NFL Fans Noticed Something Very Bizarre About DeAndre Hopkins’ SNF Intro On Thanksgiving
This article was originally published on Total Pro Sports.

Baltimore Ravens wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins will go down as an all-time legend when his career is done, but there are not too many people who still believe he is one of the wideouts in the game right now.
PFF certainly thinks so.
Hopkins, who was smacked in the helmet by a Buffalo Bills fan earlier this year, was on the field for the Thanksgiving matchup against the Bengals when information about him was posted on the screen of viewers at home.
In a recent PFF ranking, the Ravens wideout was ranked as the 10th-best wide receiver out of 124 qualified players. That was something that fans could not take their eyes off of.
10th of 124 what pic.twitter.com/0m7rmXlMoK
— Matthew Wiley (@wiley77) November 28, 2025
Hopkins has established a notable career in the NFL, earning four Pro Bowl selections and three first-team All-Pro honors with the Houston Texans during his first seven seasons. He added one more Pro Bowl with the Arizona Cardinals in 2020.
We love Hopkins just like anybody else, but there is no way that the wideout is in 10th right now in 2025.
DeAndre Hopkins’ Best Days Are Behind Him

PFF thinks highly of DeAndre Hopkins, but his play has certainly gone down in 2025.
On Thursday, DeAndre Hopkins had two catches for 25 yards. The game before that, he also had two catches, but for 13 receiving yards. Against the Browns, Hopkins hauled in one catch for 11 yards. When lining up against the Minnesota Vikings, the all-pro had two catches for 16 yards.
In fact, Hopkins hasn’t had a single contest in 225 where he has had more than two catches.
Hopkins landed a one-year deal with the Ravens following his 2024 season, during which he played for the Tennessee Titans and Kansas City Chiefs.
The five-time Pro Bowler and seven-time 1,000-yard receiver finished the 2024 campaign with 56 catches for 610 yards and five touchdowns.
DeAndre Hopkins is not in his prime anymore, so he is a low-risk, high-reward type of player at this stage of his career.
