2024 SEASON: Started all 15 games he appeared in and posted 29 catches for a career-high 620 yards (21.4 avg.) and two TDs...Ranked No. 2 in the league in yards per catch among players with 25-plus receptionsâŠHis average of 21.4 yards per catch was the top mark by a Packer (min. 25 rec.) since Lofton's 22.0-yard average in 1984âŠOf his 29 catches, 14 were explosive gains (16-plus yards), a 48.3 percentage that ranked No. 2 in the NFL this season among players with 25-plus catches and the top single-season percentage by a Packer dating back to 2000âŠWas sidelined in Week 5 (ankle) and Week 17 (knee) as well as the team's playoff game due to a knee injuryâŠAt Tennessee (Sept. 22): Led the team with 67 yards receiving on two catches (33.5 avg.), posting a 37-yard grab down to the Tennessee 13 late in the first half on third-and-18 and a 30-yard leaping grab to the Tennessee 6 on third-and-6 on Green Bay's opening drive that helped set up a QB Malik Willis TD run two plays later. Became the first Packer to register two third-down catches of 30-plus yards since WR Davante Adams did so at San Francisco on Nov. 5, 2020⊠Vs. Arizona (Oct. 13): Paced the team with 68 yards receiving on three catches (22.7 avg.), highlighted by a 44-yard TD reception on a long pass from QB Jordan Love with 4:32 remaining in the first half to give the Packers a 24-0 leadâŠAt Chicago (Nov. 17): Led the team with a career-high 150 receiving yards on four catches, a 37.5-yard average that was the top mark posted by a Packer with four-plus receptions since WR Carroll Dale on Sept. 27, 1970 (46.5 avg., four catches for 186 yards). Posted a season-long 60-yard reception down to the Chicago 14 late in the fourth quarter to set up the Packers' game-winning TD. Added a 48-yard catch earlier in the fourth quarter, becoming the first Packer dating back to 2000 to register two receptions of 45-plus yards in a fourth quarterâŠAt Detroit (Dec. 5): Registered a team-high 114 yards on four catches (28.5 avg.), becoming the first Packer since the 1970 merger to average 33.0-plus yards per catch over a four-game span (min. 10 rec.) with 10 catches for 331 yards (33.1 avg.)âŠVs. Chicago (Jan. 5): Started and played 10 snaps before departing the game early in the second quarter (knee).
2023: Started all nine games he played in and posted 28 receptions for 422 yards (15.1 avg.) and five TDs (No. 3 on the team)âŠWas inactive for the first three games and the final five games (hamstring)...Appeared in both playoff contests, posting two receptions for 20 yards (10.0 avg.)âŠVs. Detroit (Sept. 28): Played 26 snaps in his season debut, posting two receptions for 25 yards (12.5 avg.), including a 1-yard TD grab midway through the third quarterâŠAt Las Vegas (Oct. 9): Finished with a team-high 91 yards on three receptions (30.3 avg.), highlighted by a career-long 77-yard catch down to the Las Vegas 6 midway through the third quarterâŠVs. L.A. Chargers (Nov. 19): Posted two receptions for 21 yards (10.5 avg.), highlighted by an 11-yard TD catch in the back of the end zone late in the third quarter that gave Green Bay a 16-13 leadâŠAt Detroit (Nov. 23): Paced the team with five receptions for a season-best 94 yards (18.8 avg.) and a TD (16-yarder in the third quarter). Caught four passes for 78 yards (19.5 avg.) in the first quarter alone, the most by a Packer in a first quarter since WR Allen Lazard registered 80 yards on two catches at the N.Y. Giants on Dec. 1, 2019âŠVs. Kansas City (Dec. 3): Recorded a career-high seven receptions for 71 yards (10.1 avg.) and two TDs before sustaining a hamstring injury on a 10-yard reception with just over three minutes remaining in the game. Caught a 9-yard TD pass from Love early in the second quarter and added another score on a 12-yard catch with 5:23 remaining in the third quarter.
2022: Played in 14 games with 11 starts and posted 41 receptions for 611 yards (14.9 avg.) and a team-high seven TDsâŠWas tied for No. 1 in the NFL among rookies in TD catches and ranked No. 5 among rookies in receiving yardsâŠHad two TD receptions of 50-plus yards (63, 58), the first Green Bay rookie to post multiple TD receptions of 50-plus yards since Howton (six) in 1952âŠWas tied for No. 1 among NFL rookies with three 100-yard receiving games on the season, the second most by a Green Bay rookie in team history (Howton, five in 1952)âŠAlso had seven carries for 80 yards (11.4 avg.) and two TDs and returned two kickoffs for 35 yards (17.5 avg.)...Became only the third player in franchise history to that point to post seven-plus receiving TDs and multiple rushing TDs in a season, joining McNally (1931) and Hutson (1941)âŠBecame just the second NFL rookie WR to accomplish that feat (Claypool, 2020)âŠBecame just the fourth WR since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger to post 40-plus catches, 600-plus receiving yards, seven-plus receiving TDs and multiple rushing TDs in a season, joining Claypool (2020), Tyreek Hill (2020) and Jerry Rice (1994)âŠWas inactive (hamstring) for three contests (Weeks 3, 6-7)âŠAt Minnesota (Sept. 11): Became the first rookie WR to start for the Packers in Week 1 since James Jones in 2007 and finished with two receptions for 34 yards (17.0 avg.) and a 7-yard runâŠVs. New England (Oct. 2): Posted his first NFL touchdown, scoring on a 15-yard run early in the second quarterâŠVs. Dallas (Nov. 13): Led the team with 107 receiving yards and a career-best three TDs on four catches (26.8 avg.), becoming the first Green Bay rookie to post 100-plus receiving yards and three receiving TDs in a game since WR James Lofton on Sept. 10, 1978. Tied the single-game team rookie record for receiving TDs as he matched Lofton, Howton (Nov. 27, 1952) and McGee (Oct. 30, 1954). Became the first NFL rookie to catch three TD passes against the Cowboys since Moss on Nov. 26, 1998âŠVs. Tennessee (Nov. 17): Finished with four receptions for 48 yards (12.0 avg.) and two TDs as he became the first Green Bay rookie to register multiple TD catches in back-to-back-games since McGee in 1954 (Oct. 30-Nov. 7). His five TD grabs in his last two games matched McGee's mark for the most by a Green Bay rookie over a two-game span and were tied for the most by an NFL rookie over a two-game span since 2000 with Falcons WR Calvin Ridley (2018) and Giants WR Odell Beckham Jr. (2014)âŠAt Philadelphia (Nov. 27): Led the team with a career-high 110 receiving yards and a TD on four receptions (27.5 avg.). With nine minutes remaining in the game, caught a short pass over the middle from Love and took it 63 yards for a TD, his longest reception as a pro and the longest by a Green Bay rookie since Jones' 79-yard TD catch at Denver on Oct. 29, 2007âŠAt Chicago (Dec. 4): Posted three catches for 48 yards (16.0 avg.) and a TD while adding a 46-yard rushing TD with 1:51 remaining that clinched the win. Became only the second rookie WR in NFL history to post 45-plus rushing yards and a rushing TD and 45-plus receiving yards and a receiving TD in a game (Joey Galloway on Nov. 12, 1995). His two TDs on the day gave him eight from scrimmage over his last four games, tied for the most over a four-game span by a rookie WR in NFL history (Moss, 1998). Became the first rookie in team history with seven TD catches over a four-game span and the first NFL rookie to do so since Beckham in 2014. Brought his streak of consecutive games with a TD catch to four, the second-longest streak by a rookie in team history behind Howton (five in 1952)âŠVs. Detroit (Jan. 8): Paced the team with 104 receiving yards on five receptions (20.8 avg.). Added 12 yards on two carries (6.0 avg.) as he finished the night with a career-high 116 yards from scrimmageâŠ2022 Draft: Selected by Green Bay in the second round (No. 34 overall) of the 2022 NFL Draft, a pick obtained from the Minnesota Vikings for the Packers' two second-round selections in 2022 (Nos. 53 and 59 overall). Became the first NDSU player to be drafted by the Packers since RB Tim Mjos (eighth round) in 1970.
COLLEGE: Played in 52 games with 31 starts in four seasons (2018-21) for the Bison, finishing his career with 105 receptions for 2,140 yards (20.4 avg.) and 14 TDs with 392 rushing yards and two TDs on 49 carries (8.0 avg.)âŠReturned 26 kickoffs for 686 yards (26.4 avg.) and two TDsâŠFinished his career at NDSU ranked No. 2 in school history (min. 50 rec.) in yards per reception (20.4 avg.) and yards per kickoff return (26.4 avg.), No. 8 in receiving yards (2,140) and No. 10 in receptions (105)âŠPlayed for NDSU teams that won the FCS national championship in 2018, 2019 and 2021, with the Bison posting a 52-4 record during his four seasonsâŠEarned his degree in university studiesâŠ2021: Appeared in 12 games with 10 starts, earning second-team All-America honors from The Associated Press at WR after leading the team with a career-high 43 catches for a career-best 801 yards (18.6 avg.) and seven TDsâŠEarned first-team All-Missouri Valley Football Conference recognition as both a WR and an all-purpose playerâŠRanked No. 2 in the conference in yards per catchâŠAlso carried the ball 15 times for 114 yards (7.6 avg.) and a TDâŠReturned 10 kickoffs for 227 yards (22.7 avg.), finishing the season with 1,142 all-purpose yardsâŠWas sidelined for three playoff games before returning for the FCS title gameâŠHauled in three passes for 79 yards (26.3 avg.), including a 67-yard TD grab, and posted a season-long 48-yard kickoff return at Towson (Sept. 18)âŠPosted a career-high 163 receiving yards on five catches (32.6 avg.) vs. Northern Iowa (Oct. 9), highlighted by a career-long 85-yard TD receptionâŠHauled in four passes for 91 yards (22.8 avg.) at Youngstown State (Nov. 13), including a 71-yard TD grabâŠRacked up a season-high 52 rushing yards on three carries (17.3 avg.) vs. South Dakota (Nov. 20), including a season-long 43-yard TDâŠ2020/21: Played in 10 games with eight starts, earning first-team All-America recognition as a kickoff returner from AP, Athlon and Phil Steele's College FootballâŠAveraged 33.8 yards on 10 kickoff returns and was the only FCS player to register two kickoff return TDs (100, 94 yards) on the season as he tied the NDSU single-season and career recordsâŠLed the team with 19 receptions for 442 yards (23.2 avg.) and a TDâŠAdded 116 rushing yards on 21 carries (5.5 avg.) to finish with a team-high 896 all-purpose yardsâŠPosted a season-high 93 yards on four receptions (23.3 avg.) vs. Illinois State (March 13)âŠAccounted for 229 all-purpose yards on his way to earning MVFC Offensive Player of the Week honors at Northern Iowa (April 10), posting two receptions for 86 yards (43.0 avg.) and a 100-yard kickoff return for a TDâŠScored on a 94-yard kickoff return in an NCAA quarterfinal game at Sam Houston (May 2)âŠ2019: Played in all 16 games with 11 starts, leading the team with 34 receptions for 732 yards (21.5 avg.) and six TDs on his way to earning second-team All-MVFC honorsâŠRanked No. 2 in the conference in yards per reception and No. 3 in receiving yardsâŠCarried the ball 13 times for 162 yards (12.5 avg.) and a TD and returned four kickoffs for 70 yards (17.5 avg.)âŠPosted a 69-yard TD reception at Youngstown State (Nov. 2)âŠRegistered a season-high 121 receiving yards on four grabs (30.3 avg.) vs. Western Illinois (Nov. 9), including a 51-yard TD catchâŠRecorded a career-high seven receptions for 107 yards (15.3 avg.) in an NCAA quarterfinal win vs. Illinois State (Dec. 14)âŠScored TDs on back-to-back offensive plays in the NCAA semifinal victory vs. Montana State (Dec. 21) with a 75-yard reception and a career-long 70-yard run bookending a Montana State three-and-outâŠ2018: Appeared in 14 games with two starts as a redshirt freshman, catching nine passes for 165 yards (18.3 avg.) and returning two kickoffs for 51 yards (25.5 avg.)âŠPosted a season-long 48-yard reception vs. Southern Illinois (Nov. 17).
PERSONAL: Given name Christian Justus WatsonâŠBorn in Phoenix, Ariz. âŠMarried, wife's name is LakynâŠHis father, Tim, was drafted by the Packers in the sixth round of the 1993 NFL Draft and went on to play defensive back for the Kansas City Chiefs (1993-95), N.Y. Giants (1995) and Philadelphia Eagles (1997)âŠHis older brother, Tre, played linebacker at the University of Illinois (2015-17) and the University of Maryland (2018)âŠHigh school: Averaged 17.1 yards per catch with eight receiving TDs as a senior at H.B. Plant High School (Tampa, Fla.), helping his team to a 13-1 record and a state runner-up finish in 2016âŠPosted 587 all-purpose yards as a seniorâŠWas a two-year letterman, playing WR and safetyâŠAlso competed in track and field, participating in the long jump and triple jump as well as the 200-meter and 4x100-meter eventsâŠCommunity involvement: Visited schools and volunteered at camps for kids and with food drives while in college.