
#79 OT · Los Angeles Chargers
Height
6'6"
Weight
307 lbs
Age
29
College
Sioux Falls
Draft
Undrafted
Experience
7 yrs
Grade Trey Pipkins Iii
Your grade joins the crowd-sourced Fan Verdict.
On the field, Trey Pipkins Iii grades out as a middling OT for Los Angeles Chargers (C Performance). The money matches the play — the Contract Value Index lands at C+, fairly priced. The public read is negative (D+ Sentiment), drawn from current news and social signal rather than the box score.
Length
2 years
Total Value
$10.0M
Guaranteed
$4.6M
AAV
$5.0M/yr
Among offensive tackles at this AAV tier, Trey Pipkins III earns a C+ Contract Value Index (CVI). At $5M AAV over two years, he represents a modest depth investment—the kind of veteran floor piece teams deploy when injuries strike or rotation demands flexibility—and his C performance grade confirms he's holding down a reserve role rather than commanding a starting salary. The 2025 season saw him appear in 13 games, consistent with a depth deployment, and his anonymity in the media landscape aligns with that positioning: a seven-year veteran offensive lineman who has faded from meaningful discourse, neither praised nor controversial. At 29, Pipkins sits in the journeyman phase of his career where availability and durability matter more than elite production, and the CVI reflects that reality—not overpaid for what he delivers, but not a steal either. The Chargers' recent moves, highlighted by secondary and special-teams activity rather than offensive line upgrades, suggest they view Pipkins as competent organizational depth, not a foundational piece worth elevating. For a tackle market where starters command premium dollars, this modest deal is fairly calibrated to a player who has effectively become the invisible middle tier of NFL rosters.
Other same-position deals the Contract Value Index also places in the C band — a quick read on where Trey's contract sits relative to comparable money.
Trey Pipkins III's tape and counting stats together earn a C performance grade. At 29 years old with seven seasons of NFL experience, he slots into the below-average-to-solid-starter tier at offensive tackle—the kind of depth piece teams keep on the roster out of necessity rather than conviction. His 2025 season appearance in 13 games demonstrates reasonable durability, though that limited snap volume reflects his role as a reserve rather than a foundational blocker expected to anchor the line. The absence of standout statistical production in his current-season numbers and the near-complete absence of positive media coverage underscore the trajectory of a journeyman lineman who has never distinguished himself as a reliable starter in the pass-heavy modern NFL. At $0.8M annually, the Chargers are treating him exactly as what he is: organizational depth who can fill a roster spot without meaningful long-term investment. For a veteran tackle nearing 30, invisibility in the media landscape—neither praised for reliability nor condemned for liability—typically signals a career defined by availability rather than impact, positioning him squarely in the replacement-level category where competence is assumed but excellence is never expected.
Trey Pipkins Iii ranks 58th of 189 graded offensive tackles by performance. That slots Trey between Penei Sewell (C+) just ahead and Stone Forsythe (C) just behind.
Graded higher
Penei SewellDetroit LionsC+Matt PeartDenver BroncosC+Zach TomGreen Bay PackersC+Graded lower
Stone ForsytheCarolina PanthersRecent headlines push Trey Pipkins III's sentiment grade to a D+, with Los Angeles Chargers' broader season shaping the read. Pipkins represents the NFL's invisible middle tier—a seven-year veteran offensive tackle earning just $0.8M annually who has effectively faded from meaningful media discourse, suggesting he occupies a depth or reserve role within the team's offensive line hierarchy. The absence of recent coverage reflects neither fan enthusiasm nor significant controversy; his journeyman status as a low-profile lineman has left him in neutral territory, where competence is assumed but excellence is never expected. His on-field performance grade of C aligns with this positioning—competent enough to retain a roster spot but not distinctive enough to command analyst attention or confidence heading into 2026. Recent team transactions, including the signing of OT Laekin Vakalahi alongside a broader reshuffling of the secondary and special teams, reinforce that Pipkins operates as organizational depth rather than a foundational piece, and the Chargers' 11-6 record and playoff positioning create no urgency to elevate a veteran reserve into the conversation. For a pass-heavy league increasingly reliant on elite tackle play, flying this far under the radar typically signals a career defined by availability rather than impact—Pipkins is the type of journeyman lineman teams keep around without ever truly counting on.
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Trey Pipkins Iii is a player in his 7th NFL season listed at OT for the Los Angeles Chargers. 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 Trey Pipkins Iii, 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 C+, Performance C, Sentiment D+.
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