1 |
MIN |
Justin Jefferson |
Top wideout of 2022 enters final year of rookie contract with everything to gain by repeating that No. 1 ranking. |
2 |
CIN |
Ja’Marr Chase |
Lock to be Top-5, could challenge for No. 1 |
3 |
LAR |
Cooper Kupp |
Rams didn’t add any new receivers so Kupp, health willing, will end with an obscene amount of receptions. His health may be a concern. |
4 |
MIA |
Tyreek Hill |
Says he wants 2,000 yards and while unlikely, it wouldn’t be all that shocking. |
5 |
DAL |
CeeDee Lamb |
Better each year and was No. 6 last season. 107 catches in 2022 was just four short of Cowboys record by Michael Irvin. |
6 |
BUF |
Stefon Diggs |
Never worse than No. 7 after three years in Buffalo. |
7 |
PHI |
A.J. Brown |
First year in Philly and had a career year as the No. 5 fantasy wideout last year. Now he already has chemistry with Jalen Hurts. |
8 |
LV |
Davante Adams |
Been Top-3 for the last three seasons and yes, even without Aaron Rodgers. 100 catches is his standard. |
9 |
NYJ |
Garrett Wilson |
Rookie season saw 83-1103-4 learning new offense while the Jets used four different quarterbacks. Aaron Rodgers brought his own receivers, all except for the next Davante Adams… |
10 |
DET |
Amon-Ra St. Brown |
Lions will feature some new faces on the offense, but St. Brown has already locked down the WR1 role and already caught over twice as much as any other receiver. Already belongs to the 100-catch club. |
11 |
MIA |
Jaylen Waddle |
Maybe Tyreek Hill isn’t going to dominate all the targets. Waddle didn’t suffer, he just got better with 1,356 yards and a team-high eight receiving touchdowns. |
12 |
PHI |
DeVonta Smith |
Same deal as Waddle. Brought in A.J. Brown and Smith just got better with 95-1196-7. Already was a Top-10 wideout last year so this feels like a good value. |
13 |
NO |
Chris Olave |
1.11 pick last year looks to improve on his 72-1042-4 rookie season playing with Andy Dalton and Jameis Winston. Derek Carr will be an upgrade and their schedule is much better. |
14 |
CIN |
Tee Higgins |
This feels too high for a wideout that’s never been better than the No. 19 in his three seasons. He’s hit his ceiling already and it isn’t this high. |
15 |
SEA |
D.K. Metcalf |
Solid as a lock for around 1,000 yards and ten touchdowns. Switching to Geno Smith didn’t improve his stats, but didn’t bring them down much either. |
16 |
CLE |
Amari Cooper |
Two of his last three years saw him as Top-15 and now he gets a full year of Deshaun Watson. Cooper scored a career-best nine touchdowns in 2022 and only played six games with Watson. |
17 |
SF |
Deebo Samuel |
Remember 2021? I remember 2019, 2020, and 2022 as well. Never better than No. 31 other than the one aberrant season. Christian McCaffrey already does everything that Samuel does, only better and a whole lot more often. |
18 |
WAS |
Terry McLaurin |
He’s been a lock for WR2 stats every year. Imagine what he could do if the Commanders had a quarterback. I bet McLaurin does. |
19 |
LAC |
Keenan Allen |
Safe spot for Allen. He’s offered WR1 stats for five straight years but then had injury woes last season. He’s 31 years old and starting to cool down while the Chargers brought in Quentin Johnson to kickoff the transition. |
20 |
TEN |
DeAndre Hopkins |
He was a perennial Top-5 wideout for four straight seasons, but then the wheels started wobbling in 2021 with a hamstring issue and torn MCL. He wasn’t the same last year and the knee continued to flare up and the Cardinals fell apart. Now he joins the Titans who already have Treylon Burk and yet ranked around No. 30 in virtually every passing category. Not exactly a high-octane passing attack heading to the Super Bowl. |
21 |
JAX |
Calvin Ridley |
Plenty of reasons not to buy into Ridley, but all reports have him looking great in camp and gaining chemistry with Trevor Lawrence. He’s a popular sleeper and will not come cheaply despite not playing for nearly two years. And yet, he’s on a short list of players that could explode and far exceed their draft spot. His last full season had him as the No. 5 fantasy wideout of 2020. |
22 |
GB |
Christian Watson |
After the defections to the Jets, Watson is the clear WR1 for the Packers but was only the No. 41 fantasy wideout playing with Aaron Rodgers with minimal other receivers of note. Swapping out to the first year for Jordan Love seems far more risk than likely reward for a player that only managed three games with more than 50 yards last year under better circumstances. |
23 |
CHI |
D.J. Moore |
Has never been worse than the No. 25 fantasy wideout but also not much better and he ends up in Chicago on the passing offense that ranked No.32 in pass attempts and yards. |
24 |
DEN |
Jerry Jeudy |
Even with Russell Wilson struggling, Jeudy ended as the No. 22 fantasy wideout and there’s every reason to expect that the Broncos pass better this year with the change in coaches and offense. |
25 |
LAC |
Mike Williams |
Other than 2021, Williams has spent his career with around WR3 fantasy stats. He was No. 14 in 2021 but then only No. 33 last year. Williams usually missed a couple of games in most seasons. |
26 |
JAX |
Christian Kirk |
This seems pretty harsh dropping from No. 12 last year. Perhaps the addition of Calvin Ridley has most spooked, but as we saw on several teams last year, it is not a zero sum game. Adding Ridley may just add more production and Kirk doesn’t have to see his stats take a dive. |
27 |
TB |
Chris Godwin |
Godwin was a solid fantasy WR2 the last couple of seasons with Tom Brady there, and now that they move onto Baker Mayfield (or Kyle Trask), it seems prudent to dial back the expectations, especially since Mayfeld is not going to throw 811 times like Brady just did. He should deliver at least this level of production and maybe a bit better depending on Mayfield who did produce two 1,000-yard receivers in one season at Cleveland. |
28 |
ATL |
Drake London |
The first wideout drafted in 2022 should be ready for a Year 2 leap after posting 72-866-4 as a rookie on a team that didn’t throw. Desmond Ridder takes over, the Falcons’ rushing game must be respected, and they have the lightest schedule strengths after battling one of the worst last year. London was already the No. 28 wideout last year and this draft spot assumes no improvement? Very nice value here. |
29 |
SEA |
Tyler Lockett |
He’s been a solid fantasy WR2 for the last five seasons but he turns 31 years old and the Seahawks have an out with his contract next year. Jaxon Smith-Njigba was the first wideout drafted this year and is ready to take the torch from Lockett sooner than later. Lockett will still have a role and will offer fantasy value, but for the first time he’s likely to see a decline in workload as the season progresses. |
30 |
IND |
Michael Pittman Jr. |
This feels like a bargain for a talented wideout who was around No. 20 for the last two seasons with a revolving door at quarterback. But adding the raw rookie quarterback Anthony Richardson to the equation has to have some dampening effect. Pittman is worth the pick as a mid-level WR3. |
31 |
SF |
Brandon Aiyuk |
This feels too low for a wideout that has never been worse than No. 35 even as a rookie that missed four games. He was No. 15 last year and the 49ers appear to be getting Brock Purdy back. The schedule is worse, but this drop seems unwarranted. |
32 |
PIT |
Diontae Johnson |
Johnson’s stats suffered when Ben Roethlisberger was no longer shot-putting every other pass to him. Johnson ended as the No. 32 fantasy wideout last year when he ended with 86-882 and a historic zero touchdowns on that many catches. George Pickens should see an uptick this year and the Steelers want to focus more on the run. Johnson is likely safe here, but there’s no reason to expect much upside. |
33 |
TB |
Mike Evans |
This is ADP. I am not sure why since Chris Godwin goes five picks earlier and Evans already ranks No. 2 in NFL history with nine straight 1,000-yard seasons. 33? He’s never been worse than No. 22 and that’s playing with a slew of marginal quarterbacks prior to Tom Brady. He is only 29 and is impressively linking up with Baker Mayfield in training camp. I might just draft him twice to make sure I get him. He’s rarely a fantasy WR1 but he’s never been a WR3. |
34 |
ARI |
Marquise Brown |
Every player on every team has fantasy value of some level and is worth owning at the right spot. I feel comfortable with always letting someone else find the right spot for a Cardinals’ receiver. Looks like a train wreck this year. |
35 |
PIT |
George Pickens |
No problem taking Pickens here as a final fantasy WR3. He’s in a nice spot for a step up in Year 2 after logging a No. 39 fantasy rank as a rookie wideout playing with a rookie quarterback in 2022. |
36 |
MIN |
Jordan Addison |
The majority of rookie wideouts do not meet fantasy expectations but the new that do are in the sort of situation that Addison has. He’s the first-round pick of the Vikings looking to replace Adam Thielen while Justin Jefferson and T.J. Hockenson keep the secondary busy. Addison should make a tremendous complement to Jefferson and he caught up to 100 passes in a season in college. He should have a smaller learning curve than many while playing in an offense that already was Top-5 in all passing categories. |