Travis Kelce skews the numbers somewhat, having led the Chiefs nine times in catches and turning that into eight playoff appearances and five Super Bowls. Zach Ertz, Mark Andrews and George Kittle have helped that postseason total.
Therein lies the reality. An offense can be plenty successful with a tight end as top receiver, if the tight end is elite.
"What makes Trey so dynamic is what he does when the ball is in his hands," Wilson said. "He gains a lot of his yards in yards after catch. Whatever makes you an efficient passing offense – and I don't know what that number is – in terms of total receiving yards, if you can reach that number (as a team) it doesn't matter where it comes from."
Last season, McBride had the most targets with 147. Harrison had 116 (with 62 receptions), Wilson had 71 (47), running back [James Conner](/team/players-roster/james-conner/) 55 (47) and [Greg Dortch](/team/players-roster/greg-dortch/) 50 (37).
"Maybe I have 10 catches one game and the next game I have two catches and Marvin has 10 catches," McBride said. "Whatever it may be. Kyler (Murray) is going to get the ball to the right people, he's going to go through his progression; to me, Mike, Marvin, Dortch, and whoever it is I am confident in all these guys."
The Cardinals want to run the ball, enough so that a major increase in passing attempts seems unlikely. With McBride's production and Harrison's potential, Wilson doesn't see the target distribution changing much.