Five No. 1 WRs who are awfully cheap in fantasy land
Rankings vs. Underdog ADP: Biggest values and fades
More touches for Antonio Gibson!?
Team Preview Szn: Buffalo Bills
Itâs 5/16. Take it away, Ian HartitzâŠ
Every day is a great day to fire up a best ball draft.
Underdog Fantasy has contests of all shapes and sizes to enter, and some of the early average draft position (ADP) data is intriguing when it comes to WRs potentially being slept on.
Overall, just six receivers are their own teamâs highest-ranked player at the position, yet they find themselves outside fantasyâs top-36 WRs at the moment.
A scholar and/or whatever edition of ChatGPT is out these days might describe these players as âfantasy footballâs cheapest No. 1 WRs.â
The allure of Burks is simple: He flashed down the stretch and remains the clear-cut No. 1 WR inside an offense with arguably less target competition than any other unit in the league. Itâs rare to find a first-round WR with sky-high target share potential available this late in drafts.
Yes, the Titans remain fully devoted to the religion of giving Derrick Henry as many touches as possible.
Also, yes, Burks is currently going in a good range of drafts where there are only a few other WRs with his sort of upside still available; heâs a great third or fourth WR addition to squads deploying a zero-RB-esque strategy.
đ» Ravens WR Zay Flowers (ADP: WR44, pick 89.5)
Thereâs a lot to like about Flowers as a prospect. Right now, Flowers, Odell Beckham Jr., and Rashod Bateman are going within 20 picks of each other.
Nobody is doubting the ability of Flowers to rise to the top of the group; just realize the Ravens havenât exactly been great at enabling fantasy-friendly WRs over the years.
Give the tik-toker credit for rebounding with a 78-933-3 receiving line with the Chiefs in 2022; his 9.2 yards per target were the most he has averaged since his rookie season.
Most impressive was JuJu's ability after the catch: He ranked seventh among 80 qualified WRs in yards after the catch per reception (5.9) during his first season in Kansas City and the production wasnât overly fluky as evidenced by his sixth-place ranking in yards after the catch above expectation (Next-Gen Stats).
Smith-Schuster is still just 26 years old and once again finds himself in an offense with few other proven avenues to go with the football.
Of course, a big season is contingent on OC Bill O'Brien 1.) getting Mac Jones to look more like the guy we saw in 2021 vs. 2022, and 2.) Making life a bit more fantasy-friendly for a Patriots WR group that ranks 28th in expected PPR points over the past three seasons.
đ Panthers WR Jonathan Mingo (ADP: WR58, pick 128)
The Panthers are the right sort of situation for the talented rookie to ball out from day one. While itâs possible D.J. Chark, Adam Thielen, and Terrace Marshall earn the Week 1 starting nods, Mingo is reportedly already forming a strong connection with Bryce Young and could see his ADP (continue) to rise as this uncertain depth chart reveals itself.
The Panthers are a top-six offense in terms of available targets and air yards; Mingo arguably has less 2023 target competition than any rookie WR.
This is easily one of the NFLâs top-five cheapest WR rooms.
Itâs tough to overly criticize Hyattâs standing at the top of this muddled mess considering the rookieâs field-stretching skill set stands out in this slot-filled WR room; itâd be rather shocking if he doesnât find a way into three-WR sets sooner rather than later.
Of course, being the primary deep-ball threat in an offense that posted the leagueâs third-lowest aDOT is like having the best raincoat in Nevada; Hyattâs rather steep learning curve coming out of the wide-open Tennessee offense could prevent him from seizing too high of a target share inside of a passing game that was reluctant to overly feature any single WR last season.
Identifying major differences in rankings vs. average draft positions (ADP) is the easiest way to land yourself some value in fantasy drafts of all shapes and sizes. Chris Allen has you covered with some of Fantasy Lifeâs most-extreme discrepancies at the moment.
Drafting a team can feel daunting if youâre new to best ball.
Youâve got sickos throwing out strategy tips and folks arguing about Week 17 correlations. But the draft itself is also problematic. Youâll have a plan and then watch another manager draft your guy. And the backup options by ADP arenât worth the click.
There should be a process for finding value independent of the market.
Letâs set aside the obvious for a second. At 6â1â-226 lbs with 4.46 speed, Jonathan Mingo steps onto the Panthers squad as the most athletic receiving option for Bryce Young.
Head coach Frank Reichâs plan for deploying Mingo makes me more interested than focusing on his measurables.
The Panthers want the Ole Miss phenom to function as a short-intermediate option. And, compared to receivers drafted ahead of Mingo, Carolinaâs decision makes sense.
Mingoâs after-the-catch averages and efficiency per route on short and intermediate targets align with his peers. So, without much competition in front of Mingo, drafters would be prudent to place bets on his takeover of the Panthersâ offense during his rookie campaign.
For Elijah Mitchell to be a value, you have to split his cost into two components: health and workload. And the market has appropriately priced his health.
Fantasy pundits assumed that Christian McCaffreywould take over the backfield without mentioning Mitchell. CMCâs knack for evading tackles and earning targets would wipe away any residual value for the remaining SF RBs.
Mitchell had other thoughts.
The two played in three competitive games and nearly split the workload. Even if you included targets, Mitchell had more high-value touches than McCaffrey. Granted, itâs a small sample size, but it indicates how Kyle Shanahan intended to deploy the duo.
CMC only had two more carries than Mitchell in the playoffs during their two games together. And yet, McCaffrey enters â23 as the RB1 while his 1B sits at RB41. With San Franciscoâs PROE likely to stay in the bottom 12, Mitchell should be a target at his current price.
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Fantasy Life senior analyst Ian Hartitz is breaking down all 32 NFL teams over the next two months. Letâs take a look at the Bills, who once again profile as having one of the leagueâs most fantasy-friendly passing attacksâŠ
đ WRs
Stefon Diggs (Ianâs WR4)
Gabriel Davis (WR39)
Khalil Shakir (WR86)
Deonte Harty (WR87)
Diggs has peeled off 127-1535-8, 103-1225-10 and 108-1429-11 receiving lines since teaming up with Josh Allen in 2020. Only Davante Adams, Cooper Kupp, Tyreek Hill and Justin Jefferson have averaged more PPR points per game during this span.
And yet, nothing about Diggsâ 2022 performance indicated a major dropoff in performance was imminent and the Bills didnât really add any target competition to worry about. Age alone isnât enough reason to completely fade somebody; just realize itâs enough to serve as a tie-breaker when compared against similarly elite talents with absurdly fantasy-friendly volume.
The longtime stud remains plenty capable of twisting up cornerbacks of all shapesand sizes; you donât need more than one hand to count the number of WRs you should pick ahead of him in fantasy land.
And then thereâs Davis, whose season-long 48-836-7 receiving line wasnât exactly what truthers had in mind considering the man ended his 2021 campaign with an incredible 8-201-4 performance in the Billsâ batshit crazy AFC Divisional Round loss to the Chiefs. His status as the WR38 in PPR points per game didnât exactly pay off his pricey WR24 preseason ADP.
One important note: Davis suffered a high-ankle sprain in a Week 2 practice that he ultimately played through during the rest of the season. He still managed to post the occasional boom, but the injury helps explain why the team felt the need to re-sign Smokey and Beasley later in the season.
Bills GM Brandon Beane certainly seems to be giving Davis the benefit of the doubt.
Somehow still only 24 years of age, Davis (again) profiles as Allenâs rather undisputed No. 2 WR. The Billsâ pass-happy offense has produced the single-most expected WR PPR points per game over the past three seasons; improved health in 2023 should yield returns closer to what drafters were hoping for last season.
Or maybe it wonât; either way, Davis is currently being priced below where he finished last season. The definition of buying a fantasy asset closer to their floor than ceiling, Davis is a prime post-hype candidate who has proven capable of booming in a major way when everything is right.
Iâm largely out on the rest of the Bills receivers as anything other than LATE round darts. This is mostly due to the insertion of the teamâs first-round TE Dalton Kincaid. More on him ⊠right now!
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