Kentucky TE Josh Kattus heads back home with free agent contract

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If you walk into an NFL draft room and ask a GM what sticks at the bottom of the roster, the answer isn’t highlight plays—it’s trust, role clarity, and physical reliability. That’s exactly where Josh Kattus enters the building for the Cincinnati Bengals.

This isn’t a projection signing. This is a profile signing.

Heading back to his hometown. @JKattus has signed a free agent contract with the @Bengals. pic.twitter.com/JTYFyEVJb3

— Kentucky Football (@UKFootball) April 26, 2026

With the Kentucky Wildcats, Kattus built a résumé that front offices quietly value—over 50 receptions, 600+ yards, 5 touchdowns, all within a pro-style system that didn’t feature the tight end as a primary target but demanded execution on every snap. You’re not drafting box score numbers here—you’re evaluating operational consistency.

Turn on the tape and you see a true Y-body type. Inline strength. Hand placement that holds up. Pad level that doesn’t drift late in reps. He’s not just engaging defenders—he’s controlling them. That matters in AFC North football, where games are decided in condensed space and short-yardage situations.

Now put on the GM lens. Kattus checks foundational boxes:

  • Scheme versatility (in-line, attached, motion capability)
  • Run game reliability (edge sealing, second-level angles)
  • Situational awareness (red zone spacing, underneath windows)
  • Low assignment volatility (he doesn’t bust)

That’s how UDFAs make teams.

And then there’s the Bengals fit—this is where it tightens up.

Cincinnati’s offense, with Joe Burrow, is built on timing, spacing, and precision. The wide receivers stretch the field, the quarterback manipulates coverage, and the tight end’s job is to make the structure hold. That means:

  • Win your block so the run game stays on schedule
  • Be available on checkdowns and seams
  • Don’t miss assignments in protection

Kattus already plays that brand of football.

He’s not walking in as a mismatch weapon—he’s walking in as a stabilizer. A player who allows the offense to stay multiple without tipping tendencies. A player who can line up, do his job, and let the stars operate around him.

That’s how you earn snaps in that system.

From a roster construction standpoint, this is about cost-controlled depth with developmental upside. If he proves he can handle special teams, maintain blocking consistency, and convert in limited receiving opportunities, he becomes exactly what every front office is hunting in late August—a dependable TE2/TE3 who doesn’t force you to adjust your call sheet. That’s real value. So while the UDFA label will follow him into camp, don’t confuse that with his actual standing on a board. Players with this profile don’t need hype—they need reps. If he stacks enough of them, this becomes less about making the roster…and more about staying on it.

Now, it comes full circle for Josh Kattus. Back home in Cincinnati, with the Cincinnati Bengals, this isn’t just another roster battle—it’s personal. The same city that raised him is now the stage where he has to earn it. No spotlight. No shortcuts. Just a hometown kid, built on grit and detail, getting his shot to prove he belongs.

This article originally appeared on UK Wildcats Wire: Kentucky football's Josh Kattus signs with Cincinnati Bengals

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