A.J. Brown, WR1 SZN has finally arrived.
After months of speculation, trade rumors, player-only meetings that did/didn’t happen, sideline book readings and under-the-table handshake agreements, the Philadelphia Eagles and New England Patriots finally came to terms on the 29-year-old WR A.J. Brown.
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At last: The #Eagles are trading star WR AJ Brown to the #Patriots, per The Insiders.
It’s a 2028 first-round draft pick and a 2027 fifth-round pick going to Philly, as Brown reunites with coach Mike Vrabel. One of the NFL’s longest runnings sagas ends with a splash. pic.twitter.com/WCXJqEA5x7
— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) June 1, 2026
The move has massive fantasy football implications that we can officially break down (pending a passed physical, of course).
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A.J. Brown Traded to the New England Patriots
A.J. Brown finished WR14 overall and WR11 in PPG in 2025, averaging nearly 12 half-PPR PPG across 15 games on a 27.5% target share (11th) with 67 receiving yards/game (14th) and seven TDs. But AJB was consistently frustrated/indifferent about his role in the Eagles’ inconsistent/out-of-sync/broken passing offense, despite a top-15 WR fantasy finish.
The 6-foot, 226-pound wideout had only three end-zone targets and ranked outside the top 30 in red-zone targets last season, with Dallas Goedert and Devonta Smith being more emphasized in that area of the field (and just generally).
He wanted out, and it doesn’t take a genius to see why. Now, we didn’t know exactly where Brown would end up in 2026 for most of this offseason, but it was clear that 2025 would be his final year in Philly.
Obviously, the most logical and anticipated landing spot was with the New England Patriots, and the fit is just too perfect. Brown reunites with his former Titans HC, Mike Vrabel, who drafted him and coached him from 2019 to 2021. And although Brown was ultimately traded from Tennessee to the Eagles before the 2022 season, Vrabel was not co-signing this transaction. According to Brian Baldinger, Vrabel wanted to keep Brown in Nashville.
Mike Vrabel never wanted to trade A.J. Brown.
"He loved that guy…the player, the man, the beast, the physicality."
– @BaldyNFL pic.twitter.com/N4TNiIJO0E
— Anthony Gargano (@AnthonyLGargano) February 20, 2026
I’ve got no other reason to believe otherwise. After all, the Titans GM who traded Brown got fired just a few months later. The Patriots’ head coach loves Brown and will get the most out of whatever he has left. And there’s still so much meat left on the bone for Brown to produce.
Even in a “down” 2025 campaign for Brown (which I believe was more situational than an actual fall-off in play given his deployment in the offense), the former Eagles WR still surpassed 1,000 receiving yards (sixth time in his career) as a back-end fantasy WR1.
Top 20 in yards per route run (slightly ahead of Devonta Smith) per PFF. It was a career-low YPPR for Brown, but it was still very good compared to most WRs. Also, according to PFF, AJB still graded out as the fourth-best WR against man coverage.
Brown voiced his displeasure with the Eagles’ offense on multiple occasions, and eventually, his target volume did turn around (squeaky wheel gets the grease). The former Ole Miss standout had a stretch of double-digit targets in five of six games (Weeks 11-16) after only doing so once in his first eight games this season. Over this six-game stretch (per the Fantasy Points data suite):
- 32% target share
- 88 receiving yards per game
- 2.8 YPRR
- 16.3 PPG in half-PPR / 19.8 in full PPR
- 19.6 XPPG in half-PPR
Just an example of how elite Brown can be when the passing game goes through him as the focal point (WR3 overall pace). Brown was also dealing with a hamstring injury at the start of the season, which probably contributed to his sluggish start and drop in per-route efficiency.
2026 Fantasy Football Outlook
Now officially with the Patriots (again pending physical), current OC Josh McDaniels can feature him like a true alpha No. 1 – something the Pats lacked in 2025. Last year, in New England, Stefon Diggs was cast in that “alpha” role. However, he did not run a full allotment of routes despite being hyper-targeted as the No. 1 WR (68% route participation).
But after getting his feet wet through the first three weeks of the season, Diggs was highly efficient from Weeks 4-17: 4th in yards per route run (2.67). He finished with 100 targets during the regular season and ranked WR29 in PPG (9.9). Several other Pats WRs, such as Kayshon Boutte and Mack Hollins, flashed big-time in this offense with downfield splash plays. Boutte led the NFL in yards per target (17.0) and rating when targeted (133.2) while leading the team with a 71% route participation.
There’s room for a major bounce-back and elite fantasy WR output for Brown attached to quarterback Drake Maye if he sees the requisite volume we have seen in the past from McDaniels offenses (think most recently with Davante Adams on the Raiders or throwback Brandon Marshall on the Broncos); 150, 175, or even 180 targets could be Brown’s 99th-percentile outcome as the engine of this passing offense.
His target competition in New England is weaker than it ever was in Philly, with nobody close to Smith on the roster (even if Romeo Doubs is a solid No. 2 Robin to Brown’s Batman). Brown can also be an every-down player after finishing 8th in route participation (90%) in 2025.
Maye proved last year that he is a WR elevator with high-end passing efficiency and a beautiful deep ball. Only Matthew Stafford completed more passes of 20-plus air yards than Maye did in 2025. The Patriots QB also completed 55% of these passes, a stark contrast to Jalen Hurts‘ 39% completion rate on the same types of throws.
I’m so ready for Brown to feast in 2026 with his improved overall situation. AJB fits in so well with the current WR room, head coach, offensive coordinator, and quarterback. You couldn’t dream of a better spot for him to finish out his NFL career.
And I think after how things played out last year in Philly, we are going to see a highly motivated WR who is going to bully defensive backs. Because after already winning a Super Bowl, Brown just wants to get the rock and dominate.
I think back to an Instagram post he made a few days after winning his first championship. The TDLR version: He wasn’t satisfied with winning the Big Game like he thought he would.
“I’ve never been a champion at the highest level before, but I thought my hard work would be justified by winning it all. It wasn’t. My thrill for this game comes when I dominate. It’s the Hunt that does it for me. It’s when the DB drops his head and surrenders because he can’t F with me.”
He can’t be ranked high enough. Get your popcorn ready.
And book your calendars. The Eagles will visit New England for joint practices this summer.
AJB WR1 szn.
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