Chris Lindstrom keeps stacking up the kind of résumé that should make him impossible to ignore, and somehow he still ends up flying under the radar.
That’s the strange reality for interior offensive linemen in the NFL. If you’re not catching passes, scoring touchdowns, or piling up fantasy points, the attention usually goes somewhere else. For the Falcons, that means one of the league’s best players can keep doing elite work without nearly enough noise around him.
ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler surveyed more than 70 NFL scouts, executives, and coaches for the seventh straight year to rank the top 10 players at every position heading into the 2026 season. In the interior offensive line group, Lindstrom landed sixth - a solid spot, but still lower than his play suggests.
“He doesn't get enough recognition -- he's been really good for a long time,” a veteran NFL defensive coach said.
There is at least some context here. Fowler’s interior line category mixes guards and centers together, which makes the comparison messier than a pure guard ranking.
Even so, Lindstrom has a strong case to be viewed as a top-three guard in the league, and he’s got the hardware to back it up. He was the No. 1 player on this list in 2023, the same year he became the highest-paid guard in NFL history.
The names ahead of him were Tyler Smith, Quenton Nelson, Quinn Meinerz, and Joe Thuney. Smith’s place makes sense, and Meinerz has earned his reputation too. But Lindstrom being behind Thuney feels like a stretch for a player who has been this steady, this productive, and this durable.
Since the start of the last six years, Lindstrom has missed just one game. He hasn’t dealt with an extended injury absence since his rookie season in 2019.
That kind of availability matters, and so does the way he plays. Atlanta leans on him as one of the best run-blockers in football, which has helped keep the Falcons’ ground game consistent over the last seven seasons.
He’s also taken steps forward as a pass-blocker in recent years, which only strengthens the case that he’s more than just a mauler in the run game. The 29-year-old has been exactly what a team wants from a guard, even if the league’s ranking exercise didn’t treat him like it.
Lindstrom, a 2019 first-round pick out of Boston College, has been a Pro Bowler and Second-Team All-Pro in each of the last four years. But because he plays one of the least glamorous positions in the sport, most of the appreciation still comes from inside Atlanta. Fowler’s survey didn’t change that.
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