What Demaryius Thomas Brings to Table For Patriots Now That He’s off the PUP

FOXBORO — The Patriots continue to accumulate resources for Tom Brady, activating veteran wide receiver Demaryius Thomas on Tuesday.

Thomas is recovering from a ruptured Achilles that ended his 2018 season in late December, and is now eligible to practice and play in games for the Patriots.

The question is, will he make an impact?

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After reviewing Thomas’s 2018 season, it’s clear that he no longer has the explosiveness that he did in the early part of the decade, and that was pre-Achilles injury.

Once upon a time, Thomas had five consecutive 1,000-yard seasons from 2012 to 2016 where he was one of the best big-play threats in the NFL, and could beat you over the top or as a dynamic ball carrier; he’s not that guy anymore.

However, Thomas reinvented himself some last year as a possession receiver to carve out a new role that should help him stay in the NFL.

There are three ways that Thomas wins at this stage of his career, and it helped him turn into an intermediate threat at this stage of his career:

1. Route Detail and Body Positioning

Thomas is a Josh McDaniels holdover from McDaniels’ time in Denver, and my guess is that the Patriots OC signed off on Thomas’ fit in his offense.

Thomas can read coverages and techniques to alter his route on the fly based on how the defense is playing him.

[arve url=”https://streamable.com/s/7jj17/pzlytb” /]

Here, Thomas is in an off-man coverage situation at the bottom of the screen with a post safety in the middle of the field. He puts his head down and charges hard out of his stance, which gives the illusion that he’s probably running a go or post. When the corner across from him sees Thomas’ stem, he opens his hips to stay over the top of the route and play to the safety in the middle of the field. When the corner opens, Thomas alters his route to get into the defensive backs’ blind spot. Just like if a car sneaks into the blind spot in your side mirror, the corner loses sight of Thomas, who then gets his man turned around with a hard jab step toward the sideline to sell an out-breaking route before coming back on an in-cut over the middle.

Thomas might not be as dynamic as he once was, but his route detail has developed over time.

2. Body Control and Catch Radius

At 6-3 and 225 pounds, Thomas is one of the bigger receivers in the NFL, and he uses that size to play above the rim on the perimeter now that he isn’t creating as much separation.

[arve url=”https://streamable.com/s/y7x4i/nfjdth” /]

On this 22-yard catch, Thomas beats soft-press coverage on a pretty back shoulder grab. The corner doesn’t jam him at the line of scrimmage opting to speed turn to keep the play in front of him. Thomas carries him like it’s a go route and then adjusts to the back shoulder throw while the ball is in the air displaying excellent body control along the sideline. Thomas also uses his freakishly long frame to pluck the ball out of the air above his head.

There are some focus drops on Thomas’ tape, but he also makes some high-level contested catches with strong hands and a well above-average catch radius.

3. Defeating Zone Coverage

Finally, Thomas ran a career-high 33.4 percent of his routes out of the slot last season and has a decent feel for working himself open over the middle against zone coverage.

[arve url=”https://streamable.com/s/g2dmk/qezqmu” /]

The Ravens defense rotates into a split-safety post-snap after showing a single-high look before the play starts. When Thomas reads the zone, he takes his route right at the two linebackers dropping into zones over the middle and wraps an intermediate crosser right behind those linebackers before coming out the other side into an open space. That’s an excellent job of clearing the underneath linebackers while not getting too far downfield to give the post safety a play on the ball.

If he can run routes against zone coverage like that one, he might be able to gain Tom Brady’s trust.

CONCLUSION

Before we overreact to Thomas’ activation off the PUP we need to see him in action post achilles injury and after a less than productive 2018.

I still have my doubts that he can run past NFL defensive backs with regularity to even play at his 2017 form (83 catches, 949 yards, five touchdowns).

But a healthy Thomas would provide some depth at the position and be an upgrade over Chris Hogan from a season ago.

Evan Lazar

Evan Lazar is the New England Patriots beat reporter for CLNS Media.

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