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        Jordyn Tyson
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        Jordyn Tyson Dynasty Value: First-Round Talent With Risk

        Jordyn Tyson looks like a future NFL WR1 on tape and in the data. The question for dynasty managers is how much risk you're willing to take to get there.
        By Jody Smith Updated on January 29, 2026 9:49 PM UTC
        Jordyn Tyson Dynasty Value: First-Round Talent With Risk

        QUICK LINKS: 

        Jordyn Tyson Draft Profile Jordyn Tyson Combine ResultsJordyn Tyson Highlights

        Jordyn Tyson enters the 2026 draft cycle with first-round buzz, and it’s earned. He checks the physical boxes, runs disciplined routes, and has already shown he can handle a featured role.

        But the evaluation isn’t clean. Tyson’s injury history complicates the projection and introduces more risk than you want from a premium wide receiver prospect.

        The counterpoint is his 2024 tape. Tyson won in multiple ways, created consistent separation, and flashed the traits of a future focal point. If the health cooperates, the upside justifies the bet.

        Let’s get to his full profile.

        Jordyn Tyson Dynasty Value

        Dynasty 1-qb Dynasty Superflex
        Non-PPR 50 Non-PPR 34
        PPR 54 PPR 43
        TE Premium 53 TE Premium 41

        To see Jordyn Tyson's dynasty value for your exact league setup, check out our Dynasty Draft War Room.

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        Jordyn Tyson Draft Profile

        Position: WR
        Height: 6'2
        Weight: 200
        BMI: 25.7

        Draft Age: 21.8
        NFL Draft Pick: TBD


        Draft Sharks Model: TBD
        Analytics Score: TBD
        Film Score: TBD
        Production Score: TBD

        Jordyn Tyson Combine Results

        Wingspan Arm Length Hand Size 40-yard Dash 10-yard Split
        - - - - -
        Bench Press Vertical Broad Jump 3-cone drill 20-yard shuttle
        - - - - -

        Jordyn Tyson College Stats

        Games REC TGTS REC% YDS TDS ADOT Y/RR
        2022 9 23 48 47.9%
        466 4 17.0 2.70
        2023 3 0 4 0.0% 0 0 24.8 0.00
        2024 12 75 113 66.4% 1098 10 12.6 3.04
        2025 9 61 97 62.9% 711 8 11.7 2.37

        A Seamless Arrival, Then an Abrupt Detour

        Tyson arrived with momentum. After a 1,500-yard, 13-touchdown senior season at Allen High School in Texas, he earned four-star status and signed with Colorado in 2022.

        The transition to college proved seamless. 

        Tyson led the Buffaloes in receiving as a true freshman, posting 470 yards and 4 TDs while averaging a gaudy 21.4 yards per catch.

        Then the trajectory changed. 

        A torn ACL, MCL, and PCL against Oregon ended his season after nine games. Tyson transferred to Arizona State afterward, adding both uncertainty and opportunity to his profile.

        The Breakout That Changed His Dynasty Profile

        After redshirting in 2023, Tyson turned 2024 into a statement season.

        The start was uneven. He went quiet against Wyoming and Mississippi State, flashed with a 120-yard, 1-TD game versus Texas State, then disappeared again against Texas Tech. 

        From that point on, though, Tyson was nearly automatic. He cleared 100 yards and/or scored in each of his final eight games, powering a 7-1 finish that took Arizona State from 3-9 in 2023 to 11-3 and a Big 12 title.

        A broken collarbone against Arizona ended his season prematurely again, but Tyson had already proved himself. He commanded 32% of team receptions and 34.4% of receiving yards in an offense that leaned heavily on RB Cam Skattebo.

        The efficiency backed it up. Tyson earned third-team All-American honors while ranking 14th nationally in yards per route run at 3.04, 23rd with 441 yards after catch, and he came down with 10 of his 15 contested-catch targets. 

        He also showed positional flexibility, running 42.6% of his routes from the slot, per Pro Football Focus.

        Proof of Upside ... With Lingering Questions

        Tyson’s junior season opened exactly how you’d want to see it. He scored seven touchdowns in Arizona State’s first five games and routinely took over passing plans.

        OPPONENT
        CATCHES YDS TD
        Northern Arizona 12 141 2
        Mississippi State 6 68 1
        Texas State 6 105 1
        Baylor 7 43 1
        TCU 8 126 1

        The tape and box scores lined up. Tyson shredded Northern Arizona for 12-141-2, followed with a 126-yard game against TCU, and delivered a 10-105-1 performance in ASU’s upset of then-No. 7 Texas Tech. 

        At that point, his draft stock was climbing fast. But then injury hit again.

        A right hamstring issue sidelined him for three games. When he came back, Tyson played limited snaps against Colorado and then tweaked his left hamstring early against Arizona.

        Tyson also had to play those final two games without QB Sam Leavitt, who suffered a Lisfranc injury on Oct. 25.

        The WR declared for the draft on Dec. 19 and opted out of the Sun Bowl against Duke.

        Jordyn Tyson Highlights 

        Games watched: Utah (2024), BYU (2024), Mississippi State (2025), Baylor (2025), TCU (2025), Utah (2025), Texas Tech (2025), Houston (2025), Colorado (2025), Arizona (2025)

        Tyson’s athletic skill set makes him an exciting prospect, but does the film reflect a future fantasy WR1?  

        He Wins at the Catch Point

        On this play, Tyson runs a clean route, faking the CB inside before sharply breaking to the corner. The throw goes high and closer to a fade than intended.

        Tyson tracks the ball well and times his leap to high-point the football. He tucks the ball on the way down and retains possession through the catch.

        The play displays Tyson’s route running, cutting, and leaping ability – a potentially thrilling red-zone combo for his NFL team.

        Tyson Turns a Broken Play into a Gain

        On this play, Tyson gets separation on a streak with the CB falling down behind him.

        The pass is underthrown, forcing Tyson to slow and come back slightly to the ball. He adjusts for a leaping grab and adds yards after the catch.

        The throw should not have been a completion, but Tyson’s concentration and adjustment turned it into a big play.

        Advanced Feel for Zone Coverage

        On this play, Tyson runs a smooth in route, splitting the zone defenders cleanly. He turns his head to the QB on the break and catches the ball in stride.

        Tyson’s ability to find holes in zone coverage makes him difficult to cover.

        The end of the play shows one of Tyson’s potential weaknesses. After the catch, he tries to jump backward to avoid the safety instead of securing a few more yards. Even if he had broken the tackle, two defenders were in position to finish the play.

        Tyson can leave yards on the field by chasing the highlight play.

        An Offensive Weapon, Not Just a Target

        This play shows Tyson’s versatility as an offensive weapon. He takes the end around and still has a defender to beat. With a stiff arm, Tyson puts him down and scores the TD.

        Expect the team that drafts Tyson to give him occasional end-around rushes.

        Jordyn Tyson Team Fit: Pittsburgh Steelers

        We’ll see whether it’s Aaron Rodgers or a new guy at QB. But either way, the Steelers need to address a thin receiving corps.

        Pittsburgh could lose Calvin Austin, Marquez Valdes-Scantling, and Scotty Miller to free agency. Adam Thielen has retired. RB Kenneth Gainwell led the team in receptions and is also set to test the market.

        TIP

        Keep up with the latest free agency news with out continuously updated NFL Free Agent Tracker.

        Tyson would address the problem immediately. He has the flexibility to play outside opposite DK Metcalf or operate as a volume slot receiver. 

        He also comes with a subtle but meaningful connection, having been coached by Hines Ward at Arizona State.

        Tyson might be off the board before Pick 21. But if he’s there, the fit makes sense.

        Dynasty Value Conclusions: One Factor Could Keep Him from WR1 Territory 

        The film and analytics align in this case. Tyson has the size, route discipline, and positional flexibility to function as a primary option in the NFL.

        The variable is health. Excluding the 2025 Sun Bowl, Tyson missed 34% of his games at Colorado and Arizona State, a non-trivial mark for a player with WR1 aspirations.

        Tyson remains a legitimate candidate to be among the first wide receivers drafted, but we’ll see whether the league docks him for that injury history.

        He already sits high in our 2026 dynasty rankings and currently sits atop our 2026 rookie WR rankings.

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        Jody Smith Author Image
        Jody Smith, Analyst
        Jody Smith has been playing fantasy football for over 30 years, the last 15 as an analyst, writer, and editor. Jody's rankings have been among the most consistent, placing him inside the top-10 in multi-year accuracy.
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