DraftCall
DraftCallFantasy Football

Head to Head

Updated from live stats

George Kittle vs Tetairoa McMillanWho should you start in 2026 fantasy football?

George Kittle is the better fantasy start for 2026, averaging 12.1 PPG to Tetairoa McMillan's 10.5 in 2025. Full head to head breakdown below.

The Bottom Line

George Kittle is the better fantasy play this season.

Cross-position decisions depend on league format. In half-PPR, George Kittle (12.1 PPG) is the higher-floor play. Tetairoa McMillan (10.5 PPG) could win a specific week on touchdown variance. For FLEX spots, lean toward the player with the softer defensive matchup that week rather than defaulting to season averages.

Low confidence: the production gap is narrow enough that weekly context matters more than the season line.

Want this verdict updated live on Sunday?

Track George Kittle and Tetairoa McMillan in the DraftCall app and get their updates the moment they change.

Get the App
TESan Francisco 49ers#3PPG LEADER
George Kittle
PPG
12.1
Games
11
Rec
57
Rec Yds
628
Rec TDs
7
Targets
69
Bye
Week 8
WRCarolina Panthers#26
Tetairoa McMillan
PPG
10.5
Games
17
Rec
70
Rec Yds
1,014
Rec TDs
7
Targets
122
Bye
Week 5

The Edge Chart

VolumeEfficiencyTD UpsideFloorCeilingDurability
George Kittle
Tetairoa McMillan

Head to Head

12.1 PPG10.5 PPG
11 GP17 GP
Bye: Week 8Bye: Week 5

Fantasy Tiers

George Kittle: Tier 1 (Elite) TE (ranked #3 at the position). Tetairoa McMillan: Tier 4 (Bench/Bye Fill) WR (ranked #26 at the position). Comparing across positions, raw PPG is less useful than positional scarcity. A Tier 1 (Elite) TE is harder to replace on waivers than a Tier 4 (Bench/Bye Fill) WR in most league formats.

George Kittle vs Tetairoa McMillan: The Full Breakdown

Comparing George Kittle (TE, San Francisco 49ers) against Tetairoa McMillan (WR, Carolina Panthers) means weighing two different roles in your fantasy lineup. George Kittle averaged 12.1 PPG in 2025 over 11 games, while Tetairoa McMillan posted 10.5 PPG across 17 games.

Cross-position FLEX decisions cannot be made on PPG alone. Positional scarcity, matchup quality, floor versus ceiling, and league scoring format all shift the answer. A 14 PPG tight end in a thin TE week is often worth more than a 16 PPG receiver in a deep WR week, because the opportunity cost on the waiver wire is wildly different.

DraftCall's AI engine weighs all of these signals and returns a verdict with clear reasoning, so you are not cross-referencing four different rankings tabs on a Sunday morning.

George Kittle has his bye in Week 8, Tetairoa McMillan in Week 5. Plan your FLEX rotation around those weeks, especially if either player is anchoring your roster.

Trade Value + Dynasty Outlook

Both are in a similar trade value range. A straight swap would be fair in most leagues, with the tiebreaker going to whichever manager values schedule or bye week more. Dynasty outlook: George Kittle (age 32) is in the later years of production. Still a redraft asset, but dynasty value is declining. Tetairoa McMillan (age 23) has years of prime production ahead. Buy-and-hold dynasty asset.

Did You Know?

  • George Kittle outscored Tetairoa McMillan by a projected 27 total fantasy points over a full 17-game season.
  • Tetairoa McMillan played 17 games in 2025 compared to George Kittle's 11. That durability gap means Tetairoa McMillan contributed more total fantasy points even before you look at per-game averages.
  • George Kittle scored 7 total touchdowns in 2025 (0.6 per game), making him one of the more reliable scoring options at tight end.
  • Tetairoa McMillan saw 122 targets in 2025. Target volume is the single strongest predictor of weekly PPR production at the tight end position.
  • Tetairoa McMillan is 9 years younger than George Kittle (23 vs 32), which significantly impacts dynasty league trade value.

Detailed Stat Breakdown

George Kittle vs Tetairoa McMillan: 2025 fantasy football stat comparison in the half-PPR scoring format.
StatGeorge KittleTetairoa McMillan
PPG (Half-PPR)12.110.5
Games Played1117
Total Fantasy Pts (est.)133179
Receptions5770
Rec/Game5.24.1
Receiving Yards6281,014
Rec Yds/Game57.159.6
Receiving TDs77
Targets69122
Target Share/Game6.37.2
Age3223
Experience8 yrs-
Bye WeekWeek 8Week 5

Summary

Based on 2025 production, George Kittle holds the PPG edge with serviceable output at 12.1 points per game. Tetairoa McMillan averaged 10.5 PPG. Season averages are a starting point, not the final word. For a full AI analysis factoring matchup quality, recent form, injury impact, and game script, download DraftCall and get a verdict backed by real data.

DraftCall app on iPhone

Website vs App

Get the AI verdict on George Kittle vs Tetairoa McMillan

DraftCall's AI analyzes matchup quality, recent trends, injury impact, and game script to give you a clear start/sit recommendation.

See everything in the app →

Launch List

Get the live verdict on George Kittle vs Tetairoa McMillan

The DraftCall app delivers live game-day verdicts on every matchup. Join the launch list and we will email you the day it goes live for the 2026 NFL season, with your direct iOS and Android install links.

We will never share your email. Unsubscribe anytime.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I start George Kittle or Tetairoa McMillan in fantasy football?

Based on 2025 season averages, George Kittle has the edge at 12.1 PPG compared to Tetairoa McMillan's 10.5 PPG. However, the best start depends on weekly matchup, recent form, and injury status. DraftCall's app provides real-time AI-powered verdicts that factor in all of these variables.

How many fantasy points did George Kittle and Tetairoa McMillan average in 2025?

George Kittle averaged 12.1 fantasy points per game (half-PPR) across 11 games in 2025. Tetairoa McMillan averaged 10.5 PPG over 17 games. That is a difference of 1.6 points per game.

When are George Kittle and Tetairoa McMillan's bye weeks in 2026?

George Kittle (SF) has a bye in Week 8, and Tetairoa McMillan (CAR) has a bye in Week 5. Plan your roster accordingly if you are carrying both players.