1.  
TE  KC
Rec
88
Rec Yds
938
Rec TD
7
Rec Avg
10.7
Rush Att
1
Rush Yds
4
Rush TD
0
Rush Avg
4.0
Kelce has been the gold standard at the tight end position for the better part of the last decade, but he looked like he lost a step for much of the 2023 regular season and finished 16 receiving yards short of an eighth consecutive 1,000-yard campaign. His postseason performance suggested concerns over the 34-year-old tight end slowing down were overblown, however, as Kelce compiled 355 yards and three touchdowns in four playoff games to help the Chiefs capture their second straight Super Bowl. Kelce missed the 2023 season opener due to a knee injury and was held out of the regular-season finale since the Chiefs were locked into their playoff seed, but he suited up for all 15 games in between, marking the ninth consecutive campaign in which he’s played at least that many games. Even if Kelce’s best days are behind him, the star TE is still locked in as the most trusted target for QB Patrick Mahomes, as Kelce’s 121 targets, 93 catches and 984 receiving yards all led the Chiefs in 2023, and each mark ranked in the top four among NFL tight ends. Kelce's mix of production and availability gives him an elite floor, especially for a tight end, and he could even be due for a bounce-back season in the touchdown department. The 6-foot-5 TE's five TDs last season tied his lowest mark in the last seven years, and he scored at least eight times in each of the other five seasons over that span.
2.  
TE  DET
Rec
88
Rec Yds
920
Rec TD
7
Rec Avg
10.5
Rush Att
0
Rush Yds
0
Rush TD
0
Rush Avg
0.0
Young tight ends often take a year or two to find their footing in the NFL, but LaPorta bucked that trend with 86 catches for 889 yards and 10 touchdowns on 120 targets as a rookie in 2023. The second-round draft pick out of Iowa couldn’t quite catch up to Mike Ditka’s rookie tight end records of 1,076 receiving yards and 12 touchdowns, but LaPorta’s 86 receptions were the most by a first-year TE in NFL history. No other tight end scored more than six touchdowns last year, and LaPorta also ranked top-five at the position in catches, targets and receiving yards. Amon-Ra St. Brown is likely to lead the Lions in targets again in 2024, but the 44-target gap between St. Brown and LaPorta in 2023 was smaller than the 49-target gap between LaPorta and Jared Goff's third-favorite target, Jahmyr Gibbs, which suggests LaPorta has the inside track to once again work as the second option in Detroit's passing game in 2024. LaPorta finished fourth among TEs with 16 red-zone targets and tied for second with 10 targets inside the 10-yard line, so he's unlikely to outscore all other TEs by at least four TDs again, but the ingredients are there for LaPorta to follow up his superb rookie season with another strong campaign.
3.  
TE  ARI
Rec
82
Rec Yds
877
Rec TD
6
Rec Avg
10.7
Rush Att
0
Rush Yds
0
Rush TD
0
Rush Avg
0.0
McBride had just 265 receiving yards as a rookie, but the 2022 second-round draft pick out of Colorado State emerged as one of the league’s most productive tight ends in the second half of his sophomore season. Zach Ertz hurt his quadriceps in Week 7 of 2023 and didn’t suit up for the Cardinals again, opening the door for McBride to post 66 catches for 655 yards and three touchdowns on 85 targets over the last 10 games of the season. If McBride could sustain that 10-game pace over a full 17-game season, it would work out to 112 catches for 1,114 receiving yards on 145 targets. Both of those 17-game target and yardage totals would have led all NFL tight ends in 2023, and only Evan Engram (114) had more receptions. Arizona let top wide receiver Marquise Brown walk in free agency, which could open up even more targets for McBride on a rebuilding Cardinals team that could find itself playing from behind a lot again in 2024 after finishing 4-13 each of the past two seasons. Few if any TEs across the NFL have a higher volume floor than McBride, who had at least six catches in six of the eight games started by Kyler Murray last year.
4.  
TE  BAL
Rec
68
Rec Yds
864
Rec TD
7
Rec Avg
12.7
Rush Att
0
Rush Yds
0
Rush TD
0
Rush Avg
0.0
Andrews was on pace for another excellent season in 2023 before a lower-leg injury ended his regular season in Week 11. He returned in the playoffs and is healthy heading into 2024, which will be Andrews’ age-29 season. Despite missing the last seven weeks in 2023, Andrews still tied for second among tight ends with six touchdowns, and his 544 receiving yards through 10 games worked out to a 925-yard, 17-game pace, which would have been good for fifth at the position. Andrews’ 153-target, 1,361-yard season in 2021 looks to be an outlier, but he has also posted yardage totals of 852 and 847 yards over the last five campaigns while averaging 7.4 touchdowns over that five-year stretch. His second-highest target total was 113 in 2022, and Andrews was on pace to exceed 100 targets again in 2023 while working as Lamar Jackson's co-favorite target alongside wide receiver Zay Flowers. Isaiah Likely filled in admirably after Andrews went down, but Likely hasn’t cut into Andrews’ playing time or production much over the past two seasons, so a healthy Andrews has the right mix of skill and situation to remain among the top performers at his position in 2024.
5.  
TE  BUF
Rec
78
Rec Yds
805
Rec TD
6
Rec Avg
10.3
Rush Att
0
Rush Yds
0
Rush TD
0
Rush Avg
0.0
Kincaid took a while to gain Josh Allen’s trust, but the 2024 first-round draft pick out of Utah got going from Week 7 onward, compiling 56 catches for 555 yards and two touchdowns on 72 targets over the final 11 games of his rookie season. It helped that fellow Bills tight end Dawson Knox missed five of those games due to a wrist injury, but Kincaid thrived even after Knox returned, as Kincaid’s two highest yardage totals (87 and 84) came in the final two games of the 2023 regular season. The biggest knock on Kincaid’s otherwise promising rookie season was that he caught only two of Allen’s 29 touchdown passes. Despite scoring eight touchdowns in each of his last two seasons at Utah, the 6-foot-4, 240-pound tight end tied for 17th at the position with nine red-zone targets, only one more than Knox. It’s hard to imagine Kincaid’s red-zone usage going anywhere but up given his precise route running, but with the 6-foot-4, 254-pound Knox still around, Kincaid may continue to cede more prime red-zone opportunities than other similarly skilled tight ends.
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