Two games. That’s all it’s taken for Rome Odunze to shove his way into the spotlight and plant his flag as one of the NFL’s most dangerous young receivers. Not “promising.” Not “developing.” Dangerous. He’s not just meeting expectations — he’s dropkicking them through a flaming table.
We’re talking top-tier usage, alpha-level target share, and touchdowns that keep piling up like he’s playing flag football with JV corners. This isn’t hype. This is a sophomore leveling up right in front of our eyes.
Rome Odunze hasn’t just arrived — he kicked in the door and made himself at home.
Rome isn’t coasting on empty targets or garbage-time stats. His production is real, sustainable, and backstopped by the kind of metrics that make data nerds and film junkies unite like Voltron. Here’s what he’s cooking up, just two weeks into the season:
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**Metric**
**Rome’s Number**
**Why It Matters**
**Target Share**
~29.9%
Nearly 3 in 10 throws are coming his way. That’s alpha behavior.
**Air Yards Share**
~45.8%
The deep shots are _his_ — almost half of ‘em. High-value targets, not just volume.
**aDOT (Avg Depth of Target)**
~13.7 yards
This ain’t dink-and-dunk — he’s being used to stretch defenses vertically.
**Snap Share / Route Participation**
~97-100%
On the field for damn near every route. Full usage.
**Air Yards/Game**
~136.5
Elite air yardage totals — few wideouts sniff that range.
**Catch Rate**
~65%
Solid efficiency given his depth of target. He’s not just running wind sprints.
**Fantasy PPG**
~23.8 (PPR)
That’s WR1 output, no asterisk needed.
Odunze’s explosion didn’t come out of nowhere. It’s the result of two things: Ben Johnson’s offensive brilliance and Rome’s complete skillset finally being put to work. The Bears are funneling high-value targets to their second-year stud, and he’s converting them at an elite clip.
What makes Rome’s usage even scarier? He’s not just getting volume — he’s getting the right kind of volume. High aDOT. Red zone targets. Plays designed to get him into space. He’s not just “in the game plan,” he _is_ the game plan.
And the Week 2 tape? It’s proof of concept: 7 catches, 128 yards, 2 scores on 11 targets against Detroit. That’s surgical work, not just splash plays. Scoring strikes from 28 and 6 yards out showed he can beat you deep or bully you in the red zone.
Let’s say Rome doesn’t average 23.8 fantasy points per game for the full season. Even a slight regression still puts him in elite company. Here’s a conservative projection based on current trends:
* **Targets**: 100–110
* **Receptions**: 65–80
* **Yards**: 1,000–1,300
* **Touchdowns**: 8–12
That kind of line would put him firmly in WR1 territory — both in real football and fantasy. If he pushes the high end of that range, we’re talking Pro Bowl lock, All-Pro conversations, and possibly the greatest sophomore receiving season in Bears history.
Ben Johnson hasn’t even unleashed the full playbook yet. The same guy who turned Amon-Ra St. Brown into a star in Detroit is now scheming Odunze open across all three levels. Rome’s 2024 film showed he could win deep, but this year we’re seeing curls, outs, digs — a complete route tree.
His ability to beat press (78.9% success rate as a rookie) hasn’t gone anywhere. Now combine that with schemed YAC chances and a quarterback who actually gets him the ball in stride? You get fireworks.
And let’s not forget: the Bears’ passing attack is now built around him. That 42.2% air yard share? That’s not WR2 stuff. That’s “you are the damn offense” stuff.

Rome Odunze’s Route Chart from Week 2 vs. the Detroit Lions, per Next Gen Stats.
If you’re a Bears fan, here’s a fun little fever dream: two games into the 2025 season, Rome Odunze is pacing for 170 targets, 111 receptions, 1,403 receiving yards, and — wait for it — 26 touchdowns. Yeah, 26. Now, we both know he’s not hitting 26 damn touchdowns (this ain’t Madden), but the 1,000-yard mark? That’s looking more and more like a floor than a ceiling.
And if he even sniffs that 1,400-yard pace, he’s going to be within striking distance — around 100 yards short — of breaking Brandon Marshall’s single-season franchise record of 1,508 yards. Everything would have to go right (and when the hell does that happen for Chicago?), but let’s dream a little. This is as real as Bears optimism gets in September.
Rome Odunze isn’t coming — he’s _here._ The route participation, the deep targets, the touchdowns, the advanced metrics — they all say the same thing: he’s not just breaking out; he’s blowing up.
If you’re still calling him a WR2 or “promising prospect,” you’re watching last year’s tape. The Bears gave him the keys. He’s driving like he owns the damn highway.