
NFL TE rankings: Coaches, execs, scouts put Arizona Cardinals' Trey McBride in top 5
Arizona Cardinals fans know how good tight end Trey McBride. After all, he did catch 111 passes last season. He broke his own receptions record for a single season as a tight end and came close to setting the franchise single-season record period (DeAndre Hopkins' 115 catches in 2020 set the mark).
But how good does the league think he is?
He made his first Pro Bowl this past season.
ESPN's Jeremy Fowler polled coaches, scouts and executives about who they believe are the top 10 players at each position.
Let's see where McBride lands.
NFL TE rankings: Trey McBride, Arizona Cardinals
McBride is fourth in the top 10, behind Las Vegas' Brock Bowers, San Francisco's George Kittle and Detroit's Sam LaPorta. He received at least one vote as the No. 1 tight end and was in the top 10 in every ballot.
"Best receiving tight end out there," an NFL coordinator said. "He's a hard cover even for elite corners."
McBride's jump from last year's honorable mention status to the top four is sizable, but he was the only tight end not named Kittle or Bowers to receive a first-place vote.
"Lack of touchdowns hurts him a bit for me if we're talking about top-five guys," an NFL personnel director said about McBride, who has six total touchdowns in three seasons.
McBride actually has more than six total touchdowns. He has six receiving touchdowns. He rushed for a touchdown last season and recovered a fumble in the end zone for a touchdown as well, so he has scored eight total in his career.
Now, those eight career total touchdowns equal Kittle's touchdown receptions in 2024, but Bowers had only five touchdowns last season, compared to McBride's four total scores.
Does McBride need to score more touchdowns? Yes. Last season, on several end-zone targets, Murray either missed him or McBride didn't make a catch he would expect himself to make. That was fluky. Now, considering the strength of the Cardinals' running game and the presence of Marvin Harrison Jr., we might not see McBride get double-digit scores, but that is really the next step for him.
He is an elite pass-catching tight end. He is a capable blocker. If he scores touchdowns, that takes him to the next level.
Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire's Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on Spotify, YouTube or Apple podcasts.

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New York Times
13 minutes ago
- New York Times
Hendon Hooker and other Detroit Lions who could benefit most from a strong training camp
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Indianapolis Star
44 minutes ago
- Indianapolis Star
Most essential Colts No. 4: Braden Smith's return is enormous for the offense
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Indianapolis Star
44 minutes ago
- Indianapolis Star
Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza, top 2026 NFL Draft prospect, a 'wide receiver's dream'
Show Caption Fernando Mendoza has plenty of potential that Indiana hopes he shows in its offense. The 6-5, 225-pound QB had former ESPN draft analyst Todd McShay gushing. Mendoza certainly has flaws, and the reality check came when stacking up against other QBs forecasted in the 2026 draft class. 2026 NFL mock drafts have Mendoza anywhere from a top-5 pick to the fifth round. It didn't take long for a recognizable NFL draft analyst's review of Indiana football quarterback Fernando Mendoza to see his name vault up 2026 NFL mock drafts. When "The McShay Show" published its scouting report of Mendoza, who played two seasons at Cal before transferring to IU, the show's co-hosts, namesake Todd McShay and Steve Muench, had an intriguing title: "What makes the Indiana QB a wide receiver's dream." McShay, recognizable from his days at ESPN, was gushing over Mendoza until a reality check at the end of the show. Mendoza seemed to have an ideal frame at 6 foot 5, 225 pounds. He was third in the ACC in yards passing per game (273.1) and was surrounded by four draft picks. In 11 games last season, he threw for 3,004 yards, 16 touchdowns to six interceptions and completed 68.7% of his 386 pass attempts. He also ran for 105 yards and two scores, and had 15 yards receiving and a TD. McShay and Muench dove into what they believe are four key factors when evaluating a quarterback: mental makeup (MM), accuracy, release/arm strength and pocket mobility. They rated them from 1 (elite) to 5 (marginal) with a scale to good and below average in-between. Here were their grades: Though McShay is high on Mendoza, a large part of it is due to the leap he thinks he can make under coach Curt Cignetti and offensive coordinator Mike Shanahan. And Muench said he wants to see Mendoza elevate his game, particularly road games at Oregon and Penn State. He cited that Mendoza's six interceptions "could have been a lot higher," citing a weakness of defenders dropping underneath on passes over the middle. Muench cited three separate instances in different games. Then came the McShay glaze. He cited that Mendoza can see the whole field, goes through progressions quickly, maybe too quickly at times, and that he makes smart decisions when moving the pocket. "I think this son of a gun is tough in the pocket but, as importantly," McShay said, "what stood out to me more than anything on his tape, he knows where to put the football. … He's not perfect, but (a defensive back) with his back to him, he gives his receivers the best trajectory and angle to go up and make the play on the ball (does it on rails, posts, short fades, in middle of field). It was like over and over again. He's unbelievable with back shoulder fades. "On top of that, I do think he's impatient sometimes while he can go through his reads quickly and bail on his reads early, but he's just a pup, man. So I'm expecting a big jump." He labeled it a " (Kurtis) Rourke -plus situation" for IU, an upgrade with a better arm and more mobility. Muench, who wants to see it to believe the potential, pointed out the success Cignetti and Shanahan have had in bringing in transfer QBs three of the past four years: going 8-3 in their first Division-I season at James Madison and then 11-2, each time having the Sun Belt player of the year, and then Rourke leading IU to its first College Football Playoff last season. Though Muench believes Mendoza has fixable misses of missing reads, he does see the potential and likes the fact he makes plays under pressure. "If you're taking something away, he adjusts to it and makes a play with his feet," Muench said. "… I was stunned with how well he runs when he takes off." As the title of the show and McShay eluded to earlier in the podcast, he went deeper on Mendoza's arm talent. "Here's the other thing, snap delivery, crisp. It comes down the back shoot a touch but it's crisp," McShay said. "It's just quick and crisp and the ball snaps off his hand, and he's got good energy. "Not just the placement, it's the trajectory of the placement. He's a (expletive) wide receiver's dream. Not because you underthrew it, because you place it there and he did it over, and over, and over again on tape. His ball doesn't flutter or sail at the end, it comes in." Where Fernando Mendoza ranks among NFL quarterback prospects There were several caveats to the exercise McShay and Muench did toward the show's end. One was an Arch Manning-sized one as they believed he would stay another year in college after taking over as starter at Texas in 2025. The other was they only took into account their scouted QBs, which included: South Carolina's LaNorris Sellers, Clemson's Cade Klubnik, Penn State's Drew Allar and LSU's Garrett Nussmeier. Muench: Sellers (that's the guy to me), Klubnik, Allar, Nussmeier and Mendoza. McShay: Klubnik, Sellers, Nussmeier, Mendoza, Allar. "I swear to you as we sit here right now, second week in June, I swear to you while they're all different QBs to a different degree … I think they all have the potential to be early draft picks, and I don't think at this point there is a huge difference between them," McShay said. For what it's worth, ESPN's No. 1 pick predictor published July 17 gave Mendoza a 12% chance, behind only Sellers, Klubnik, Nussmeier and Allar — all listed at 15%. And ESPN's Matt Miller and Jordan Reid picked Mendoza third among QBs, ahead of Sellers and Allar. Fernando Mendoza's NFL quarterback comparison McShay laughed at the hypocrisy, "I'm so lazy," he said. He had just gone into the traits he liked about Mendoza when he offered his NFL quarterback comparison: Said McShay: "When this guy decides he's going to see his reads through; I gave him a Jared Goff comp. It's an indictment on me, I'm such an idiot … I went through Goff, started writing up comparisons between the two, I literally gave the comp three hours later and went through my notes and said Goff went to Cal. ... I think it's a good comp, and it isn't a Cal thing." Where Fernando Mendoza ranks in 2026 NFL mock drafts ESPN's Matt Miller (June 30): Mendoza not in first round Pro Football and Sports Network (July 12): Third overall to the Miami Dolphins Fernando Mendoza highlights