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        Parker Washington Fantasy Overview

        Parker Washington

        Parker Washington
        Player Profile

        WR JAC

        Height

        5'10"

        Weight

        204 lbs.

        Experience

        5 yrs.

        Bye

        7

        Birthday

        Mar 21, 2002

        Age

        24.3

        College

        Penn State

        NFL Draft Pick

        2023 - Rd 6, Pk 185

        Fantasy Rankings & Projections

        Fantasy Rankings

        Weekly
        BYE -
        Season
        WR {{playerPageAppVar.projectionForRestOfSeason && playerPageAppVar.projectionForRestOfSeason.rank[selectedScoringConfig.fantasyPtsKey] ? playerPageAppVar.projectionForRestOfSeason.rank[selectedScoringConfig.fantasyPtsKey] : "-"}}
        Dynasty
        WR50

        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

        Parker Washington's Preseason Player Analysis

        2025 Role & Results

        Production & Fantasy Finishes

        Washington's career trajectory is one of the more dramatic at the position in recent memory. He broke out in 2025 after finishing WR98 in 2023 and WR91 in 2024 in PPR points per game. He finished 2025 as WR27 overall with 184.7 PPR points across 16 games and averaging 11.5 points per game (WR35).

        The true breakout followed Travis Hunter's LCL tear in Week 7. Washington averaged 14.9 PPR points per game from Week 8 on, ranking 16th among WRs over that period.

        Usage & Role

        Washington's yards per route run jumped from 1.02 in 2024 (78th among 83 WRs with 50+ targets) to 2.06 in 2025 (17th among 76 WRs).

        A 13.1-yard average depth of target helped, climbing for the second straight season (from 7.9 and 11.7 the previous two years. That aDOT means Washington was winning on more intermediate and deep routes than you’d typically expect from a player who leads his team in slot snaps.

        Washington also beat his teammates in multiple metrics.

        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

        From Jakobi Meyers’ Week 10 arrival on, Washington’s 20.5% target share trailed only Meyers (narrowly):

        Receiver

        Target Share

        Jakobi Meyers

        20.7%

        Parker Washington

        20.5%

        Brenton Strange

        15.6%

        Brian Thomas Jr.

        14.8%

        Efficiency & Regression

        Although Washington led Jacksonville in slot snaps last year, he has actually seen his slot share decrease vs. the start of his career.

        Washington spent 75.8% of his pass snaps in the slot as a 2023 rookie, vs. just 24.2% out wide. That split changed to 39.0% and 60.7% respectively in 2024, and he started in the same direction last year before Hunter’s injury.

        Washington played just 37.1% of his snaps in the slot through Week 7. That climbed to 57.9% after the bye; 61.1% in post-bye games he shared with Brian Thomas Jr.

        That breakdown matters for projecting who’ll stay on the field most in two-WR sets going forward. Indeed, Washington trailed Meyers and Thomas in route share after Meyers’ arrival last season. That playing-time distribution could change in 2026, especially after the way Washington played last season.

        Over his final seven games including the playoffs, Washington averaged 5.0 catches, 86.3 yards, and 0.57 touchdowns per game. Extrapolated over a full season, that pace would have made him the PPR WR7.

        2026 Opportunity & Projection

        Projected Role & Competition

        Washington’s 2026 outlook will likely be tied to Hunter’s. The two-way rookie’s knee injury gave way to the Washington breakout, after all, and this year seems to be heading Washington’s way as well.

        Multiple reports have Jacksonville planning to run Hunter more on defense in his second season, and OC Grant Udinski has called Washington capable of building on the success of late last season.

        “I think really, really highly of Parker,” Udinski said in late May. “We think that he is capable of what he did at the end of the season last year and even more than that.”

        Supporting Cast

        The rest of the competition picture is unchanged with Thomas, Meyers, and Brenton Strange all returning. Washington showed last year that he can perform despite the crowded pass-catching group.

        Coen's offense is also a natural fit for a WR to earn targets. His system generated a 4.3% pass rate over expected in 2025. RB Travis Etienne’s departure in free agency leaves an unproven backfield that could increase the passing lean.

        The key number heading into 2026 is route participation. Washington's per-route efficiency was top notch, ranking 17th in YPRR among 76 WRs with 50+ targets.

        Coaching & Offensive Scheme

        Washington clearly got on the field enough to generate surprising fantasy production over the second half last season. But here’s how Jacksonville’s top three wideouts aligned in route share from Week 13 on, after Thomas returned from a three-week ankle sprain:

        • Meyers 91.0%
        • Thomas 78.0%
        • Washington 67.4%

        That came with Thomas playing less than he did to open the season. It also found Hunter not playing at all thanks to the knee injury. Even if the second-year, two-way player sees limited offensive time this season, his chances could come primarily at Washington’s expense if they remain slot leaders.

        Washington has showed he can also play outside, but he’d need to push Thomas or Meyers off the field to counter the Hunter impact or to stay on the field in two-WR sets.

        That’s another potential challenge for 2026. Jacksonville drafted a pair of TEs to join Brenton Strange. Udinski said as the team selected Nate Boerkircher in Round 2 that the new TE “is changing the offense.” Coen has since said that he “likes 12” (formation with two TEs) but also that “we still have some pretty damn good wideouts I like to use.”

        The takeaway? These Jaguars feature more potential scheme flexibility, and we’ll probably have to wait to see exactly how that plays out in season.

        Risk Factors

        As you read above, Washington closed out last season with a stretch of production that could have him flirting with WR1 territory if he carries it over into 2026. It’s not hard to make the case for that upside from a WR3-level ADP, especially when his coordinator is talking him up.

        But Jacksonville also presents a crowded group of pass catchers that might limit alignments of 3+ WRs as well as Washington’s snaps in 2-WR situations.

        If he regresses from the scoring efficiency of late 2025 and sees a decline in opportunities, then Washington could settle into a quiet WR4-type fantasy season.

        The range of potential outcomes keeps him from being a “must” target at ADP, but the cost presents more upside than risk.

        Advanced Stats

        Speed Score Rank

        0%

        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 OC Grant Udinski believes WR Parker Washington is capable of "even more" than he did at the end of last season. Washington averaged 4.8 catches, 74.7 yards, and 0.5 TDs over his final 10 games last year, including 114 yards and 0.75 TDs over his final 4.

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