It’s a new season and there will be risers and fallers as there
are every year in every top-10 list. We investigated running
backs last week and this week the wide receiver room is up for
analysis.
The wide receiver top-10 is more volatile than the running back
room. Starting with the 2020 wideouts, top-10 (based on FPts/G),
only 14 of the 30 players were repeat members (min four games
played in a season). Just four repeated from 2020 to ‘21,
six the next season and four last year (CeeDee Lamb, Tyreek Hill.
A.J. Brown and Justin Jefferson). And only Hill has appeared in
all four of the seasons.
2020
2021
2022
2023
D. Adams
C. Kupp
C. Kupp
C. Lamb
T. Hill
D. Adams
J. Jefferson
T. Hill
S. Diggs
D. Samuel
J. Chase
K. Allen
C. Ridley
J. Jefferson
T. Hill
ARSB
D Hopkins
J. Chase
S. Diggs
J. Jefferson
K. Allen
C. Godwin
D. Adams
P. Nacua
AJ. Brown
T. Hill
AJ. Brown
AJ. Brown
W. Fuller
Ant. Brown
C. Lamb
N. Collins
DK. Metcalf
Dio. Johnson
D. Hopkins
DJ. Moore
J. Jefferson
S. Diggs
M. Thomas
M. Evans
Following this information we must expect plenty of new names in
the 2024 top-10 receivers list. Looking at the top-10 list below
from last season, I see four players who will have to battle hard
to return to the top-10. (Hint: Hill isn’t on the struggling
list… I’m not an idiot. He’s been top-10 every
year since 2017).
Allen leaves the comfort of the Chargers where he was always
the No. 1 option to a competitive situation in Chicago. Allen’s
11.5 targets per game figures to take a significant hit. He also
leaves a talented young quarterback, who averaged 39 passing attempts
per game and threw for more than 4,000 yards three times, to a
team which has never had a 4,000-yard passer in 104 seasons. He
arrives in Chicago to a team which already has a top-10 receiver
(D.J. Moore) and drafted another wide receiver with their second
of two first-round picks at No. 9 (Rome Odunze). Allen also has
to learn the habits of his new rookie quarterback, who in turn
has to learn the league (though I was impressed with his first
pre-season game). Allen figures to do some damage early, then
his totals sink a bit as Odunze gets added to the offense. He’s
likely a low-end WR2 or high-end WR3.
Yes, Puka Nacua won many people a title last season. That was
2023 and it’s a new season. Cooper Kupp still plays in LA and
he’s starting the season in relative good health. Forget what
Kupp is capable of doing? You must have a short-term memory issue.
In 2021 he produced 145-1,947-16 and a league-leading 25.7 FPts/G.
The very next season he repeated as the top receiver posting 75-812-6
in just nine games before an injury sidelined him. He may never
reach that level again, but he will thwart Nacua’s ability to
be a top-10 option. Nacua is dealing with a “week-to-week” knee
injury, so there’s that. It’s tough enough to get through a 17-game
season when you start at 100% healthy. Nacua might sneak into
the last top-10 spot, but I’m thinking 11th-20th. He’s going well
before that fantasy value in early drafting.
Nico Collins was the 2023 receiving star for the Texans and rookie
quarterback C.J. Stroud, particularly when Tank Dell’s season
ended in Week 13. Everything went right for Collins last year.
He was one of the most efficient receiver in the league averaging
2.37 FPts per target. But the addition of Stefon Diggs, who requires,
no demands, the largest target share from his quarterback will
make it difficult for all three guys to crack the top-10 and might
also cause some dissension in the receiver’s room. A slight drop
in his production level seems a logical analysis.
Keenan Allen’s arrival along with the drafting of Odunze in the
first round will take targets and receptions from the team’s 2023
leader (96-1,364-8). This is simply a matter of opportunities and
not a reduction on his playing abilities. The situation looks similar
to that of the Seahawks last season. When Jaxon Smith-Njigba arrived
and took 93 targets, DK Metcalf’s totals stayed fairly consistent,
but Tyler Lockett lost yardage and touchdowns. Also, not every rookie
quarterback can produce C.J. Stroud or Cam Newton numbers.
Although Chase has not been as explosive as his rookie season
(teams are playing much more Cover-2) he’s still worthy
of top-10 status. He finished 12th last season, but didn’t
have his starting quarterback for seven games last season. Browning
was good in the backup role, but Chase only cracked 100-yards
once in those games. His seven touchdowns were the fewest of his
pro career. The key to Chase’s fantasy value is keeping
Joe Burrow healthy. One ranking site has the Bengals OL ranked
21st, another 24th. They will have to improve the line if the
Burrow-to-Chase combination is to be elite again.
Garrett Wilson finished 33rd last season at 12.8 FPts/G. But
he had Aaron Rodgers for four plays. The combination of Zach Wilson,
Trevor Siemian and Tim Boyle were horrible. The Jets finished
29th in scoring and the defense scored three times. They were
30th in passing yards and dead last in passing TDs (11). Even
in his last underwhelming full season (2002 in Green Bay) Rodgers
threw 26 touchdowns passes. Rodgers is getting really old, but
he could throw more than 11 touchdowns from a golf cart. With
oft-injured Mike Williams opposite Wilson, the third-year wideout
could lead the league in targets.
As I said early when reasoning for Nacua’s fall from the
top-10, Kupp is extremely talented. He’s also Matthew Stafford
safety valve when he gets in trouble. He’s a bit of a question
mark due to two consecutive injury-filled seasons, but Christian
McCaffrey also had two injury-filled years and has returned to
form and more. Kupp isn’t being drafted as a WR1 and that
could be a mistake for fantasy owners. I have Kupp as a sleeper
top pick this season, as much as a former best wide receiver in
football can be a sleeper.
If your wide receiver choices are Marvin Harrison Jr., Michael
Wilson, Greg Dortch or Zay Jones, where are you sending your targets?
Former Cardinals wide receivers Marquise Brown is with Patrick
Mahomes in Kansas City, and Rondale Moore (inj) is in Atlanta.
That’s 163 targets up for grabs. Harrison is Kyler Murray’s
most talented receiver since prime DeAndre Hopkins. The pass-catching
work in Arizona will be MHJ and tight end Trey McBride. By-the-way,
Junior’s dad, Marvin Harrison’s first year in the
NFL, with Jim Harbaugh and the immortal Paul Justin at quarterback,
produced a 64-836-8 total. Murray is better than those quarterbacks
and Junior is way ahead of his dad knowledge at this point because
he’s had “papa” to lean on for his entire playing
career. He’s got Chase and Jefferson talent level, he just
needs Burrow and Kirk Cousins-level passing.