
#81 WR · Miami Dolphins
Height
6'2"
Weight
210 lbs
Age
24
College
Missouri
Draft
Undrafted
Experience
0 yrs
WR Rank
#73 / 295
Grade Theo Wease Jr.
Your grade joins the crowd-sourced Fan Verdict.
On the field, Theo Wease Jr. grades out as a strong WR for Miami Dolphins (B- Performance). That places him 73rd of 295 graded wide receivers. The money matches the play — the Contract Value Index lands at B+, good value. The public read is mixed (C+ Sentiment), drawn from current news and social signal rather than the box score. As a prospect, expect these grades to move quickly as a real sample builds.
| Year | Team | GP | Rec | Yards | TD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Career | ![]() | 3 | 6 | 139 | 1 |
| 2025 | ![]() | 3 | 6 | 139 | 1 |
Length
2 years
Total Value
$1.8M
AAV
$923K/yr
Theo Wease Jr.'s Contract Value Index lands at B+, putting the deal in a defined slice of comparable signings. At $922,500 AAV across two years, this is a depth-receiver contract built around upside rather than proven production—a reasonable bet on a 24-year-old still in his rookie season. His 2025 season output of 139 receiving yards across three games represents genuine scarcity; that limited baseline is precisely why the CVI reflects value rather than overpay, and why a B+ grade hinges entirely on the premise that he's being paid like a developmental asset, not a established starter. The mediaFraming is instructive here: Wease Jr. enters 2026 as a secondary receiver in Miami's offense, one capable of generating splash plays—his 63-yard touchdown against Tampa Bay demonstrated that ceiling—but lacking the consistency or volume to anchor a receiving corps. The Dolphins' recent signings across the offensive and defensive lines suggest organizational investment in roster depth and scheme execution, which implicitly creates runway for receivers like Wease to prove themselves in live games rather than practice settings. At this salary and term, the deal carries minimal cap burden and no guaranteed-money risk; the real verdict will be determined by whether his 2026 performance can build on that highlight moment and establish him as a viable NFL contributor, a question the contract itself is priced to answer.
Other same-position deals the Contract Value Index also places in the B band — a quick read on where Theo's contract sits relative to comparable money.
Theo Wease Jr. produces at a tier that grades a B- performance mark for Miami. The 24-year-old wideout, in his rookie season, flashed genuine big-play ability on a limited sample — his 2025 season featured 139 receiving yards across three games, punctuated by a 63-yard touchdown connection with Quinn Ewers that generated legitimate highlight-reel buzz and elevated his profile within the Dolphins' pass-heavy system. The upside is clear: he demonstrated deep-route capability and the ability to win on vertical shots, which keeps him in the receiver-depth conversation as the team heads into 2026. The glaring weakness is volume and consistency — a three-game sample with 139 yards is developmental production, and his role remains highly uncertain given Miami's recent receiver signings (Chris Bell included in early June moves) and the depth-chart reality of a bubble player competing for snaps. Media framing treats Wease as a high-upside developmental commodity whose perception will hinge almost entirely on his 2026 performance; the viral touchdown created genuine opportunity, but minimal career production means he has no safety net. He remains a classic case of untapped potential awaiting establishment, a prospect whose next stretch of playing time will determine whether that one explosive moment was a legitimate harbinger or an outlier.
Theo Wease Jr. ranks 73rd of 295 graded wide receivers by performance. That slots Theo between Kayshon Boutte (B-) just ahead and Khalil Shakir (B-) just behind.
Graded higher
Kayshon BoutteNew England PatriotsB-Jayden HigginsHouston TexansB-Tory HortonSeattle SeahawksB-Graded lower
Khalil ShakirBuffalo BillsTheo Wease Jr.'s public perception scores a C+ sentiment grade as fan and media tone converge. The narrative around the 24-year-old rookie wideout has been energized almost entirely by a single viral moment—a 63-yard touchdown connection with Quinn Ewers against Tampa Bay—that vaulted him from anonymous depth-chart fodder into genuine underdog storyline territory. Media coverage is cautiously optimistic, with fantasy analysts now monitoring his role and beat reporters acknowledging that Miami's organization is giving him a legitimate chance to compete for snaps, a meaningful signal that he's viewed as more than practice-squad filler. That cautious tone makes sense given his minimal career foundation: across three games in the 2025 season, he accumulated 139 receiving yards, a production baseline that would normally consign him to invisibility. However, the recent team transactions—Miami has signed multiple defensive and offensive linemen over the past two weeks—suggest the Dolphins are building a cohesive roster around their passing attack, which implicitly values receivers like Wease who can take advantage of deep-route opportunities in a pass-heavy system. The perception is fundamentally tethered to upside and opportunity rather than proven production; his role and reputation in 2026 will be almost entirely determined by whether he can build on that highlight with consistent NFL performance.
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Theo Wease Jr. is a player on a rookie-scale contract listed at WR for the Miami Dolphins. FanVerdicts covers every NFL player, team, GM, and transaction — and puts your verdict on all of it. Sign in to cast your Fan Verdict on Theo Wease Jr., see where the crowd lands, and argue the call. FanVerdicts also brings its own read — performance, sentiment, and Contract Value Index — as one honest input alongside the crowd's. Where FanVerdicts has weighed in so far: Contract Value Index B+, Performance B-, Sentiment C+.
The crowd's Fan Verdict moves in real time as fans vote on this profile. FanVerdicts' own read updates as new data lands — performance recalculates when NFL game stats post, sentiment shifts with media coverage and fan discussion, and the Contract Value Index recomputes when contract terms change. Contract details below show the structure (years, total value, average annual value, guarantees) behind the Contract Value Index read.
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