Alex Erickson has become kind of a forgotten man here, but his usage as a receiver might increase quite a bit this year now that Marvin X is finally gone. Just as Rex Burkhead blossomed in New England after being little more than a WSTD with the Bengals, the new regime in Cincy recognizes Ericson's receiving talents. The article below mentions that teams have even been trying to trade for Ericson, seeing similarities to Cooper Kupp in him. That article is also copied below.
2019 potential Bengals breakout player: Alex Erickson
By Anthony Cosenza
For a guy who barely received many offensive snaps in his first three seasons, Alex Erickson may have found himself a big, new role in Zac Taylor’s offense.
Every year a preseason hero seems to emerge from Cincinnati Bengals’ training camp. Often times they don’t end up making a notable impact if they make the final roster, but sometimes they matriculate into a solid contributor.
Count fourth-year receiver Alex Erickson as a member of the latter category. Since wowing everyone back in the 2016 preseason, he has become a core special teams player and a spot guy on offense.
Unfortunately for Erickson, his opportunities on offense were extremely limited under Marvin Lewis and Co. But, with new coach Zac Taylor entering the picture, some believe he can be a solid receiving option for the club this season.
Why he could break out in 2019
Many believe that Taylor will bring similar innovation and diverse schemes to Cincinnati from Los Angeles. With these plans come the need for multiple, able receiving threats.
A couple of months ago, it became public news that Erickson was a quietly-hot commodity in the league, with teams giving trade offers to Cincinnati for his services. The Bengals turned down those offers—either because they weren’t lucrative enough, or because the new regime has high hopes for him in 2019. Perhaps it’s both.
Erickson has a 71.7% catch rate from his targets and exactly half of his 38 career receptions (19) have moved the sticks for a first down. These aren’t numbers to make one pop out of their chair with excitement, but the needle could be pointing up in a critical year for Erickson’s career.
What he needs to prove
As mentioned above, Erickson has just 38 catches in his career. The people talking about a Cooper Kupp-like year from him in this new offense would be wise to temper expectations—at least initially.
In limited opportunities, Erickson has showed a penchant for having reliable hands and to move the chains. However, small sample sizes provide large risks.
What if a more extended route tree is asked of Erickson in 2019? Will he still be able to be a weapon as a return man, if given more responsibilities on offense? With so many other weapons still on offense, will he even be given a higher amount of targets?
These are all important questions, but we could see a sizable leap from Erickson in 2019.
https://www.cincyjungle.com/analysi...tential-bengals-breakout-player-alex-erickson
Report: Bengals have rejected trade offers for WR Alex Erickson
Could a bigger role be in store for the fourth-year receiver?
By John Sheeran
John Ross isn’t the only Bengals pass-catcher that other NFL franchises have apparently inquired about a trade this offseason.
On former NFL executive Michael Lombardi and Adnan Virk’s podcast
The GM Shuffle, Lombardi mentioned that teams have tried to trade for Bengals slot receiver Alex Erickson this offseason.
Evan Silva
✔@evansilva
On latest GM Shuffle, Lombardi mentioned #Falcons WR Mohamed Sanu was subject of some trade discussions earlier this offseason.
Also said teams have inquired about WR Alex Erickson but #Bengals have refused to trade him.
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podca...ss-off-this-week/id1458884463?i=1000437494849 …
In a segment regarding potential fantasy breakout receivers, this is what Lombardi had to say about Erickson:
“I think he’s the Cooper Kupp for Andy Dalton. ...They won’t trade this guy. This guy’s a really good player. ...teams have tried to trade for him and they won’t trade him. They won’t trade him. ...I think he’s a really good player.”
For what Lombardi is implying, it appears he thinks as highly of Erickson as the Bengals do.
Realistically, it would be difficult to imagine the Bengals getting any type of compensation that would make trading Erickson worth their time. Despite originally being an undrafted free agent who earned a roster spot back in 2016, Erickson has a place in the Bengals’ wide receiver corps and as a kick returner. While he’s not athletically gifted or immeasurably talented as a receiver, is he worth trading away for a late Day 3 pick? Probably not.
But the praise Lombardi has for Erickson could be warranted if the Zac Taylor-led Bengals are more inclined to use him in the offense. While it’s outlandish on the surface to compare him to Kupp, Erickson’s potential production is higher than the production he’s given in his three years in Cincinnati.
Lombardi mentions the Bengals needing Erickson to be Dalton’s main option in the slot ala Kupp for the Rams’ Jared Goff, but Tyler Boyd should more than suffice. Boyd could take on the flanker role on the outside and allow Erickson to squeeze into the starting lineup, or Erickson could just rotate more with Boyd and keep him fresh. Taylor will have options, that is for sure.
Erickson is entering the first year of his two-year extension he signed last season, and it appears he isn’t leaving Cincinnati before that deal is up.
https://www.cincyjungle.com/2019/5/...rs-bengals-alex-erickson-falcons-mohamed-sanu