Michael Thomas Will Return to Greatness in 2021

Jason Wood's Michael Thomas Will Return to Greatness in 2021 Jason Wood Published 07/11/2021

UPDATE: Michael Thomas did have surgery (as we speculate in the original article below), and will miss a chunk of the regular season. Our injury expert Jene Bramel expects a PUP list start, meaning Thomas will miss six or more regular season games. Further complicating matters, head coach Sean Payton publicly questioned why Thomas waited so long to have the procedure, and other reports indicate Thomas was MIA for months of the offseason, frustrating the team and the front office. Sadly, this could turn into a lost season for the talented receiver, and we now can't rule out a mid-season trade once he's healthy.



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We Can Forgive, But Can We Forget?

Fantasy football is a game of logic, research, statistical analysis, and historical context. It’s also a game of passion, frustration, and superstition. Where else can you find hobbyists building complex regression models while wearing their favorite jersey that hasn’t been washed in weeks to protect a winning streak? Despite our most systematic approach to rankings and projections, we’re not immune to the sting of past disappointments.

Enter Michael Thomas.

To say Thomas was a disappointment last year would be like saying the city of Atlantis is hard to find on a map.

A year after setting an NFL record with 149 receptions, Thomas was the consensus No. 1 receiver across the industry last preseason. The debate wasn’t whether Thomas should be drafted first at the position; the question was how early in the first round he should be selected?

Sadly, his season was a disaster, and those who held onto him paid dearly. Very few teams who drafted Thomas and kept him on their roster made their league’s championship game, much less took home the title.

Difference between 2020 ADP and Final Fantasy Ranking, 30 Biggest Misses

Year-End Rank
First
Last
Team
ADP
Differential
178
Courtland
Sutton
DEN
23
-155
198
John
Ross
CIN
86
-112
165
Parris
Campbell
IND
56
-109
103
Kenny
Golladay
DET
7
-96
93
Michael
Thomas
NO
1
-92
152
Alshon
Jeffery
PHI
71
-81
110
Julian
Edelman
NE
33
-77
124
DeSean
Jackson
PHI
48
-76
90
Odell
Beckham
CLE
14
-76
159
J.J.
Arcega-Whiteside
PHI
87
-72
132
Bryan
Edwards
LV
63
-69
140
Kenny
Stills
HOU
78
-62
95
Deebo
Samuel
SF
37
-58
99
Preston
Williams
MIA
45
-54
52
Julio
Jones
ATL
4
-48
89
Henry
Ruggs
LV
43
-46
121
Van
Jefferson
LAR
75
-46
97
Jalen
Reagor
PHI
52
-45
91
Golden
Tate
NYG
53
-38
98
N'Keal
Harry
NE
60
-38
105
Steven
Sims
WAS
70
-35
68
A.J.
Green
CIN
34
-34
83
John
Brown
BUF
50
-33
87
Sammy
Watkins
KC
57
-30
48
D.J.
Chark
JAC
21
-27
31
Chris
Godwin
TB
6
-25
107
Denzel
Mims
NYJ
83
-24
100
Miles
Boykin
BAL
79
-21
78
Breshad
Perriman
NYJ
59
-19
80
Allen
Lazard
GB
62
-18

You would think after crushing fantasy fortunes in such grand fashion, Thomas’ ADP would plummet this year. But that’s not what’s happened:

Consensus
Name
Team
WR1
KC
WR2
GB
WR3
BUF
WR4
ARI
WR5
ATL
WR6
SEA
WR7
TEN
WR8
MIN
WR9
NO
WR10
LAC
WR11
Allen Robinson
CHI
WR12
WAS
WR13
DAL
WR14
DAL
WR15
TB
WR16
TEN
WR17
LAR
WR18
TB
WR19
MIN
WR20
LAR

Does Thomas warrant a top-10 ADP? Does it adequately price in last year’s disaster and the uncertainty at quarterback? Or is Thomas’ ADP too low? Have we overreacted to one bad season and forgotten about a historic four-year start to his career?

An All-Time Great Career (Before 2020)

NFL Receivers through their first 4 seasons (NFL History)

Rank
Name
YRs
Gms
Recs
Yds
YPR
TDs
1
2016--2019
63
470
5512
11.73
32
2
2014--2017
64
401
4040
10.07
22
3
Anquan Boldin
2003--2006
56
342
4605
13.46
20
4
2004--2007
60
330
4544
13.77
34
5
2011--2014
60
329
4874
14.81
35
6
2006--2009
61
327
4019
12.29
25
7
2013--2016
64
317
4487
14.15
23
8
Odell Beckham
2014--2017
47
313
4424
14.13
38
9
Marvin Harrison
1996--1999
60
311
4141
13.32
33
10
Andre Johnson
2003--2006
61
311
3953
12.71
17
11
2014--2017
61
309
4581
14.83
32
12
Randy Moss
1998--2001
64
308
5396
17.52
53
13
Andre Rison
1989--1992
63
308
4123
13.39
37
14
2017--2020
58
308
3726
12.1
26
15
Torry Holt
1999--2002
64
306
5088
16.63
23
16
Keyshawn Johnson
1996--1999
62
305
4108
13.47
31
17
2015--2018
55
302
3493
11.57
24
18
2010--2013
59
293
4104
14.01
40
19
Al Toon
1985--1988
58
292
3881
13.29
21
20
2017--2020
54
288
3571
12.4
24
21
Marques Colston
2006--2009
57
285
4074
14.29
33
22
Frank Sanders
1995--1998
64
285
3858
13.54
13
23
Wayne Chrebet
1995--1998
64
283
3517
12.43
18
24
2012--2015
62
283
4413
15.59
24
25
Chad Johnson
2001--2004
60
282
4124
14.62
25

Thomas' total of 470 receptions through four seasons is not only the best in NFL history, it's 69 receptions better than Jarvis Landry -- who held the record previously. Thomas is also first, all-time, in receiving yards through four seasons. And he ranks behind only Randy Moss for most fantasy points scored in four seasons. He's on a Hall of Fame trajectory, or at least he was until 2020.

So What Happened?

Thomas injured his ankle in Week 1 and missed the next six games. As he was working his way back from the ankle injury, Thomas was suspended for a game after punching a teammate. He returned for six games, playing mainly with Taysom Hill, before landing on the Reserve/Injured list with three games left in the regular season. He was back on the field for the Saints' two-game playoff run but was shut out against the Buccaneers.

Surgery?

In January, reports surfaced that Thomas would require surgery on his injured ankle. It turns out Thomas tried to play through a litany of serious injuries knowing it was likely Drew Brees’ final season.

Oddly, we have no confirmation Thomas underwent the surgical procedures. There have been no media reports confirming the surgeries nor a prognosis. But Saints head coach Sean Payton said Thomas was “so far, so good” at June minicamp. We’re assuming he’s 100% healthy entering training camp, but if he’s not – particularly if we find out he opted out of the surgeries – consider him a much riskier proposition at current ADP.

Assuming He’s Healthy, What About the Quarterback Situation?

After more than a decade of excellent under center, the Saints are gambling on two wildcards: Taysom Hill and Jameis Winston. The coaching staff has given no indication of how they’re leaning, and it probably comes down to training camp performance. Hill enters his fifth season as a clear Payton favorite. He played regularly, mainly as a gadget player, in recent seasons and importantly started in Drew Brees’ absence last year. The problem is Hill is already 30 years old and has 4 career touchdown passes. The other option is Jameis Winston – a former first-overall pick by division rival Tampa Bay. Winston was last seen throwing a league-high 30 interceptions while also leading the league with 5,109 yards.

The Odd Couple

Hill
Winston
Age
30
27
Pedigree
Undrafted
1st Overall Pick
Saints Tenure
5th Year
2nd Year
Games Started
4
70
Comps
94
1,570
Atts
134
2,559
Comp%
70.1%
61.4%
Pass Yds
1,047
19,812
Yards/Att
7.8
7.7
TD Passes
4
121
TD%
3.0%
4.7%
INTs
3
88
INT%
2.2%
3.4%

Conventional wisdom favors Winston as a fantasy catalyst because he has a history of prolific passing offenses and has the skill set to make any pass in the playbook. But Payton went with Hill last year in Brees’ absence, and the gadget master was far more efficient than feared, completing more than 70% of passes, leading the team to a 3-1 record, and scoring 81 points in four games. Neither Winston nor Hill have large contracts beyond this season; it’s the definition of camp battle.

Does Thomas’ fantasy value depend on who wins the job?

The boring answer is – we don’t know yet. But we can make an educated guess.

Thomas was surprisingly good with Hill under center

Week
Targets
Recs
Yards
YPR
TDs
Ctch%
10
12
9
104
11.6
0
75.0%
11
6
4
50
12.5
0
66.7%
12
11
9
105
11.7
0
81.8%
13
8
8
84
10.5
0
100.0%
16-Game Pace
148
120
1,372
11.4
0
81.1%

Even though Hill was a game manager in his month stint as the starter, he had no problem featuring Thomas. Thomas was on a 120-catch, 1,372-yard pace with Hill, although he didn’t score a touchdown. The lack of scoring is odd, but the usage is more predictive and should calm the nerves if Hill wins the job and the Saints push for a balanced offensive approach.

Winston is an unknown, but he made Mike Evans a star

Jameis Winston targeted Mike Evans 713 times in five seasons, averaging 143 targets per game. Evans was a perennial fantasy star paired with Winston, which bodes well for Thomas’ chances of success if Winston wins the job. Evans and Thomas are different players, but both are big, alpha receivers capable of running the full route tree. Both are aggressive at the point of attack and do their best work on the outside. It’s not a perfect proxy, but it’s hard to look at Winston’s rapport with Evans and think Thomas can’t thrive.

Thomas’ target share should remain massive

Outside of star running back Alvin Kamara, who is a threat to Thomas’ target share? Emmanuel Sanders is gone. Jared Cook is gone. TreQuan Smith has a valuable role but is inconsistent and won’t command a larger role. Tight end Adam Trautman has promise, but he’s unlikely to see more snaps and targets than Cook did. If Thomas isn’t featured, how can the Saints offense function?

STATS AND PROJECTIONS

Season
Games
Rushes
RuYards
RuTDs
Targets
Recs
ReYards
ReTDs
FumLost
2018
16
0
0
0
147
125
1405
9
2
2019
16
1
-9
0
186
149
1725
9
0
2020
7
1
1
0
55
40
438
0
0
Footballguys Projections
Projector
Games
Rushes
RuYards
RuTDs
Recs
ReYards
ReTDs
FumLost
Footballguys Consensus
16.2
0.7
4
0
102.6
1216
7.6
0.1
Anthony Amico
17.0
0.0
0
0
139.9
1615
8.5
0.0
Sigmund Bloom
17.0
0.0
0
0
98.0
1145
7.0
1.0
Justin Freeman
15.0
0.0
0
0
122.5
1430
7.3
0.0
Bob Henry
16.0
1.0
5
0
95.0
1100
8.0
0.0
Maurile Tremblay
17.0
3.0
16
0
109.9
1403
7.3
1.1
Jason Wood
16.0
0.0
0
0
112.0
1350
7.0
0.0

Final Thoughts

Last year was a gut punch. It's one thing for an NFL player to fall short of expectations. That's par for the course. But it's entirely another for a consensus first-round pick to barely crack the Top 100 at his position. Thomas' fall from grace is nearly unprecedented given his Hall of Fame start through four seasons. We shouldn't ignore last year's struggles, but there's ample reason to look past them. Thomas' ankle was an issue all season, and he later admitted to playing through multiple ligament problems because he wanted to make a final Super Bowl push with Drew Brees. Presuming he's healthy in camp (a big if until we know the status of his proposed surgeries), Thomas is talented enough to thrive regardless of who plays quarterback. We know Jameis Winston can force-feed his top target as he did with Mike Evans in Tampa Bay. And while Taysom Hill projects as a glorified game manager, he featured Thomas in their four starts together. With few alternatives on the roster and having just restructured his contract to create cap space, Thomas will 100% be a Saint for 2021 and will be counted on as the team's lead playmaker alongside Alvin Kamara. Expect more volatility from all the Saints players without Drew Brees' steadying presence, but Thomas' year-end numbers should justify another top-10 pick.

Questions, comments, suggestions, and other feedback on this piece are always welcome via e-mail at wood@footballguys.com.

Photos provided by Imagn Images

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