Summary
Tre Tucker, at age 25 and entering Year 4, shows an ascending dynasty value profile with a stable snap share and improved receiving metrics in 2025. He posted 696 receiving yards, 5 touchdowns, and 27 first downs on 57 targets. Contender rosters should consider Tucker as a WR3-locked asset with low injury risk due to a 94.8% snap share and no reported injury history.
Projection Rationale
Tucker’s 2025 receiving season, which includes 696 yards, 5 touchdowns, and 27 first downs on 57 targets, establishes a baseline for his projection floor. With a stable 94.8% snap share and no injury history, he is poised to continue contributing as a WR3 in a spread-heavy system.
Injury Risk
Tucker practiced at full participation in Week 13 of the 2025 season and has no reported injury history, making him a low-injury-risk asset.
Opportunity Notes
Tucker’s snap share remains stable at 94.8% in 2025, with weekly marks at 100% across most games and dips to 91% and 88% in Weeks 2 and 5, respectively. With 57 targets and 5 touchdowns in 2025, his target share is not threatened, and he operates in a 3-WR set with no clear WR2 threat on the depth chart.
Scheme Fit Analysis
The Las Vegas Raiders’ spread-heavy system under HC Pete Carroll and OC Chip Kelly suits Tucker’s route-running skills, which generated 696 receiving yards, 5 touchdowns, and 27 first downs in 2025. Tucker’s role in the offense is to create separation and accumulate volume in the passing game.
Trend Assessment
Rising
Tucker’s dynasty score and trade value both trend upward, driven by his 2025 receiving season and stable 94.8% snap share.
Ceiling / Floor
Ceiling clears 696 receiving yards if Tucker advances past 57 targets and maintains his 5-touchdown pace. Floor tracks near 696 yards given his stable 94.8% snap share and no reported injury history. A mid-season injury is the only realistic path to meaningful regression below that line.
Comparable Player
His receiving profile, including 57 targets, 696 yards, and 5 touchdowns, draws comparisons to 2022-2023 Tyler Boyd (CIN) — both players operate in a spread-heavy system, leveraging their route-running skills to generate volume in a 3-WR set.