We’ll have you covered as you prepare for your 2025 dynasty drafts. In order to dominate your dynasty draft, check out our expert consensus dynasty draft rankings. And sync your dynasty league to practice with fast and free dynasty mock drafts. Below, we dive into dynasty draft picks our analysts are higher on compared to our expert consensus rankings.
- Dynasty Fantasy Football Draft Kit
- Dynasty Rookie Draft Simulator
- DBro’s Dynasty Rookie Draft Primers
Dynasty Draft Advice: Picks Experts Love to Target
Wide Receivers to Draft
Drake London (ATL)
Last year, London finally had the TRUE breakout season that I’ve been forecasting for him, as he finally got to experience at least average starting quarterback play for much of the season. London finished as the WR13 in fantasy points per game while ranking third in targets (157) and securing 100 receptions. Last year, he ranked fifth in target share, 11th in receiving yards per game, and 12th in yards per route run (per Fantasy Points Data). With Michael Penix under center in 2025, London could ascend even further up the fantasy wideout ladder. His splits with Kirk Cousins and Penix were eye-popping. Yes, I know it was only a three-game sample with Penix, but it would still be impressive if London could venture even into the general neighborhood of these numbers across a full season. With Cousins, London had a 24.6% target share with 65.6 receiving yards per game and 2.24 yards per route run. Those are solid numbers, but they aren’t top-three wideout numbers like he posted with Penix. With Penix chucking him the rock, London saw his target share soar to 39% with 117.3 receiving yards per game and 3.74 yards per route run. If London can continue even a watered-down version of those numbers for the entirety of 2025, he could be contending for WR1 overall when it’s all said and done. London is a high-floor and high-ceiling pick for 2025.
– Derek Brown
Jaylen Waddle (MIA)
Jaylen Waddle took a backseat in the Miami offense with Jonnu Smith and De’Von Achane vacuuming up the underneath targets. And the games that Tagovailoa missed further cratered Waddle’s numbers. However, Waddle is just 26 years old, and part of his down year was related to a lack of TDs. Given how the Miami Dolphins’ season ended, I can’t imagine they run back the same offense they deployed in 2024. If Tyreek Hill continues his downward trajectory or Miami moves on from the speedy WR, Waddle will benefit greatly. Jonnu Smith has already been traded, signaling that Miami will get back to featuring it’s top two wideouts and Achane as the focal points of the passing attack.
– Andrew Erickson
Jordan Addison (MIN)
Jordan Addison is only 23 years old, and he’s already had a 10-touchdown season and a nine-touchdown season in the NFL. Despite having to share targets with Justin Jefferson, Addison has finished WR21 and WR20 in half-point PPR fantasy scoring the last two years. If your rivals are concerned that Addison plays with a top receiver and will be playing with a quarterback, J.J. McCarthy, who hasn’t taken a regular-season snap, capitalize on the discount.
– Pat Fitzmaurice
Ricky Pearsall (SF)
Ricky Pearsall battled through adversity in 2024, returning from a preseason gunshot wound to make his debut in Week 7. He finished as the WR50 in points per game (7.1), matching Brandon Aiyuk‘s average prior to his ACL tear. Pearsall flashed big-play potential late in the season, posting 14 catches for 210 yards and 2 TDs across Weeks 17-18 while averaging nine targets per game. With Deebo Samuel gone and Aiyuk working back from injury, Pearsall is positioned for a second-year breakout.
– Andrew Erickson
Here are our latest Dynasty Draft Rankings from our consensus of fantasy football experts. You can find the latest Dynasty Draft Rankings and sync your fantasy football league for specific advice.
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