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Must-Have Targets Experts Draft (2025 Fantasy Football)

Must-Have Targets Experts Draft (2025 Fantasy Football)

Finding the right players to build your fantasy football roster around can be the difference between a championship run and a disappointing season. To give you an edge in 2025, we’ve gathered insights from our collection of Featured Pros-a trusted group of top-ranked analysts across the fantasy football industry. In this article, you’ll discover the must-have draft targets our experts believe offer the best value, upside, and reliability. Whether you’re drafting early or looking for mid-round gems, these expert-backed recommendations will help you lock in the foundation for a winning fantasy football team.

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Must-Have Fantasy Football Draft Targets

What one RB outside the top 15 in the expert consensus are you hoping to end up with in all your leagues and why?

Jaylen Warren (PIT)

“We already know that Jaylen Warren’s the best receiving back in Pittsburgh. He toppled Najee Harris in that category as an NFL sophomore, and there’s no reason to believe Kaleb Johnson will change that. We also know that Warren beat Harris in rushing-efficiency metrics over their shared time. So there’s room for him to claim more of that work until/unless Johnson takes it away. And we also know that Aaron Rodgers won’t have patience for a rookie RB making mistakes as he learns. All the more reason to expect the talented fourth-year guy to stay in the mix all year. Give me all the Warren at his absurd mid-RB3 price. At worst, he’s not hurting my team from there. And his ceiling could help define my season.”
Matt Schauf (Draft Sharks)

Chuba Hubbard (CAR)

Chuba Hubbard is a player that I have been a fan of since his senior year in college at Oklahoma State. I was very excited for his prospects coming into the NFL, and then he landed in Carolina. I drafted him in a few dynasty leagues and was patient. Last year, my patience paid off, and Chuba rushed for 1,195 yards and 10 TDs (along with 43 receptions for 171 yards and one touchdown) on a not-so-great Panther team. They rewarded him with a contract extension, and he is going to be their lead back again this year (Rico Dowdle is not a player who will eat into Hubbard’s carries). In all my drafts, I am grabbing Hubbard at the bargain price of a mid-late 4th round pick and excited for the fantasy rewards he will give me on an ascending Carolina Panthers team!”
Adam Dove (The Fantasy Couriers)

TreVeyon Henderson (NE)

Trey Henderson is by far the most attractive running back that lives outside the Top 15 Expert Consensus Rankings. In fact, he is the last RB in all of fantasy that one can draft that still holds top 5-8RB upside. Hendy is a weapon and is my Jahmyr Gibbs 2.0. He immediately becomes a top 5RB in the league in terms of both pass catching and pass protection, which means that he might already be top 5 in the league in terms of guaranteed volume. In dynasty, I rank only Bijan Robinson and Jahmyr Gibbs ahead of him, and Ashton Jeanty and Hendy might share that third spot.”
Smitty (TheFantasyFootballShow)

“Just because it’s the chalk answer doesn’t mean it’s the wrong answer: TreVeyon Henderson has skyrocketed up draft boards in recent weeks due to a stellar preseason, and the rise has been for good reason. The Patriots took him in the top 40 of the NFL draft, and during camp/preseason, he’s already drawn rave reviews as a returner, pass-blocker, and pass-catcher. His only competition to touches in this backfield currently – Rhamondre Stevenson – has a history of both fumbling issues and injuries, which means Henderson can go from an already startable pass-catching fantasy RB to a borderline workhorse top-five RB in a hurry. The Patriots’ offense is rising, with Drake Maye under center, and Henderson could be the focal point. Throw in his ELITE metrics (92nd percentile 40-yard dash, 91st percentile burst score, 92nd percentile college yards per carry of 6.9), and Henderson has all the makings of a rookie RB who will not just win weeks, but win leagues, in 2025. His overall consensus ADP right now is 51, but I wouldn’t be afraid to reach anywhere in the fourth round to get him – or even toward the latter half of the third round in full PPR leagues.”
Chris Dell (Betting Predators)

“As someone who was in on Jacory Croskey-Merritt since before the NFL draft, it would still feel too easy today to answer with his name. I will go with another rookie I was in on since before the draft as my rookie RB2 and a top 5 dynasty RB, TreVeyon Henderson. Henderson currently sits at 51 in the half-PPR, and if I can get the kind of explosive upside that wins championships at a discount relative to backs he could very plausibly outperform (e.g., Kyren Williams, Kenneth Walker, Breece Hall, Omarion Hampton, and Chuba Hubbard, to name a few), I will take it enthusiastically. Henderson can produce on 10-12 touches what it would take other backs 15-20 touches to match.”
Brian Ford (Going For 2)

TreVeyon Henderson – Throughout camp and preseason, it has felt like every time Henderson touches the football, a big play is about to happen. One of the largest factors that often keeps talented rookie RBs off the field is pass protection, something he absolutely excels at. Coach Mike Vrabel led a run-heavy attack during his time in Tennessee, even during the 2nd half of the 2021 season when Derrick Henry was out. Henderson’s talent will likely make him the clear RB1 ahead of Rhamondre Stevenson – it’s hard for fantasy managers to ask for much more than a heavy workload for an explosive pass-catching back. This has all the makings of a future superstar; it’s very possible that this may be the lowest we see Henderson go in drafts for years to come.”
Charlie Sisian (The Fantasy DC)

Kyren Williams (LAR)

“Give me all the Kyren Williams you have in stock, please. Williams is currently going off the board as RB12 and 25th overall and is easily my favorite target in Round 3; for that matter, he is my favorite target in the back-half of Round 2. His ADP has been suppressed with rookie fever over Jarquez Hunter, but the Rams just gave him a contract extension and have given every indication that he will be their bellcow for the foreseeable future. I cannot possibly draft enough Kyren Williams at 25th overall.”
Aaron St Denis (Fantasy Sports Advice Network)

RJ Harvey (DEN)

RJ Harvey (63rd expert consensus) is the one back I’m targeting in every league outside the top 15. Drafted in the second round by Denver, Harvey has already flashed in the preseason with early-down work and route usage. He’s expected to split carries with Dobbins, but Harvey has earned a prominent role and could lead the team in touches if his preseason momentum holds. If Dobbins can’t stay healthy and if goal-line work trends toward a committee as hinted during the preseason, then Harvey’s path to high-value touches only widens. In a backfield built for fantasy production, Harvey offers standalone value with receiving upside and a path to weekly RB2 usage.”
Lawrence Iacona (Gridiron Experts)

“Rookie running backs have proven to be fantasy goldmines over the last few seasons. Now, take a rookie running back and place him in an offense where RB production is king, and there was next to no RB production a year ago, you have yourself a home run selection. That is where RJ Harvey finds himself now with the Denver Broncos and Sean Payton. Harvey will be the RB1 at some point for Denver in 2025, and I will not be missing the boat on that. While others will discount him in my drafts, I will be glad to scoop him up. At minimum, Harvey is a locked and loaded RB2 that has significant RB1 upside in 2025.”
Ed Birdsall (Talking Points Sports)

RJ Harvey is the RB I want in every league, and he’s already climbing above consensus rankings! We’ve seen JK Dobbins struggle to stay healthy throughout his career, and we’ve also seen multiple RBs thrive in Sean Payton’s offense (Ingram and Kamara). Harvey reminds me a lot of a young Alvin Kamara, and I believe Payton will use him in a similar role to Kamara’s breakout 2017 season. The sky is the limit for this rookie, and I love his current ADP at RB21.”
Brady Auer (BA Sports Podcast)

Jordan Mason (MIN)

Jordan Mason (RB33 in the rankings) is one of my favorite draft targets this season. Last year, he was the RB5 over the first month, filling in for Christian McCaffrey, averaging 17.9 half-point PPR fantasy points per game, totaling 16.9 or more in all but one contest. While the veteran struggled with injuries, Mason was outstanding when healthy. More importantly, he has a real chance to steal significant work from Aaron Jones in 2025. According to Fantasy Points Data, Mason had a better explosive run rate (7.8% vs. 3.5%) and missed forced tackle per attempt rate (22% vs. 11%) than Jones last season. The Vikings’ coaching staff wants both running backs to have half the backfield workload. Yet, don’t be surprised if Mason starts the season as a co-starting running back with a role at the goal line and quickly forces the Vikings to give him more touches.”
Mike Fanelli (FantasyPros)

D’Andre Swift (CHI)

“I’m going to keep pounding the drum for D’Andre Swift at RB21. I’m targeting him in the 5th and 6th rounds wherever I can make it work, and I am happy if I land him. His upside is through the roof with Ben Johnson at the helm, and as long as they don’t sign another RB, Swift should be the bellcow. On top of that, he’s great at catching passes, and if the Bears offense is going to be as high-powered as everyone thinks, Swift should see a big bump in value between now and December.”
Andrew Hall (FantasyPros)

Dylan Sampson (CLE)

Jacory Croskey-Merritt is the best sleeper currently, but with him flying up draft boards, my favorite late-round target is Browns RB Dylan Sampson. He is currently ranked as RB55 on FantasyPros, as most people are not excited about a fourth-round rookie in a bad Browns offense. Kevin Stefanski historically uses his RBs well, and with the latest Quinshon Judkins news stating he may not sign until his legal situation is resolved, Sampson might have a chance at a big role early in the season. Sampson is a talented back, who many had as a Day 2 pick, and if his only competition is Jerome Ford and an RB who, at best, will join the team in late August, Sampson could be a huge steal late in drafts.”
Ricky Lemon (The Fantasy Champions)

Tony Pollard (TEN)

Tony Pollard was the RB21 in 0.5 PPR PPG last season with Will Levis and Mason Rudolph under center, and Pollard’s current ECR is…RB24? Even if you don’t believe in Cam Ward as a prolific passer, most should agree that it’d be hard for him to be worse than Levis or Rudolph. Assuming the Titans’ overall offense is just slightly more efficient, Pollard should at least be a top-20 running back. Factoring in Ward’s strong camp thus far and Tyjae Spears‘ high ankle injury means that Pollard is being drafted at his absolute floor with back-end RB1 upside if Ward is #good.”
Meng Song (Fantrax)

Tony Pollard. There’s still not a lot of enthusiasm for him in drafts despite the likelihood that Tyjae Spears misses the first month of the season with a high-ankle sprain. Pollard should get plenty of touches over the first several games of the season and will still be the lead back even after Spears returns. The Titans’ healthier, upgraded offensive line could be among the best in the league. And QB Cam Ward, the No. 1 pick in the draft, should upgrade the Titans’ offense overall.”
Pat Fitzmaurice (FantasyPros)

Braelon Allen (NYJ)

Braelon Allen. He is currently around RB46 in the expert consensus and can be had around pick 140 in Half-PPR leagues. With the uncertainty surrounding Breece Hall, his upside is immense at his current draft position. The Jets should be running the ball at a much higher clip than they did in 2024, and even in a timeshare with Hall, Allen could crush this price tag. The 2024 4th-rounder was absolutely electric with Wisconsin in college, averaging nearly 6 YPC. He was serviceable in limited time during his rookie season, totaling 482 yards and three scores on 111 touches. He’s a steal in the late rounds with solid upside.”
Justin Elick (Daily Fantasy Circuit)

“Jets head coach Aaron Glenn has hinted at an RBBC- comprising of Hall and Braelon Allen, where Allen gets the short-yardage and potential goal-line touches. Glenn said, “With Braelon, a 240-pound man who’s always falling forward. Listen, that’s where he’s going to make his money.” And this just in, per Tony Pauline of Sportskeeda, people close to this situation think Breece Hall might be moved before the trade deadline. If that happens, Allen’s stock gets a major boost. My best guess is Allen would be the primary RB in a committee with Isaiah Davis. However, there’s a world where Braelon Allen becomes a rare bell cow RB, and those are very valuable in fantasy football, especially on a run-heavy team, which the Jets figure to be. Ringo’s comp- Braelon Allen reminds me of Nick Chubb in his prime.”
Mark Ringo (Sleepers and Busts)

“While there may be other running backs I’m hoping to end up with in my leagues, none of them may provide the same value, based on ADP, as Braelon Allen. Allen has performed well in the Jets’ first two preseason games and has drawn rave reviews from the beat writers covering training camp. It is no secret that the Jets are going to be a very run-heavy team under new Head Coach Aaron Glenn. Breece Hall is going to be a free agent after the season and will probably look to cash in on a contract similar to Kyren Williams and James Cook. While Hall remains the lead back, there is growing speculation that Allen could command a workload approaching a 50-50 split. Allen’s physically dominant running style, particularly his proficiency in short-yardage situations, aligns well with the Jets’ offensive identity.”
Rich Piazza (Fantasy Shed)

“Listed at 6’1, 236 lbs., Braelon Allen is a BEAST. HC Aaron Glenn has been vocal this offseason about using multiple backs. Combine that with the fact that Breece Hall hasn’t quite lived up to expectations in the Big Apple, and you have a prime breakout candidate. At his current ADP of RB46, Allen has Week 1 FLEX appeal and could smash his ADP if he manages to outperform Hall, even if the Jets have a low-scoring offense in 2025.”
Lee Wehry (FantasyPros)

James Conner (ARI)

James Conner is a running back that I have been adding to rosters in the draft. Conner is currently listed as RB19 in the expert consensus ranks, and this feels like the floor to me. In the past 4 seasons, Conner has finished RB20 or better in each of the seasons in half-point PPR. This is running back with a very consistent safe floor and the ability to deliver pop weeks throughout the fantasy season.”
Derek Dennington (The Good Old Boys Fantasy Football Podcast)

Alvin Kamara (NO)

“If you are drafting in a home league with fantasy managers who may not be paying close attention to the preseason goings on, the answer is Jacory Croskey-Merritt. But before you try to secure the rising rookie, grab Alvin Kamara in the fourth round. Kamara has been in the NFL for eight seasons and has never finished outside the top 18 fantasy running backs. He’s also never played 17 games in a season, so it is not like he’s Najee Harris-ing himself to better season-long numbers. Kamara should continue to pull double duty as the lead back and primary safety valve in the passing game, particularly given New Orleans’ shaky quarterback situation. Alvin Kamara is about as safe as you can get outside the top 15 and is exactly the type of player who allows you to swing for the fences later in drafts.”
Mick Ciallela (Fantrax)

Isiah Pacheco (KC)

“A player that I find myself heavily targeting in drafts currently is Kansas City RB Isiah Pacheco, who is largely being overlooked after his injury a season ago and now finds himself as an intriguing upside player in drafts with his current RB25 ADP, which allows you to snag him in the mid-to-late rounds. In 2023, he averaged 15.3 PPR points per game over 14 contests, finishing as the RB14 with 213.9 total fantasy points, proving he can deliver consistent production when healthy. Despite a fibula fracture derailing his 2024 season, Pacheco showed his explosive potential early, racking up 189 combined yards and a touchdown on 41 touches in just two games before the injury. With Andy Reid noting that Pacheco has added “good weight” and looks “tremendous” in camp, he’s poised to reclaim his lead-back role, especially since the Chiefs’ offense thrives on positive game scripts that fuel rushing opportunities. Even with competition from Kareem Hunt and Elijah Mitchell, Pacheco’s 4.37 speed, physical running style, and potential for increased receiving work, only 2.7% of Kansas City’s 600 passes targeted him in 2024, making him a steal with RB1 potential.”
Brandon Murchison (RotoBaller)

Fantasy Football Cheat Sheet Creator

What one WR outside the top 15 in the expert consensus are you hoping to end up with in all your leagues and why?

Jaylen Waddle (MIA)

“I want to say Jaylen Waddle here, but the low-risk price on Keon Coleman makes him an even better “every-team” fit. For the cost of a WR5 (or even WR6), I can get a second-year, second-round wideout who already flashed intriguing upside in three high-value areas: deep receiving, yards after catch, and end-zone usage. So I can stash that guy on my bench and then watch him play with Josh Allen every week, in an offense that needs his talent to help make everything else work? Sounds like a fun season.”
Matt Schauf (Draft Sharks)

“Right now, it is Jaylen Waddle for me. Waddle already has two top-20 seasons under his belt, with a third in the WR3 range in 12-team leagues. Yes, last season was rough. But Waddle’s demise has been greatly exaggerated. He is still just 26 years old and plays in the same offense he has been in his entire NFL career. Waddle averaged 7.7 targets over his first three seasons compared to just 5.5 last year. However, Jonnu Smith is gone, De’Von Achane is dealing with a calf injury, and Tyreek Hill… well, who knows. Any or all of these should bump up Waddle’s workload in 2025. In turn, he should be much closer to the player he was from 2021 to 2023 than last year’s version.”
Mick Ciallela (Fantrax)

DK Metcalf (SEA)

“This off-season, the Pittsburgh Steelers traded a 2nd round pick for DK Metcalf. Then, they signed Aaron Rodgers, who, even though he is at the end of his career, was still able to put up 3,897 yards and 28 touchdowns last year for the New York Jets. Rodgers tends to have an alpha receiver that he targets each year, usually Davante Adams, and this year that player will be DK Metcalf. Metcalf’s value has also increased due to the fact that the Steelers traded away George Pickens, who was his biggest competition for targets, and didn’t bring anyone in to fill that void. He should have a stellar year as Rodgers’ WR1, which is why I am drafting him on as many teams as possible!”
Adam Dove (The Fantasy Couriers)

“The answer to this question is easily DK Metcalf. The Steelers have moved on from George Pickens, leaving Metcalf as the only show in town. Add in Aaron Rodgers at quarterback, who is notorious for locking in on his WR1, and the sky is the limit. He is going off the board as WR21 and 45th overall, and there is no chance that he doesn’t outperform this ADP by at least 12 spots. I’m loading up on Metcalf. I am fine with him as my WR1, but he is being drafted as my WR3.”
Aaron St Denis (Fantasy Sports Advice Network)

Emeka Egbuka (TB)

Emeka Egbuka is ranked as WR 44 on the Top 15 Expert Consensus Rankings, which is one of the biggest steals in all of fantasy football 2025. If there is a Brian Thomas Jr. from this 2025 NFL Draft Class, it’s Egbuka. His college receiver room was more talented than this current Tampa Bay room, as he played with Jeremiah Smith, Marvin Harrison Jr., Chris Olave, Jaxon Smith-Njigba, and others. He also learned to play all over the field during his crowded journey inside those rooms, which manufactured a competitive monster within Egbuka. He might be the most NFL-ready WR to come out of college in a decade. Baker Mayfield loves him. Want bold? Egbuka could be a top 12WR this season, and I predict that come this time next year, we value him like we value Ladd McConkey this year.”
Smitty (TheFantasyFootballShow)

“Call me crazy, but I’m drafting Emeka Egbuka any chance I get. His WR43 value is criminal to me, even with Mike Evans and Chris Godwin ahead of him on the depth chart. Jalen McMillan suffered a neck injury in the preseason, and those can linger. I love Egbuka in dynasty, but I like him an awful lot in redraft. WR43 seems insane given his upside, so I’m fine reaching for him a round or two early to make sure he’s in my lineup week in and week out.”
Andrew Hall (FantasyPros)

Emeka Egbuka has been the talk of training camp, drawing praise from coaches, teammates, and the media. A savvy route runner with above-average speed and a first-round pedigree, thrust into a prominent role with Chris Godwin, and now Jalen McMillan is set to miss time in the regular season due to injury, and you have a perfect storm for a breakout. Don’t be surprised to see Egbuka move up from his current ADP of WR42, but with WR2 potential, he’s still a bargain on draft day and will be on as many teams as I can get him.”
Lee Wehry (FantasyPros)

Ladd McConkey (LAC)

Ladd McConkey (24th expert consensus) is the one wide receiver outside the top 15 I’m hoping to land in every league. He’s still the alpha in Los Angeles, still the most trusted target for Justin Herbert, and still the best bet to lead the team in receptions. McConkey was a PPR monster as a rookie, and I believe his touchdown production will climb with improved red-zone usage. The Chargers drafted Tre Harris and Omarion Hampton and brought back Keenan Allen from the Bears, so McConkey will no longer be the sole defensive focus. That opens the door for cleaner looks, more volume, and a strong case for WR1 upside at WR2 cost.”
Lawrence Iacona (Gridiron Experts)

Tetairoa McMillan (CAR)

“It is Tet McMillan time in Carolina. The Panthers have been starving for a dominant outside receiver for years, and now they finally get one with the former Arizona product. McMillan will be the number one target in this offense by leaps and bounds in 2025, with a lot of where he finishes at the end of the season dependent on Bryce Young, who finished 2024 on an absolute tear (QB8 on a points per game basis the last 7 weeks). Go grab McMillan, and reap the rewards of that selection.”
Ed Birdsall (Talking Points Sports)

Tetairoa McMillan (WR24 in the rankings) is one of my favorite wide receivers to draft outside the top 10. The rookie has had an outstanding training camp, building a strong connection as Bryce Young‘s go-to wide receiver. While he is dealing with a minor hamstring injury, McMillan should be ready for Week 1. The Panthers won’t have an elite passing attack this year. Yet, Young’s strong finish to last season should make fantasy players confident that the rookie will be a weekly mid-range WR2 option. The former Arizona Star was one of the top pass catchers in college football last year, ranking sixth in yards per route run (2.87), second in missed tackles forced (29), and fourth in contested catches (18) among 42 wide receivers with at least 100 targets (per PFF). More importantly, no one on the team will keep McMillan from seeing at least 130 targets as a rookie.”
Mike Fanelli (FantasyPros)

Tetairoa McMillan has all the traits necessary to become the prototypical WR1 the Panthers drafted him to be. Bryce Young took an enormous step in the final 10 games of 2024, and could take another with his new 6’4” weapon. McMillan dominated on contested catches throughout college, but also showed enough ability to separate that we shouldn’t worry about him being a one-trick pony. He was a complete alpha at Arizona, boasting a 44.4% dominator rating (91st percentile). It’s important to monitor what was described as a “tight hamstring” by coach Dave Canales – hamstring injuries have the potential to linger, but there isn’t much reason to worry about this one yet.”
Charlie Sisian (The Fantasy DC)

Tetairoa McMillan. He’s a top-10 draft pick who’s 6-foot-5, runs good routes, and averaged 108.8 yards per game over his final two college seasons. It’s obvious McMillan is going to be Bryce Young‘s top receiver right away. The Panthers will probably have to throw quite a bit because their defense isn’t very good on paper. There’s a reasonable chance McMillan finishes in the top 10 in targets this season.”
Pat Fitzmaurice (FantasyPros)

Jameson Williams (DET)

Jameson Williams was the WR15 in half-PPR scoring over the second half of the 2024 season (Weeks 9-17), and he’s finishing up an offseason full of high praise from his coaching staff in a pass-happy offense – so why is his ADP still just WR25? JAMO is a player I’m constantly targeting as my WR2 in home leagues, as the former first-round pick from 2022 (94th percentile 40-yard dash from that draft class) seems on the verge of a true breakout season entering 2025. Williams was already top-seven in yards per target last season, and even with just a slight uptick in volume, he could move higher than the top-15 we saw over the last nine games of the previous season. He’s an easy click for me over the likes of young, talented receivers who have less-than-ideal passing game situations, ala Marvin Harrison Jr. and DeVonta Smith. OC Ben Johnson might be gone, but this is undoubtedly one of the NFL’s best offensive environments – and the Lions STILL have a borderline top-five offensive line, according to Establish The Run’s Brandon Thorne, despite losing center Frank Ragnow.”
Chris Dell (Betting Predators)

Xavier Worthy (KC)

Drake London and Ladd McConkey are easy choices – but too easy, being that they are ranked so soon after the top 15. I will go with Xavier Worthy. Worthy is still misunderstood as a player; he has more versatility than many believe. The Chiefs, at least publicl,y are saying they want to push the ball downfield more. He is the most talented WR on their roster, and he was a 21-year-old rookie with first-round draft capital who produced fairly well and is hitting year 2, an archetype much research shows is worth betting on in fantasy football. Add in Rashee Rice‘s very likely multi-game suspension, and we have a good argument that Worthy is underpriced. Like with Henderson, we are abiding by the “Upside wins championships” mantra.”
Brian Ford (Going For 2)

DJ Moore (CHI)

DJ Moore is the easiest draft pick for me this year and is my most-owned player in best ball. The WR16 last year in PPR and the WR6 in 2023 is currently ranked as WR20. I’ve gotten him on Underdog as the WR27 in my most recent draft, which is an absolute steal. The consistent WR is now getting a huge coaching upgrade in Ben Johnson, who plans to utilize Moore in multiple ways, such as lining him up in the backfield. Ideally, we’ll also see him in the slot, in the same role as Amon-Ra St. Brown, who has been a fantasy machine over the last few seasons.”
Ricky Lemon (The Fantasy Champions)

DJ Moore. This one is easy for me. I’ve been loading up on him in best ball and redrafts alike. He is one of the most underrated WRs in the league, and is coming off a solid season (966 yards, 6 TD) in one of the league’s worst offenses. With a revamped offensive line, a new coaching regime, and Caleb Williams turning heads in the offseason and preseason, Moore is a lock for me. Don’t be surprised if he ends up in the top 10-15 at the WR position in 2025.”
Justin Elick (Daily Fantasy Circuit)

Davante Adams (LAR)

“For years, there were preseason debates on Cooper Kupp vs. Robert Woods in fantasy, and both Rams wide receivers thrived. Puka Nacua has been a PPR machine since entering the league with over 9.5 targets per game, but he’s scored just nine touchdowns in his 28 starts. Who’s to say that Davante Adams can’t see a similar target share to Nacua this year and possibly be the better red zone target? Even at age 32, Adams has true league-winning upside in Round 3 this year, assuming that Matthew Stafford is healthy.”
Meng Song (Fantrax)

Ricky Pearsall (SF)

Ricky Pearsall is the WR I’m targeting in rounds 6-8 of drafts this year. He projects as the WR1 for Brock Purdy and the 49ers to start the season. Jauan Jennings is banged up and seeking a new contract, while Brandon Aiyuk looks like he’ll begin the year on the PUP list. The only real competition for targets will come from CMC and George Kittle, but defenses will be forced to focus on those two first, which should free up Pearsall. I love the upside and comeback story he brings into 2025 – draft him as a WR3/Flex option with big-time breakout potential!”
Brady Auer (BA Sports Podcast)

Marvin Harrison Jr. (ARI)

“Don’t look at me like that. I can feel your look. Marvin Harrison Jr. didn’t live up to many fantasy drafters (and my) hopes or expectations last year. Sometimes it takes players a few years to make the leap. A lot of people wrote off another one of Ringo’s picks, Jameson Williams, last year at this time, and they’re eating some tasty crow this summer. I like mine with honey mustard, haha! Anyway, I digress….I don’t know if it’s going to be this year, next year, or 2027, but sooner or later Marvin Harrison Jr. is going to be a fantasy star. He’s just too talented and dedicated to his craft not to reach his immense potential.”
Mark Ringo (Sleepers and Busts)

Jayden Higgins (HOU)

Jayden Higgins, selected 34th overall by the Houston Texans, became the first second-round NFL draft pick to sign a fully guaranteed contract, a factor that subsequently impacted the negotiation process for other second-round selections. Higgins is frequently compared to his Texans teammate, Nico Collins, and is projected to start alongside him on the outside in the offense. His draft capital, talent, and anticipated role provide a favorable outlook for Higgins, suggesting the potential to exceed his current average draft position (ADP). With the team’s apparent struggles in the running game, the Texans are expected to feature a pass-heavy offense, offering C.J. Stroud an opportunity to rebound from a disappointing sophomore season and potentially enhance Higgins’ production.”
Rich Piazza (Fantasy Shed)

Courtland Sutton (DEN)

Courtland Sutton is a wide receiver who delivers an incredible floor with upside. The chemistry that Nix and Sutton have built and the offense scheme of Sean Payton should continue to have Sutton produce for fantasy this year. Currently ranked as WR 22 in the expert consensus ranks would project to be the floor for Sutton this year, in my opinion. This is a wide receiver who is the clear number one for a team looking to build upon the finish from last year.”
Derek Dennington (The Good Old Boys Fantasy Football Podcast)

Calvin Ridley (TEN)

“People look at the Tennessee Titans offense from a fantasy perspective, and to the naked eye, there is just not much there to buy into. But that should not be the case for WR Calvin Ridley, whose current WR28 ADP presents a player you can draft in the middle rounds and brings an upside of someone who could reach high-end WR2 levels. Despite a shaky 2024 season with the Titans, he still managed 64 receptions for 1,017 yards and four touchdowns on 120 targets, proving he can produce even with subpar quarterback play from Will Levis and Mason Rudolph. The arrival of rookie QB Cam Ward, who threw for 1,051 deep yards with a 45.6% completion rate in college, could unlock Ridley’s big-play ability, as seen in their training camp chemistry, including a 40-yard connection against Roger McCreary. Ridley’s league-leading 1,883 air yards in 2024 and 15.9 yards per catch show he’s a field-stretching threat, perfect for Ward’s aggressive downfield style, setting him up for a possible 1,100-yard, 7-touchdown season. With minimal target competition from Van Jefferson, an aging Tyler Lockett, and surging rookie Elic Ayomanor, Ridley’s 22.6% target share in Tennessee’s offense makes him a high-volume WR2 with top-15 upside if Ward hits the ground running.”
Brandon Murchison (RotoBaller)

2025 Fantasy Football Draft Kit

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