AJ Brown And Devonta Smith Will Break Records In 2024
On the Best Show Ever, Ricky Bo compared this Eagles offense to the Greatest Show on Turf offense that the Rams had in the early 2000s. That offense features Kurt Warner, Marshall Faulk, Isaac Bruce, Torry Holt, and in the Super Bowl winning year Az-Zahir Hakim. We don’t know will emerge as the #3 WR, but the comparison is easy to imagine with the other guys.
I think the tandem of AJ Brown & Devonta Smith will be even better in every category this year than Bruce and Holt ever were. That is a big ask, but I think they do it.
Can AJ Brown and Devonta Smith Beat The Greatest Show On Turf?
The Rams won a Super Bowl and got to another one during their run. Their best year for offensive production was the year 2000 though. Torry Holt had 82 receptions for 1635 yards & 6 receiving touchdowns. That same year Isaac Bruce had 87 catches for 1471 yards and 9 receiving touchdowns. Combined that is 169 receptions, for 3,106 yards and 15 touchdowns.
That team only made the Wild Card round of the playoffs and didn’t win a playoff game due to a costly fumble by Az-Zahir Hakim, and 3 Warner interceptions.
Last season AJ Brown and Devonta Smith combined for 187 receptions, 2522 yards, and 14 touchdowns. They did that for an offense that was terrible down the stretch and with Jalen Hurts not being at his best. They also lost in the wild card round as we all know. In 2022, they combined for 183 receptions, 2692 yards, and 18 touchdowns when they made the Super Bowl.
Giving all the facts, I think the only question about them is related to yards and the winning. The Eagles have a new offensive coordinator that should inject life, and Hurts is poised for a bounce-back year. Saquon Barkley’s presence will help them the same way Marshall Faulk helped Holt and Bruce. Swift had a good year last year, but he doesn’t scare defensive coordinators the way Barkley does.
AJ Brown and Devonta Smith will not only beat the best year of the greatest show on turf, but they will be the best duo in the NFL for the next 4 years.