St. Brown caught one pass for three yards in the Bears' 29-13 loss to the Vikings in Week 18, and ended the season with 21 receptions, 323 yards and a touchdown over 16 games played.
What it means:
After failing to reach 120 yards in either of his last two seasons in Green Bay, St. Brown posted similar numbers with the Bears this year than he had during his rookie season in 2018. Going into the fifth year of his career, he's likely ticketed to be a depth option next year and beyond. He's now an unrestricted free agent.
St. Brown sustained a knee injury during Sunday's contest against the Vikings.
What it means:
The Bears made the ruling on St. Brown late in the third quarter, deeming him questionable to return. If he's unable to do so, he'll emerge from Week 18 having caught his only target for three yards.
St. Brown and the Bears agreed to a one-year contract extension Wednesday, Kevin Fishbain of The Athletic reports.
What it means:
Selected by Green Bay in the sixth round of the 2018 draft, St. Brown caught 21 passes for 328 yards as a rookie and now has similar numbers (20-320-1) four years later in his first season on the Bears. He had only 215 receiving yards total the three years in between, but the Bears seem to have been pleased with his blocking in their run-heavy offense, as St. Brown has started each of the 15 games he's played while handling a 60 percent snap share. That said, he might just be a backup and special teams player next year if the Bears find a real receiving threat (perhaps Chase Claypool?) to pair with Darnell Mooney (IR - ankle). St. Brown figures to get his 16th start of the season this Sunday against the Vikings, catching passes from Nathan Peterman instead of Justin Fields (out - hip).
St. Brown caught two passes for 20 yards in the Bears' 41-10 loss to the Lions on Sunday.
What it means:
St. Brown has posted at least 20 yards in four of his last five games, but he's only surpassed 25 yards just once since Week 8, and his lack of volume will make him a low-upside fantasy option in Week 18 against the Vikings.
St. Brown (concussion) doesn't have an injury designation for Sunday's game in Detroit.
What it means:
St. Brown apparently has cleared concussion protocol after missing one game, while fellow Bears wide receivers Chase Claypool (knee) and Dante Pettis (ankle) are listed as questionable. None has been a reliable source or targets or production, but St. Brown at least figures to play a lot of snaps this weekend.
St. Brown (concussion) was limited at Thursday's practice.
What it means:
Making his first appearance on the practice field since suffering a concussion Week 15 against the Eagles, St. Brown still has multiple phases to complete before the Bears can clear him from the protocol for head injuries. As for the rest of Chicago's injured wide receivers, Chase Claypool (knee) returned Thursday with a cap on his reps, while Dante Pettis (ankle) didn't log any activity, leaving question marks in the position group ahead of Sunday's game at Detroit.