In this series of articles, I’m looking at the breakout potential for second-year wide receivers. This article will focus on Darius Slayton, and you can find the articles for the other wide receivers from the 2019 draft class here. Slayton saw his first action in Week 3 almost by necessity with injuries and suspensions to the New York Giants’ top two wide receivers. But the fifth-round rookie stayed productive for most of the year, including when the receiver group was at full strength. Slayton led the Giants in receiving yards (740) and touchdowns (8) last year.
[Editor’s note: Subscribe to PFF ELITE today to gain access to PFF’s Premium Stats and new Player Grades experience in addition to the 2020 NFL Draft Guide, 2020 Fantasy Rookie Scouting Report, PFF Greenline, all of PFF’s premium article content and more.]
One of the best ways to determine the range of outcomes and the probability of success for fantasy players is comparing them to similar historical players. In this analysis, I’ll compare Slayton to hundreds of receivers drafted since 2006 and project the likelihood of his breakout based on those who had the most similar size, college production, draft position and rookie metrics.
METHODOLOGY
The matching methodology for this set of articles is similar to that for the 2020 wide receiver and running back prospects, where I found the closest statistically comparable players using principal component analysis (PCA) and the euclidean distance between the players' components, and then gave each a “Similarity” score based on percentile of distance.
The metrics for PCA are draft position, weight, rushing attempts per game, market share of college receiving yards (CFB MS), college yards per reception (CFB YPR), rookie yards per route run (YPRR), rookie average depth of target (aDOT), rookie PPR fantasy points per game (PPR/Gm) and top-24 fantasy weeks (Top-24). All college numbers are from players’ final seasons.
DARIUS SLAYTON COMPS