Dez Bryant

Dez Bryant

35-Year-Old Wide ReceiverWR
 Free Agent  
2024 Fantasy Outlook
There was no outlook written for Dez Bryant in 2024. Check out the latest news below for more on his current fantasy value.
$Signed a one-year, $1.5 million contract with the Ravens in November of 2020.
No targets in season finale
WRBaltimore Ravens
January 5, 2021
Bryant was not targeted on 23 snaps Sunday against the Bengals.
ANALYSIS
The veteran saw his highest snap count since Week 12 but did not factor into the box score. Bryant finished his regular season with six catches for 47 yards and two touchdowns on 11 targets. He will likely continue to have a minor but consistent role in the offense during the playoffs. Baltimore heads to Tennessee to face the Titans on Sunday.
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Fantasy/Red Zone Stats
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2020
2018
2017
2016
2020 NFL Game Log
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2018 NFL Game Log
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2017 NFL Game Log
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2016 NFL Game Log
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Receiving Alignment Breakdown
See where Dez Bryant lined up on the field and how he performed at each spot.
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2024 Dez Bryant Split Stats
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Measurables Review View College Player Page
How do Dez Bryant's measurables compare to other wide receivers?
This section compares his draft workout metrics with players at the same position. The bar represents the player's percentile rank. For example, if the bar is halfway across, then the player falls into the 50th percentile for that metric and it would be considered average.
* The 40-Yard Dash, Shuttle Time, Cone Drill, Vertical Jump, Broad Jump, and Bench Press metrics are from his Pro Day. All others are from the NFL Combine.
Height
6' 2"
 
Weight
220 lbs
 
40-Yard Dash*
4.52 sec
 
Shuttle Time*
4.46 sec
 
Cone Drill*
7.10 sec
 
Vertical Jump*
38.0 in
 
Broad Jump*
133 in
 
Bench Press*
14 reps
 
Hand Length
9.75 in
 
Arm Length
34.00 in
 
Recent RotoWire Articles Featuring Dez Bryant See More
NFL Injury Analysis: Goedert Remains Limited
37 days ago
Jeff Stotts highlights some key NFL injured players, including Philadelphia tight end Dallas Goedert, who remains limited by an oblique strain suffered last week.
Box Score Breakdown: Recapping Week 1 of the NFL Preseason
52 days ago
Jerry Donabedian breaks down all 16 preseason games, including impressive NFL debuts from quarterbacks J.J. McCarthy and Caleb Williams.
NFL DFS Picks: Yahoo Plays and Strategy for MNF Wild Card Baller
January 14, 2023
Sasha Yodashkin looks over the final game of the wild-card round as Tom Brady and the Buccaneers host the Cowboys in a Monday night clash.
NFL Injury Analysis: Training Camp Update
August 3, 2022
Jeff Stotts analyzes the latest injury news out of training camps, including a trip to the operating room for Joe Burrow.
Past Fantasy Outlooks
2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
Finally healthy for the first time since 2014, Bryant had arguably his worst season as a pro. Despite playing with his starting quarterback all year, Bryant managed only 12.1 YPC and 6.3 YPT (25th among the league's 27 100-target WR). While he scored six times, he had only eight catches of 20-plus yards on 132 targets. Once an elite red-zone presence, Bryant converted only three of his 10 inside-the-10 targets for scores. At 6-2, 220, and with 4.52 speed, Bryant once made plays all over the field using his size, strength and athleticism to overpower and run through would-be tacklers. Last year, he mostly made plays facing Dak Prescott, trying to catch back-shoulder throws or posting up - there were few deep targets and few with Bryant running away from his quarterback. Consequently, the Cowboys cut Bryant in April, saving $12.5 million in cap space for both this season and next. At press time, he remains a free agent. At 29, he's not necessarily finished, and it's possible the team's ultra-conservative and predictable play calling made his decline seem steeper than it was. His landing spot will in large part determine his value, assuming he's still even half the player he once was.
A hairline fracture in his knee cost Bryant three games, and he barely played in Week 17 with the Cowboys' No. 1 seed wrapped up. Otherwise Bryant was largely the player who lit up the league from 2012-14. Prorate Bryant's stats over a full 16 games, and you get 67 catches for 1,061 yards and 11 scores, despite playing in a run-heavy offense with an unfamiliar QB. Perhaps more importantly, Bryant doesn't seem to have lost his explosiveness -- his 15.9 YPC was the highest average of his career and placed him fifth among the league's 46 95-target WR. And these stats don't count the team's playoff loss to the Packers when he lit them up for 9-132-2 on 12 targets. The Cowboys made no significant additions to the offense this offseason, so Bryant should again be the team's No. 1 target, both down the field and in the red zone where he has always excelled. The biggest issue is durability -- Bryant's missed 10 games over the last two seasons -- but he's still only 28 and went into the offseason with a clean bill of health. The Cowboys will still be a run-first team, but rising star QB Dak Prescott will have a season under his belt and a better rapport with Bryant with whom he connected more reliably late in the year -- including the playoffs, Bryant eclipsed 70 yards in seven of his final eight full games and scored eight touchdowns.
There's nothing to take away from Bryant's abbreviated 2015 season, played entirely on a bad foot with a gaggle of replacement-level QBs aiming the ball in his general direction. With Tony Romo healthy, and Bryant on schedule after offseason surgery, last year's outlook largely applies: "The league's premier touchdown catcher ... Bryant led the NFL with 16 in 2014, running his total from 2012.14 to 41. Unlike Julio Jones and Antonio Brown, who did their damage with north of 180 targets, Bryant checked in 12th overall (137), tied for 18th in the red zone (15) and seventh inside the 10 (10). At 6.2, 220, with 4.5 speed, Bryant has the specs you'd want from a No. 1 WR, and he plays even bigger and more physical." The principal difference is while last year DeMarco Murray's departure left a void to be filled, in part, by more targets to Bryant, this year, the Cowboys signed RB Alfred Morris and drafted the premier college RB, Ezekiel Elliott, fourth overall. With Darren McFadden coming off a strong year, and 36-year-old Romo among the league's most brittle QBs, we have to imagine the Cowboys intend to lead the league in run/pass ratio (they were 3rd in 2014). As such, while Bryant should again be the unquestioned top target, he's unlikely to approach the volume of players like Brown, Jones or DeAndre Hopkins.
The league's premier touchdown catcher — other than maybe a healthy Rob Gronkowski — Bryant led the NFL with 16 last season, running his three-year total to 41. Unlike Demaryius Thomas and Antonio Brown, who did their damage with north of 180 targets, Bryant checked in 12th overall (137), tied for 18th in the red-zone (15) and seventh inside the 10 (10). Bryant tied for second in goal-line targets with eight, however, a hallmark of Scott Linehan's play calling since his days with the Dolphins when even Chris Chambers got double-digit scores. At 6-2, 220, with 4.5 speed, Bryant has the specs you'd want from a No. 1 NFL receiver, and he plays even bigger and more physical than that. Bryant's 9.6 YPT placed seventh among the league's 41 100-target wideouts, and his 22 catches for 20-plus yards was fifth. Entering 2015, Bryant's role could potentially grow. While the Cowboys return an all-world offensive line and quarterback Tony Romo, they are thin at wide receiver with only the disappointing Terrance Williams and slot man Cole Beasley providing experienced depth. Moreover, Jason Witten turned 33 in May, and workhorse tailback DeMarco Murray is in Philadelphia. Given the strength of the line and the team's success a year ago, one would think Dallas will again feature a run-heavy scheme, but at press time, it's hard to envision the backfield options (individually or collectively) absorbing Murray's 392-carry load. That could portend more work for Bryant.
By some metrics Bryant’s 2013 season was a disappointment. Despite being sixth in targets (160), Bryant was only 13th in yards, thanks to a pedestrian 7.7 YPT (23rd among the league’s 37 100-target WR) and 13.3 YPC (20th). And this was on a Cowboys team that finished 13th in YPA (7.2). Moreover, Bryant had only four catches of 40 or more yards (tied for 17th) and 13 of 20 or more (tied for 23rd). In short, Bryant simply wasn’t the dominant game-breaking receiver that took the league by storm in the second half of 2012. At 25, it’s unlikely Bryant has lost a step, however, and at 6-2, 222 with 4.5-speed, he has the physical tools to make plays down the field. And Bryant’s size and red-zone usage ensure him a high floor for touchdowns – he led the league with 16 targets inside the 10 last year, catching seven for scores. The arrival of offensive coordinator Scott Linehan, whose track record of targeting No. 1 receivers heavily in the end zone spans more than a decade, will only help. Perhaps most importantly, Bryant was injury free and played 16 games for the second year in a row. And there were neither off-field indiscretions nor problems in the locker room, unless you count a media misinterpretation of Bryant trying to rally his teammates on the sidelines.
After spending two seasons as a punch line, both from his bizarre off-field behavior and tendency to disappear late in games, Bryant exploded for a 50-879-10 line over last season's final eight games, cementing himself as one of the league's elite receivers. At 6-2, 218 and with athleticism, quickness and downfield speed, Bryant is one of the most physically gifted receivers in the league. His 10.0 YPT ranked second among the league's 39 100-target wideouts, thanks in large part to a 67-percent catch rate, a rarity for someone who operates down the field. Bryant made his share of big plays – his six catches of 40-plus tied for second with two other players, though in most seasons that wouldn’t crack the top five, and he had 19 plays of 20-plus (6th). But he saw only 15 targets in the red zone (25th) and six targets from inside the 10 (23rd). Heading into 2013, Bryant is now Tony Romo's undisputed No. 1 wideout, irrespective of Miles Austin's erratic health, and that Bryant put up a top-three season without being targeted heavily in the red zone means there's still untapped upside for the 24-year old who is just now entering his prime. Bryant had successful surgery to repair his broken left index finger in January, and a back injury limited him during the offseason. Nonetheless, he's expected to be 100 percent healthy for training camp.
With Miles Austin slowed for much of the season by a hamstring injury, Bryant managed to play in 15 games, saw 103 targets and scored nine touchdowns. He was also fairly efficient, averaging 9.0 YPT (12th) and showed excellent hands (just two drops). But nagging injuries and an apparent lack of focus (and possibly conditioning) are still issues as Bryant often seemed to disappear during the second halves of games. In fact, Bryant had 37 catches for 558 yards and seven scores in the first two quarters and just 25-344-2 in the latter two. At 6-2, 220, and with excellent speed and quickness for his size, there’s little doubt Bryant has elite tools. But given his inconsistency, he’s likely to be Tony Romo’s No. 3 option so long as Austin and tight end Jason Witten (117 targets) are healthy. That’s far from a death sentence to his value, however, as the Cowboys, having let Laurent Robinson leave via free agency, lack experienced depth at the position.
After missing most of training camp with an ankle sprain, Bryant suited up for Week 1, but didn't really come into his own until Week 7 against the Giants when he hauled in two touchdowns and returned a punt 93 yards for a score. Bryant went on to have a stretch of three straight 80-plus yard games with Jon Kitna at the helm, but went down for the season in Week 13 with a fractured fibula. In sum, Bryant's season totals and even per-play numbers as a rookie who missed training camp with an injury and played half of his 12 games with a backup quarterback aren't very instructive. It's Bryant's off-the-charts tools – 6-2, 220, good hands, great quickness for a player his size, downfield speed – that make him so intriguing. He also has an ideal quarterback in Tony Romo to get him the ball down the field, and Bryant's expected to be 100 percent healthy for the start of camp. The bigger issue is whether there are enough balls to go around for Bryant, Miles Austin and Pro Bowl tight end Jason Witten.
Character concerns caused Bryant to slip in the first round, but there’s little doubt about his talent. At 6-2, 220, Bryant’s athletic, powerful and plays with a mean streak. He has good hands, excellent quickness for a player his size and decent downfield speed. And while Bryant’s had issues being on time for team activities, he’s hardly a hardened criminal or “clubhouse cancer.” While Bryant will almost certainly begin as the team’s No. 3 receiver behind Miles Austin and Roy Williams, we expect him to see significant action sooner rather than later. For starters, owner Jerry Jones likened moving up to draft Bryant as making amends for passing on Randy Moss in 1998, and so far Bryant hasn’t disappointed, impressing Cowboys coaches during the team’s rookie minicamp in May. Moreover, the Cowboys are built to win now, so it’s likely they’re looking for an immediate return on their first-round investment.
More Fantasy News
Reels in another TD
WRBaltimore Ravens
December 29, 2020
Bryant caught an eight-yard touchdown pass on his lone target in Sunday's 27-13 win over the Giants.
ANALYSIS
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Good to go for Sunday
WRBaltimore Ravens
December 27, 2020
Bryant (thigh) is active for Sunday's game against the Giants.
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Listed as questionable, should play
WRBaltimore Ravens
Thigh
December 25, 2020
Bryant (thigh) is listed as questionable for Sunday's game against the Giants.
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Logs limited workout
WRBaltimore Ravens
Thigh
December 24, 2020
Bryant (thigh) was a limited participant in Thursday's practice, Jonas Shaffer of The Baltimore Sun reports.
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Managing practice reps
WRBaltimore Ravens
Thigh
December 23, 2020
Bryant didn't practice Wednesday due to a thigh injury, Jamison Hensley of ESPN.com reports.
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Latest Fantasy Rumors
Wants to continue playing
WRBaltimore Ravens
February 24, 2021
Bryant said Tuesday that he wants to play two more seasons in the NFL, though he doesn't expect to re-sign with the Ravens, Jamison Hensley of ESPN.com reports.
ANALYSIS
Bryant signed with Baltimore in October after missing the entire 2018 and 2019 seasons. He went on to play in six regular-season games, catching six passes for 47 yards and two touchdowns while averaging 21.5 snaps per contest. Bryant may intend to play a couple more years, but he'll likely need to compete for a roster spot at this point in his career. It isn't clear if he'll have many options as a free agent this offseason.
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