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        Brian Thomas Jr. Fantasy Overview

        Brian Thomas Jr.

        Brian Thomas Jr.
        Player Profile

        WR JAC

        Height

        6'2"

        Weight

        209 lbs.

        Experience

        2 yrs.

        Bye

        7

        Birthday

        Oct 08, 2002

        Age

        23.8

        College

        LSU

        NFL Draft Pick

        2024 - Rd 1, Pk 23

        Fantasy Rankings & Projections

        Fantasy Rankings

        Weekly
        BYE -
        Season
        WR {{playerPageAppVar.projectionForRestOfSeason && playerPageAppVar.projectionForRestOfSeason.rank[selectedScoringConfig.fantasyPtsKey] ? playerPageAppVar.projectionForRestOfSeason.rank[selectedScoringConfig.fantasyPtsKey] : "-"}}
        Dynasty
        WR28

        2026 Projections

        Rec Rec Yds Rec TDs Fantasy Pts
        {{fullPreSeasonProjection ? fullPreSeasonProjection.rec_catch.toFixed(1) : '0'}} {{fullPreSeasonProjection ? fullPreSeasonProjection.rec_yds.toFixed(1) : '0'}} {{fullPreSeasonProjection ? fullPreSeasonProjection.rec_tds.toFixed(1) : '0'}} {{fullPreSeasonProjection ? fullPreSeasonProjection[selectedScoringConfig.fantasyPtsKey].toFixed(1) : '0'}}

        DS 3D Projection

        Brian Thomas Jr.'s Preseason Player Analysis

        2025 Role & Results

        Production & Fantasy Finishes

        Thomas' 2025 season looked nothing like his promising rookie year. After finishing WR7 at 15.8 points per game in 2024, he fell to WR42 with just 9.9 points per game across 14 contests in 2025. Nearly every key metric went backward.

        Metric

        2024

        2025

        Target Share

        24.4%

        18.6%

        Targets Per Route

        0.247

        0.187

        Yards Per Route Run

        2.45

        1.50

        PFF Receiving Grade

        83.4

        66.7

        ESPN Receiver Score

        57

        17

        Expected PPR PPG

        14.3

        11.7

        Actual PPR PPG

        16.5

        9.9

        The target share drop from 24.4% to 18.6% coincided with the arrival of Jakobi Meyers and the emergence of Parker Washington, both of whom cut into Thomas's role.

        In his first eight games, Thomas caught just 50% of his targets (66th) at 13.5 yards per catch (25th) and 6.8 yards per target (55th). His 20.9% target share over that period led the team (before Meyers arrived).

        Over his final six games, with the entire offense hitting its stride post-bye, those numbers improved to a 58.1% catch rate (29th), 15.9 YPC (ninth), and 9.3 yards per target (13th). But, his 14.9% target share over that period still ranked third behind Meyers and Washington. The late-season uptick coincided with Lawrence's (QB1 over that period) post-bye surge and the offense finding its rhythm, which offers some reason for optimism heading into 2026.

        Just as telling was the gap between his 11.7 expected PPR points per game and his 9.9 actual. Jakobi Meyers fell slight short at 11.0 fantasy points per game vs. 11.4 Expected, but that certainly wasn’t the gap that Thomas had. Parker Washington actually exceeded his expected fantasy points per game scoring 11.5 vs. 11.2 expected.

        Usage & Role

        Part of what changed was how the offense used him. Thomas shifted toward more of a pure deep threat in 2025, with his aDOT climbing from 11.4 yards (33rd among 84 WRs with 50+ targets) in 2024 to 14.5 yards (fourth among 76 WRs) in 2025.

        Thomas drew 34.6% of Jacksonville’s air yards, 11th-highest in the league. That means the opportunity volume was there, but his 54.5% catch rate (67th) and 52nd-ranked PFF receiving grade show he wasn't converting those opportunities consistently. A deep threat who doesn't catch the ball is more of a decoy than a weapon.

        Efficiency & Regression

        When comparing Thomas to the rest of Jacksonville's receiving group, the gap in production metrics is clear:

        Receiver

        PFF Rec Grade

        YPRR

        TPRR

        Parker Washington

        83.0

        2.06

        0.214

        Jakobi Meyers (w/ JAC)

        78.2

        1.71

        0.208

        Travis Hunter

        62.7

        1.32

        0.191

        Brian Thomas Jr.

        66.7

        1.50

        0.187

        Thomas ranked last or near last in every efficiency category among the group. Washington and Meyers were clearly ahead of him in 2025, and Hunter's presence as a two-way player adds yet another target competitor to the mix if the team keeps him on offense at times.

        Brenton Strange also continues to be a target with his 15.0% target share for the season being in line with the WR group.

        Injuries likely played some role in the downturn. Thomas played through a Week 2 wrist injury and a Week 7 shoulder injury, then missed three games after a Week 9 ankle sprain.

        Thomas saw a drop in his fantasy scoring after the ankle injury. From Weeks 1-9, he scored 10.7 PPR fantasy points per game. That dropped to 8.9 from Weeks 13-18 after returning from the injury. The ankle injury also coincided with the arrival of Meyers as well as Washington’s emergence, putting a further damper on Thomas’ opportunity.

        2026 Opportunity & Projection

        Projected Role & Competition

        The target competition isn't going anywhere. Meyers, Washington, Hunter, and Brenton Strange all return.

        One positive is that HC Liam Coen's offense leaned to the pass with a 4.3% pass rate (Fourth) over expected last season. That was even higher than the +2.7% he generated in Tampa Bay in 2024. They ranked 14th in the league with 563 pass attempts. The passing environment should remain strong with lead RB Travis Etienne going to the Saints in free agency.

        The remaining backfield -- featuring Bhayshul Tuten, Chris Rodriguez, and LeQuint Allen -- doesn’t look like a group the offense plans to lean on any more heavily.

        Supporting Cast

        The ceiling is a return to 2024, where Thomas's athleticism commanded a 24.4% target share and he finished as WR7 in points per game. Thomas has commented that he is fully recovered from his injuries and ready to be the “best that I can be.”

        His late-season numbers hint that the 2024 version isn't gone entirely (and may have even been hidden due to playing through injuries).

        Thomas faces tougher target competition than he did as a rookie, so a return to the fantasy top 10 probably isn’t coming. But he’s capable of leading this team in targets and climbing into WR2 territory.

        Risk Factors

        The floor is a repeat of early 2025. If Thomas settles in as the team's third WR and remains mostly a deep threat, he could struggle to deliver even WR3 numbers on a consistent basis.

        We rank him at WR41, well below his WR31 ADP. But Thomas sits in a large tier of our WR rankings that stretches from No. 28 to No. 42. So his upside’s worth considering on draft day, even if he’s relatively overvalued vs. our ranking.

        Advanced Stats

        Forty Yard Dash

        4.33

        Forty Yard Dash Rank

        98%

        Burst Score

        128.50

        Burst Score Rank

        82%

        Speed Score

        122.20

        Speed Score Rank

        99%

        Catch Radius

        10.44

        Catch Radius Rank

        98%

        VIEW MORE ADVANCED STATS

        Shark Bites

        Brenton Strange TE JAC
        7:11pm UTC 6/24/26

        I Don’t Know What to Think After This Brenton Strange Extension

        I Don’t Know What to Think After This Brenton Strange Extension

        The Jaguars have agreed to a three-year extension with TE Brenton Strange with a max value of $48 million and $25 million in guarantees, NFL Network reports. That’s the fifth-most guaranteed money on a TE contract in the league right now. The $16 million a year at max value would also rank fifth-highest. (We’ll see about the base numbers.)

        It was a little surprising when the Jaguars drafted Texas A&M TE Nate Boerkircher. It was the team’s first pick, after Jacksonville traded its first-rounder to move up for Travis Hunter in 2025, and Boerkircher totaled just 38 receptions across five college seasons (four at Nebraska, one at A&M). But the degree to which Jags leadership got excited about the selection might give us some hints at the team’s offensive plans for 2026 and beyond … and they could impact the fantasy outlook for your favorite Jacksonville receiver.

        Jaguars WR Brian Thomas Jr. has been one of the team's best players in recent OTAs, according to multiple members of the media. Sports Illustrated's John Shipley called Thomas "the story of the offseason program." These are just pad-less spring practices, but it's encouraging to hear after Thomas' majorly disappointing 2025 season.

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