Falcons post-draft roster review: All eyes on Kyle Pitts

Falcons post-draft roster review: All eyes on Kyle Pitts
The Falcoholic The Falcoholic

Tight end contains only a little intrigue for 2025, but larger questions loom.

Tight end is a straightforward position, at least in terms of summer training camp battles. The Atlanta Falcons have two starters they deploy quite often and will likely keep a third tight end, selecting from four players vying for that honor. As battles go, it’s set to be less than compelling.

But zooming out from the summer reveals more intrigue. Kyle Pitts is here on his fifth-year option, and has one final chance to reach his sky-high potential before the Falcons are tempted to move on. Charlie Woerner offers such sturdy blocking that the team may well be tempted to tear up the final year of his deal in 2026 and extend him, assuming he builds on a productive first season. And that third spot takes on more import when you think about the possibility of Pitts being gone and a young developmental option hanging around and looking for a chance to make a real impact past this season.

Let’s take a closer look.

Starters

Kyle Pitts, Charlie Woerner

It’s all expectations with Pitts. In his three full seasons, he’s been third, 11th, and 13th in receiving yards at the tight end position, making his production above average in every healthy year. But he was drafted fourth overall, has been closely scrutinized since, and found wanting for his pass catching, route running, effort, and so forth by fans and analysts alike. There’s a very real sense that there’s so much more here that Pitts has not been able to provide, and that’s fueling understandable speculation here and elsewhere that his time in Atlanta may be up soon.

In 2025, Pitts has a big-armed quarterback in Michael Penix who should allow him to eat on the downfield routes he prefers, and the work as a run blocker and in pass protection that he has put in should hopefully lead to at least modest improvements in those areas. If Penix and Pitts form an excellent rapport and the tight end turns out to be the kind of game-changing pass catcher with a new quarterback that the team envisioned back in 2021, the fact that he’s still so young makes him an obvious candidate to sign a long-term deal. If not, and we see the up-and-down play and inconsistent impact that has defined his career to this point, 2025 will be his last year as a Falcon.

Woerner played less than half of the offensive snaps, but I consider him a starter nonetheless. From Week 8 on, he played over 55% of snaps in six out of nine games, and his work as a blocker makes him vital to the effort. If he’s being targeted more than once every couple of weeks, something has gone awry with the larger offense, but the ability to pave the way for Bijan Robinson and Tyler Allgeier is invaluable.

Reserves and roster hopefuls

Feleipe Franks, Teagan Quitoriano, Nikola Kalinic, Josh Simon

Franks...