Can Austin Hooper bounce back in year two in Cleveland?

Austin Hooper was a big-name free agent signing in 2020 for the Cleveland Browns but didn’t live up to expectations. He’s looking to bounce back in 2021.

When the 2020 NFL offseason kicked off, the Cleveland Browns made a big splash signing Jack Conklin and Austin Hooper quickly. Conklin’s level of play stayed high while Hooper wasn’t able to do the same.

Limited by an injury, Hooper only played in 13 games in 2020 where he caught 46 passes for 435 yards and four touchdowns. The previous year, with the Atlanta Falcons, Hooper also only played in 13 games but caught 75 passes for 787 yards and six touchdowns.

There were two big differences between Hooper’s last year in Atlanta and first year in Cleveland. The first was that he had 97 targets in 2019 but only 70 in 2020. The second, and most important, is his connection with Matt Ryan in Atlanta for all four years of his NFL career and then trying to get comfortable with Baker Mayfield during a COVID-19 limited 2020 season.

Hooper is looking forward to more time with Mayfield and less limitations in the offseason leading to him bouncing back in 2021.

“It’s like any relationship — you’ve just got to keep working on it and keep understanding each other,” Hooper said in an interview on the Jim Rome Show last week. “Baker, being the guy who’s my age and has been at similar points in our lives, it’s been awesome. He’s a young, hungry guy who wants to work, and it’s been awesome and I’m really grateful.”

“With no offseason and everything that led up to training camp, (head coach Kevin) Stefanski definitely had to keep it pretty vanilla until about halfway through the year when we really understood (the schemes),” Hooper said. “After having the full year where we laid it all out there, this is where we can have some more fun with it and add some wrinkles now that we’ve built a good foundation together.”

While Hooper may never get a chance at 1,000 yards due to the Browns depth of talented playmakers, he has a chance to still be an important part of the offense. Last year, Hooper was second in receiving first downs with 27 behind Jarvis Landry’s 46 and just ahead of Rashard Higgins (26). He also tied for second with four receiving touchdowns behind Kareem Hunt.

Hooper and the Browns would like to see both of those numbers go up in 2021 along with a few more explosive receptions leading to a bigger yardage total. For now, Hooper is looking forward to the challenge.