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1:16Round 1 Pass Catcher In Best Position To Succeed Immediately
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1:41Saints' Jordyn Tyson Projected to Lead Rookie WRs In Yards
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0:542026 NFL Draft Grades: Saints Select Jordyn Tyson No. 8
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1:48Will Jordyn Tyson Be The Best WR From the 2026 Class?
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17:10The Making of an NFL-Ready Prospect in the 2026 Draft
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0:55Jordyn Tyson's Injury History Raises Draft Questions
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1:32Jordyn Tyson Primed to Be First WR Taken
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1:13Jordyn Tyson: The 2026 NFL Draft's Top WR?
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10:37Best Team Fits For NFL Draft Prospects
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0:41Rueben Bain Jr. Is The Best Fit For Kansas City At No. 9
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0:40Jordyn Tyson Is The Best Fit For Saints At No. 8
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55:06Ryan Wilson's Final 2026 NFL Mock Draft
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1:17NFL Draft Interview: Arizona State Wide Receiver Jordyn Tyson
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12:10Breaking Down Bryant McFadden's Mock Draft Trades
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1:34Who They Should Take NFL Mock Draft: Who Do The Giants Select?
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26:07NFL Draft Smokescreen Season
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1:43Jordyn Tyson or Carnell Tate: Who's the WR1 of 2026?
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1:58Jordyn Tyson Stock Rising To Top 10 Pick Status
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0:58Jonathan Jones Mock Draft: Dolphins Draft Jordyn Tyson After Losing Tyreek Hill & Jaylen Waddle
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40:05NFL Insider Jonathan Jones Releases Mock Draft
Top Jordyn Tyson News
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Saints' Jordyn Tyson: Selected by Saints
The Saints selected Tyson in the first round of the 2026 NFL Draft, eighth overall.
Tyson (6-foot-2, 203 pounds) had the best collegiate production profile between himself and fellow top wideout prospects Carnell Tate and Makai Lemon, but Tyson's injury history understandably caused some anxiety and until Thursday it was unclear whether NFL teams would red-flag Tyson over those injury concerns. That Tyson was picked this early seems to answer the question - the Saints looked into his knee and hamstring injuries and evidently decided to bet on his talent. Tyson suffered a torn ACL, MCL and PCL his true freshman season at Colorado, and hamstring troubles from his 2025 season followed Tyson into the offseason, leaving him unable to participate in pre-draft athletic testing. If one disregards the injuries as the NFL seemingly has, then there are otherwise only reasons to like Tyson. His production was compelling both at Arizona State and Colorado, and while Tyson won't ever be a great big-play threat he shows the ability to dice up the underneath to a high-volume extent, giving him clear 100-catch upside at the NFL level during his best years. Even as a rookie, Tyson should push for a heavy workload right away, likely running as the primary Saints wideout opposite Chris Olave.
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Player Bio
| HT/WT: 6-2, 203 lbs |
| Birthplace: Allen, TX |
| Experience: 3 |

























