KellysHeroes
Footballguy
pretty sure Doobs role will decrease, Watson is basically gone; Reed seems to be the only WR that will have a role next to Golden
From your above posts, and from my previous post….I'm rooting for UNlucky.It doesn't look like I'm going to get him in any of my drafts 3 completed and another almost done and two just started. Unlucky or lucky?
Javon Walker 2002.Hell I don’t think the packers have drafted a WR in the 1st round in over 20yrs
It’s a case where it’s crowded because other than Reed, the other guys aren’t good (or with Watson not reliable). It seems GB would be wise to try and focus the passing game in on Reed, Golden and the TEs. My worry for fantasy team is even if Golden is good, he’s better for the offense than he is for statistical production.Heard an interesting take the other day on a podcast - might’ve been the football guys pod? I dunno.
But one of the concerns was the “crowded” WR room in GB. The one dude put it pretty nicely when he said “ if Golden hits, the rest of the WR’s on that team won’t matter”
So true, and a great way to think about it when drafting Golden. No, he’s not your prototypical “alpha WR” … but if he’s commanding the targets in an upcoming offense? Well worth it.
Hell I don’t think the packers have drafted a WR in the 1st round in over 20yrs
Sure .. but like I said, or the podcast man said - if Golden hits? I highly doubt there much value in any of the ancillary WR’s.It’s a case where it’s crowded because other than Reed, the other guys aren’t good (or with Watson not reliable). It seems GB would be wise to try and focus the passing game in on Reed, Golden and the TEs. My worry for fantasy team is even if Golden is good, he’s better for the offense than he is for statistical production.Heard an interesting take the other day on a podcast - might’ve been the football guys pod? I dunno.
But one of the concerns was the “crowded” WR room in GB. The one dude put it pretty nicely when he said “ if Golden hits, the rest of the WR’s on that team won’t matter”
So true, and a great way to think about it when drafting Golden. No, he’s not your prototypical “alpha WR” … but if he’s commanding the targets in an upcoming offense? Well worth it.
Hell I don’t think the packers have drafted a WR in the 1st round in over 20yrs
Ray G
When I’m evaluating WR I pay particular attention to a players catch to acceleration transition.
Matthew Golden’s ability to create after the catch on hitch routes (one of the most frequently run routes in the NFL) is outstanding.
No wasted movement. Very Good Player #NFLDraft
@wisconsinsane
Todd McShay: Matthew Golden stepped up in big games. Every time they needed him he stepped up. The fact he can adjust and track the football.
"Golden is the only guy in his class that moves like this . He's going to be a number two as a rookie and emerge as a number one."
Jason B. Hirschhorn
Nobody knows what rookies will be so soon after the draft, so take the following with a grain of salt.
@AlbertBreer wrote that the Packers feel Matthew Golden's "overall athleticism has already shown up" and they could make a veteran WR available "based on Golden's development."
Welcome aboard, Golden.
Just took him at 2.2 in FFPC 1QB TEP league.
From many of the comments in here, it sounds like I should’ve waited to grab him with my 4th round pick![]()
Packers have a strong plan for him and I expect WR3 level numbers from him as a rookie
60+/900/6-8 TDs as a rookie
I felt Jacobs was value at his ADP last year, this year I feel he is sky high and the Packers have a 2nd round RB from the '24 Draft, Marshawn Lloyd who is going to see touchesPackers have a strong plan for him and I expect WR3 level numbers from him as a rookie
60+/900/6-8 TDs as a rookie
I think those are fair expectations so long as he establishes himself as the leader of the pack in that room; but I'd agree that's also a fair expectation to have considering his draft capital and the role he played in college. He seems like their direct replacement to Watson, as no other WR on that team was really a field stretcher proficient at those deep routes and with the speed to really attack NFL secondaries.
My concerns are more the passing offense in general. They were 30th in passing attempts last year; the rest of their numbers being middle of the pack instead of bottom speak to a very high efficiency. But I worry it may also be a signal for some regression unless they up those attempts a bit. That could be a safe bet too though considering their investment in two more WRs and even their work horse back calling for the team to get a real WR1. He might not want 300+ rushing attempts again haha.
Seeing that your league is non-TEP, and you already have Kincaid and Kraft, I go with the first round WR at 1.12.Welcome aboard, Golden.
Just took him at 2.2 in FFPC 1QB TEP league.
From many of the comments in here, it sounds like I should’ve waited to grab him with my 4th round pick![]()
Good value there. I'm debating using the 1.12 if he's available, but will definitely be on board if a 1st round WR falls to my 2.3.
As it pertains to 1.12, really trying to figure out if the TEs offer any more than a marginal upgrade to Kraft or Kincaid in a non-TEP. I think it's probably just more of the same but leaning slightly towards Loveland over Golden for now.
Ryan Wood
Romeo Doubs’ initial impressions of Matthew Golden:
“Kid’s a stud, man.”
Ryan Wood
Matthew Golden already making an impression. Caught an 11-yard out from Malik Willis on second-team offense during 2-minute drill. Bumped up to starters on next 2-minute series and caught 9-yard out from Jordan Love, one play before touchdown to Jayden Reed.
What really strands out early is same thing everyone who’s ever coached Golden has said: tremendous hands. Looks like a natural receiving the football.
If you got him anywhere from #10 on (assuming dynasty draft) I think you got a steal. Very easy path to being the #1 in GB.I really wasn't excited to draft Golden, but ended up doing it in a league over the weekend as he was clearly the best option available. Now that I have a share, his camp reports are looking promising. Running with both the first and second team currently.
Took at #14 overall. Surprised Skattabo went before him even.If you got him anywhere from #10 on (assuming dynasty draft) I think you got a steal. Very easy path to being the #1 in GB.I really wasn't excited to draft Golden, but ended up doing it in a league over the weekend as he was clearly the best option available. Now that I have a share, his camp reports are looking promising. Running with both the first and second team currently.
Took at #14 overall. Surprised Skattabo went before him even.If you got him anywhere from #10 on (assuming dynasty draft) I think you got a steal. Very easy path to being the #1 in GB.I really wasn't excited to draft Golden, but ended up doing it in a league over the weekend as he was clearly the best option available. Now that I have a share, his camp reports are looking promising. Running with both the first and second team currently.
I'm hoping the #1 in GB turns out to be more consistent than it has been. I still own Reed in that same league as well and he's been difficult to own. I missed out on his huge week 1 and he was basically a low end WR3 the rest of the year with half a dozen duds mixed in. Every single GB WR has multiple weeks a year they completely disappear and I hate that rollercoaster.
I'm not a massive believer in his talent to be a true #1 either. Hopefully I'm wrong.
I think the Green Bay #1 issue has been more about the players than anything else. I think all of Reed, Doubs, Watson, Wicks are best suited to be #3 types.Took at #14 overall. Surprised Skattabo went before him even.If you got him anywhere from #10 on (assuming dynasty draft) I think you got a steal. Very easy path to being the #1 in GB.I really wasn't excited to draft Golden, but ended up doing it in a league over the weekend as he was clearly the best option available. Now that I have a share, his camp reports are looking promising. Running with both the first and second team currently.
I'm hoping the #1 in GB turns out to be more consistent than it has been. I still own Reed in that same league as well and he's been difficult to own. I missed out on his huge week 1 and he was basically a low end WR3 the rest of the year with half a dozen duds mixed in. Every single GB WR has multiple weeks a year they completely disappear and I hate that rollercoaster.
I'm not a massive believer in his talent to be a true #1 either. Hopefully I'm wrong.
ESPN’s Rob Demovsky reports WR Matthew Golden “seemed to immediately gel” with Jordan Love in offseason practices.
It’s good news for the 23rd overall selection in the 2025 draft. Golden, Demovsky added, “should get plenty of playing time right away” in a Green Bay offense that could be without Christian Watson (knee) to start the regular season. While it seems unlikely Golden will establish himself as an unquestioned No. 1 option in the run-first Packers offense, he could see a good number of downfield looks from Love, an excellent deep ball thrower. Golden’s struggles against man coverage in college suggest he won’t be an elite NFL wideout by any measure.
NFL Draft Files
He displays awesome burst, speed, and body control as a route runner and pass catcher. Creates easy separation.x.com
x.com
Jon Helmkamp
The guy separates like crazy and has a great release package.x.com
x.com
The Draft Room
This is an elite separator with savvy route-running, impressive ball-tracking, and sneaky contested-catch ability![]()
x.com
x.com
@TommyK_NFLDraft
Positives
Good releases at the LOS to beat press.
Negatives
Noticeably disrupted against contact and jams when he can't separate cleanly.
x.com
x.com
NFL Draft Files
Matthew Golden put the nation on notice with a 4.29 yard 40 yard dash…
But how’s the tape? Well…
elite separator
elite burst and body control
nimble with no wasted movement
release and route stem nuance
has cleaned up drops
Stefon Diggs typa player.Jacob Gibbs
Texas WR Matthew Golden
Easy separation
Get this man a QB who can throw with anticipation and he will feastMatthew Golden - always a threat to blow-by
@scoutd
“Hey Siri, show me a natural separator.”
“Got it. Playing Matthew Golden tape now.”
Jacob Gibbs
Texas WR Matthew Golden
Disappointing stats
Open often
He's dangerous as a mover and already has refinement to his route tree necessary to create massive separation wins (vs. Georgia)
Reel Analytics
Texas WR Matthew Golden finds space and makes a play!
This clip highlights his ability to create separation and get open. His IGA Score® of 73.4 ranks in the 73rd percentile among WRs, reflecting his in-game athleticism and playmaking ability.
#IGAScore #NFLDraftDynasty Zoltan
Matthew Golden is a twitchy, explosive route runner, with sharp stems that instantly create separation, and the requisite strong hands and body control to match.
The blurb that came out today suggested he wasn't very good against man coverage. I had not heard anything to suggest as such until today. There was nothing but consistent drumbeats about his elite route running. Now, I understand he may be better vs zone, but is 68.5% really such a bad thing? The words "creates easy separation" are everywhere throughout his scouting reports. I sort of assume that implies more than just zone. If it's an area to work on, fine, what WR couldn't work on their skills vs man coverage? Doesn't seem like a weakness so much as not his greatest strength. And there is a difference. He looks like he has all the tools he needs to perform against man coverage but as with all rookies that will be a rite of passage. Anyway just wanted to point out *nobody* has said he is bad against man coverage. What is Harmon's threshold there? 70% shhhhhht@scoutdnfl
Texas WR Matthew Golden plays with such a sudden, manipulative pace.
Jog — Walk — Sprint
Reminds me so much of Stefon Diggs.
Matt Harmon
Matthew Golden 2025 #ReceptionPerception Prospect Profile...
Highlights:
- 68.5% success rate vs. man coverage
- 82.5% success rate vs. zone coverage
- 83.3% contested catch rate
- Excellent success on deep and intermediate routes
Golden looks like an ideal and dangerous complement to a true No. 1 WR who lifts the ceiling of your offense. Read his full RP profile here: receptionperception.com/matthew-golden…
receptionperception.com/matthew-golden…
In general, I believe Harmon considers the thresholds for upside 70% for man, 75% for press, 80% for zone. I might have press and man flipped though TBH. More importantly though, these grades are not equivalent across the three coverages types, and the TLDR of that is 1% point in man grade is worth about 1.5-1.75 (150%-175%) the value of the same increase in zone scoring. So while a percentage point or two might seem insignificant, it's not, especially when looking at his man coverage ratings. A ~5% point grade difference is basically the difference between league average and the elite tier. And in general, he views man success rates as the most important (having the most correlation) with success, and ultimately much more important for outside WRs/what we would consider WR1s. To come right back against that though, slot WRs have been capable of still being WR1s. ARSB scored a 71.6% against man in his 2024 season. So a 3% difference from Golden; but to reiterate those 3% points are the difference between 67th percentile for ARSB to Goldens 44th percentile.NFL Draft Files
He displays awesome burst, speed, and body control as a route runner and pass catcher. Creates easy separation.x.com
x.com
Jon Helmkamp
The guy separates like crazy and has a great release package.x.com
x.com
The Draft Room
This is an elite separator with savvy route-running, impressive ball-tracking, and sneaky contested-catch ability![]()
x.com
x.com
@TommyK_NFLDraft
Positives
Good releases at the LOS to beat press.
Negatives
Noticeably disrupted against contact and jams when he can't separate cleanly.
x.com
x.com
NFL Draft Files
Matthew Golden put the nation on notice with a 4.29 yard 40 yard dash…
But how’s the tape? Well…
elite separator
elite burst and body control
nimble with no wasted movement
release and route stem nuance
has cleaned up drops
Stefon Diggs typa player.Jacob Gibbs
Texas WR Matthew Golden
Easy separation
Get this man a QB who can throw with anticipation and he will feastMatthew Golden - always a threat to blow-by@scoutd
“Hey Siri, show me a natural separator.”
“Got it. Playing Matthew Golden tape now.”Jacob Gibbs
Texas WR Matthew Golden
Disappointing stats
Open often
He's dangerous as a mover and already has refinement to his route tree necessary to create massive separation wins (vs. Georgia)
Reel Analytics
Texas WR Matthew Golden finds space and makes a play!
This clip highlights his ability to create separation and get open. His IGA Score® of 73.4 ranks in the 73rd percentile among WRs, reflecting his in-game athleticism and playmaking ability.
#IGAScore #NFLDraftDynasty Zoltan
Matthew Golden is a twitchy, explosive route runner, with sharp stems that instantly create separation, and the requisite strong hands and body control to match.The blurb that came out today suggested he wasn't very good against man coverage. I had not heard anything to suggest as such until today. There was nothing but consistent drumbeats about his elite route running. Now, I understand he may be better vs zone, but is 68.5% really such a bad thing? The words "creates easy separation" are everywhere throughout his scouting reports. I sort of assume that implies more than just zone. If it's an area to work on, fine, what WR couldn't work on their skills vs man coverage? Doesn't seem like a weakness so much as not his greatest strength. And there is a difference. He looks like he has all the tools he needs to perform against man coverage but as with all rookies that will be a rite of passage. Anyway just wanted to point out *nobody* has said he is bad against man coverage. What is Harmon's threshold there? 70% shhhhhht@scoutdnfl
Texas WR Matthew Golden plays with such a sudden, manipulative pace.
Jog — Walk — Sprint
Reminds me so much of Stefon Diggs.
Matt Harmon
Matthew Golden 2025 #ReceptionPerception Prospect Profile...
Highlights:
- 68.5% success rate vs. man coverage
- 82.5% success rate vs. zone coverage
- 83.3% contested catch rate
- Excellent success on deep and intermediate routes
Golden looks like an ideal and dangerous complement to a true No. 1 WR who lifts the ceiling of your offense. Read his full RP profile here: receptionperception.com/matthew-golden…
receptionperception.com/matthew-golden…
Good post. I would add, and this is an AND not a BUT, that those couple % point differences are also not necessarily statistically significantly different. I don't mean in terms of what the difference represents, I agree with your take and understanding of how those small gaps are actually much bigger than they appear. I agree with that.In general, I believe Harmon considers the thresholds for upside 70% for man, 75% for press, 80% for zone. I might have press and man flipped though TBH. More importantly though, these grades are not equivalent across the three coverages types, and the TLDR of that is 1% point in man grade is worth about 1.5-1.75 (150%-175%) the value of the same increase in zone scoring. So while a percentage point or two might seem insignificant, it's not, especially when looking at his man coverage ratings. A ~5% point grade difference is basically the difference between league average and the elite tier. And in general, he views man success rates as the most important (having the most correlation) with success, and ultimately much more important for outside WRs/what we would consider WR1s. To come right back against that though, slot WRs have been capable of still being WR1s. ARSB scored a 71.6% against man in his 2024 season. So a 3% difference from Golden; but to reiterate those 3% points are the difference between 67th percentile for ARSB to Goldens 44th percentile.NFL Draft Files
He displays awesome burst, speed, and body control as a route runner and pass catcher. Creates easy separation.x.com
x.com
Jon Helmkamp
The guy separates like crazy and has a great release package.x.com
x.com
The Draft Room
This is an elite separator with savvy route-running, impressive ball-tracking, and sneaky contested-catch ability![]()
x.com
x.com
@TommyK_NFLDraft
Positives
Good releases at the LOS to beat press.
Negatives
Noticeably disrupted against contact and jams when he can't separate cleanly.
x.com
x.com
NFL Draft Files
Matthew Golden put the nation on notice with a 4.29 yard 40 yard dash…
But how’s the tape? Well…
elite separator
elite burst and body control
nimble with no wasted movement
release and route stem nuance
has cleaned up drops
Stefon Diggs typa player.Jacob Gibbs
Texas WR Matthew Golden
Easy separation
Get this man a QB who can throw with anticipation and he will feastMatthew Golden - always a threat to blow-by@scoutd
“Hey Siri, show me a natural separator.”
“Got it. Playing Matthew Golden tape now.”Jacob Gibbs
Texas WR Matthew Golden
Disappointing stats
Open often
He's dangerous as a mover and already has refinement to his route tree necessary to create massive separation wins (vs. Georgia)
Reel Analytics
Texas WR Matthew Golden finds space and makes a play!
This clip highlights his ability to create separation and get open. His IGA Score® of 73.4 ranks in the 73rd percentile among WRs, reflecting his in-game athleticism and playmaking ability.
#IGAScore #NFLDraftDynasty Zoltan
Matthew Golden is a twitchy, explosive route runner, with sharp stems that instantly create separation, and the requisite strong hands and body control to match.The blurb that came out today suggested he wasn't very good against man coverage. I had not heard anything to suggest as such until today. There was nothing but consistent drumbeats about his elite route running. Now, I understand he may be better vs zone, but is 68.5% really such a bad thing? The words "creates easy separation" are everywhere throughout his scouting reports. I sort of assume that implies more than just zone. If it's an area to work on, fine, what WR couldn't work on their skills vs man coverage? Doesn't seem like a weakness so much as not his greatest strength. And there is a difference. He looks like he has all the tools he needs to perform against man coverage but as with all rookies that will be a rite of passage. Anyway just wanted to point out *nobody* has said he is bad against man coverage. What is Harmon's threshold there? 70% shhhhhht@scoutdnfl
Texas WR Matthew Golden plays with such a sudden, manipulative pace.
Jog — Walk — Sprint
Reminds me so much of Stefon Diggs.
Matt Harmon
Matthew Golden 2025 #ReceptionPerception Prospect Profile...
Highlights:
- 68.5% success rate vs. man coverage
- 82.5% success rate vs. zone coverage
- 83.3% contested catch rate
- Excellent success on deep and intermediate routes
Golden looks like an ideal and dangerous complement to a true No. 1 WR who lifts the ceiling of your offense. Read his full RP profile here: receptionperception.com/matthew-golden…
receptionperception.com/matthew-golden…
For Golden specifically, I would guess he would agree with your statement "Doesn't seem like a weakness so much as not his greatest strength". From his Golden profile: "All that said, Golden isn’t a total slouch against man coverage at all. His 68.5% success rate vs. man coverage is a perfectly fine result. For comparison’s sake, along the small and fast but can play some real wide receiver archetype, his success rate vs. man coverage puts him just between the prospect scores of Tank Dell (68.7%) and Xavier Worthy (68.4%)."
And IMO, he would be the first to tell you the scores they give people coming out of college are just doing the best with the information they have, as there are so many other factors that weigh in. Not only is college vs pros very different, but one college team vs another tends to also be MUCH more different than any NFL team vs another NFL team. Just much more variation and impacting factors in college. So really, his rookie year scores will be multiplicatively more telling than these college ones.
It's as messy a situation as there is.. As for the landing spot, IDK what to make of it. I feel like there is going to be a third Packer WR that gets left out and probably deserves more. I think they're a much better corps than people give credit. Am assuming Christian Watson is long gone when I say that
I don't think it's as messy as most. Romeo Doubs is on the last year of his contract and has been a problem in the locker room already. Watson is in his final year, has underwhelmed and been plagued by injuries. Neither guy likely has a future with the team and could lose their role or even roster spot this season. Wicks has been given chances but he's not done much with them.It's as messy a situation as there is.. As for the landing spot, IDK what to make of it. I feel like there is going to be a third Packer WR that gets left out and probably deserves more. I think they're a much better corps than people give credit. Am assuming Christian Watson is long gone when I say that
100% agree with this and he's backed it up too. I believe his sample size for full profiles is 8 games. But depending on how many times he faced man coverage across those 8 games, sometimes 2-3 more successful routes (or failed routes) will jump your score a full percentage point or more. You see the same thing to an ever larger extent with his route tree success breakdowns. A guy might be in the yellow on the corner route, but if he ran even one more of those routes across the sample and won that route, it would have bumped them up into the green tier.Good post. I would add, and this is an AND not a BUT, that those couple % point differences are also not necessarily statistically significantly different. I don't mean in terms of what the difference represents, I agree with your take and understanding of how those small gaps are actually much bigger than they appear. I agree with that.In general, I believe Harmon considers the thresholds for upside 70% for man, 75% for press, 80% for zone. I might have press and man flipped though TBH. More importantly though, these grades are not equivalent across the three coverages types, and the TLDR of that is 1% point in man grade is worth about 1.5-1.75 (150%-175%) the value of the same increase in zone scoring. So while a percentage point or two might seem insignificant, it's not, especially when looking at his man coverage ratings. A ~5% point grade difference is basically the difference between league average and the elite tier. And in general, he views man success rates as the most important (having the most correlation) with success, and ultimately much more important for outside WRs/what we would consider WR1s. To come right back against that though, slot WRs have been capable of still being WR1s. ARSB scored a 71.6% against man in his 2024 season. So a 3% difference from Golden; but to reiterate those 3% points are the difference between 67th percentile for ARSB to Goldens 44th percentile.The blurb that came out today suggested he wasn't very good against man coverage. I had not heard anything to suggest as such until today. There was nothing but consistent drumbeats about his elite route running. Now, I understand he may be better vs zone, but is 68.5% really such a bad thing? The words "creates easy separation" are everywhere throughout his scouting reports. I sort of assume that implies more than just zone. If it's an area to work on, fine, what WR couldn't work on their skills vs man coverage? Doesn't seem like a weakness so much as not his greatest strength. And there is a difference. He looks like he has all the tools he needs to perform against man coverage but as with all rookies that will be a rite of passage. Anyway just wanted to point out *nobody* has said he is bad against man coverage. What is Harmon's threshold there? 70% shhhhhht
For Golden specifically, I would guess he would agree with your statement "Doesn't seem like a weakness so much as not his greatest strength". From his Golden profile: "All that said, Golden isn’t a total slouch against man coverage at all. His 68.5% success rate vs. man coverage is a perfectly fine result. For comparison’s sake, along the small and fast but can play some real wide receiver archetype, his success rate vs. man coverage puts him just between the prospect scores of Tank Dell (68.7%) and Xavier Worthy (68.4%)."
And IMO, he would be the first to tell you the scores they give people coming out of college are just doing the best with the information they have, as there are so many other factors that weigh in. Not only is college vs pros very different, but one college team vs another tends to also be MUCH more different than any NFL team vs another NFL team. Just much more variation and impacting factors in college. So really, his rookie year scores will be multiplicatively more telling than these college ones.
I also would say that in medicine or nuclear science or rocketry, that those hard thresholds should be hard thresholds period. But in fantasy football, I think we can be just a little bit more pliable.
I'm not saying Harmon was/is erroneous in any way, rather that this is a difficult thing to get into quantifiable useful form, and that dude has done more to move that concept forward than any other three people in the industry. In practical terms though, the difference between 68.5 and 70.0 is maybe one or two catches in a career college sample as small as Goldens, to his detractors' point. Or one or two more routes won. It just isn't significant enough to bump anyone into or out of a scouting tier. And it is significantly more noisy data than say the medicine or nuclear analogies. So to say one WR came back with a score of 68.5 and another came back with 70.0 is still good process, but that gap isn't necessarily statistically different given the confidence% of Harmon's collection process. Which is high. But much less than 100% confidence probably less than 80%. Again, in terms of the precision of the data collection, not what the results represent.
Now that said, if he really is below that threshold in reality then it is something to consider, but for me it's about checking boxes and the preponderance of evidence. The success vs. man box is a really big one, but he is more than close enough for me. As for the landing spot, IDK what to make of it. I feel like there is going to be a third Packer WR that gets left out and probably deserves more. I think they're a much better corps than people give credit. Am assuming Christian Watson is long gone when I say that.