When preparing for your fantasy football drafts, knowing which players to target and others to avoid is important. The amount of information available can be overwhelming, so a great way to condense the data and determine players to draft and others to leave for your leaguemates is to use our expert consensus fantasy football rankings compared to fantasy football average draft position (ADP). In this way, you can identify players the experts are willing to reach for at ADP and others they are not drafting until much later than average. Let’s dive into a few notable fantasy football players below. And you can check out which experts are higher or lower than our expert consensus rankings using our Fantasy Football Rankings Comparison Tools.
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Let’s dive into players our analysts like less than the expert consensus rankings.
Players to Avoid
Wide Receivers
| Expert Consensus’s Rank | Player | Derek Brown’s Rank | Diff. |
| 5 | Malik Nabers NYG – WR | 10 | 5 |
| 12 | Jaxon Smith-Njigba SEA – WR | 20 | 8 |
| 14 | Tyreek Hill MIA – WR | 22 | 8 |
| 20 | Marvin Harrison Jr. ARI – WR | 29 | 9 |
| 21 | DJ Moore CHI – WR | 27 | 6 |
Jaxon Smith-Njigba (SEA)
Jaxon Smith-Njigba broke out in a big way in his sophomore season. He was the WR17 in fantasy points per game and really exploded down the stretch. In Weeks 9-18, he was the WR8 in fantasy points per game, ranking 11th in target share (25.4%), tenth in receiving yards per game (82.4), and ninth in yards per route run and first downs per route run (per Fantasy Points Data). I was very bullish about Smith-Njigba last year, but I find myself worried about his 2025 outlook. The Seattle Seahawks are going to lean on their ground game more this season after ranking sixth in pass rate over expectation and fourth in neutral passing rate in 2024. Even if Smith-Njigba proves that he can pick up right where he left off, his raw target volume could dip this season. I’m also worried about him playing more on the perimeter this season. Last year, during that insane stretch, he ran out of the slot on 81.3% of his snaps. Last year, his separation (0.035 vs. 0.068) and route win rate (9.4% vs. 10.4%) were notably worse as a perimeter wide receiver, while also noting that his overall numbers in these metrics were surprisingly poor. Overall, among 112 qualifying receivers, he ranked 62nd in separation score and 88th in route win rate. Smith-Njigba could return low-end WR2 value this season, but he’s a tough player to click as a high-end WR2/ borderline WR1.
– Derek Brown
Running Backs
| Expert Consensus’s Rank | Player | Andrew Erickson’s Rank | Diff. |
| 11 | Kyren Williams LAR – RB | 15 | 4 |
| 17 | Chuba Hubbard CAR – RB | 21 | 4 |
| 21 | David Montgomery DET – RB | 25 | 4 |
| 22 | D’Andre Swift CHI – RB | 32 | 10 |
| 26 | Tony Pollard TEN – RB | 31 | 5 |
Kyren Williams (LAR)
It feels like Groundhog Day all over again – another offseason, another round of analysts fading Kyren Williams. But this year, the concerns are more justified, in the last year of William’s rookie contract. Despite a monster workload in 2024 (nearly 400 touches, 87% snap share, both second to only Saquon Barkley), Williams was wildly inefficient – ranking near the bottom in explosive run rate, missed tackles, and YAC per attempt (akin to Najee Harris’ numbers in 2024) with fumbles to boot. The Rams spent legit draft capital on Blake Corum in 2023 (who Sean McVay thinks is a stud) and Jarquez Hunter in 2024 (who the Rams traded up for) while publicly embracing the NFL trends of a more committee-driven backfield approach this offseason. Williams could still deliver RB1 numbers on sheer volume alone, but if that volume even slightly dips, it will be tough for him to live up to his ADP.
– Andrew Erickson
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