Usage / Role
22%
Rotational offensive role
Player Dossier
2006-2009Tulane
WR • 6'1" • Baytown, TX, USA
Jeremy Williams reads as a alpha target based on recent role and receiving efficiency.
Usage / Role
22%
Rotational offensive role
Impact Production
100
Top-tier box-score impact for a receiver
Reliability
87
Regular contributor with several takeover games
Star Power
85
Elite ceiling indicators
Career Arc
Value trend by season
Best season by Season Value: 2009 Regular Season · Tulane
Snapshot
Player Story
Jeremy Williams built his college career from 2006 through 2009 as a wide receiver from Baytown, TX wearing No. 20, spending time with Tulane. The clearest part of Jeremy Williams' career was his receiving role: 197...
Read the storyJeremy Williams, WR. Best season Best season by Season Value: 2009 Regular Season · Tulane. Jeremy Williams reads as a alpha target based on recent role and receiving efficiency.
Stat Footprint
Quick Answers
Season Ledger
| Season | Team | Games | Rec | Rec Yds | TD | Overall |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 Regular Season | Tulane | 11 | 40 | 484 | 2 | 59.9 |
| 2007 Regular Season | Tulane | 10 | 46 | 773 | 5 | 78.9 |
| 2008 Regular Season | Tulane | 5 | 27 | 437 | 5 | 67.3 |
| 2009 Regular Season | Tulane | 12 | 84 | 1,113 | 8 | 83.4 |
Related Context
Jeremy Williams played WR for Tulane. Across 4 tracked seasons, Jeremy Williams recorded 200 rushing yards, 2,807 receiving yards, and 20 touchdowns. His top tracked season came in 2009 with Tulane.
Lead takeaway
Best season by value score: 2009 Regular Season
Tulane paired 1,113 primary output with 75 efficiency.
Supporting note
2008 Regular Season role shape
target-driven usage with 79.5 efficiency.
Supporting note
Career value is trending up
2009 Regular Season improved on the prior stop by season value score.
Supporting note
Peak game by takeover score: East Carolina
Loss with an explosive receiving profile. It landed in the 100th percentile of the selected season.
Analysis workspace
Filter the strongest season sample, inspect game-level shape, and then drop into the full log without losing the story of the year.
Understand the selected season before dropping into the full game log.
Games
5
Receiving Yards / G
87.4
Efficiency
79.5
Usage
25.3
Consistency
66
Best Game by takeover score
East Carolina
Active game
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Follow how the selected stat changes from one game to the next. Spikes mark standout outings, while dips show quieter weeks.
Chronological game order.
Game by game trend chart. Alabama: 26. East Carolina: 157. UL Monroe: 49. SMU: 124. Army: 81
Each dot is a game. Farther right means the player carried more of the workload, and higher means they were more efficient with those chances.
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Volume on the x-axis, quality on the y-axis.
Volume versus efficiency scatter chart. Alabama: 4 by 43.3. East Carolina: 8 by 100. UL Monroe: 6 by 54.4. SMU: 6 by 100. Army: 3 by 100
Compare how this player performed across different situations. "Games" shows how many matchups are included in each split.
Dense stat lines with inline explanations and season-linked highlights.
5 games
Featured metric
Receiving Yards
Top game by takeover score
East Carolina
Best efficiency game
100 vs Army
Player Story
Jeremy Williams built his college career from 2006 through 2009 as a wide receiver from Baytown, TX wearing No. 20, spending time with Tulane. The clearest part of Jeremy Williams' career was his receiving role: 197 catches, 2,807 receiving yards, 19 touchdowns, and 200 rushing yards across 38 career games in the available record. His largest box-score season came in 2009 with Tulane. Those numbers show where he fit, how often the ball or action found him, and how his role developed over time.
The value of the career arc is that it connects production to role, not just a name on a roster. His career also includes 200 rushing yards and 483 return yards, giving the story more than a single-category snapshot. With 38 career games in the available record, his career has enough shape to show both opportunity and production across Tulane.
The arc is straightforward: Jeremy Williams moved through the depth chart, found a larger role, and turned that opportunity into production that can be understood through standard football numbers.
Track team changes, role shifts, and season-to-season movement.
Tulane
2006-2009
Opening stop
Season Value Progression
| Season | Team | Primary | Efficiency | Usage | Delta |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 Regular Season | Tulane | 484 | 74.3 | 19.9 | — |
| 2007 Regular Season | Tulane | 773 | 86.8 | 28.6 | 289 |
| 2008 Regular Season | Tulane | 437 | 79.5 | 25.3 | -336 |
| 2009 Regular Season | Tulane | 1,113 | 75 | 39.3 | 676 |
#1 Featured game
vs UTEP
Week 11 · W 34-19 · Conference game
Win with an explosive receiving profile.
188
Receiving Yards
100 takeover
188 receiving yards with a 100 efficiency score.
#2
vs East Carolina
Week 3 · L 24-28 · Conference game
157
Receiving Yards
100 takeover
Loss with an explosive receiving profile.
157 receiving yards with a 100 efficiency score.
#3
vs McNeese
Week 4 · W 42-32
222
Receiving Yards
100 takeover
Win with an explosive receiving profile.
222 receiving yards with a 100 efficiency score.
#4
vs SMU
Week 5 · W 34-27 · Conference game
124
Receiving Yards
93 takeover
Win with an explosive receiving profile.
124 receiving yards with a 100 efficiency score.
#5
vs UCF
Week 12 · W 10-9 · Conference game
106
Receiving Yards
90.2 takeover
Win with an explosive receiving profile.
106 receiving yards with a 70.7 efficiency score.
#1 Season by Season Value
2009 Regular Season · Tulane
1,113 primary output · 75 efficiency · 39.3 usage
83.4
#2
2007 Regular Season · Tulane
78.9
773 primary · 86.8 efficiency · 28.6 usage
#3
2008 Regular Season · Tulane
67.3
437 primary · 79.5 efficiency · 25.3 usage
10
100+ receiving yards
8
8+ catch outings
5
2+ TD games
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