A couple weeks ago we did a write up on DJ Moore and why he had left his fantasy owners disappointed so far.  This week we decided to look at a slightly more challenging and frustrating wide receiver for fantasy gamers - AJ Green.  

If you were to only look at social media then you would think it was already figured out.  There are articles out there calling for AJ Green to be benched in favor of Auden Tate .  Fans on Twitter are saying AJ Green has lost a step.  And obviously there is some truth to that as he’s 32 and no longer dominating the way he did in 2011.  But when you take a look under the hood, AJ Green might not be entirely to blame here. 

First, let’s look at some stats courtesy of Pro Football Focus.  Green only has 31 catches on 67 targets for an atrocious 46% catch rate.  But, when you look at drops, Green only has 3.  That means that, of those 67 targets, 33 of them were deemed uncatchable - roughly half the balls thrown Green’s way.  Here’s a glaring example of one in a windy game that was pointed out by USA Today’s “For The Win” writer Steven Ruiz.

Obviously the wind factored in but you also can’t possibly expect Green to catch that. Of the 5 targets Green got last week, 4 of them were deemed uncatchable (and Green dropped the lone catchable one making it uglier than it needed to be).  Here’s another. 

You can criticize Green for not making an effort on the tackle but that’s simply not a catchable ball.  So merely looking at targets and saying he’s not catching them is not a good approach.  Let’s go deeper.

The Bengals run one of the most consolidated snap shares and target shares of any team in the league.  For the vast majority of snaps it’s AJ Green and Tee Higgins on the outside playing split end/flanker with Boyd in the slot.  Because of this consolidation and the fact that the Bengals are second in the league in pass attempts, the Cincinnati is the only team in the league on pace to have three players get 100+ targets - something that’s only happened 2.5% of the time over the last five years.  That’s pretty rarified air considering 7 teams last year didn’t have a single player get 100+ targets.  

Of the three wideouts, Green runs the deepest routes with an average depth of target of 14.40 yards.  That’s similar to other deep threats like Kenny Golladay (14.66), DK Metcalf (14.68), and Tyreek Hill (14.82).  Let’s look at Joe Burrow this year focusing on deep throws (which PFF categorizes as “passes over 20 yards”).

Burrow has thrown 43 deep balls which is tied for 7th in the league.  On those, he has completed 8 which is tied for 26th.  Completing 8 of 43 would be 18.6% (when you adjust for a drop that Tee Higgins had, that brings us to 20.9%).  Of QBs who have attempted at least 10 deep balls, an adjusted completion percentage of 20.9% ranks 33rd out of 36 QBs - only Dwayne Haskins, Mitchell Trubisky , and Jimmy Garapollo have been worse.  His passer rating of 51.1% on those throws is 32nd out of 36 QBs with those three and Drew Lock being the only worse QBs.  Not great.  Here are a couple target charts for Joe Burrow courtesy of Next Gen Stats in weeks where he clearly did better with the underneath passes. 

Okay, well, what if his struggles on deep passes are AJ Green’s fault? He’s the one running those routes right?  Per PFF, AJ Green has 17 targets on passes over 20 yards and 1 of them has been catchable (which he caught for 22 yards). The rest of the wide receivers have combined for 26 targets beyond 20 yards and 6 of them have been caught.  Tyler Boyd , John Ross , and Auden Tate have caught zero of theirs.  The only receiver having any success on them has been Tee Higgins who has received 6 catchable balls on 16 targets (5 catches and a drop).   For Higgins, 4 of those 5 catches were made down the deep right sideline.  Earlier we said Burrow was ranked QB33 of 36 QBs in adjusted completion percentage.  Even if we take just his most successful deep ball receiver, the only one who has caught multiple passes over 20 yards, you get a 31.25% completion percentage which would only move Burrow up two spots to QB31 - now ahead of Drew Lock and Joe Flacco .  So clearly it’s not just Green.

When Green does run shorter routes, he’s been just fine.  Here’s his receiving direction chart, courtesy of PFF.  

As you can see, he has a catch rate of 77% in that range catching 100% of catchable balls with zero drops.  Burrow doesn’t have a passer rating lower than ~85 in any of the sectors.  Here’s how Tyler Boyd looks in that range. 

As you can see with Boyd, he has no catches on his targets over 20 yards but he’s primarily running his routes underneath.  The passer ratings for Burrow aren’t drastically different but Tyler Boyd simply runs more of those routes underneath that were the bread and butter of Justin Jefferson and Joe Burrow at LSU.  

Now, we can’t throw all the blame on Burrow either.  The glaring stat for AJ Green is that, according to NFL’s Next Gen Stats, he is only generating 1.7 yards of separation on average which is the worst of any player with a minimum of 28 targets. DeVante Parker (1.8), Kenny Golladay (1.8), and Mike Gesicki (1.9) are the only other players under 2.  You combine a guy running deep routes who isn’t getting separation with a quarterback that has struggled with accuracy on deep throws, and the result is the nightmare we are seeing.  There are really only three options here.  AJ Green gets more work underneath (which isn’t highly likely since Tyler Boyd has done a great job there and is not speedy enough to be a deep threat).  AJ Green creates more separation.  Or Joe Burrow improves on his deep ball.  There is still hope but we obviously need to see it before we consider Green again for fantasy in 2020.

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