Dalton Kincaid didn’t crack ESPN’s Top 10 tight ends, but he did land in the honorable mention tier when Jeremy Fowler polled league executives, scouts and coaches this summer.
The Bills tight end got a strong nod from an NFC executive, who called him: “A very gifted athlete. He hasn’t put it all together yet, but that’s partly due to injury -- he absolutely can. I expect him to.”
That assessment fits the way Kincaid has been viewed since his college days: one of the smoothest, most dynamic athletes at the position. The production has been uneven, though, and the snap counts tell the story.
As a rookie, Kincaid caught 73 passes for 673 yards and two touchdowns while playing 60% of Buffalo’s offensive snaps. His second season brought a drop to 44 catches and 448 yards, with his snap share falling to 43.2%. Last year, the usage dipped again - Kincaid played just 27% of the snaps, yet still finished with 39 receptions, 571 yards and five touchdowns.
Even with that limited workload, Kincaid still flashed the kind of playmaking that makes him such an intriguing name going forward. He led all qualifying tight ends in yards per route run during the regular season at 2.79, a number that would stand out even for a wide receiver. He also led all tight ends in receptions of 20-plus yards in 2025 with 13.
That’s why the bigger question isn’t where Kincaid sits today, but where he could land if the usage climbs. Going into 2027, he has a path to the Top 5-Top 7 range if he can get on the field for 40-plus percent of Buffalo’s offensive snaps in 2026. Push that closer to 50%, and the ceiling gets even more interesting for the Bills offense.
The Top 10 itself was a mix of established stars and rising names. Fowler’s list had Travis Kelce at No. 10, followed by Mark Andrews, Kyle Pitts Sr., Colston Loveland, Tucker Kraft, Tyler Warren, Sam LaPorta, George Kittle, Trey McBride and Brock Bowers at No. 1.
One minor pushback: Tyler Warren checked in at No. 5 after a fun rookie season, but that feels a little rich this early. Still, the overall list is a reminder of how crowded and talented the position has become, with veterans like Kittle, who is 32 and coming off a torn Achilles in the playoffs, alongside younger players such as Kelce, who is 36, and Andrews, who is 30.
Kincaid belongs in that conversation if he can stay healthy and get more consistent usage. The talent is obvious. The next step is turning that into a bigger role.
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One name drawing attention is T.J. Sanders, the second-round defensive tackle from last year who had a modest rookie season but now looks like a possible leap candidate in the new system. His ability to line up inside and spend time at defensive end gives him a path to more snaps, and if the scheme unfolds the way some around the league expect, Buffalo may be hearing a lot more about him by 2026. [Read more 🡒]
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Bills Fans Already Know This Final 53 Cut Will Sting
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That matters even more with Jim Leonhard installing a new base 3-4 defense, because scheme changes tend to reshape the back end of the roster as much as the top. There will be plenty of attention on the usual training camp standouts, and rookie receiver Skyler Bell is one name drawing early buzz, but the real sting for Buffalo could come from how many familiar faces end up squeezed out once the competition gets serious. [Read more 🡒]
