On Target: Rookie WR Dominate

On Target: Rookie WR Dominate

This article is part of our On Target series.

We talkin' bout playoffs! That's right, my friends, week 14 has arrived and the fantasy playoffs have officially arrived and in most formats, we're at the single elimination stage. In this column, we've gone through red-zone efficiency, yards per targets, touchdowns per catch and a whole host of other rate stats that has helped us identify undervalued pass catchers and players whose consistency has kept us in the playoff hunt. In celebration of the playoffs, I'm going to take On Target a slightly different direction. We'll look at the target table for the entire year, then the top-5 rookies in this class and finally, two players who will shoehorn themselves into the WR1 conversation next year.

PLAYERTARGETSRECYARDSTD
Demaryius Thomas13788125510
Antonio Brown13596125811
Julio Jones1308211695
Jeremy Maclin1197110889
Emmanuel Sanders1168211527
Golden Tate1168011363
Andre Johnson114657202
Jordy Nelson11270111910
Julian Edelman112777432
Dez Bryant1106795210
Kelvin Benjamin110578248
Keenan Allen110727624
Alshon Jeffery107678547
Vincent Jackson107507022
Rob Gronkowski102659109
Brandon Marshall102586608
T.Y. Hilton1016811455
Rueben Randle101566092
Anquan Boldin99688434
Sammy Watkins98516955
Mike Wallace98546617
Matt Forte98786503
Reggie Wayne95546362
Steve Smith94548195
Greg Olsen93617795
Martellus Bennett93657375
DeAndre Hopkins906010416
Randall Cobb906592210
Mike Evans90538908
Calvin Johnson90497245
Andrew Hawkins90527182
James Jones90605624
Mohamed Sanu89517385
Roddy White89566625
Jimmy Graham88656709
Brandon LaFell86537127
Michael Crabtree86515774
Kendall Wright83516335
Jordan Matthews82546867
Robert Woods82495503
Le'Veon Bell81656432
Allen Robinson81485482
Eric Decker80495314
DeSean Jackson78479425
Jarvis Landry77575185
Pierre Garcon77495073
Delanie Walker75446734
John Brown75395695
Riley Cooper75434571
A.J. Green73456865
Miles Austin73485812
Dwayne Bowe72465690
Greg Jennings72455464
Larry Donnell72515166
Cecil Shorts72384161
Markus Wheaton71415132
Jared Cook71374731
Torrey Smith70386098
Doug Baldwin70485192
Larry Fitzgerald69466582
Brandin Cooks69535503
Michael Floyd69315074
Andre Holmes69355024
Marques Colston68416343
Heath Miller68515832
Antonio Gates68475749
Allen Hurns68355305
Mychal Rivera68413553
Odell Beckham67486995
Justin Hunter67284983
Jason Witten65444694
Andre Ellington64463952
Shane Vereen64443793
Coby Fleener63355946
Jerricho Cotchery63344440
Eddie Royal62435326
Jermaine Gresham62473552
Cordarrelle Patterson62303501
Andre Roberts62303402
Malcom Floyd61396894
Percy Harvin61413150
Jeremy Kerley61323051
Taylor Gabriel58305401
Zach Ertz58344602
Charles Clay58393462
Kenny Stills57446913
Travis Kelce57445784
Owen Daniels57393853
Jermaine Kearse55294141
Fred Jackson55433401
Kenny Britt54284903
Terrance Williams54304826
Julius Thomas544042612
Davante Adams54344173
Nate Washington53294712
Louis Murphy51283622
Brian Hartline50323801
DeMarco Murray50443430
Scott Chandler50323372
Darren McFadden50332060
John Carlson49283171
Wes Welker49352942
Steve Johnson48354353
Niles Paul47354641
Ahmad Bradshaw47383006
Hakeem Nicks47242433
Justin Forsett47352270
Jace Amaro46342912
Arian Foster46312554
Jarius Wright45283550
Bobby Rainey45333151
Darren Sproles45293130
Travaris Cadet45342741
Harry Douglas44303391
Jason Avant44232311
Matt Asiata44292161
Jamaal Charles43302144
Vernon Davis43232102
Marcel Reece43251510
Roy Helu42384362
Devin Hester42273621
Brent Celek42262720
Victor Cruz41233371
Pierre Thomas41342571
Levine Toilolo41232042
Jerick McKinnon41271350
Dwayne Allen40263747
Jordan Reed40333520
Preston Parker40252942
Theo Riddick40272723

Top-5 Rookie Wide Receivers

1. Jordan Matthews
2. Mike Evans
3. Odell Beckham
4. Sammy Watkins
5. Kelvin Benjamin

Those familiar with my work will see one surprising name in this list: Odell Beckham. Beckham's college production stats were not first-round caliber, but it's become clear from his performance as a Giant that his college numbers are not representative of who ODB is. Matthews is still the clear No. 1 for me, as he has the most impressive combination of college production (all team leader in the SEC for catches and yards), combine numbers and rookie performance. As a part-time player, Matthews has been fantastic for the Eagles. Mike Evans has only played organized football for four seasons and is already dominating NFL cornerbacks and has a higher ceiling than any of the players in this class but has a lack of consistency that could be concerning. Watkins started the year incredibly hot but because he doesn't have the dominant size or athleticism to become a true premier player, I can't justify him over the players ranked above him. The conversation between Beckham and Watkins is an interesting one that I think will evolve over their career but as of this moment, it's hard to project Watkins for a better career. The No. 5 spot could go a number of ways, particularly with Brandin Cooks omitted from these ranks. Benjamin earns the fifth and final spot because there is not a coverage that exists that has the ability to shut him down. When Benjamin has a bad game it will be because he simply played poorly, not because the defense covered him well. At his gargantuan size and with underrated athleticism (he suggested he purposely ran slow at the combine) he's at the beginning of a four-year stretch of WR1 performance.

Entering The WR1 Conversation

Every year, we see several young players hop out of the middle/late rounds and be selected in the top-4 rounds as a legit WR1 candidate. This summer, Keenan Allen and Mike Floyd were the young fellas who found themselves in the elite conversation. Unfortunately, both failed to justify that price tag. Allen has had a renaissance the last few weeks but by the time he turned it on, most of his owners were probably out of playoff contention. Floyd started hot, but after the first 5 weeks of the season, he has basically been a non-entity for fantasy, even with Larry Fitzgerald injured. Part of that is due to Drew Stanton taking over for an injured Carson Palmer, but even more of it is due to the fact that both Arizona QB's just chose not to throw to him.

In 2015, the new wide receiver names are going to be DeAndre Hopkins and wait for it ... Donte Moncrief. Hopkins is self explanatory. He's putting on an absolute show with efficiency, scoring six touchdowns on only 90 targets and putting up much better fantasy numbers than more revered teammate Andre Johnson. For some odd reason, his sublime rookie season wasn't recognized by many fantasy analysts, and, therefore, he was available for a cheap price in 2014. That will not be the case in 2015 after he finishes this season as a WR1. If his ADP stays reasonable next year, he will be one of my favorite buys in the third and fourth round of redraft leagues. If the Texans stay with Fitzpatrick or if they find a QB upgrade, Hopkins is a safe bet to outproduce where he is drafted.

Moncrief is a different case entirely. He's barely played this season but when he has, he's been an incredible force on the outside opposite Reggie Wayne. The Colts offense is likely to look different in 2015. Trent Richardson might finally be benched, Ahmad Bradshaw will be back and Daniel Herron has proved he is a serviceable NFL running back. Reggie Wayne will be another year older and at this point, is a candidate to become a part-time player or perhaps even retire. Hakeem Nicks is still theoretically a member of the team but is finally losing snaps and it's not unreasonable to expect him to be cut. All of this points to one thing: Donte Moncreif (a size/speed freak from the best college conference) starting at WR for an Andrew Luck lead offense. If that is indeed the case, Moncrief's ADP will skyrocket to the fifth or sixth round and even that won't put a lid on his profit potential.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Davis Mattek
Davis Mattek has played DFS for a living for over a year and began in the fantasy sports industry in 2012. He is a member of the FSTA and FSWA.
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