Romeo Doubs spent four seasons in Green Bay, being one of the most reliable WRs on a team that kept searching for better ones. He was the leading target on the roster for most of 2025 – not by design, but by attrition. Christian Watson‘s ACL kept him off the field for the first seven games. Tucker Kraft‘s ACL ended his season in Week 9. Jayden Reed‘s foot cost him four games early. Matthew Golden, the first-round rookie, struggled to carve out a role. In the chaos, Doubs was simply the man who kept showing up – and he rewarded that reliability with his best statistical season: 55 receptions, 724 yards, six TDs on 85 targets across 16 games.
This offseason, he walked into free agency and signed a four-year, $68 million contract with the New England Patriots – entering his age-26 season as a potential WR1 for a franchise that last season watched Drake Maye throw 439 pass attempts to a non-star-studded receiving room. The contract pays Doubs $8.6 million against the cap in 2026, escalating to $18.6 million in 2027, with a potential out in 2028 at just $7.5 million in dead cap. For the Patriots, it’s a calculated bet on a receiver who has posted four consecutive seasons of 50-plus receptions with at least six TDs. For fantasy managers, it’s one of the most interesting boom-or-bust profiles on the board.
What 2025 Actually Showed — and What It Didn’t
Doubs led the Packers team in receptions (55), targets (85), and receiving yards (724) in 2025 while tying for the team lead in receiving TDs (six). While his numbers totaled for a career season, the context surrounding them is important.
The weekly data reveals two very different seasons depending on when you look. Doubs was Green Bay’s most reliable WR option through the early portion of the season, averaging 6.4 targets per game over his first 10 contests. However, his role was diminished down the stretch, as he averaged just 3.5 targets per game over his final six outings.
That split maps almost perfectly to Watson’s injury timeline. In Weeks 1-7, with Watson on IR, Doubs was the nominal WR1 of the offense – receiving double-digit targets in Week 4 against Dallas (where he caught six for 88 yards and three TDs in a 40-40 tie), averaging over seven targets per game in that stretch, and scoring five of his six regular-season TDs before November. Once Watson returned in Week 8, Doubs became more of a complementary piece almost immediately.
The uncomfortable truth is that Doubs’ 2025 breakout is greatly due to a fortunate alignment of injuries. It helped that both Christian Watson and Jayden Reed missed substantial time with injuries, as it allowed Doubs to maintain a steady target share throughout the season. Doubs’ numbers probably wouldn’t have looked as great if everyone were healthy.
Below, find the Packers’ receiving room breakdown by metric – you will notice that while Doubs led the team in volume (targets and receptions), he wasn’t at the top of the chain in terms of efficiency (YPRR, EPA/target). He also boasted a high drop rate, which poses another issue in terms of general ability.

Let’s dive deeper into the number that follows Doubs everywhere: Doubs led the Packers’ offense with 10 drops, including two potential TDs. His career drop rate has never been below 8%, and in 2022, he posted the worst drop rate among all qualified pass catchers in the entire league. Over four seasons in Green Bay, Doubs dropped 36 passes on 322 targets, showcasing that it is a chronic, persistent issue that has plagued him through his development. At a $17 million per year average, the Patriots are betting this is correctable, or at the very least, not a major issue for them. With such a large investment, it is unlikely that this drop rate, while alarming, is a real concern for fantasy managers.
Additionally, see below a visual of Doubs’ career performance. Interestingly, Doubs seems to be consistent in his performance throughout his career, both in receiving yards and TD production. Even though 2025 is seen as his breakout year, it may be solely because of the visibility he had, being the only viable option in Green Bay for most of the season. His performance truly didn’t increase all that much.

Joining the Patriots Receiving Room
Doubs joins a receiver room in New England with Kayshon Boutte and Demario Douglas as his main competition, neither of whom held a super-strong command of the air space last season. If the 2025 NE Patriots showed us anything, it’s that Drake Maye can win a game without a star-studded WR room – it also showed that the standout receiver was very inconsistent throughout the year. Predicting who would have strong fantasy performances was impossible. If we look at Romeo Doubs‘ efficiency below, he ranks 40 of 75 qualified WRs in the league in EPA/target. While he was consistently the top dog in Green Bay last season, his efficiency puts him in the middle of the pack in terms of the league, making it seem unlikely he stays the top option with the Pats.

Conclusion
Romeo Doubs can be valued as a volatile WR3/FLEX. The bull case is genuine: 90+ targets, little WR competition, a 26-year-old receiver in his prime, and a QB with top-10 arm talent entering Year 3.
The bear case is equally real: Maye has a weak offensive line, and the Patriots will face a more difficult schedule than the previous year. Doubs is likely to produce and stay consistent with what he’s shown in his first four seasons, but may not outperform what we’ve already seen from him.
In this case, the production doesn’t match the production very well – Doubs’ largest upside is his contract value. The Patriots’ investment in him gives a guarantee of his relevance and ability to grow as a potential WR1. He is certainly worth a stash in dynasty and a late-round pick in redraft leagues. However, don’t overbuy on Doubs, as we know what we are getting.
from Fantasy Footballers Podcast https://ift.tt/xhKcrLs
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