Patriots Now Have One Of NFL’s Best, Deepest Wide Receiver Corps

This WR crew is extremely deep.

Patriots Now Have One Of NFL’s Best, Deepest Wide Receiver Corps by Doug Kyed
on Wed, Aug 21, 2019 at 8:00AM

Hand up. We reacted too quickly and severely to the New England Patriots’ shallow wide receiver depth in Nashville last week during joint practices. And really, how couldn’t we? Jakobi Meyers was the clear No. 1 option in front of Gunner Olszewski, Braxton Berrios, Dontrelle Inman, Ryan Davis and Damoun Patterson. Since Friday afternoon, Julian Edelman returned off of the non-football injury list, Josh Gordon was conditionally reinstated, Demaryius Thomas was activated off of the physically unable to perform list and Phillip Dorsett, N’Keal Harry and Maurice Harris have returned to practice. Edelman was expected. Gordon and Thomas were not. And maybe we’re about to jump the gun again. But suddenly, we’re feeling pretty good about the Patriots’ wide receiver depth. And there are numbers to back up this confidence.

We put together a five-man wide receiver depth chart for every NFL team. It’s based on either that player’s approximate value score — a Pro Football Reference metric — from their last season or a projected approximate value for rookies. We formulated our projections by averaging the rookie season AV of every drafted wide receiver of the last 10 years by round. We also projected out undrafted wide receivers using that same system. Here were our averages: First round: 5 Second round: 4 Third round: 2.5 Fourth round: 1.9 Fifth round: 1.8 Sixth round: .7 Seventh round: .5 Undrafted: .7 This system is imperfect, but it’s the best we could devise. It doesn’t account for non-season ending injuries, and it will inevitably underrate teams with younger receiving corps and overrate those with a more veteran group. Younger players will generally improve, and older players will generally worsen. Things tend to average out, however. In Arizona, Christian Kirk was probably underrated while Larry Fitzgerald was probably overrated. Same with D.J. Moore and Chris Hogan in Carolina, Tyler Boyd and A.J. Green in Cincinnati, Emmanuel Sanders and Courtland Sutton in Denver, etc. We averaged the AV of each team’s top three receivers and their top five receivers. We also noted the AV of each team’s fifth-best receiver. The Patriots — using Edelman (9), Gordon (7), Thomas (5), Harry (5) and Dorsett (3) — are tied for having the fifth strongest starting group and have the fourth-best overall corps. Dorsett, based on AV, is one of the three best No. 5 wide receivers in the NFL. Prior to Gordon and Thomas returning, the Patriots had the 19th best starters and 19th best overall corps. If you’re interested, the Los Angeles Rams, Atlanta Falcons, Kansas City Chiefs and New Orleans Saints were the only teams with better starters than the Patriots. Only the Rams, Chiefs and Falcons had a better overall corps. The Rams have an unbelievably strong top three in Robert Woods, Brandin Cooks and Cooper Kupp. The Falcons, Chiefs and Saints are (understandably) skewed by top wideouts Julio Jones, Tyreek Hill and Michael Thomas, respectively. Also, the Washington Redskins, San Francisco 49ers and Miami Dolphins have the weakest starters, while the Redskins, New York Jets, Dolphins and Arizona Cardinals have the weakest overall corps. Little is guaranteed in New England. Gordon is still on NFI and hasn’t played a full 16-game season since his rookie year. Thomas is returning from a torn Achilles, and neither he nor Dorsett are guaranteed to make the roster. Only two Patriots rookie wide receivers, Deion Branch and Aaron Dobson, have scored Harry’s projected approximate value of five since Bill Belichick became the head coach in 2000. But the group’s upside is high with all of this week’s developments. Thumbnail photo via Steve Mitchell/USA TODAY Sports Images Have a question for Doug Kyed? Send it to him via Twitter at @DougKyed.

Read more at: https://nesn.com/2019/08/patriots-now-have-one-of-nfls-best-deepest-wide-receiver-corps/

From Mike Reiss

With Demaryius Thomas activated, here is my view of WR spot, (projection to keep 6):

Julian Edelman
Josh Gordon (NFI)
N’Keal Harry
Demaryius Thomas
Phillip Dorsett
Jakobi Meyers

Maurice Harris
Braxton Berrios
Gunner Olszewski
Damoun Patterson
Ryan Davis

(Cameron Meredith - NFI)

Julian Edelman Z
Josh Gordon (NFI) X
N’Keal Harry Z,X
Demaryius Thomas X
Phillip Dorsett X
Jakobi Meyers Z

1 Like

I just came here to post that Reiss tweet.

Which six do you have?

I really hope they keep Berrios. I don’t think they need Thomas at this point at the expense of developing these younger players.

Thomas is the odd man out but has Berrios shown the ability?

and you only see if he has it when he is on the field with Tom since Hoyer is not that good and Stidham is still learning

I think you are spot on here. It’s between Thomas and Berrios. Since Braxton looks decent at pr he may get the nod considering Hoodie’s love for versatility.

I don’t see DT wowing the team after that major injury late in the year and his age but if he does I think they keep him over the kid.

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I think he has shown it only from his PR skills. Its time to have someone good at that that’s not named Edelman back there.

I wouldn’t be opposed to stuffing Thomas on IR as a backup if he’s willing. But we need these young guys, not has-beens.

2 Likes

Agreed.

Thomas should have started the year on PUP

So if the count is 6, and Slater is not counted as a WR, here is my hope:

Julian Edelman
Josh Gordon (NFI)
N’Keal Harry
Jakobi Meyers
Braxton Berrios

And then either Phillip Dorsett or Gunner Olszewski

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I think Gunner could slip into the practice squad so i think i’d run with Dorsett.

Olszewski is PS bound, he was a DB in college.

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Great. Just what they needed.

More talent lol

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