Fantasy football players, beware.
While the Vikings and Dolphins have offenses led by top-flight receivers, their talents at tight end — second-round draft picks Irv Smith Jr. of Minnesota and Mike Gesicki of Miami — have been folded into committee approaches by new head coaches who also need muscle, not just agility and hands, to unlock their playbooks.
Smith, the 2019 second-round pick, is healthy after August thumb surgery derailed his comeback from last year's knee injury. He hasn't started a game as head coach Kevin O'Connell opts to open with tight end Johnny Mundt, who has been the preferred blocking option. Yet Smith ultimately has played more in each of the last four games as the preferred receiving threat, earning a 53.8% playing rate to Mundt's 43.6%.
Smith has seen more passes thrown his way (25 targets) than anyone not named Justin Jefferson or Adam Thielen, and ranks fourth on the team with 14 catches for 133 yards and a score. They're not the video game numbers put up by the Chiefs' Travis Kelce or the Ravens' Mark Andrews; Smith has been more of a safety valve underneath. Smith, who is making nearly $1.3 million in the final year of his rookie contract, said he's getting more comfortable in O'Connell's offense and will embrace any chance he gets.
"Whatever my role is," he said, "make something happen."
The Dolphins are in a tenser situation with Gesicki, the 2018 second-round pick who was franchise tagged in March. The Dolphins front office's decision to tag Gesicki, and reported failed attempts to trade him, tied him to Miami for about $11 million — the fourth-highest cap hit at the position league-wide in 2022.
Like Smith, Gesicki, who had 73 grabs for 780 yards last season, comes off the bench for starting tight end Durham Smythe, who was drafted 81 spots after Gesicki in the fourth round in 2018. Smythe is playing more (58.4%) than Gesicki's 49.2%, giving the Dolphins offense a better punch as a run blocker for head coach Mike McDaniel's system, tight ends coach Jon Embree told Miami reporters last week.
Gesicki is on the field primarily to run routes, blocking just 28% of the time, according to Pro Football Focus. That's just a tick higher than Smith's 27.4% blocking rate for the Vikings. Gesicki has caught nine passes for 101 yards and a touchdown in five games.