Notre Dame’s 2026 recruiting class already has plenty of buzz around it, and Preston Fryzel is one of the names that stands out for a very specific reason: he looks like a tight end built to stretch the field. The Ohio native arrives in South Bend as a big-bodied pass catcher with wideout speed, and that combination gives him a chance to become a different kind of weapon in the Irish offense.
Marcus Freeman’s class is the highest-ranked group of his tenure, with On3/Rivals slotting it No. 1 in the country and the overall composite ranking placing it No. 2.
Tight end is part of that haul too, and Fryzel is one of the two additions at the position alongside five-star Kansas product Ian Premer. The early outlook is clear enough: Premer is the more ready-made option, while Fryzel is the one who may need more time to develop before he’s ready for a bigger role.
That doesn’t mean Fryzel is short on upside. The evaluation from National Signing Day described him as a player whose senior season really changed the trajectory of his profile.
At Toledo Central Catholic, he was often deployed more like a wide receiver, and that’s exactly the kind of skill set Notre Dame can use. The Irish like to move tight ends around the formation, and Fryzel fits that mold because he can work from the slot, get downfield, and win one-on-one on the boundary.
The same evaluation pointed to the traits that make him such an intriguing long-term piece. He has “legit speed,” runs routes like a receiver, and “tracks the deep ball like a wide receiver.”
That speed gives him separation ability, and he can turn catches into bigger gains after the ball is in his hands. The flip side is just as important: he still has to add strength, fill out his frame, and improve as a run blocker before he can reach his ceiling.
Fryzel has already taken a step in that direction. He arrived on campus a little over 200 pounds and got up to 225 pounds during winter workouts and spring training.
That growth matters, especially in a tight end room where the physical demands are obvious and the competition is deep. He also benefited from enrolling early, and he used spring ball to start building a foundation for what comes next.
For now, the expectation is patience. Offensive coordinator and tight ends coach Mike Denbrock has plenty of options in the room, which makes meaningful snaps hard to find for a true freshman.
Fryzel may see the field in the closing stages of games early in the season, and special teams could offer him a path to contribute through kickoff coverage, kickoff return, or punt coverage. Beyond that, the focus is on development.
If he keeps adding good weight, gets stronger in the run game, and becomes more comfortable in the offense during fall camp, he can put himself in position to make a push for the rotation in 2027. That’s the real target here. Fryzel’s first season at Notre Dame is less about immediate production and more about laying the groundwork for the kind of player he can become.
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The debate gets sharper when the list is stacked against familiar opponents, including NC State sitting one spot ahead of Notre Dame even though the Irish beat the Wolfpack in South Bend in 2023 and NC State was routed there last season. It is also a reminder that raw records do not always tell the full story, especially for a program that has been perfect in neutral-site games during that span and has built much of its recent profile in settings far removed from the campus stadium conversation. [Read more 🡒]
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Littles recruitment is still in its early stages, but it is moving fast for a player with a productive high school rsum and plenty of room to keep climbing. The Irish are trying to sell him on what their defensive line room can become, while other programs are making their own case, and the next round of visits could go a long way toward shaping where this one heads next. [Read more 🡒]
