The NFL has taken notice of Oronde Gadsden II, and the Chargers’ young tight end is already showing up in league conversations after just one rookie season.
Gadsden didn’t crack ESPN’s latest top-10 tight end rankings, but he did receive votes in the annual poll of NFL front office executives, scouts and coaches. That alone says plenty after a season in which he emerged as one of the Chargers’ most productive weapons and, as the source notes, became the first Los Angeles player to be mentioned on any of the publicly released lists.
For the Chargers, it’s another sign that their fifth-round magic is real. Joe Hortiz has found value there before with Tarheeb Still and Cam Hart in 2024, and then hit again in 2025 when Los Angeles traded up to land Gadsden. The team clearly saw something worth chasing when he slipped to the fifth round, and that bet paid off quickly.
Coming out of Syracuse, Gadsden was viewed as a pass-catching developmental tight end who had only recently moved over from wide receiver. His path to the field wasn’t immediate either, since several veterans were ahead of him and it took a few weeks before he got his shot on the active roster.
Once he got rolling, though, he made it count. His breakout came in Week 7 against the Indianapolis Colts, when he piled up 164 yards and announced himself in a big way. From there, defenses started treating him like a real threat, and that extra attention helped slow his production late in the season.
Even so, the rookie numbers were strong. Gadsden finished with 694 yards and three touchdowns, despite not playing until Week 3. That yardage total ranked 10th among NFL tight ends and put him just ahead of Buffalo’s Dalton Kincaid.
Now the challenge is carrying that momentum into a new offensive setup. The Chargers have brought in new offensive coordinator Mike McDaniel, and the system is expected to lean into a wide-zone look, multiple tight end sets and a quicker passing game. The source also notes McDaniel may borrow from Sean McVay and the Rams by using 13 personnel with all three tight ends on the field together.
That could matter a lot for Gadsden. Last season, he was used as a seam-stretching field threat, and that role should still be part of his game. But a quicker rhythm offense around Justin Herbert could create more short-area targets, especially for tight ends who naturally work closer to the quarterback and can turn catches into yards after the catch.
There’s also more competition in the room now, with free agents Charlie Kolar and David Njoku joining Gadsden. Still, the setup gives him a chance to keep growing, especially with Njoku and Kolar around as veteran help while he continues to sharpen his game.
The league has already started to recognize the rise. Gadsden’s rookie year was good enough to get him votes among the NFL’s best at his position, and if his first season was the opening act, the Chargers are clearly hoping there’s a bigger one coming next.
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