Thoughts: Hill winning the starting job for New Orleans should be viewed as a more significant possibility than many believe, so he’s worth a shot here. Overall, my wide receivers have a good amount of upside considering the lack of early investment. Thoughts: His value isn’t quite as high in a full PPR league, but Ruggs can still be a high-upside, big-play WR3 this year. 1 receiver for Las Vegas, and he didn’t show any signs of slowing down when on the field last season. Thoughts: Although the roster is a bit heavy on veteran wideouts now, Brown could realistically emerge as the No. Thoughts: I thought about taking Jameis Winston here to really go for upside, but he might not even start, and Darnold is a good balance with Trey Lance as a bench quarterback. Tampa Bay’s passing attack is good enough to support three wide receivers. Thoughts: Brown being available in the double-digit rounds of a 12-team league feels like stealing, but I’ll take it. There are still enough wideouts on the board to wait another round. Thoughts: I now wish I would have taken Deebo Samuel over Brandin Cooks to get a big-time San Francisco stack, but Lance’s potential upside in a Superflex league was still worth stashing. Remember, you can always make a trade later on. Thoughts: Receiver obviously remains the biggest need on the roster, but the upside of Mostert as my RB4 was difficult to pass up. Thoughts: Cooks has been remarkably consistent with at least 1,082 receiving yards in five-of-six seasons since his rookie year, and his floor-which should remain stable with Tyrod Taylor-complements the rest of the lineup well while hunting for upside the rest of the way. For Aiyuk, he has major upside-especially if Jimmy Garoppolo is under center all season. Thoughts: I was honestly surprised at the amount of quality of wide receivers left on the board, so hopefully I can double up with another target in Round 8. Thoughts: Jacobs was a consideration in Round 5, so I’ll certainly take him 15 picks later to solidify my roster with three exciting running backs, two QB1 options, and the best fantasy tight end in the game. As a rookie, Dobbins scored nine touchdowns and averaged 6.0 yards per carry. Thoughts: He didn’t produce much as a pass-catcher in Year 1, but Dobbins showed well enough out of the backfield at Ohio State, so we’ll see if Baltimore tries to become a little more versatile overall. Plus, both he and Allen can do damage with their legs. Thoughts: Tannehill has more touchdowns than Patrick Mahomes and Josh Allen since taking over as the starter for Tennessee, and now he’ll be throwing to A.J. 1 pick didn’t go with the Kansas City stack of Patrick Mahomes, Kelce, and Clyde Edwards-Helaire. It’s a bit surprising the team with the No. Thoughts: This might be the lowest I’ve seen Kelce drop in a mock this year, and he often goes as a first-round pick outside of Superflex formats. Thoughts: Stefon Diggs was going to be the pick to stack with Josh Allen, but Chubb isn’t a bad consolation prize at all, as the Superflex format causes him to fall to the No. Thoughts: Having to choose between Allen and Derrick Henry was not easy, but in a full PPR league, the edge went to the quarterback-who is neck-and-neck with Patrick Mahomes to be the top one taken. This week’s mock draft is for a 12-team, Superflex PPR league (in addition to a regular FLEX spot) using the FantasyPros draft simulator.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |