
OscarDelp
Fluid, fleet-footed tight end with blocking chops and untapped pass catching potential.
Field-TiltingSpeed
RefinedTechnique
SureHands
Delp is a high-end athlete who may need to get stronger at the next level, but brings the foundation to develop into a two-way tight end who can contribute on all three downs. A four-star prospect and the top-ranked tight end in his recruiting class, he was a four-year contributor for Georgia and a three-year starter, totaling 70 catches for 854 yards and nine touchdowns in his career. He’s a smooth-moving athlete and gets to top speed quickly, threatening deep on vertical routes up the seam. He gets off the line cleanly and can snap off his routes to separate underneath, bringing a big catch radius and the ability to pluck the ball away from his frame. He has reliable hands, with a career 4.1 percent drop rate, according to PFF. He shows quick feet and good body control to catch the ball and change direction without losing his balance, and adds some run-after-the-catch talent, bringing the acceleration and burst to run away from pursuit and destroy pursuit angles. He averaged 7.8 yards after the catch per reception last season, and flashed the ability to pick up chunk yards on crossing routes, where he could use his speed to pull away from trailing defenders. Delp can be deployed in a variety of ways as a blocker, showing skills on slice blocks across the formation and move blocks in space. He brings an understanding of positioning and works hard to sustain. When lined up in-line, he can fire out of his stance and create some push, keeping his feet churning to drive the defender off his spot.
Delp has good athletic traits, but his career production was very underwhelming. He never had more than 24 catches in a season and posted a career yards-per-route-run average of just 1.23 yards. His route tree is limited. And while he had just one drop in 2025, there are times he fights the ball at the catch point and fails to come down with it cleanly. He has been hit or miss on contested catch situations, and doesn’t always play strongly enough through contact.
Background
By Daniel Comer
A junior and former four-star recruit out of Cumming, Georgia. Was the no. 2 tight end and the no. 100 overall player in the 2022 class.