Andrew's in-depth Jordyn Tyson NFL Draft rookie breakdown of the Arizona State WR. Read the Arizona State WR's scouting report, strengths, weaknesses, and 2026 fantasy football outlook.
Welcome to Coach Knows Ball, an NFL Draft series analyzing the top prospects in the 2026 class. I'm a college football coach with 11 years of NCAA experience and have been scouting NFL Draft prospects for over 15 years. This series will give a deep dive into the film of some of the top players in this draft class, with detailed insight into future NFL standouts' strengths, weaknesses, and projections.
Scouting NFL Draft prospects is about projecting translatable traits. There is often overlap between translatable traits and college performance, but there's a reason many top college players are not considered legitimate professionals. For example, a wide receiver being able to get in and out of breaks efficiently will not change from college to pro. Conversely, an edge-rusher who got most of his sacks due to hustle or missed offensive line assignments may not have shown translatable traits on film.
The film clips in this series show each pro prospect's positive and negative traits. Reading this article will give you a more in-depth look into each player with actual in-game visual evidence. We will continue our 2026 series with Arizona State WR Jordyn Tyson.
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Jordyn Tyson Rookie Profile
Tyson is a 21-year-old wide receiver prospect from Arizona State. He started his collegiate career at Colorado, where he caught 22 passes for 470 yards and 4 touchdowns as a true freshman in 2022. He then transferred to Arizona State and barely played in 2023 as he dealt with a torn ACL/MCL/PCL. In 2024, he returned from injury to put up probably the best single age-adjusted season of any receiver prospect in this class - 75/1101/10 at 20 years old. In 2025, he was not as productive as he dealt with a nagging hamstring injury (61/711/8 in nine games). Let's dive into the film.
Twitchy and Explosive
Tyson is easily the twitchiest receiver in this class. He is explosive and agile. There are reps on film of him winning routes in a way that clearly translates to the pro game. He can decelerate at the top of routes, find space versus zone coverage, and change tempos and use suddenness against man.
In the clip below, Tyson hesitates off the line of scrimmage, by design, to set up his cover defender. He fakes right and sticks off his outside foot. When a receiver squares up his cover defender and slowplays him to cross his face using his outside instep, we call that "juicing him up."
Jordyn Tyson
Traits that translate
This type of elite twitch translates to the NFL
vs an SEC boundary corner
Juice him off, stick off that outside foot
He will separate in the pros pic.twitter.com/bDJ88P0Sf7
— Andrew (GPNGC) (@DraftWithAndrew) March 7, 2026
The above suddenness is uncommon, especially for a 6-2 receiver. We will get into his inconsistencies as a route-runner later, but his best reps are elite.
Tyson has the traits NFL teams want in a versatile threat. He can win from the slot and on the outside. In the clip below, Arizona State puts Tyson at boundary two to get a favorable matchup. He wins with a split release to a vertical stem and then a perfect speed cut to separate.
Jordyn Tyson
These are traits that translate
Split release (quick)
Get vertical
Efficient speed cut - pressure off o/s foot, snap head and rip elbow,run out the break pic.twitter.com/Hyt0iLheOF
— Andrew (GPNGC) (@DraftWithAndrew) March 7, 2026
Tyson did not run a 40 at the combine, but I have no questions about his long speed. He has shown the ability to get behind the defense and run away from people.
In the clip below, Tyson absolutely torches the TCU corner. He gains ground to eat up the corner's cushion, then explodes out of his release with real speed to win. He finishes the play completely stacked over the defender. Tyson makes hard things look easy, which is a hallmark of a college player with a bright NFL future.
Jordyn Tyson
Evaluating prospects
Making hard plays look hard = random, not predictive
Making easy plays look easy = everyone should
Making easy plays look hard = 🚩
Making hard plays look easy/effortless = have a chance to be a special propic.twitter.com/NfaUs0cqyC
— Andrew (GPNGC) (@DraftWithAndrew) March 19, 2026
Tyson has the hip and ankle flexion needed to run every type of route at a high level.
In the clip below, he runs a speed dig versus an off inside leverage corner. This is a very difficult leverage to win this route against. Tyson's vertical threat and speed out of the break allow him to win, and he finishes the play with an awesome diving catch. Outstanding stuff.
Jordyn Tyson
Speed dig vs off inside leverage corner
Not an easy thing to do!
Awesome diving catch too, great body control and hand-eye coordination pic.twitter.com/OGwnGMz4Y0
— Andrew (GPNGC) (@DraftWithAndrew) March 7, 2026
Tyson is more finesse than physical, and some of his movement skills for his size remind me of CeeDee Lamb. In the clip below, you can see Tyson blocking downfield. This is a show of awesome play strength and competitiveness. Receiver blocking is more about effort than anything else.
Love watching one player when another pops off the screen!
BIG TIME block from @ASUFootball WR Jordyn Tyson late in this game
Tyson is one of the best route runners I've studied so far in this class - and when you combine that with THIS?
✅✅✅✅ #ForksUp #ActivateTheValley pic.twitter.com/bN4XDZGCLG
— Fran Duffy (@FDuffyNFL) July 17, 2025
Tyson has all the physical traits of an NFL WR1. With professionalism in terms of attention to detail in his craft, plus good coaching, he has a very high ceiling.
Injuries and Inconsistencies
NFL scouts try to focus on what a player can do rather than what they can't. In terms of Tyson, there is basically nothing that he can't do in terms of receiver play. The only on-field issue with his game is that his play is inconsistent. His breakpoints lack consistency, he has dropped passes, and there are a handful of tough plays he simply couldn't finish at the catch point.
One of the weirdest habits in his game is that Tyson frequently mistimes his jump when attacking the ball in the air. In the clip below, he shows off his often-utilized rocker step and wins a beautiful route. The mistimed jump is just weird, and there are multiple instances of it on film.
Jordyn Tyson
Inverted smash
Beautiful rocker step to win
Mistimed jump (he has a bad habit of this)
He’s a spatial freak w/ enough twitch to be a sensational route-runner but his gait, depths, and breakpts are inconsistent
Ball skills are also inconsistent pic.twitter.com/H8ZPQuqqSg
— Andrew (GPNGC) (@DraftWithAndrew) March 18, 2026
Tyson also showed drops on film. He is an extremely explosive athlete and makes many tough catches look easy. However, at times, he loses focus or doesn't keep his eyes on the ball with the right technique, which results in drops. The clip below is a common mistake - don't start worrying about YAC before you look the ball in.
Jordyn Tyson
Simple fix: exaggerate eyes thru tuck, don’t try to run before you secure it
Tyson has all the traits you want in a WR1
However, his breakpoint technique is inconsistent - needs to master details
And inconsistent at catch pt - a lot of close 1s he didn’t finish pic.twitter.com/0y0odG0hd3
— Andrew (GPNGC) (@DraftWithAndrew) March 7, 2026
Perhaps Tyson's inconsistencies on film can be explained by injuries. He's not a perfect on-field prospect, but there is A LOT to work with, and receiver coaches in the league would absolutely love to have him in their room.
The glaring concern for Tyson as a prospect is his lengthy injury history, which includes a brutal knee injury, a broken clavicle, and injuries to both hamstrings this past season.
My expertise is in evaluating film. I have no idea how to project Tyson's durability, but I suppose NFL teams may have concerns about his injury history. Modern medicine has come a long way, so hopefully he can stay healthy.
NFL Player Outlook
Tyson is my WR2 in this class, but his ceiling is higher than Carnell Tate's. Tyson isn't the most consistent player, but he may have put out more polished film if he didn't have to deal with so many injuries. His durability is a concern, but if he checks out as healthy, he'll have a real shot to develop into a highly productive WR1.
If you want to read and watch some of my past film breakdowns, click the links below.
- Fernando Mendoza - QB, Indiana
- Jeremiyah Love - RB, Notre Dame
- Carnell Tate - WR, Ohio State
- Super Bowl Champion Jaxon Smith-Njigba - WR, Ohio State
- Super Bowl MVP Kenneth Walker III - RB, Michigan State
- Cam Ward - QB, Miami
- Jaxson Dart - QB, Mississippi
- Brock Bowers - TE, Georgia
- Jayden Daniels - QB, LSU
- Bijan Robinson - RB, Texas
- Jahmyr Gibbs - RB, Alabama
- Ja'Marr Chase - WR, LSU
Thanks for reading, and stay tuned for more draft content in the coming days.
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