7/11/2022

Nfl Teams Slot Receivers

Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

Real talent at the wide receiver position has taken a major hit around the NFL. Some of this could have to do with college teams failing to develop pass catchers.

12/5/20: Rodgers has played well for Clemson so far this year, and he could be a slot receiver candidate for the NFL. 8/29/20: Rodgers has a running back's build and could be a slot receiver candidate for the NFL. He has the potential to rise in 2020 if he becomes the featured receiver with Justyn Ross out for the season. You can't just tally the stats from the Slot guys because they all run routes from the perimeter as well. Long story short, I track this stuff in a huge spreadsheet. I tweet out a lot of charts and stuff regarding Slot WRs and DEF vs receivers out of the slot.

Slot to 247Sports Home. With Davante Adams proving himself to be one of the best wide receivers in the NFL, the Packers were looking to find a number two wide receiver to play Robin to Adams. Furthermore, the team's 2018 first-round receiver, Moore, spent the bulk of his snaps in the slot. The same can be said of Hogan, who signed with Carolina in free agency. Samuel is a hybrid player. Some other shifty, possession-type receivers who just missed the cut: the Rams' Tavon Austin (5-8, 176), De'Anthony Thomas (5-8, 176) of the Chiefs and the Cowboys' Cole Beasley (5-8, 180).

Others believe that a pass-happy NFL has led to teams relying on more receivers. Hence, the influx of starting slot receivers.

Whatever the reason, many teams head into the 2019 season lacking at this position. It’s in this that we look at the 10 worst starting receivers in the NFL right now.

Zay Jones, Buffalo Bills

Jones might have improved as a sophomore last season, but he has a whole heck of a lot more to go in that category before being considered a starter-caliber receiver. The former second-round pick has caught 47.2 percent of his targets in two seasons and is averaging 5.5 yards per target throughout his career. For comparison’s sake, New York Giants stud youngster Saquon Barkley averaged 5.8 yards per touch as a rookie. He’s a running back. Think about that for a quick second.

John Ross, Cincinnati Bengals

Nfl Teams Slot Receivers List

This one is pretty much on the Bengals. Cincinnati listed Ross as its starting slot receiver in the team’s initial depth chart. For what reason, exactly? A top-10 pick back in 2017, Ross has caught all of 21 passes in two seasons. He didn’t even record a single reception as a rookie. Better yet, Ross boasts a career 35 percent catch rate. Some figured Cincinnati might look to move on from Ross this past offseason. Instead, the team might rely on the injury-plagued workout warrior to make an impact under first-year head coach Zac Taylor.

Trey Quinn, Washington Redskins

We’re not going to blame this second-year receiver for Washington having him listed as its starting slot receiver. The issue here, as it has been over the past several years in D.C., is depth. Quinn caught nine passes in three games of action as a rookie last season. Sure he has the look of a pretty solid slot guy dating back to the youngster’s SMU days, but this is not the AAC. We’re going to have to see a whole bunch more from Quinn to even consider him a starter-caliber receiver. That’s only magnified by the perpetual quarterback mess in the nation’s capital.

Hunter Renfrow, Oakland Raiders

Much like other young receivers in this list, it’s not Renfrow’s fault that he’s being catapulted to the top of the depth chart. The former Clemson standout is currently listed as Oakland’s top slot guy behind recent acquisitions Antonio Brown and Tyrell Williams. Depending on Brown’s injury, he could even jump up a notch on Derek Carr’s target list as a rookie. The bad news for Oakland? Renfrow never put up more than 602 yards in what seemed like a decade at Clemson. He lacks athleticism. His upside is limited. They are asking too much from him.

Kevin White, Arizona Cardinals

Sadly, White’s NFL career has been derailed by injury after injury. The former Chicago Bears top-seven pick has played in a grand total of 14 games in four NFL seasons. Fourteen games! He’s caught 25 passes and boasts a 52.1 percent catch rate during that span. Given how stellar White was during his college days at West Virginia, this represents a harrowing tail. It also doesn’t make him any better or more reliable as a receiver for first-year Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray.

Taywan Taylor, Tennessee Titans

Is Taylor terrible? Well, that depends heavily on whether you overrate Titans quarterback Marcus Mariota. Let’s say for a second that Mariota is a viable NFL quarterback, what does that say about Taylor? The former third-round pick has caught 53 passes in two NFL seasons. He’s also averaging one touchdown per 42 targets. To contrast for a second, fellow second-year Titans receiver Corey Davis is averaging one score per 44 targets. The moral of the story? Things are not great in Nashville. Taylor deserves some of the blame because of his lackluster overall numbers elsewhere. After all, there’s a reason Tennessee exhausted a second-round pick on A.J. Brown in April. It’s not to take Davis’ spot.

Donte Moncrief, Pittsburgh Steelers

Let’s paint a picture here. The Jacksonville Jaguars signed Moncrief to a one-year, $9.6 million deal prior to the 2018 season. Despite his obvious physical traits (6-foot-2 and 216 pounds), Moncrief had put up a combined 698 yards with a 54.4 percent catch rate in his final two seasons with Indianapolis. Moncrief responded by posting a top-10 drop rate and catching 53.9 percent of his targets last season. The Steelers are now relying on him to replace Antonio Brown behind all-world receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster. Good luck with that given Pittsburgh starting quarterback Ben Roethlisberger tied for the NFL lead in interceptions last season.

Marquise Goodwin, San Francisco 49ers

Goodwin impressed big time in his first season with the 49ers after an injury-plagued four years in Buffalo. He caught 56 passes for 962 yards while averaging 17.2 yards per reception. Unfortunately, the injuries and lack of production that plagued him in Western New York came back to haunt Goodwin last season. He tallied just 23 catches and hauled in 55 percent of his targets. Still listed as a starter on the 49ers’ depth chart, there’s an outside chance Goodwin doesn’t even break camp with the team. That’s a mighty big fall from grace for the world-class athlete.

Devin Funchess, Indianapolis Colts

Indianapolis surprised a lot of people by handing Funchess a one-year, $10 million contract in free agency. The former Carolina Panthers second-round pick hauled in just 44 passes for 549 yards while boasting a mediocre 55.7 percent catch rate last season. He was also pretty much benched for the final quarter of the campaign. An inability to get open and create space has plagued Funchess throughout his career. We’re not expecting this to magically change with Indy in 2019.

DeVante Parker, Miami Dolphins

Simply put, Parker has failed to live up to the expectations that came with being a top-14 pick back in 2015. Injuries and inconsistency has dogged him at pretty much every turn. Parker missed five games to injury last season, bringing in just 24-of-47 targets for a lackluster 51.1 percent catch rate. While Parker is still listed as one of Miami’s starters, it would not be a surprise to see Allen Hurns or impressive rookie Preston Williams surpass him on the depth chart earlier in the 2019 season.

A few years back, when I asked Doug Baldwin — one of the pre-eminent slot receivers of the last decade — about the importance of the position, he summed it up pretty well.

“The slot receiver’s kind of the quarterback of the receivers,” he said in 2015. “More so because the slot receiver has more responsibilities in terms of reading coverages and different adjustments based on what coverages you’re seeing. It’s a lot more complicated. … You have to know a lot more. You have to stay within the confines and the framework of the offense — you have a lot of freedom because you have a little bit more space, but at the same time, your job is usually to get someone else open, or to get open on a crucial down where it’s one-on-one. You have to be versatile, and you have to understand how your route goes into the concept, based on the different coverages you can see.”

10. Adam Humphries 9. Golden Tate 8. Dante Pettis 7. Cooper Kupp 6. Jarvis Landry 5. Julian Edelman 4. Adam Thielen 3. JuJu Smith-Schuster 2. Antonio Brown 1. Tyreek Hill

It was an apt description in 2015, and though Baldwin has retired, the role of the slot receiver is quite similar to what it was then — and in 2019, one could argue that it’s even more important now. Three- and four-receiver sets are now the norm in the NFL, which means that teams will have double slot packages in which big and small receivers work together. And there’s no shame to the position — it’s not just for the Wes Welkers of the world anymore. Guys who can win outside just fine find themselves in the slot quite frequently, and you’ll find a few names that will rank highly on our upcoming list of outside receivers on this list as well.

Other Top 11 lists: Tight ends Centers Guards Offensive tackles Edge defenders Interior defensive linemen Linebackers Safeties Outside cornerbacks Slot defenders

So, here are the 11 best slot receivers in the NFL as we head into the 2019 season.

Nfl teams slot receivers odds

When watching Jacksonville’s 2018 passing offense, two things are abundantly clear — Jaguars receivers had one heck of a time with consistent production with Blake Bortles and Cody Kessler throwing the ball all over the place, and the acquisition of Nick Foles was a necessity to give those receivers any chance of improvement. Among those receivers, Westbrook may have the most potential, as he brought in 59 slot receptions on 83 targets for 646 yards and five touchdowns. Not bad for a second-year receiver who’s never had a lot of help from his quarterbacks at the NFL level.

Nfl Teams Vs Slot Receivers

Westbrook uses nimble feet and an impressive catch radius to make contested catches, and he has a good knack for getting open in zones. His drop rate was a problem at times, but with a credible quarterback at the helm, Westbrook could be a rising star in a big hurry.