and Washington, but ultimately opted to take his talents to Oregon. Committing as a tight end, he went on to spend three years in Eugene. A rotational player for the first two of those, he was made a starter as a junior and responded by catching 51 passes for 560 yards and eight touchdowns. For his efforts in 2025, Sadiq was named first-team All-Big Ten and the conference’s Tight End of the Year.
Draft profile
Projected round: 1 | Consensus big board: No. 16 | Patriots meeting: N/A
Strengths: Sadiq is an elite receiving threat and one of the best all-around pass catchers this draft has to offer. Why? Because he has an explosive skillset that is rare at the tight end position: his 40-yard dash, 10-yard split, broad jump and vertical jump are all among the best ever by a tight end prospect, with each one ranking above the 95th percentile. His burst off the line is legitimate and he follows it up with high-end long speed. He also can turn screen passes into big plays, and generally is dangerous after the catch; if he gets the ball in space he is a big play threat because of his speed and running back-like contact balance.
Sadiq can split out as a big perimeter target and is a threat in the red zone. His length, which is nothing special at the tight end position but above-average if we throw wide receivers into the mix as well, gives him the catch radius to pluck off-target balls out of the air; it also allows him to put distance between himself and the defender covering him. He furthermore is an effort blocker in the run game, who has experience executing a variety of assignments and lining up in different spots in the formation.
The interesting thing about Kenyon Sadiq's ridiculous 10/40 times is that you didn't see them on tape as much as you might expect. He was more of a ball-tracker and intermediate guy getting things done. Makes me think that his NFL team will have vertical plans for him. pic.twitter.com/IkqdCzqRkS
— Doug Farrar ✍ (@NFL_DougFarrar) March 1, 2026
Weaknesses: Be it in terms of height, weight or length, Sadiq is undersized compared to traditional tight end standards. He also needs to learn to become more physical, both when going up against NFL-level edge players on the line of scrimmage and when faced with defensive backs playing press-man technique against him. His hands are questionable as well, and he finished the 2025 season with six drops on 67 targets (9.0%). In general, he is still raw in several aspects — route running, use of tempo, use of leverage, hand placement as a blocker — which is unsurprising given that he enters theNFL as a one-year starter.
Patriots preview
What would be his role? Given his stature the relative rawness in some parts of his game, Sadiq projects mostly as an F-tight end rather than your traditional Y in the mold of Hunter Henry early in his career. That means that he will move across the formation lining up in various spots in order to find favorable matchups. Will that prevent him from becoming a true TE1? Not necessarily, but to start his career he will likely play a complementary role rather than being trusted with an Henry-esque workload of 80+% of snaps.
Does he have positional versatility? He has, which is a testament to his abilities. He can play inline tight end, move to the slot, split out wide, and serve a backfield role as a fullback or H-back. He also saw action on the core four special teams units at Oregon before being promoted to a starting role on offense as a junior in 2025.
What is his growth potential? Having only turned 21 in March, Sadiq is one of the younger players in the draft and very much far from a finished product. The biggest variable when it comes to his success in the NFL is adjusting to the physicality he will encounter, but if he can adapt — and if his career has shown us one thing it’s that he very much has made a habit out of doing so — he should be able to become a three-down performer and go-to guy in the passing game.
Why the Patriots? Hunter Henry will turn 32 during the 2026 season and is entering the final year of his contract. While that does not necessarily remove him from New England’s long-term plans, adding a running mate and potential successor as the featured option at the position makes a ton of sense for the organization. Sadiq checks those boxes and would bring a dynamic presence to an offense very much in need of just that.
Why not the Patriots? The Patriots are set to pick 31st overall, and there is a chance that Sadiq will be off the board at that point. Also, the team might not be willing to invest major draft capital in a player who, despite all of his undeniable talent, is not particularly suited at this stage to replace Henry 1-on-1.
One-sentence verdict: Sadiq is a mismatch waiting to happen, and one of the most exciting pass catchers in this year’s draft regardless of position.
For more information about Kenyon Sadiq and the rest of this year’s class of prospects, please take a look at Adam’s 2026 NFL Draft Guide.
Also, what do you think aboutSadiqas a potential Patriots target? Do you like him? Where would you pick him? Please head down to the comment section to share your thoughts.