Steelers Fans Wont Like How One National Ranking Treated Darnell Washington

Despite impressive contributions and potential, Steelers' tight ends Pat Freiermuth and Darnell Washington are notably overlooked in the latest rankings.

ESPN’s latest tight end rankings left Pittsburgh with a split result: Pat Freiermuth at least got a nod, while Darnell Washington was nowhere to be found.

Jeremy Fowler’s annual series, which asks NFL executives, coaches and scouts to sort out the top 10 at each position, dropped Friday with Brock Bowers at No. 1, Trey McBride at No. 2 and George Kittle right behind them. From there, the list kept rolling through a deep group of pass-catchers and matchup weapons - but neither Steelers tight end made the cut.

Freiermuth landed in the honorable mentions, grouped with Bills tight end Dalton Kincaid, Cowboys tight end Jake Ferguson, Browns tight end Harold Fanin Jr. and Bears tight end Cole Kmet. A separate “Also receiving votes” category included T.J. Hockenson, Isaiah Likely, Dalton Schultz, Dallas Goedert, Oronde Gadsden, Juwan Johnson and Brenton Strange.

Washington, though, didn’t even make it into those extra categories, and that’s the part that stands out.

The top of the ranking is hard to argue with. Bowers has already separated himself as the league’s best tight end because of his receiving ability and what he does once the ball is in his hands.

The middle of the list is loaded too, with Sam LaPorta, Tyler Warren, Tucker Kraft, Colston Loveland and Kyle Pitts all presented as tough covers for defenses. Even the back end has some debate attached to it, with Mark Andrews and Travis Kelce both showing signs of age.

Freiermuth missing the top 10 isn’t the issue. The real head-scratcher is Washington being left off entirely.

That omission feels especially strange because Washington’s value doesn’t come from piling up catches. He’s a 6'7'', 300-plus-pound 'Y' tight end, the kind of player who can line up inline and function like an extra offensive tackle. That role limits his receiving totals, but it doesn’t make him disposable.

When Pittsburgh does throw his way, Washington has shown soft, natural hands and the kind of power after the catch that turns routine completions into problems for defenders. Even in a pedestrian passing game last season, he finished with 31 receptions and 364 yards in 2025, production that hardly deserves to be brushed aside.

The numbers back up the eye test, too. According to Pro Football Focus, Washington has graded out as a top-20 tight end for two straight years. He posted a 71.2 overall grade in 2024, which ranked 17th at the position, and followed that with a 71.0 grade last year, good for 19th.

Nobody was asking for Washington to crack the top 10. But leaving him out of the honorable mentions altogether feels like a miss, especially when 22 tight ends were mentioned in all. For a player whose job is as much about physical control and blocking value as it is about catches, that kind of omission says more about how he’s viewed than what he brings to the Steelers.

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