2025 Receiving Stats
REC
22
YDS
330
TD
2
AVG
15.0
TAR
39
Rest-of-Season Projections
2025 Fantasy Outlook
Hopkins is the latest in a long line of prolific WRs to sign with Baltimore at the end of their respective careers. He turns 33 in June, after his production fell off a cliff in 2024, but he may still have some juice left if it turns out that the knee injury he suffered during training camp last year was part of the problem. Hopkins actually had respectable efficiency stats last year, with a 24.1 percent target rate, 1.84 yards per route, a 69.5 percent catch rate, 7.4 yards per target and five TDs in 16 regular-season games (10 for Kansas City, six for Tennessee). The biggest problem for fantasy production was a lack of playing time, as he reached 70 percent snap share just once all year. That's perhaps encouraging from the Ravens' standpoint, but there's a good chance Hopkins will only be a part-time player again this season, joining a run-heavy offense that has Zay Flowers and Rashod Bateman at wide receiver and Mark Andrews and Isaiah Likely at tight end. Read Past Outlooks
RANKS
Plays depth role in Baltimore
Hopkins caught 22 of 39 targets for 330 yards and two touchdowns across 17 games in 2025.
ANALYSIS
The veteran joined the Ravens on a one-year deal in the offseason and started the season strong. He caught touchdowns in each of his first two games and was remarkably efficient through the first six weeks of the season; Hopkins caught nine of 13 passes for 178 yards and two scores in that span. His best game the rest of the way was four catches for 41 yards. In fairness, it was a topsy-turvy year for the Ravens offense as it had to navigate a Lamar Jackson injury, but Hopkins still only managed to play 33 percent of the snaps. Hopkins, who turns 34 in June, will be an unrestricted free agent this offseason.
The veteran joined the Ravens on a one-year deal in the offseason and started the season strong. He caught touchdowns in each of his first two games and was remarkably efficient through the first six weeks of the season; Hopkins caught nine of 13 passes for 178 yards and two scores in that span. His best game the rest of the way was four catches for 41 yards. In fairness, it was a topsy-turvy year for the Ravens offense as it had to navigate a Lamar Jackson injury, but Hopkins still only managed to play 33 percent of the snaps. Hopkins, who turns 34 in June, will be an unrestricted free agent this offseason.
NFL Stats
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Fantasy/Red Zone Stats
See red zone opportunities inside the 20, 10 and 5-yard lines along with the percentage of time they converted the opportunity into a touchdown.
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Advanced NFL Stats
How do DeAndre Hopkins' 2025 advanced stats compare to other wide receivers?
This section compares his advanced stats with players at the same position. The bar represents the player's percentile rank. The longer the bar, the better it is for the player.
Air Yards Per Game
29.7Air Yards Per Snap
1.51% Team Air Yards
15.5%% Team Targets
9.2%Avg Depth of Target
13.6 YdsCatch Rate
56.4%Drop Rate
2.6%Avg Yds After Catch
3.2% Targeted On Route
20.2%Avg Yds Per Route Run
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2025 NFL Game Log
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2025 NFL Game Log
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Snap Distribution / Depth Chart
Snap Counts
Snap %
Receiving Alignment Breakdown
See where DeAndre Hopkins lined up on the field and how he performed at each spot.
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Side
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2025 DeAndre Hopkins Split Stats
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Measurables Review
View College Player Page
How do DeAndre Hopkins' measurables compare to other wide receivers?
This section compares his draft workout metrics with players at the same position. The bar represents the player's percentile rank. For example, if the bar is halfway across, then the player falls into the 50th percentile for that metric and it would be considered average.
* The Cone Drill metric is from his Pro Day. All others are from the NFL Combine.
Height
6' 1"Weight
210 lbs40-Yard Dash
4.57 secShuttle Time
4.50 secCone Drill*
6.83 secVertical Jump
36.0 inBroad Jump
115 inBench Press
15 repsHand Length
10.00 inArm Length
33.38 inPast Fantasy Outlooks
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Coming off a suspension-shortened 2022 with 717 yards in nine games, Hopkins was released by the Cardinals last offseason and met with a surprisingly soft market. He ended up choosing Tennessee on a two-year, $26 million contract, which led to a drastic reversal from his Arizona usage under Kliff Kingsbury. Despite being 31 years old and not a burner even in his prime, Hopkins led the NFL with 39 targets 20-plus yards downfield last year. That would seem to be a good thing for fantasy production, though he got his hands on only 12 of the passes, catching all 12 for 428 yards and two TDs. The real problem was that Hopkins saw far fewer short passes than he had under Kingsbury. It's not that he only ran deep routes, but rather that Tennessee was 31st in total play volume and 30th in pass attempts. Hopkins was targeted on 27.1 percent of routes -- 13th among WRs and similar to his 2022 rate (27.7 percent) -- but dropped from 38.4 routes per game in his final Arizona season to 29.7 in Tennessee. While the Titans figure to throw more in 2024 with former Bengals offensive coordinator Brian Callahan as the head coach and RB Derrick Henry off to Baltimore, there are plenty of reasons to question Hopkins' fantasy production moving forward. Hopkins turns 32 this September, QB Will Levis completed only 58.4 percent of passes as a rookie, and free-agent signing Calvin Ridley may end up being the No. 1 receiver. It's a safe bet Hopkins' aDOT will come down from last season's eight-year high of 14.0, but that might cost him big plays or TDs and doesn't necessarily mean he'll see more targets overall.
More Fantasy News
No catches vs Packers
Hopkins was held catchless on one target Saturday against the Packers.
ANALYSIS
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Shows rapport with Huntley
Hopkins recorded four receptions on five targets for 41 yards in Sunday's 28-24 loss to the Patriots.
ANALYSIS
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Makes splash play on one catch
Hopkins caught his lone target for a 32-yard gain Sunday against the Bengals.
ANALYSIS
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Held catchless in loss
Hopkins was held without a catch on one target Sunday against the Steelers.
ANALYSIS
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Logs two catches Thanksgiving Day
Hopkins caught two of three targets for 25 yards during the Ravens' 32-14 loss to the Bengals on Thursday.
ANALYSIS
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Latest Fantasy Rumors
Bigger role sans Bateman
Hopkins and the rest of the Ravens wide receivers will take on larger roles against the Steelers on Sunday after Rashod Bateman was ruled out due to an illness, Jonas Shaffer of The Baltimore Banner reports.
ANALYSIS
There was optimism that Bateman would play Sunday, but the fifth year wideout was not able to shake off an illness that caused him to miss all three practices during Week 18 prep. That leaves Hopkins as the No. 2 wideout behind Zay Flowers, though the former coming off a zero-catch performance against the Packers in Week 17. The difference this Sunday is that the veteran wide receiver will be catching passes from Lamar Jackson rather than Tyler Huntley, though Hopkins has been held to two catches or less in 15 of 16 regular-season games in 2025. The Ravens are hoping to get some version of the Hopkins that was named to the NFL's All-Pro First Team from 2017 to 2019.
There was optimism that Bateman would play Sunday, but the fifth year wideout was not able to shake off an illness that caused him to miss all three practices during Week 18 prep. That leaves Hopkins as the No. 2 wideout behind Zay Flowers, though the former coming off a zero-catch performance against the Packers in Week 17. The difference this Sunday is that the veteran wide receiver will be catching passes from Lamar Jackson rather than Tyler Huntley, though Hopkins has been held to two catches or less in 15 of 16 regular-season games in 2025. The Ravens are hoping to get some version of the Hopkins that was named to the NFL's All-Pro First Team from 2017 to 2019.








