Amon-Ra St. Brown 2026 Season Preview — the rarest call we make | Muffed

2026 NFL Season · PPR Scoring · Friday, Jun 12

0:000:00

Your episode · 0:00

The Rundown

Every fantasy take you'll hear this summer is a sleeper or a bust. Amon-Ra St. Brown is neither, and that's the headline: he is priced exactly right — and we can prove it. This is the rarest episode Muffed makes. Stay for why "correctly priced" is the most useful thing you can know about a first-round pick.

The season first. One hundred seventeen catches on one hundred seventy-two targets, fourteen hundred one yards, eleven touchdowns. Nineteen point one points a game — the number three receiver in total scoring, number four per game. Nearly a third of everything Detroit threw went to one man, and Jared Goff threw it well — thirty-four touchdown passes, second-most in the league. The floor was the story: thirteen-plus points in twelve of seventeen weeks. The ceiling showed up too — a forty-one point day against the Rams, thirty-nine against Chicago in Week 2. And yes, one zero, against Green Bay in Week 13, because even metronomes miss a beat. One bad day all year.

Now the career, because this is where St. Brown becomes something close to unique. Listen to his points per game, year by year, since twenty twenty-two: sixteen-seven. Twenty-seven... no — twenty point seven. Eighteen-six. Nineteen-one. And his finish among receivers, per game, the last three seasons: fourth, fourth, fourth. Three straight years, the same rank. His catch totals those three years: one nineteen, one fifteen, one seventeen. This is the flattest elite production line in football. Most stars oscillate. St. Brown repeats.

And here's why the data says he'll keep repeating. We've spent the spring testing what actually carries over year to year, every receiver in football, ten years deep. The stickiest stat in the sport is targets per game — it repeats at a correlation of point seven nine, far ahead of yards, miles ahead of touchdowns. St. Brown just averaged over ten targets a game, the centerpiece role he's held for half a decade. Meanwhile the stat that doesn't repeat — touchdown share — sits at twenty percent of his scoring, just under the fade line where receiver seasons start collapsing the following year. Translation: there is no luck in this profile to give back. He is, quite literally, the pattern library's favorite player: maximal sticky stats, no red flags. When people ask what a repeatable season looks like, this is the photograph.

[[SITUATION]]

The one variable — and we'll be straight that it's real: Detroit has a new offensive coordinator. John Morton lost play-calling duties in November and was let go after the season; Drew Petzing came over in January after three years running the Cardinals' offense, per the offseason reports. New systems can move target trees, and there are new faces on the offensive line, including at center. The other side of the ledger, from the same reports: Goff and Petzing's working relationship is being described as ahead of where the old one was, and Petzing is reportedly leaning on St. Brown specifically as an extension of the coaching staff. Coordinators change. Alphas tend to stay alphas. But we can't model it, so it stays a watch item, not a discount.

The price: pick seven and a half, the fourth receiver off the board, June tenth snapshot. He has finished fourth among receivers, per game, three years running. The market is paying him like the player he keeps being. Our verdict: no call. And before that sounds like a shrug, hear what it actually means — we ran this price against ten years of base rates looking for an edge in either direction and found nothing. Nothing wrong with the price, nothing left on the table. In a draft where everyone's hunting angles, a pick you can make with zero anxiety is an edge of its own. Draft him at cost. Sleep well.

September watch list: the target share under Petzing — that's the entire bet, and you'll know within three weeks. The red-zone diet — eleven scores was earned, not lucky, but new play-callers redistribute goal-line looks. That's it. Short list, boring player, beautiful pick. If he's one of your guys, Muffed builds this show for your whole roster every week of the season. Next preview's queued.

The Bottom Line

NO CALL — Priced exactly right at WR4, three years running. Draft him at cost, sleep well.

This episode is built around one person's roster.

Sign up and get a weekly episode built around yours — player-by-player, in the voice of your smartest football friend.

Get your own weekly episode →