Rookie tight ends used to be an auto-fade in fantasy football redraft settings, but we’ve seen that belief be busted in recent years. Look at the top of the 2025 TE rankings, and you’ll see youth well-represented, and the Chicago Bears are hoping that Colston Loveland can be next in line.
Should you leave your draft counting on the 10th overall pick in April as a weekly asset?
Should You Draft Colston Loveland in Fantasy?
Last season, it took roughly 10 PPR points to be a top-12 performer at tight end. Some weeks, it was higher than that, and others lower, but on a per-game basis, that was the minimum you hoped to get from your tight end throughout the 2024 fantasy season.
I cannot wait to see what Colston Loveland can do in the Bears offense.
TE size but plays like a WR. This offense is going to be a lot of fun pic.twitter.com/TWgPEE93SH— Just Another Year Chicago: Bears (@JAYChi_Bears) June 17, 2025
As I’m sure you’re aware, that’s been a tough number for rookies at the position to get. Over the past decade, only four of 20 qualified tight ends have gotten there, with the majority checking in well under 8.0 points per game.
That said, the three most recent Round 1 tight ends have done enough to make them plausible fantasy options, if not substantial profits given where they were drafted.
- 2021 Kyle Pitts: 10.4 PPG (TE11, 0.7 PPG away from TE8)
- 2023 Dalton Kincaid: 9.4 PPG (TE14, 13 PPG away from TE8)
- 2024 Brock Bowers: 15.5 PPG (TE3)
We are slowly dismissing the idea that rookies can’t come in and impact the fantasy game at this position. I think that’s likely to continue for as long as defenses insist on taking away the big play, thus surrendering the space in which these prospects can thrive.
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That’s even more true when a team identifies a tight end as a chain-moving option and invests heavily. Loveland stands 6’6” and weighs in at 248 pounds, which is a nice frame for a player with the type of varied route tree he enters the league with.
Last season, Caleb Williams ranked 13th in passer rating on passes thrown less than 10 yards down field (ahead of Kyler Murray, Bo Nix, Jordan Love and others) and 33rd on all other passes (behind Kirk Cousins and Daniel Jones to name a few).
I fully expect him to develop a more well-rounded pass diet in his second season, but the underneath game is going to be featured in this Ben Johnson offense (his Lions ranked 31st in average depth of throw a season ago). With a pair of field-stretching receivers (Rome Odunze and Luther Burden III) slated to be on the field with regularity, there is going to be room for Loveland to operate.
I’m not anticipating a Brock Bowers-type year because I don’t think that role will be available. But why can’t he be what Zach Ertz was for Jayden Daniels a season ago? Ertz finished as fantasy’s TE9 and was even better once a solid connection was developed (7.0 through Week 5, 11.9 after that).
As long as you are committing to the pick in the later rounds and not pivoting at the first sight of a learning curve, I think Loveland is a great wait-on-TE option in all formats, as he is cheap exposure to an impressive skill set in an offense with plenty of potential.
Dan Fornek’s Colston Loveland Fantasy Projection
Michigan’s poor passing attack didn’t do Colston Loveland any favors in 2024. Loveland followed up a strong campaign during Michigan’s 2023 National Championship (45 receptions, 649 receiving yards, and four touchdowns) with a modest 56 receptions for 582 yards and five touchdowns in 10 games. However, Loveland’s advanced stats were quite impressive.
He led all tight ends with a 37.6% targets per route run figure and was third in yards per route run (2.67). The tight end was frequently moved along the offense, lining up out wide, in the slot, as a wing, and as a traditional tight end. He also often flashed the speed to attack defenses vertically down the field, as well as elusiveness in space.
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Loveland missed the entire draft process due to recovery from offseason shoulder surgery, but still was drafted tenth overall by the Chicago Bears. He has wasted no time becoming a favorite weapon for Caleb Williams in training camp, consistently flashing the playmaking ability that popped up on his film.
Chicago’s passing attack is crowded, but Loveland will have a chance to be an immediate contributor thanks to his ability to create mismatches anywhere on the field. Head coach Ben Johnson was excellent at creating those situations during his time with Detroit, and Loveland was the first player he drafted to help establish his offense in Chicago.
The target share and consistency may be hard to figure out from week to week in the early season. Still, Loveland has the athleticism to establish himself as a top-target earner at the position quickly. He’s worth drafting in 2025 with the hopes that he earns enough target volume to be the next rookie tight end to put together a top tight end season.
