Dynasty Rookie Draft Rankings (2024 Fantasy Football)

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Dynasty Fantasy Football Draft Rankings

RK PLAYER NAME POS BEST WORST AVG. STD.DEV
1 Marvin Harrison Jr. WR1 1 2 1.1 0.3
2 Malik Nabers WR2 1 5 2.3 0.9
3 Rome Odunze WR3 3 4 3.3 0.4
4 Brock Bowers TE1 3 6 4.2 0.8
5 Brian Thomas Jr. WR4 4 9 6.5 1.5
6 Caleb Williams QB1 3 9 7.1 1.9
7 Jayden Daniels QB2 6 16 9.8 3.4
8 Troy Franklin WR5 5 17 10 4
9 Trey Benson RB1 8 14 12.3 1.9
10 Jonathon Brooks RB2 8 20 12.7 3.6
11 Xavier Worthy WR6 6 25 12.8 6.6
12 Adonai Mitchell WR7 8 19 13.3 3.5
13 Ladd McConkey WR8 7 21 14.4 4.7
14 Drake Maye QB3 10 24 14.9 4.4
15 Keon Coleman WR9 6 29 15.9 8.8
16 MarShawn Lloyd RB3 13 25 17.5 3.7
17 Blake Corum RB4 11 28 17.8 4.2
18 Jaylen Wright RB5 12 24 18.2 3.6
19 Braelon Allen RB6 11 30 19.7 6.2
20 J.J. McCarthy QB4 12 31 20.5 6.3

Dynasty Rookie Draft Outlook

Brian Thomas (WR – LSU)

Thomas is a traits-based prospect with a legit 4.4-lifting speed. He can take the top off a defense and burn by a corner in the blink of an eye. Thomas faced a ton of off-coverage in college, with corners afraid to get beat over the top by him. As a field stretcher, he offers solid ball tracking deep and a “my ball” mentality at the catch point. He has good body control for a receiver his size. He’ll be a good fit in an offense built upon creating explosives and with a strong deep ball rate. Thomas was tasked with a limited route tree at LSU. His game logs consisted of a ton of stop routes, gos, and fade routes. He was tasked with running to space against zone. You won’t find many in-breaking routes on his film outside of the occasional crosser. Thomas has a decent gear down for his size with the ability to gain separation on comebacks, but he saw hefty cushions in coverage. It’ll be interesting to see how he handles corners pressing him or playing tighter in the NFL. He has the upper body strength and hand-fighting to put up a fight against press, but it’s more of a projection since we haven’t seen him do it much. He’s not much of a threat after the catch, with only 5.3 yards after the catch per reception in college. His transition from receiver to rusher is methodical, considering his size. He’s not a twitchy player, as his hips look stiff once he has the ball in his hands and is asked to create after the catch.

Ladd McConkey (WR – Georgia)

McConkey is a solid underneath option but lacks the extra gear to take the top off a defense. Corners, even when beat off the line, can close on him downfield. He likely ends up as a 50/50 receiver, with half of his snaps coming as a slot receiver in the NFL. His route running prowess allows him to get open in the short and intermediate as he is sudden in movements and crisp at the top of his stem. He plays through contact well in his routes with a good swipe and upper body strength to work through press coverage. McConkey runs like a running back in traffic. Good vision in chaos with the shiftiness to break some tackles and provide YAC. He offers some run game utility with 13 collegiate carries for 216 rushing yards (16.6 ypc) and four scores.

Jaylen Wright (RB – Tennessee)

Wright has “run away from you” type of speed. A downhill bowling ball that consistently looks like he has been shot out of a cannon. He pauses at the line as he surveys the scene and finds a crease. While that could appear to be indecision, I think it’s more of a watered-down version of Le’Veon Bell’s style. Wright has the immediate burst to more than makeup for the quick pause. Wright pin balls off defenders in the second level. Once he gets to the second level of a defense, it’s usually game over. He offers more finishing power to his runs than maybe his stature would suggest. He consistently falls forward and earns every blade of grass. Wright holds up well in pass pro. With a solid, strong base, he has no problem upending pass-rushing defenders. He had 59 pass-pro snaps last season and only allowed one QB hit and zero sacks. His skill in this area will allow him to earn more passing down reps than his route running chops would suggest. He’s a check-down option only in the passing game. Wright has solid enough hands with an 88.2% catch rate and only two drops from his 34 collegiate targets.

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