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Dynasty Rookie Draft Rankings (2026 Fantasy Football)

We’ll have you covered as you prepare for your 2026 dynasty rookie drafts. In order to dominate your dynasty rookie draft, check out our expert consensus dynasty rookie draft rankings. And sync your dynasty league to practice with fast and free dynasty rookie mock drafts. Below, we dive into dynasty rookie draft rankings from some of our fantasy football expert community.

2026 Dynasty Rookie Draft Rankings

Here are our latest Dynasty Rookie Draft Rankings from our consensus of fantasy football experts. You can find the latest Dynasty Rookie Draft Rankings and sync your fantasy football league for specific advice.

RK PLAYER NAME TEAM POS AGE BEST WORST AVG. STD.DEV
1 Jeremiyah Love FA RB1 20 1 1 1 0
2 Carnell Tate FA WR1 21 2 5 2.8 1
3 Makai Lemon FA WR2 21 2 8 3.4 1.3
4 Jordyn Tyson FA WR3 21 2 8 3.8 1.3
5 Denzel Boston FA WR4 22 5 12 7 2
6 K.C. Concepcion FA WR5 21 5 14 8.4 2.8
7 Jonah Coleman FA RB2 22 5 22 8.9 4.3
8 Jadarian Price FA RB3 22 6.0 19.0 9.5 3.4
9 Kenyon Sadiq FA TE1 20 6.0 16.0 9.7 2.6
10 Fernando Mendoza FA QB1 22 5.0 16.0 11.4 2.9
11 Emmett Johnson FA RB4 22 5.0 45.0 12.8 8.7
12 Kaytron Allen FA RB5 23 7.0 20.0 13.8 3.7
13 Nicholas Singleton FA RB6 22 4.0 25.0 14.8 5.4
14 Omar Cooper Jr. FA WR6 22 8.0 36.0 16.4 6.8
15 Elijah Sarratt FA WR7 22 11.0 25.0 17.4 3.7
16 Chris Bell FA WR8 10.0 50.0 17.8 9.1
17 Eli Stowers FA TE2 22 10.0 25.0 14.4 3.5
18 Chris Brazzell II FA WR9 11.0 36.0 21.1 6.4
19 Germie Bernard FA WR10 22 15.0 36.0 21.7 5.7
20 Antonio Williams FA WR11 21 8.0 38.0 22.2 8.0
21 Ty Simpson FA QB2 23 18.0 29.0 23.1 3.3
22 Mike Washington Jr. FA RB7 13.0 37.0 23.4 6.0
23 Zachariah Branch FA WR12 21 10.0 28.0 19.8 4.9
24 Malachi Fields FA WR13 14.0 44.0 25.5 8.6
25 Garrett Nussmeier FA QB3 24 22.0 48.0 29.9 6.9
26 Ja’Kobi Lane FA WR14 21 21.0 63.0 30.1 9.3
27 Demond Claiborne FA RB8 22 20.0 44.0 27.0 5.7
28 Roman Hemby FA RB9 23 18.0 55.0 33.1 9.8
29 Skyler Bell FA WR15 23 20.0 63.0 34.3 9.9
30 J’Mari Taylor FA RB10 20.0 49.0 30.7 7.4
31 Max Klare FA TE3 26.0 65.0 36.1 8.7
32 Adam Randall FA RB11 20.0 41.0 33.1 5.8
33 Deion Burks FA WR16 18.0 65.0 37.9 11.6
34 Michael Trigg FA TE4 23.0 48.0 33.8 5.7
35 Le’Veon Moss FA RB12 24.0 52.0 35.8 7.2

Makai Lemon will run the majority of his routes from the slot in the NFL, as he did in college (75.6% slot). His perimeter usage could depend on whether he’s closer to the 2024 or 2025 version of his play. In 2024, Lemon was a more explosive player in all facets (off the line, in route, and after the catch). He wasn’t nearly as twitchy in 2025, which could be related to a preseason injury he sustained or possibly adding some weight prior to the 2025 season. We’ll see what version of Lemon we get in the NFL, but if he’s closer to the 2025 version of himself, he could be a slot-confined receiver. Lemon isn’t a burner regardless of which season you’re discussing. He’s more quick than fast, though. He has the quick-twitch/short-area skills to produce with the ball in his hands after the catch. Lemon displays solid contact balance with the ability to break tackles and churn out yards with the ball. He has good vision in traffic as a runner. Lemon is a zone coverage Ginsu knife. He slices through zone with ease, with a firm understanding of finding space and pacing his routes well. Lemon’s snap at the top of his routes can be good, but not amazing at times, which allows corners to undercut his routes. He has to clean up his technique in this area. Lemon’s raw speed and the limitations in this area, and his route running, could limit him as a perimeter receiver and vertical threat. Lemon doesn’t routinely stack defenders with vertical route concepts as he puts the emphasis upon his ability to win with back shoulder throws and at the catch point. Lemon is strong at the catch point with the ability to high point the ball while flashing late hands. He had a 66.7% contested catch rate in 2025. Lemon isn’t a skyscraper, so despite the fact that he is strong at the catch point, his smaller catch radius could make it tough to live in a world in the NFL where he must dominate at the catch point. His hands are like vice grips, though, with a 2.8% drop rate in college (only four in college across 183 targets).

Jadarian Price has easy and immediate acceleration. He doesn’t have a truly elite home run gear, but I won’t be surprised if his runs in the low to mid 4.4s in the 40 with a strong 10-yard split. The strong acceleration makes him appear shot out of a cannon on many runs. He’s a scheme-agnostic runner. Price has the contact balance and lower body strength to handle runs up the A gap while displaying the speed to consistently win the edge with stretch zone plays. Price has an awesome feel for pressing the line and exploding upfield. He can create yards for himself and make defenders look silly when he looks dead to rights with his short-area agility, vision, and decisiveness. Price is an adventure as a pass protector. He has more than a few reps where he was late on blitz pickup. If you’re asking him to redirect incoming rushers or chip a defender, Price looks competent, but tasking him with holding his area of grass and standing up a rusher is more of a tall order. Price has a limited resume as a pass catcher in college with only 18 targets, but when he was asked to catch passes, he displayed soft, dependable hands (zero drops) and looked comfortable doing so. He transitions well from receiver to runner immediately.

 

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