National Site Singles Out Justin Jefferson in Rankings

Dec 16, 2024; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Justin Jefferson (18) celebrates his touchdown against the Chicago Bears in the first quarter at U.S. Bank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brad Rempel-Imagn Images.

Depending on the polling audience, Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase might’ve passed Minnesota Vikings wideout Justin Jefferson in the court of public opinion.

Vikings wide receiver Justin Jefferson received some love this week in 2025 WR rankings.

Chase terrorized the league in 2024, logging 127 receptions for 1,708 yards and 17 touchdowns and winning folks’ fantasy football championships along the way. Entering 2025, Chase and Jefferson can be considered co-headliners for the “best wide receiver in the NFL” title.

But notably, Sportsnaut came along last weekend with wide receiver rankings for 2025, and Jefferson took home the top spot.

Sportsnaut Calls Justin Jefferson the Top Dog

Matt Johnson of Sportsnaut delivered summer WR rankings about 2.5 months before the regular season, and somewhat surprisingly, Jefferson earned the top spot.

Getting His Madden
Jan 8, 2023; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Justin Jefferson (18) runs after a catch during the second quarter against the Chicago Bears at Soldier Field. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Bartel-USA TODAY Sports

Johnson defended the choice: “Justin Jefferson is the best wide receiver in the NFL and he’s on a trajectory to be one of the best receivers ever. The Minnesota Vikings’ sensation enters 2025 with the NFL record for receiving yards per game (96.5).”

“Putting that into greater perspective, the next closest player (Ja’Marr Chase) is at 87.5 receiving yards per game. Even with Jefferson only playing 10 games in 2023, he has the NFL record for most receiving yards through five seasons (7,432). The second-closest player, Torry Holt, had 6,784 receiving yards in 80 games.”

Along with Sam Darnold at quarterback, Jefferson’s Vikings cruised to an unforeseen 14-3 record last year before crumbling in the postseason.

Johnson added, “We should all wait another decade before calling him one of the best receivers ever, but he’s certainly the best wide receiver in the NFL right now. Justin Jefferson stats (2024): 103 receptions, 1,533 receiving yards, 10 touchdowns, 14.9 yards per reception, 62 first downs, 90.2 receiving yards per game, 10.0 yards per target.”

Justin Jefferson to Receive Third QB1 in Three Years

From 2020 to 2023, Jefferson mostly experienced continuity with Kirk Cousins throwing him the ball on Sundays (injuries changed that dynamic for part of 2023). That fully changed in the 2024 offseason when Cousins dipped for the Atlanta Falcons, while Minnesota signed Darnold and drafted J.J. McCarthy.

Writer Claims Justin
Jan 15, 2023; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Justin Jefferson (18) looks on during warmups before a wild card game against the New York Giants at U.S. Bank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-USA TODAY Sports.

Just like Cousins, Darnold left the Vikings this offseason, chasing a three-year contract worth $100.5 million with the Seattle Seahawks. Cousins and Darnold are gone and not coming back, so Jefferson will pair with McCarthy this season for the first time.

Breakneck Pace

Since turning pro in 2020, Jefferson has shattered the NFL’s receiving yard record book, at least per “xxx yards through xxx seasons” and “xxx yards through age xxx.” Jefferson owns all those records.

Some other notable examples of Jefferson’s dominance:

And this one:

One more:

In Minnesota for the Long Haul

Meanwhile, Jefferson won’t leave the Twin Cities anytime soon. He signed a groundbreaking extension last summer worth $140 million over four years, attaching him to Minnesota’s books through the end of the 2028 campaign.

Justin Jefferson
Jan 15, 2023; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Justin Jefferson (18) looks on during warmups before a wild card game against the New York Giants at U.S. Bank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-USA TODAY Sports.

Conveniently, that end date directly aligns with McCarthy’s rookie contract, so Minnesota can assess in four years if the duo deserves extended run. Folks will obviously hope for a prolonged stay by Jefferson and McCarthy. It will have meant that the duo clicked.

Ja’Marr Chase, A.J. Brown Follow Jefferson

Johnson named Chase the league’s second-best wideout and noted, “The Cincinnati Bengals made wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase one of the highest-paid NFL players ever and for good reason. Chase ranks second among career leaders in receiving yards per game (87.5), performing even better than Calvin Johnson (86.1) and Antonio Brown (84.3). The reigning first-team All-Pro selection is also coming off a season where he led the NFL in receptions, receiving yards and touchdowns.”

“We’ve even seen Chase produce elite numbers – 100 receptions and 1,216 receiving yards in 2023 – in seasons where Joe Burrow missed seven-plus games. Coming off a campaign where he led the NFL in yards after catch (787) and placed fourth in yards per team pass attempt (2.62), Chase has consistently proven he’s in the cream of the crop.”

LSU wide receiver Ja’Marr Chase (1) reacts to scoring a touchdown against Vanderbilt with wide receiver Justin Jefferson (2) during the first half at Vanderbilt Stadium in Nashville, Tenn., Saturday, Sept. 21, 2019. © Andrew Nelles / Tennessean.com, Nashville Tennessean via Imagn Content Services, LLC.

And on A.J. Brown at No. 3: “Philadelphia Eagles’ All-Pro wideout A.J. Brown is putting together a Hall of Fame-caliber resume. With a Super Bowl ring now in his trophy Case, Brown boasts three Pro Bowl selections with three consecutive second-team All-Pro selections. Brown has shown his ‘Inner Excellence’ since being traded to Philadelphia, averaging over 1,300 receiving yards per season with 25 touchdowns in 47 games played.”

“While he doesn’t see the volume on a run-heavy team that some of the other best NFL wide receivers do, Brown’s track record and what he forces defenses to do make up for it.”

Amon-Ra St. Brown (Detroit Lions, No. 4) and Puka Nacua (Los Angeles Rams, No. 5) rounded out Sportsnaut‘s top five.


Dustin Baker is a political scientist who graduated from the University of Minnesota in 2007. Subscribe to his daily ... More about Dustin Baker