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        Oronde Gadsden II Fantasy Overview

        Oronde Gadsden II

        Oronde Gadsden II
        Player Profile

        TE LAC

        Height

        6'5"

        Weight

        236 lbs.

        Experience

        1 yrs.

        Bye

        7

        Birthday

        Jun 25, 2003

        Age

        22.9

        College

        Syracuse

        NFL Draft Pick

        2025 - Rd 5, Pk 165

        Fantasy Rankings & Projections

        Fantasy Rankings

        Weekly
        BYE -
        Season
        TE {{playerPageAppVar.projectionForRestOfSeason && playerPageAppVar.projectionForRestOfSeason.rank[selectedScoringConfig.fantasyPtsKey] ? playerPageAppVar.projectionForRestOfSeason.rank[selectedScoringConfig.fantasyPtsKey] : "-"}}
        Dynasty
        TE11

        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

        Oronde Gadsden II's Preseason Player Analysis

        2025 Role & Results

        A Surprise Fantasy Asset

        Gadsden racked up 49 catches, 664 yards, and 3 TDs in 15 games, good for TE15 in total PPR points and TE22 in points per game.

        He finished as a top-12 PPR TE in five games, with two other finishes inside the top-15. He also brought the volatility you’d expect from a Round 5 rookie TE: six fantasy finishes outside the top-36.

        Gadsden Capitalizes on Opportunity

        After healthy scratches in the first two games, Gadsden got his chance in Week 3 with Will Dissly inactive and turned 7 targets into 5 catches for 46 yards against Denver.

        From Week 3 on, Gadsden posted a 61.3% route rate and 13.4% target share, with eight games above a 70% route rate and seven above a 17% target share. That works out to fringe top-12 TE usage over a full season.

        Gadsden thrived in a mid-range role with a 9.5-yard average depth of target, sixth among 49 TEs with 30+ targets. He also caught all eight of his deep targets (20+ yards downfield) for 235 yards.

        Mixed Efficiency Marks

        Among 49 TEs with 30+ targets, Gadsden ranked:

        • fifth in yards per target
        • 17th in yards per route run
        • 32nd in fantasy points per route run
        • 33rd in yards after catch per reception
        • 36th in targets per route run

        Gadsden added strong marks in catch rate (73.2%) and yards per reception (13.3).

        Offense Faces Adversity

        The Chargers landed 12th in total yards but only 20th in scoring. The passing game checked in 13th in attempts, 18th in yards, and 11th in TDs.

        That’s a decent profile, especially factoring in the tough conditions around Justin Herbert. OTs Joe Alt and Rashawn Slater combined to miss 28 games and factored heavily in the QB seeing a league-high 43.3% pressure rate.

        No Durability Issues in Year 1

        Gadsden left Week 10 with a quad bruise but returned the following Sunday.

        His more notable injury came at Syracuse in 2023, where a Lisfranc injury to his right foot required surgery and cost him 11 games.

        2026 Opportunity & Projection

        Chargers Add Competition

        Gadsden projects as the lead TE after his strong 2025, but the margin for error is thin.

        The Chargers strengthened the TE room with David Njoku and Charlie Kolar. Njoku missed 11 games over the past two seasons and lost ground to Harold Fannin Jr. in 2025, but his 2023 showed the ceiling. That year, Njoku finished sixth among TEs in catches and yards, tying for second in receiving TDs. (He did it despite playing in a Browns offense that used five starting QBs.)

        Kolar is less of a receiving threat, but his blocking could still cost Gadsden snaps, especially after the Chargers gave the former Raven a three-year deal with $17 million guaranteed.

        Kolar ranked eighth last year in Pro Football Focus run-blocking grade among 53 TEs with 200+ run-blocking snaps.

        Beyond TE, the Chargers return a young WR trio of Ladd McConkey, Quentin Johnston, and Tre Harris. McConkey’s production declined last season, while Johnston remained a complementary piece of the offense with a target share that placed him 57th among WRs. Harris played all 17 games but was a non-factor.

        Keenan Allen’s departure vacated 122 targets from last year’s offense, but don’t assume Gadsden automatically claims a large chunk.

        Herbert, OTs Will be Key

        Gadsden benefits from the presence of Justin Herbert, who finished ninth in pass attempts and ninth in yards last season despite heavy pressure.

        The O-line will bear watching after both OTs underwent offseason surgeries. LT Rashawn Slater and RT Joe Alt are at least on track to participate in training camp.

        A New Offensive Identity

        The Chargers’ personnel moves suggest more two- and three-TE sets, a shift from last year when they ranked last in 12-personnel usage (5.8%) and 23rd in 13-personnel usage (1.9%).

        That’s generally positive for the TE, who won’t have to contend with as many WRs for targets.

        McDaniel’s Miami offenses also leaned into two-back sets, using them at a 33.25% clip and frequently involving a fullback. That’s up from the Chargers’ 10.9% usage of two-back sets last season. Gadsden probably won’t see a major snap or route reduction as the movement/receiving TE. But new FB Alec Ingold, who spent the past four seasons with McDaniel, adds another potential hurdle to his playing time.

        Risk Factors

        Gadsden could simply get lost in a deep group of pass catchers. McConkey, Johnston, Njoku, Harris, Kolar, and even Omarion Hampton, who caught 32 passes in just nine games as a rookie, give the Chargers plenty of options to spread the ball around.

        Advanced Stats

        Forty Yard Dash

        4.72

        Forty Yard Dash Rank

        63%

        Burst Score

        118.90

        Burst Score Rank

        58%

        Speed Score

        98.70

        Speed Score Rank

        60%

        Catch Radius

        10.21

        Catch Radius Rank

        87%

        VIEW MORE ADVANCED STATS

        Shark Bites

        David Njoku TE LAC
        12:19pm UTC 5/11/26

        David Njoku Ruins Fantasy Outlook for Chargers TEs

        David Njoku Ruins Fantasy Outlook for Chargers TEs

        The Chargers have agreed to a one-year deal with TE David Njoku, according to NFL Network's Ian Rapoport. The contract will be worth "up to" $8 million. That max value would tie him for 19th among TEs in average annual salary for 2026, $100,000 behind new teammate Charlie Kolar. This addition points to a three-man committee.

        The Chargers fired OC Greg Roman. The offense was disappointing this season, but an injury-wrecked offensive line was a much bigger culprit than Roman's scheme or play-calling. The Chargers lost LT Rashawn Slater to a season-ending torn patellar tendon in August and then watched RT Joe Alt go down with his own season-ending ankle injury in Week 9. Los Angeles finished bottom two in Pro Football Focus' run- and pass-blocking grades and ESPN's run- and pass-blocking win rates. QB Justin Herbert was pressured on a league-high 43.6% of his dropbacks. We'll see who the Chargers tab to replace Roman. But the offensive line should be much better in 2026 with better health. With Herbert, plus RB Omarion Hampton, WRs Ladd McConkey, Quentin Johnston, and Tre Harris, and TE Oronde Gadsden, this is a prime bounce-back offense to target in fantasy drafts.

        Chargers HC Jim Harbaugh announced Monday that QB Justin Herbert won't play in Sunday's regular-season finale against the Broncos. The Chargers sit tied with Houston and Buffalo at 11-5, so there's some potential mobility to their seed with Week 18 results. But Harbaugh has clearly decided that getting Herbert -- and potentially others -- healthier for the playoffs matters more than the difference between the No. 5 and No. 7 seeds.

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