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Arizona wide receiver Jordyn Tyson makes a leaping catch against UCF. | Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images
There are plenty of polarizing players in the 2026 NFL Draft. However, there are few prospects more polarizing than Arizona State wide receiver Jordyn Tyson.
On one hand, Tyson has a long history of significant injuries and has basically missed 1/3 of the games for which heâs been eligible over his college career. His durability, availability, and even the likely length of his career have to be questions for NFL teams. However, he also has legitimately excellent tape and is the kind of player who can be a true âWR1â who forces defenses to gameplan for him.
When healthy, Tyson is arguably the best receiver in this draft class, with a blend of size, athleticism, skill, and big play potential that few can match. But thereâs that âwhen healthyâ again.
The New York Giants raised eyebrows when they were one of 18 teams in attendance for Tysonâs April 17th, workout. GM Joe Schoen was on the scene for Tysonâs workout just ahead of the draft, lending credence to late-breaking rumors that the Giants could indeed be interested in Tyson.
So what is there to know about him?
Prospect: Jordan Tyson (0)
Games Watched: vs. Kansas State (2025), vs. TCU (2025), vs. Texas Tech (2025)
Red flags: Health
Best traits
Jordyn Tyson is a good-sized, twitchy, and highly skilled wide receiver prospect.
Tyson has very good size for the position at 6-foot 1 Ÿ inches, 203 pounds. He has surprisingly twitchy athleticism, and not just for a receiver his size. Tyson is very quick in and out of his breaks, with enough lower-body fluidity to drop his hips and lower his center of gravity for particularly sharp breaks. He also has enough long speed to be a consistent threat to generate explosive plays, both on vertical passes and in run-after-catch situations.
Tyson is a smart, savvy route runner who understands both route concepts and coverage structures. He weaponizes every aspect of his routes, from efficient releases to generate immediate separation to using tempo, stride length, and quick fakes to disrupt defendersâ timing. He also subtly alters his pathing and bends his stems to find voids in zone coverage as well as maximize schemed traffic against man coverage.
He runs a decently diverse route tree within the Arizona State offense, and is used on come-back routes, crossers, slants, and on vertical routes. Tyson is a dependable possession option as well as a big play threat, consistently running his routes past the sticks or at least deep enough to stay out of long yardage situations.
Tyson also shows excellent ball skills. He quickly locates the ball in the air and effortlessly tracks it down the field. His quickness and agility allow him to make any adjustments necessary to open receiving windows and he has excellent hand-eye coordination. Tyson doesnât extend his hands to pluck the ball out of the air until the very last instant, both preserving his speed down the field and limiting defendersâ opportunities to disrupt the pass.
He does a good job of setting himself up for yards after the catch, which he then exploits with his twitchy athleticism and solid field vision.
Tyson typically runs his routes hard away from the ball, forcing defenses to respect him as a threat. Likewise, he is a willing (though not enthusiastic) blocker who doesnât shy away from defenders and does his best to lose slowly.
Worst traits
The single biggest issue that teams will need to confront with respect to Tyson is his health and durability.
Tyson has a very significant injury history that could have him off some teamsâ boards, or at least out of the first round. He suffered a devastating knee injury in 2022, tearing his ACL, MCL, and PCL. The recovery from that injury also robbed him of his 2023 season, and he then suffered a fractured clavicle in 2024 that required surgery to repair.
Most recently, Tyson suffered a hamstring injury during the 2025 season, and while he tried to play through it, he missed 3 games and likely impacted him when he was on the field. He reportedly suffered a setback during training for the draft process, which prevented him from working out at the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine and at the Arizona State pro day.
On the field, there are few real weaknesses in Tysonâs game.
His biggest issue is a slight lack of play strength, particularly for his size, as he doesnât hold up as well as expected as a blocker and isnât quite as dominant through contact as hoped. Likewise, he can struggle a bit in contested catch situations and only has a 43.8 percent catch rate on contested catches. That could also be related to his arm length (30 ÂŒ inches) and hand size (9 â inches), as his eye-hand coordination and ball skills are otherwise excellent.
Those issues could have been exacerbated by the hamstring issue as well, considering he had 26 reps at 225 on the bench press at the Combine.
(Tyson is the Arizona State wide receiver wearing number 0 with a white band on his left forearm.)
Jordyn Tysonâs projection depends entirely on his medical reports.
If healthy, with no long-term concerns regarding his knee or hamstring, Tyson has the potential to be a true âNumber 1â receiver who can line up in the X, Z, or Slot and be a problem for defenses. His athleticism, route running, and ball skills are enough to give him Pro Bowl upside, and he has the potential to be a real difference maker for almost any offense in the NFL.
However, Tysonâs health has to be considered and teams will have to be honest with themselves regarding their appetite for risk in that regard. Some teams will be scared off by Tysonâs durability concerns and pass on him. Others, meanwhile will look at the upside and what Tyson could be and be willing to take the risk.
How high Tyson is drafted will depend completely on where the teams that are willing to bet on his upside are drafting.
Does he fit the Giants? Yes, assuming theyâre comfortable with his medical reports
Final Word: A Top 15 pick

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