The NFL’s 11 best slot receivers

With the three-receiver set the new default in the NFL, slot receivers are more important than ever. Here are the NFL’s 11 best.

In the 2019 regular and postseason, per Pro Football Focus data, slot receivers regardless of position (receivers, running backs, and tight ends) accounted for 32% of all targets, 31.6% of all receptions, 32.3% of all receiving yardage, and 34.3% of all receiving touchdowns. In a league where the three-receiver set is by far the default formation (it happened on 69% of all snaps last season, per Sports Info Solutions), having a versatile and productive slot receiver is an absolute necessity in the modern passing game.

Moreover, there is no one kind of slot receiver in the modern NFL. It used to be that you wanted the shorter, smaller guy inside, and your bigger, more physical receivers on the outside. Then, offensive coaches started to realize that by putting bigger receivers and tight ends in the slot, you could create mismatches with slower linebackers and smaller slot cornerbacks. Teams countered this by acquiring linebackers built like safeties, eager to do more than just chase after run fits, and also by moving their best cornerbacks into the slot in certain situations.

Now that offensive and defensive coaches have worked hard to create as many schematic and personnel ties in the slot as possible, the best slot receivers are the ones who consistently show the ideal characteristics for the position. These receivers know how to exploit defenders who don’t have a boundary to help them — they’ll create inside and outside position to move the defender where they want him to go. They understand the value and precision of the option route, and how you can hang a defender out to dry with a simple “if this/then that” equation based on coverage rules. They know how to work in concert with their outside receivers to create route combinations which create impossible math problems for defenses. And they know how to get open in quick spaces.

But don’t automatically assume that slot receivers are just taking the dink-and-dunk routes — they’re actually tasked to catch everything from quick slants to vertical stuff down the seam and up the numbers. Last season, per PFF data, the NFL average for yards per completion for outside receivers was 11.28. For slot receivers, it was 11.63. So, over time and based on the play design and the makeup of the receivers, teams could find just that many more yards by throwing to their slot targets.

The best slot receivers in the game bring unique and highly valuable traits to the game, and here are the best among them.

More Top 11 lists: Slot defenders | Outside cornerbacks | Safeties | Linebackers | Edge defenders | Interior defensive linemen | Offensive tackles Offensive guards | Centers | Outside Receivers

Honorable Mentions

(Jason Getz-USA TODAY Sports)

Had we dropped the qualifying floor to under 50% slot snaps, two guys would have easily made it — Tampa Bay’s Mike Evans, and Baltimore’s Marquise Goodwin. Evans led all slot receivers with at least 25 targets with a passer rating when targeted of 151.3, and Brown was an absolute force against defenses in the slot — especially when he was using his speed in empty formations.

San Francisco’s Deebo Samuel, who was probably the MVP of the first half of Super Bowl LIV before things started to go backward for his team, would have received a mention as well — Samuel had just 33 targets, but caught 28 of them and helped his quarterback to a 135.3 rating when he was targeted in the slot. Kansas City speed receiver Mecole Hardman had just 23 a lot targets, but he was also highly efficient with them, helping his quarterbacks to a 133.9 rating. Though Danny Amendola was the only Lions receiver to make the 50% threshold, both Marvin Jones and Kenny Golladay were highly efficient when tasked to move inside. Other former slot stars like Tyreek Hill of the Chiefs and Minnesota’s Adam Thielen saw their roles change more to the outside in 2019 from previous seasons.

Of the receivers who actually qualified, Nelson Agholor of the Eagles was quietly efficient and had just two drops in the slot last season — which would go against several memes on the subject. Buffalo’s Cole Beasley just missed the cut, through he was one of several receivers on the Bills’ roster who didn’t always get the accuracy and efficiency they deserved from quarterback Josh Allen. And though Randall Cobb was productive for the Cowboys last season and should be so for the Texans in 2020, his nine drops as a slot man… well, we can only have one guy with nine slot drops on this list. More on that in a minute.

Now, on to the top 11.

Willie Snead IV | Julian Edelman | Tyler Boyd | Jared Cook | Golden Tate | Keenan Allen | Larry Fitzgerald | Allen Robinson | Cooper Kupp | Chris Godwin | Tyler Lockett 

Tyler Boyd wants everyone to stop sleeping on Joe Mixon

Cincinnati Bengals WR Tyler Boyd wants folks to stop sleeping on RB Joe Mixon.

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Cincinnati Bengals wideout Tyler Boyd has a simple message for those who sleep on running back Joe Mixon or omit him from best-of lists this offseason:

Stop it.

Mixon has popped up all over the place in various running back rankings this offseason, usually in the top 10. Sometimes he’s not — ESPN thinks he’ll finish outside the top-10 scorers at his position in the fantasy football realm.

And sometimes rankings outright just omit Mixon, opting for others like Derrick Henry and Dalvin Cook. One such set of rankings recently came out from analysts at NFL Network and Boyd was quick to hop online and offer his take:

Mixon is one of the NFL’s best, so much so Bill Belichick said he might be the best outright.

Given what Mixon has accomplished despite his surrounding circumstances such as a bad offensive line, it’s hard to disagree with Boyd here. With improved line and quarterback play, the Bengals hope it will be impossible to leave Mixon off these sorts of lists in the future.

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Tyler Boyd rightfully tabbed as Bengals’ most underappreciated player

Tyler Boyd slots as one of the most underrated players on the Cincinnati Bengals.

The Cincinnati Bengals have plenty of underrated players on the roster.

Cincinnati tends to fly under the proverbial radar as it is and especially with the team struggling so much over the past few years.

But one of the biggest underrated names?

Tyler Boyd, as argued by NFL.com’s Cynthia Frelund:

“There weren’t many bright spots in the Bengals’ offense last season (Joe Mixon was one of the few), but it seems Boyd isn’t getting the respect he deserves. He ranked sixth in the NFL last season with 661 receiving yards from the slot, per Next Gen Stats. When you add in the context of Cincinnati’s extremely subpar offensive line and A.J. Green’s season-long absence, Boyd’s impact starts to come into focus. For rookie QB Joe Burrow, Boyd’s on- and off-ball impact will be a key in the passing game.”

Frelund used a model that calculated player value and looped in factors like production on each snap, draft positioning, salary and more.

Boiling it down in simpler terms, Boyd is great. With A.J. Green mostly sidelined in each of the last two seasons, he functioned as the No. 1 wideout while going for 1,000-plus yards both years and scoring 12 touchdowns with 50-plus first downs both times.

Now add in the surrounding circumstances like iffy quarterback play behind a shaky line and a lack of serious threats at the other skill positions — one begins to see why Boyd was so undervalued on a national scale.

Not to take shine from Boyd, but Joe Mixon, Trey Hopkins and a handful of others could also fall under this same classification. As things improve though, Boyd stands at the forefront of Bengals who could be ready for a massive breakout, shedding this label for good.

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Tyler Boyd, John Ross make 2020 Bengals-Browns rivalry more interesting on social media

Tyler Boyd and John Ross just made Bengals vs. Browns more interesting.

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The Cincinnati Bengals might be falling back into quiet offseason mode now after a fun trip to free agency and the draft itself.

Just don’t tell the players.

Wideouts Tyler Boyd and John Ross each had some interesting thoughts on social media recently pertaining to the Cleveland Browns — which naturally has stirred up plenty of debate.

Boyd started things off by laughing off a duo comparison from NFL Network, suggesting the Joe Burrow-A.J. Green tandem is better than Baker Mayfield-Odell Beckham.

Ross wasn’t too far behind in suggesting Joe Mixon is better than both Browns running backs Nick Chubb and Kareem Hunt.

The reality is a little more muddied. Burrow is a rookie and Green has been hurt. Mixon is easily a top-10 back, though. From a Browns’ perspective, the last few years have been a big disappointment.

The good news? These guys won’t have to wait long to put the proclamations to the test. The Battle of Ohio starts in Week 2 on Thursday Night Football and picks up again in Week 7, settling things for the 2020 season before the calendar even turns to November.

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Chad Johnson recruiting Higgins, Green, Ross and Boyd for workout

Chad Johnson wants to link up with Bengals stars like A.J. Green — and rookie Tee Higgins.

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Chad Johnson continues to be one of the most prominent voices for the Cincinnati Bengals in the aftermath of 2020 NFL draft season.

Johnson specialed in a feature welcoming Joe Burrow to the Bengals. He also made it clear publicly he wasn’t happy Tee Higgins fell out of the first round…until the Bengals grabbed him to start the second round.

And now Johnson is trying to get all of the star Bengals wideouts together.

Monday, the man formerly known as OchoCinco took to Twitter and tried to recruit A.J. Green, John Ross, Tyler Boyd and Tee Higgins for a workout session, while also dropping a line about being an assistant coach:

Some of the names involved — including Green — responded:

It should go without saying, but this needs to be streamed on some sort of platform if it ends up happening over the offseason.

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Tyler Boyd is tired of just another Joe Burrow-Bengals narrative

Tyler Boyd isn’t having it.

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Like most Cincinnati Bengals fans, star wideout Tyler Boyd is tired of the Joe Burrow narratives.

The most recent, in not-so-surprising fashion, comes from Colin Cowherd, who once again lobbied for the Bengals to trade out of the 2020 NFL draft’s top pick because he’ll struggle with the Bengals (passing on the first overall pick because other teams in the division might be better is an interesting hill to defend).

Boyd, as seen in his tweet below, decided to speak out against the narrative.

It’s all nonsense of course — and giving it attention is what those behind such narratives want.

The latest silliness comes after the Bengals committed more than $100 million to multiple free agents in unexpected fashion, as well as on a tag for A.J. Green.

As if Green being around to help Burrow wasn’t enough, he’ll also get a line returning first-round pick Jonah Williams and Joe Mixon in the backfield. Oh and don’t forget Boyd himself, who has consecutive 1,000-yard seasons while acting as the No. 1 wideout despite little else around him, iffy quarterback play and a bad offensive line.

Burrow-Bengals narratives have long been attention-seeking narratives that don’t make sense. Here, Boyd just went public against one.

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Bengals players aren’t happy with team’s portrayal in the media right now

Tyler Boyd, Joe Mixon and others spoke out.

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Cincinnati Bengals fans haven’t been given much of a fair shake lately as the combine and draft nears.

Which means players haven’t either.

The national spotlight on the Bengals has been notably harsh, as has the speculation that Joe Burrow might not want to play for the team — which is blatantly false as of this writing while missing important quotes that suggest otherwise.

Fans have hit back on the coverage plenty and now players have joined the fray too via social media.

Tyler Boyd, the team’s No. 1 wideout over the past two years who signed an extension to stay in town, kicked things off before Joe Mixon and others joined in:

 

Understand Bengals fans and players alike know all too well the team has to play better to change the narrative and earn respect.

But when it feels like much of the coverage has merely lazily glossed over past successes of the franchise and when it feels like the coverage tries to influence what happens at No. 1, this is the result.

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Tyler Boyd ranked among NFL elite in slot production in 2019

Tyler Boyd was elite again in 2019.

It shouldn’t come as much of a surprise to find out Cincinnati Bengals wideout Tyler Boyd ranked as one of the most productive slot wideouts in the league last year.

According to NFL Matchup, Boyd put up 661 yards on a 13.8 average from the slot last season, good for seventh in the NFL right around names like Cooper Kupp and Larry Fitzgerald.

Impressive, as on the whole Boyd had another 1,000-yard campaign with five scores despite no A.J. Green on the field for a struggling team under a new head coach that benched the starting quarterback for a stretch (got all that?).

The idea of No.1 play from Boyd is why the Bengals front office hit him with that four-year extension worth $43 million over the summer.

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Report: Robby Anderson doesn’t plan on giving Jets hometown discount

Not willing to give a hometown discount, Robby Anderson is looking to cash-in as he becomes a free agent for the first time in his career.

With the Jets season coming to a close, the team has a decision to make about impending free agent wide receiver Robby Anderson.

Anderson has a big opportunity to cash-in as the fourth-year receiver out of Temple will hit free agency for the first time in his career. Since Anderson and the Jets failed to come to terms on a contract extension prior to the beginning of the regular season, his price tag has gone up and he will likely command around upwards of $12 million on the open market.

At 26 years old and entering the prime of his career, Anderson is in a position to earn the biggest contract of his NFL career. With this in mind, a hometown discount for the Jets during bidding for his mind doesn’t seem to be in the cards.

“You got to talk to my agent,” Anderson told Manish Mehta of the New York Daily News following the Jets 13-6 win over Buffalo. “I don’t think that makes sense.”

After a slow start to the season, Anderson had a second-half surge that could earn him a nice payday. He finished the season with 52 receptions for 779 yards and five touchdowns.

“I would say that I played the cards that I was dealt and made the most out of what I could,” Anderson said of his 2019 season.

Anderson will be seeking a contract similar to what receivers Tyrell Williams, Sterling Shepard and Tyler Boyd have signed recently. He is going to command a competitive market in free agency given his ability to take the top off the defense and game-breaking speed. Also working in Anderson’s favor is his underneath route-running skills, which developed nicely as 2019 progressed.

The Jets would be wise to get Anderson signed to a long-term deal before the legal-tampering period begins. Just don’t expect him to take a cheaper deal with the team that took a shot on him as an undrafted free agent.

Andy Dalton, Tyler Boyd say those hoping for Bengals loss aren’t ‘true fans’

Two Bengals stars had some interesting comments after the loss.

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Cincinnati Bengals players didn’t come close to quitting during Sunday’s loss to the Miami Dolphins.

But fans of the team could be forgiven for hoping for a loss — doing so meant the Bengals wrapped up the first pick in the 2020 draft.

But team leaders like Andy Dalton and Tyler Boyd aren’t happy about the segment of fans hoping for a loss.

Here’s what Dalton told the media after the game:

“You don’t view that. None of those people are — those types of fans, they aren’t true fans. If you’re a fan of the team, you want them to win, you want them to be successful. Every time you’re out there, you want to win.”

And Boyd:

Odds are Dalton probably wishes he could have that one back. It’s silly to decry fans as not “true” fans because they cheer for a certain result — cheering for a loss Sunday was because those fans believe it is truly in the best interests of the franchise for the long-term.

Fans don’t need this watered down to understand — most surely get that they should be rooting for this team no matter what, and especially the individuals on it putting in the work. But they can’t blindly pretend they don’t understand the draft implications, either.

Particularly for Cincinnati fans, it’s unfortunate to hear this sort of wording from players given what they’ve been through over the years. That these true fans have stuck through it all and finally have something to be excited for isn’t something they should feel guilt over now.

Luckily for all, everyone can get back on the same page now — everyone wants to see the Bengals whip the Browns to close the season.

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