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.
How do George Pickens’ 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.
The bars represents the team’s percentile rank (based on QB Rating Against). The longer the bar, the better their pass defense is. The team and position group ratings only include players that are currently on the roster and not on injured reserve. The list of players in the table only includes defenders with at least 3 attempts against them.
vs Packers
Sunday, Sep 28th at 8:20PM
Overall QB Rating Against
62.0
Pickens quickly earned a reputation for making difficult deep catches after the Steelers made him a second-round pick in 2022, and last season he took things to the next level with increased contributions on short and intermediate passes. His quantity of targets 20-plus yards downfield actually dropped by eight compared to his rookie season, but he caught 11 of the 22 for 405 yards and then saw 17 more looks in the range of 10-to-19 yards and 11 more within 10 yards of the line. When all was said and done, he’d topped his rookie-year totals by 22 targets, 11 catches, 339 yards and one TD. Pickens isn’t quite an athletic freak — he posted a 4.47 40 and 33-inch vertical at 6-3, 195 — but he’s smoother than most tall wideouts and already has a long highlight reel of contested catches. The question now is whether he’ll progress to true No. 1 receiver volume/production, entering his age-23 season with a new coordinator (Arthur Smith), new QBs (Russell Wilson, Justin Fields) and no Diontae Johnson. Smith has a track record of directing run-heavy offenses and inherits a unit that finished 2023 ranked 29th in pass attempts (506) and ninth in rushes (487) . Wilson’s preference for throwing to the perimeter and reputation for accurate deep passing would seem to make him a good fit for Pickens in particular, and Johnson’s departure is also promising given that Pickens was targeted on 27.3 percent of his routes in the four games Johnson missed last year (17-357-2 on 33 targets). Pickens is a strong bet to improve on last year’s 22.2 percent target share, but it won’t necessarily equate to taking the next step in fantasy football if he’s cutting his slice from one of the smallest passing-game pies in the league.
A 2022 second-round pick, Pickens bounced back from a slow, injury-addled finish to his college career at Georgia and caught 52 passes for 801 yards and four touchdowns for the Steelers in his rookie season. He made a number of highlight-reel grabs and showed a particular affinity for contested catches, with the downside being that he struggled to gain separation and drew only 84 targets in 17 games. The Steelers seem to be expecting a step forward given their lack of noteworthy WR signings this offseason, and there’s something to be said for not needing the smoothest route-running skills when you’re 6-3 with 4.47 speed. Pickens, Diontae Johnson and TE Pat Freiermuth set up as the primary targets for second-year QB Kenny Pickett, who mostly struggled as a rookie but also showed progress as the year went along. It remains to be seen if Pickens can improve his agility and route-running now that he’s more than two years removed from the ACL tear he suffered during a 2021 spring practice at UGA.
If you look at his college stats, you might think Pickens was a reach in the second round. If you
remember how he was viewed a few years ago, you’d think he was a huge steal. The five-star
recruit had 727 yards and eight TDs as a true freshman, followed by 514 and six in eight games
as a sophomore, before an ACL tear last spring limited him to four appearances (and 107 yards)
at the tail end of his junior season. Pickens could’ve returned to Georgia in 2022 to rehab his
draft value, but he did a decent job of that anyway between the late-season return and his
respectable showing at the combine (4.47 40). Pickens weighs only 195, quite thin for a 6-3
receiver, and he turned 21 shortly before the draft. He thus seems most likely to start off as
Pittsburgh’s third or fourth WR, but there’s room to eventually make a move on No. 2 wide receiver Chase Claypool, the hyper-athletic 2020 second-rounder who disappointed last
season.