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        Amon-Ra St. Brown Fantasy Overview

        Amon-Ra St. Brown

        Amon-Ra St. Brown
        Player Profile

        WR DET

        Height

        6'0"

        Weight

        202 lbs.

        Experience

        5 yrs.

        Bye

        6

        Birthday

        Oct 24, 1999

        Age

        26.6

        College

        USC

        NFL Draft Pick

        2021 - Rd 4, Pk 112

        Fantasy Rankings & Projections

        Fantasy Rankings

        Weekly
        BYE -
        Season
        WR {{playerPageAppVar.projectionForRestOfSeason && playerPageAppVar.projectionForRestOfSeason.rank[selectedScoringConfig.fantasyPtsKey] ? playerPageAppVar.projectionForRestOfSeason.rank[selectedScoringConfig.fantasyPtsKey] : "-"}}
        Dynasty
        WR4

        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

        Amon-Ra St. Brown's Preseason Player Analysis

        2025 Role & Results

        Production & Fantasy Finishes

        St. Brown delivered another elite fantasy season. He caught 117 balls for 1,401 yards and 11 TDs. He ranked third among WRs in total PPR points and fourth in points per game.

        The weekly reliability proved strong as well. St. Brown posted seven top-12 finishes and 13 top-24 finishes across 17 games. He fell outside the top 24 just four times.

        That’s exactly what fantasy managers pay for in the first round: high-end production with minimal dead weeks.

        Usage & Role

        St. Brown remained the clear leader among Detroit pass catchers.

        His 172 targets ranked second in the league, and his 117 receptions ranked fourth. He also carried a 38.4% air yards share, fifth among WRs.

        That air-yards number is important because Detroit was typically not a downfield passing offense. The Lions ranked 31st in team aDOT, and Jared Goff’s intended air yards sat at just 6.8 (35th among QBs). St. Brown commanded a huge piece of the passing game, though, working at every level.

        And his use and production remained stable through a midseason coaching shift. OC John Morton called plays through Week 9, with St. Brown averaging:

        • 9.0 targets
        • 79.4 yards
        • 2.70 yards per route

        HC Dan Campbell took over from Week 10 on, and St. Brown’s averages didn’t change much:

        • 10.0 targets
        • 79.4 yards
        • 2.70 yards per route

        Efficiency & Regression

        St. Brown’s efficiency backed up the volume.

        He earned a 90.6 receiving grade, ranking third among WRs with 50+ targets. He also ranked 14th in yards per route run (2.48) among that 76-player group.

        St. Brown ranked fifth among WRs in first downs and third in yards after catch. That fits perfectly with Detroit’s low-aDOT passing game.

        His 11 TDs marked a third straight season with double-digit scores, and his offense obviously helps in that area. The Lions have finished four straight seasons among the top 5 in scoring. Goff tossed 29+ TD passes in each of those years. His 130 TD throws over that span not only leads the league but beats his nearest competitor (Josh Allen) by 13.

        Offensive Context

        Detroit gave St. Brown one of the best offensive environments in football.

        The Lions ranked:

        • fifth in total yards per game
        • third in passing yards per game
        • third in passing TDs per game
        • fourth in yards per pass attempt
        • eighth in EPA per play
        • eighth in plays per game

        That combination gives St. Brown both high floor and an enticing ceiling. And he rebounded from a 2024 target-share dip to post the best number of his career in that category.

        St. Brown’s Target Shares broke down as follows:

        Year

        Target Share

        2021

        19.4%

        2022

        26.1%

        2023

        27.9%

        2024

        25.4%

        2025

        28.5%

        For 2025, no other Lion topped 18% target share.

        2026 Opportunity & Projection

        Projected Role & Competition

        Expect St. Brown to remain Detroit’s clear No. 1 target.

        Jameson Williams is a real threat for explosive weeks. Sam LaPorta will command targets when healthy. Gibbs is heavily involved in the passing game.

        But St. Brown’s role has already survived all of that. He ranked second among WRs in targets and produced 19.06 PPR points per game in this same offense.

        Supporting Cast

        The supporting cast is a strength.

        Goff threw for 4,564 yards and 34 TDs while completing 68.0% of his passes. That fits St. Brown’s game perfectly. Goff is accurate, efficient, and comfortable working the short and intermediate areas.

        Williams gives the offense a vertical threat after topping 1,100 receiving yards and averaging 17.2 yards per catch. That matters for St. Brown because Williams can stretch coverage and create space underneath.

        LaPorta gives Detroit another efficient middle-of-the-field weapon. Gibbs adds an elite receiving RB element.

        There is plenty of target competition here, but St. Brown still leads the group. That competition helps keep Detroit efficient and puts him in scoring position more often.

        Coaching & Offensive Scheme

        Detroit's 2025 offense was highly efficient without being overly aggressive. The Lions ranked 31st in aDOT and 24th in pass rate over expected, a style that fit St. Brown's game built on volume, timing, and yards after the catch.

        Now new OC Drew Petzing arrives after his most pass-heavy season. His PROE also climbed over his three years calling plays as Cardinals OC:


        Points

        Plays

        Pace

        Pass Rate

        Neutral Pass Rate

        PROE

        2023

        24th

        62.8

        9th

        55.9%

        52.6%

        -4.4%

        2024

        12th

        60.9

        19th

        55.3%

        57.3%

        +0.1%

        2025

        23rd

        63.2

        2nd

        65.9%

        63.4%

        +7.3%

        Petzing’s Arizona offenses didn’t score very well, ranking 24th, 12th, and 23rd in his three seasons. But he inherits much more talent in Detroit.

        We’ve seen St. Brown finish three straight seasons among the top 3 scorers at WR, with a slight boost to last year’s scoring in spite of two play-caller changes. If Petzing’s scheme increases the number of plays and/or the pass rate, that would likely only improve the environment for St. Brown.

        Paths To Ceiling

        There’s probably not a lot of upward mobility in St. Brown’s production, but there’s also little reason to believe his role will shift.

        As long as the Lions keep the 26-year-old (until Oct. 24) among the league leaders in target share, St. Brown’s proven efficiency and the offense’s strength should keep his floor and ceiling high. If Detroit moves closer to Petzing’s 2025 pass rate while remaining top-5 in scoring, St. Brown could push for the overall WR1 spot.

        Risk Factors

        The main risk for St. Brown is target competition. Williams has become a bigger part of the offense, LaPorta was highly efficient when healthy, and Gibbs plays a major receiving role. St. Brown has still produced despite this, but he could have more weeks at his floor if targets are spread around even more.

        Any scheme transition brings some risk, even if Petzing's 2025 pass-rate profile looks good for St. Brown.

        Even with those risks, St. Brown’s volume, efficiency, QB stability, and offensive environment make him one of the safest WR1 picks in fantasy.

        Advanced Stats

        Forty Yard Dash

        4.66

        Forty Yard Dash Rank

        14%

        Three Cone Drill

        6.90

        Agility Score

        11.16

        Agility Score Rank

        61%

        Burst Score

        129.00

        Burst Score Rank

        84%

        Spar Qx

        112.00

        Spar Qx Rank

        75%

        Speed Score

        81.30

        Speed Score Rank

        15%

        Height Adjusted Speed Score

        81.30

        Height Adjusted Speed Score Rank

        13%

        Catch Radius

        10.02

        Catch Radius Rank

        48%

        VIEW MORE ADVANCED STATS

        Shark Bites

        Jahmyr Gibbs RB DET
        8:44pm UTC 1/19/26

        Drew Petzing Takes Over As Lions OC

        Drew Petzing Takes Over As Lions OC

        The Lions are hiring Drew Petzing as their new OC, according to multiple reports. ESPN's Eric Woodyard writes that Petzing is expected to call plays, after HC Dan Campbell took over those duties during the second half of 2025. Petzing spent the past three seasons as Cardinals OC. Arizona's offenses were middling under Petzing, ranking 19th, 11th, and 19th in total yards and 24th, 12th, and 23rd in points. But he piloted productive and efficient running games in 2023 and 2024, with the Cardinals ranking top seven in both rushing yards and yards per carry both years. Arizona sunk to 31st in yards this past year but still ranked 16th in yards per carry. QB Kyler Murray played a big part in those rushing attacks. But Cardinals RBs averaged 4.7 yards per carry in Petzing's scheme. Consider this hire good news for RB Jahmyr Gibbs.

        The Lions announced that they've "parted ways" with OC John Morton. Morton called plays for the first eight games of the season, guiding the team to 351 total yards and 29.9 points per game. HC Dan Campbell took over play-calling for the final nine games. Detroit climbed to 393 yards per game but sunk to 26.9 points. We'll see who the Lions hire to replace Morton as OC -- and whether Campbell keeps play-calling duties. Campbell was non-committal when asked on Monday. "I'm open to anything," he said. "I don't know exactly where I'm at with that yet. Listen, I'm going to think through all of that. I really want to do what I feel is best for the team. If I believe that's what's best for us and I feel good about it, I will."

        Lions WR Amon-Ra St. Brown (knee, ankle) is active for today’s game vs. the Bears. He was listed as questionable after getting in limited practices on Thursday and Friday. That adds some risk to St. Brown’s Week 18 profile, especially with Detroit having nothing to play for. He’s a viable fade in daily contests but would be impossible to leave out of season-long lineups.

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