Here is how many drops current Saints receivers had last season

Which Saints wide receivers dropped the most passes last year? Some of their newest additions, like Jarvis Landry and Dai’Jean Dixon, boast the best hands:

Jameis Winston is back under center for the New Orleans Saints, but a lot has changed around him. Pete Carmichael will be calling plays to his headset, for one. For another, the New Orleans Saints have added a number of new wide receivers to the mix through free agency, the 2022 NFL draft, and the scrum for undrafted rookie signings after the event. But which of them have the best hands? To find out, here are the targets, receptions, and drops for each Saints wideout from the 2021 season.

It’s important to note that drops are a really badly overrated stat, in the sense that they impact such a small fraction of plays. When a receiver is being thrown at 100-plus times in a single season, they tend to catch the ball much more frequently than they drop it. And a player’s drop rate can change dramatically from one year to the next – a great example is Chris Olave, who was only dinged with one drop in the 2020 season before he dropped five passes in 2021. A great receiver can be undercut by a subpar quarterback, too.

So don’t read too deeply into it. At the same time, the player only gets into that position by reliably catching the ball when it’s thrown their way so often in practice. Too many drops in low-stakes situations reduces their opportunities when the bright lights are on, and it can spell their end with the team altogether.

Let’s get to it. Here’s how it broke down for each of the wide receivers on the 90-man roster ahead of training camp, except for Michael Thomas and Kawaan Baker, who were not targeted in 2021. Thomas missed the year with an injury, while Baker was on the practice squad. The list is ordered by their respective drop rates:

Lions rank near the top of the NFL in dropped passes

The running backs all own drop rates over 8.5 percent

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Dropped passes are a subjective statistic across different platforms. It’s not an official stat kept by the NFL. But in any metric or measurement, the Detroit Lions rank near the worst in the league in drops by receivers.

At NBC Sports, the Lions are second with 21 drops. Pro Football Focus has the Lions with 29. Those statistics are charitable across the board compared to Pro Football Reference, which tends to be the standard statistical book of record.

The Lions have 31 dropped passes per PFR, second only to Pittsburgh (37). The drop rate of 6.6 percent is also second-worst in the league, again to the Steelers (7.0).

The leading culprit, in terms of drop rate, is running back Adrian Peterson. He’s got three drops on 18 targets for a rate of 16.7 percent. Marvin Hall logged four drops on 30 targets, part of the reason why the Lions dumped him recently. T.J. Hockenson has the most drops with seven, though his volume of targets makes the tight end have a lesser drop rate than RBs Kerryon Johnson and D’Andre Swift and WR Quintez Cephus.

From Pro Football Reference:

Advanced Receiving Table
No. Player Age Pos G GS Tgt Rec Yds TD Drop Drop%
88 T.J. Hockenson 23 TE 13 13 88 58 657 6 7 8.0
11 Marvin Jones 30 WR 13 13 89 55 667 6 4 4.5
80 Danny Amendola 35 wr 11 3 56 37 539 0 2 3.6
32 D’Andre Swift 21 rb 10 1 44 35 301 2 4 9.1
19 Kenny Golladay 27 wr 5 5 32 20 338 2 2 6.3
33 Kerryon Johnson 23 rb 13 2 23 17 170 1 2 8.7
17 Marvin Hall 27 wr 11 5 30 17 290 2 4 13.3
87 Quintez Cephus 22 wr 10 2 27 16 253 1 3 11.1
83 Jesse James 26 te 13 7 19 12 116 2 0 0.0
39 Jamal Agnew 25 wr 11 1 19 12 76 0 1 5.3
28 Adrian Peterson 35 RB 13 10 18 12 101 0 3 16.7
12 Mohamed Sanu 31 wr 4 1 8 8 105 1 0 0.0
41 Jonathan Williams 26 5 0 4 4 21 0 0 0.0
45 Jason Cabinda 24 mlb 13 2 3 2 8 0 0 0.0
89 Isaac Nauta 23 7 0 2 1 3 0 0 0.0
Ty Johnson 23 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0.0
9 Matthew Stafford 32 QB 13 13 1 0 0 0 0 0.0
Team Total 464 306 3645 23 32 6.9
Provided by Pro-Football-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 12/16/2020.

For a point of comparison for Hockenson, Steelers TE Eric Ebron also has seven drops but owns a higher drop rate of 8.4 because he has fewer targets. Pittsburgh’s Diontae Johnson leads the NFL with 12 drops, followed by Buffalo’s Stefon Diggs, Giants TE Evan Engram and Seattle’s Tyler Lockett with eight apiece.