Should I Draft T.J. Hockenson? Fantasy Outlook for the Vikings TE in 2025

Can T.J. Hockenson return to elite form after a disappointing 2024 campaign?

T.J. Hockenson has 82 games on his NFL resume, and that includes a serious knee injury (torn ACL and MCL). That’s not a profile that most fantasy football managers are targeting, but he proved healthy as last season progressed and was a bright spot in the playoff loss to the Rams (five catches on five targets with a touchdown).

The tight end position is led by young history makers and some aging greats – how should you think of Hockenson as he enters his age-28 season?

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T.J. Hockenson’s Fantasy Outlook

Hockenson’s resume is impressive. He’s caught 68% of his career targets and has been able to earn volume with consistency. At the tight end position, he’s been a stable source of production for the last half-decade, and by entering this season with a clean bill of health, there are plenty of reasons to think that he can be a key asset on a successful fantasy team.

That said, is the juice worth the squeeze?

We know the upside is capped. Forgetting that his quarterback is an unknown at the professional level and that two of his pass-catching teammates profile as much more impactful per-target players by nature of the routes they run.

Forget that.

Hockenson was scoreless in 10 regular-season games last season (62 targets and 41 catches) in a year where Sam Darnold was a Pro Bowl lock. The goose egg was a bit dramatic, but Hock has scored just 23 times in his career and has missed multiple games in four of six seasons.

What is the true upside?

In a 2024 season that was probably as good as it gets for this offensive environment, Hockenson’s best weekly finish at the position was TE5, and he was better than TE10 on just two occasions. The top of the TE board can’t be touched (Brock Bowers and Trey McBride have elite production under their belts and their physical primes ahead of them), and we suddenly have an incredible amount of similar depth at the once wasteland of a position.

Fantasy Football TE Tiers

  • Tier 1: Brock Bowers and Trey McBride
  • Tier 2: George Kittle
  • Tier 3: Sam LaPorta, Evan Engram, David Njoku, and Hockenson
  • Tier 4: Mark Andrews, Travis Kelce, David Njoku, and Jonnu Smith
  • Tier 5: Tyler Warren, Colston Loveland, and Dalton Kincaid

And that’s a conservative list. Where does Isaiah Likely factor into this? Kyle Pitts still exists, meaning someone in your league will talk themselves into him. Jake Ferguson and Tucker Kraft play with pocket passing QBs and some limited pass catcher depth concerns around them.

MORE: Free Fantasy Football Mock Draft Simulator

My fading of Hockenson is less about Hockenson and more about his price tag. I simply can’t justify paying the premium that comes with his name instead of either paying up for a potential league-winner or being the last team in my league to address the position, taking two cheap bites at the apple, or trusting myself to stream early before hopefully landing on a replacement-level option for an extended stretch.

Frank Ammirante’s T.J. Hockenson Projection

T.J. Hockenson is another year removed from his ACL injury, so he should be back to full strength for the 2025 season. Remember that this is a tight end who had 95 receptions for 960 yards and five touchdowns in 2023. Expect him to act as a safety valve for first-year starter J.J. McCarthy. You know what they say, “tight ends are a young quarterback’s best friend.”

It also helps that wideout Jordan Addison will be suspended for the first few games of the season, so the Vikings will have to rely on Hockenson more than usual. That could mean an increase in targets for the veteran tight end.

MORE: Fantasy Football Trade Analyzer

If you miss out on the elite tier of this group, which includes Brock Bowers, Trey McBride, and George Kittle, then Hockenson is a fine consolation prize. This is especially true in full-PPR formats, where Hockenson’s volume but lack of big-play ability gets a boost. In half-PPR, I prefer to wait to target someone with more touchdown upside, like Mark Andrews.

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