In 2013, NFL players combined for 129,177 receiving yards and 804 receiving touchdowns. That means, on average, a touchdown was scored every 160.7 receiving yards. Denver tight end Julius Thomas gained 788 receiving yards that year, which means we might have “expected” him to catch 4.9 touchdowns. But Thomas was no average scorer: he finished with 12 touchdowns, or 7.1 more than expected.

In 2013, only Jimmy Graham and Vernon Davis scored more receiving touchdowns relative to expectation than Thomas (Davis scored 13 times on just 850 receiving yards, or 7.7 more than expected, while Graham converted 1,215 receiving yards into 16 touchdowns, or 8.4 more than expected).

Well, as good as Thomas was in 2013, he was even crazier at scoring touchdowns last year. Despite gaining just 489 receiving yards, Thomas again scored 12 touchdowns, 8.9 more than expectation (the league average was 159.7 receiving yards per receiving touchdown). That was the most in the NFL, and only Dez Bryant (1,320/16/+7.7) was within shouting distance of him.

In fact, Thomas was so prolific in 2014 at converting receiving yards into touchdowns — relative to league average — that he ranks 11th all-time in this metric. Take a look at the top 50:

Okay, but what about the fact that over the last two years, Thomas has scored 16 more touchdowns than expected! Is that the record? Well, it’s close, but Thomas still falls behind the two two-year Jerry Rice periods that straddle 1987, along with 2007-2008 Randy Moss. The table below shows the top 50 performances in this metric over a two-year period:

So if you feel like you’ve been watching a historically efficient player at converting yards into touchdowns, you’re right. But now there’s a new test for Thomas: seeing how he converts yards into touchdowns catching passes from Blake Bortles instead of Peyton Manning.

Oh, and Alyn Beals deserves his own post.