2020 will go down in history as Jones’s first season in which he missed more than two games since a foot injury ended his age-24 season after five weeks in 2013.

Jones was listed on the injury report nine times starting in Week 3, and he sat seven times, including the last four weeks of the season, due to a chronic hamstring ailment.

Jones was his typical successful self while on the field and healthy, catching nine passes on 12 targets for 157 yards and no touchdowns, 12/9/157/0, 10/8/137/2, 9/8/97/0, 10/7/137/0, and 7/5/54/1 in games where he wasn’t mentioned on the injury report and didn’t incur an injury in-game.

His stat lines fell to 4/2/24/0, 4/4/32/0, 2/2/39/0, and 10/6/94/0 in games when he was injured.

In his five healthy games, he never finished outside the top 24, but his four injured games failed to produce even one top-24 PPR finish, with three landing outside the top 60.

With Corey Davis drawing a look on 23.6 percent of his routes for the Titans last season opposite A.J. Brown, there’s reason to be optimistic about Julio’s chances in Tennessee.

Brown, like Calvin Ridley, is a rising star who will be able to pull coverage away and terrorize defenders as much as, if not more than, Jones.

How Many Dropped Passes Does Julio Jones Have?

Since 2018, Julio Jones have had 17 drop passes