Vikings Suddenly Have A Bigger Tight End Question Than Fans Realize

As the Vikings grapple with injuries and a need for youthful depth, the competition for the crucial TE3 spot reveals much about their future roster strategies.

The Vikings’ tight end room might not be the loudest roster battle on the board, but it could end up mattering more than most people realize.

T.J. Hockenson is locked in as the starter, and Minnesota knows exactly what he can be when things are rolling.

He burst out of the gate after arriving in Minnesota, earned Pro Bowl honors in 2022, and looked like a major piece of the offense. But the last stretch has been harder to judge.

Injuries have chipped away at his production, and the bigger picture around him hasn’t helped either. Between shaky offensive line play and the quarterback carousel, Hockenson has spent too much time dealing with mess around him.

That’s part of why the Vikings restructured his contract and wiped out the final year of his deal, a move that leaves his TE1 future in 2027 very much up in the air.

Josh Oliver is the next name on the depth chart, and his role is clear. He’s the TE2, he’s handled himself well when Hockenson has been out, and he remains one of the league’s better run-blocking tight ends. The catch is age: Oliver is 29, which means Minnesota can’t just stop thinking about what comes next.

That’s what makes this offseason’s TE3 battle so interesting. The Vikings went after Oregon tight end Kenyon Sadiq in the 2026 draft, but the New York Jets took him at pick 16. So now the job is there for someone already in the building.

Ben Yurosek looks like the front-runner.

He came in as a UDFA last season out of Georgia, which turned heads because he actually made the 2025 53-man roster. That likely had something to do with 2025 sixth-round pick Gavin Bartholomew being sidelined by injury, but Yurosek still earned his place.

PFF was high on him too, ranking him as a Top 10 graded UDFA from the 2025 regular season. His blocking drove most of that evaluation, and he capped things with an elite 90.4 PFF overall grade against the Green Bay Packers in Week 18.

The receiving numbers didn’t pop much last year, but Yurosek showed more of that side of his game at Stanford, where he piled up over 1,300 yards before transferring to Georgia.

For now, he has the inside track to TE3, and the Vikings clearly have enough to like there.

Bartholomew is the other big name in the mix, and his path is a little murkier. Minnesota took him in the sixth round of the 2025 draft after he earned All-ACC honors at Pittsburgh.

The problem was a back injury that followed him through 2025, so he never really got the chance to show what he could do on Sundays. At Pitt, he flashed strong run-blocking traits and earned a reputation as a “rugged run finisher” with the ball in his hands.

The Vikings invested draft capital in him for a reason, but he’s going to have to climb uphill to stick on the final 53, especially with Yurosek already making his case.

There are a couple more names to keep in the conversation, too.

Bryson Nesbit, another 2025 draft class member, spent time on the practice squad last season. He was an All-ACC player at North Carolina and showed real playmaking ability during the preseason. The issue is straightforward: he can help in the passing game, but he isn’t built for NFL blocking work.

Then there’s Marshall Lang, whom Minnesota recently signed. He played at Northwestern and was also part of the 2025 class, though he entered the league as a UDFA with the Seattle Seahawks. New GM Nolan Teasley clearly liked him enough to bring him to Minnesota, and that connection could matter when the roster gets trimmed.

The Vikings have made it obvious they’re thinking ahead at tight end, even if they didn’t land the future answer this offseason. The edge depth problem may be the more urgent concern right now, but the tight end situation is the one that starts looming larger as 2026 rolls on and Hockenson’s contract gets closer to its end. For the moment, though, Minnesota has a real TE3 competition in house, and the winner could wind up being the player best positioned to help fill the gap in 2027.

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