Superflex Dynasty Rookie Mock Draft: Three Rounds (2026)

We recently ran through a three-round dynasty rookie mock draft for superflex leagues on the FantasyPros Dynasty podcast. Ryan Wormeli, Pat Fitzmaurice, and Scott Bogman provide their analysis for each of the picks over three rounds specific to superflex dynasty rookie drafts. Check out the full video below along with a recap of their picks.

Dynasty Rookie Mock Draft: Superflex

Here is a recap of our recent three-round superflex dynasty rookie mock draft.

Round 1

Fernando Mendoza (QB – Indiana)

Fitzmaurice goes against the grain at 1.01, betting on a superflex currency play at quarterback over the class’s RB1.

Jeremiyah Love (RB – Notre Dame)

Wormeli grabs the “most likely to be elite” player in the class. In most leagues, Love is still the favorite for 1.01.

Carnell Tate (WR – Ohio State)

Bogman opens the receiver run with Tate as WR1, citing hands and consistency.

Jordyn Tyson (WR – Arizona State)

Fitz takes the upside swing of the Big Three, acknowledging the injury history.

Makai Lemon (WR – Southern California)

Wormeli takes the “last one left” of the top WR trio, leaning on target/reception profile and versatility.

Denzel Boston (WR – Washington)

Bogman keeps the WR train rolling with a TD producer who could rise through the process.

K.C. Concepcion (WR – Texas A&M)

Slot-friendly separator profile, early breakout notes, and a “floor starts crumbling” comment after this tier.

Kenyon Sadiq (TE – Oregon)

First tight end off the board. The hosts frame him as “TE1 by default,” which is still TE1.

Jadarian Price (RB – Notre Dame)

Wormeli plants a flag: Price is good, just overshadowed by Love.

Jonah Coleman (RB – Washington)

Fitz chases the PPR angle and the “bowling ball” build.

Emmett Johnson (RB – Nebraska)

Wormeli leans into pass-catching and scoring upside.

Ty Simpson (QB – Alabama)

Bogman closes Round 1 with a “draft capital + scarcity” bet at QB2.

Round 2

Chris Bell (WR – Louisville)

Fitz swings on size/speed and projection, noting rawness and coaching needed.

Nick Singleton (RB – Penn State)

Wormeli bets pedigree and athletic tools over clean production.

*This pick was prior to the news that Singleton broke his foot at Senior Bowl practices

Chris Brazzell II (WR – Tennessee)

Bogman holds his nose a bit (Tennessee WR history), but loves the profile and separation potential.

Trinidad Chambliss (QB – Ole Miss)

The volatile rushing QB dart, with the huge caveat: he might not even be in the class.

Kaytron Allen (RB – Penn State)

Wormeli doubles down on the Penn State backfield with the “workhorse grinder” type.

Skyler Bell (WR – UConn)

Bogman reaches (by admission) for a high-volume, return-capable playmaker.

Omar Cooper Jr. (WR – Indiana)

Fitz’s crush pick: toughness, hands, blocking, and “team will love him on Day 2.”

Zachariah Branch (WR – Georgia)

Wormeli goes pedigree swing. Not much conviction, but plenty of talent.

Elijah Sarratt (WR – Indiana)

Bogman grabs Mendoza’s top target as a classic chain-mover bet.

Eli Stowers (TE – Vanderbilt)

Fitz takes TE2 with athleticism and receiving upside, while questioning inline viability.

Germie Bernard (WR – Alabama)

Steady role bet with a touchdown spike and some multi-use deployment.

Demond Claiborne (RB – Wake Forest)

Bogman’s RB pick: three-down potential and tackle-breaking profile.

Round 3

Garrett Nussmeier (QB – Louisiana State)

Fitz goes QB again: arm talent, bloodlines, and “maybe the Saints” type logic.

Drew Allar (QB – Penn State)

Wormeli takes the gross-but-correct superflex swing at a traits QB.

Antonio Williams (WR – Clemson)

Bogman chases slot production upside, with injuries as the big red flag.

Mike Washington Jr. (RB – Arkansas)

Fitz likes the size/speed and pass-catching flashes, while noting age and fumbles.

Ja’Kobi Lane (WR – Southern California)

Wormeli bets the secondary target next to Lemon.

Seth McGowan (RB – Kentucky)

Bogman swings on talent despite off-field risk and an uneven path.

Jam Miller (RB – Alabama)

Fitz grabs another compact runner, more “solid NFL back” than ceiling play.

Roman Hemby (RB – Indiana)

Wormeli takes the “good player” bet and the Maryland-to-Indiana storyline.

Bryce Lance (WR – North Dakota State)

Bogman takes the size/TD producer and admits the process will decide how real it is.

Adam Randall (RB – Clemson)

Fitz closes with one of the more interesting molds: big converted WR with receiving ability.

Michael Trigg (TE – Baylor)

Wormeli takes TE3 to round out a thin-ish tight end board.

Carson Beck (QB – Miami)

Bogman ends the mock with the “QB scarcity” argument: if there’s even a path to starts, it matters in superflex.

Dynasty Rookie Draft Tiers: Superflex Leagues

Tier 1: The Only Real Difference-Makers

  • Jeremiyah Love (RB – Notre Dame)
  • Fernando Mendoza (QB – Indiana)

How the hosts framed it

  • This is the class. Everything else is negotiable.
  • Love is the best player in the class and the cleanest projection to elite fantasy production.
  • Mendoza is the only quarterback anyone felt comfortable arguing could be a long-term NFL starter.

Key discussion points

  • Love is the most likely player to be a Tier 1 dynasty asset at his position.
  • Mendoza went 1.01 purely because of superflex economics, not because he’s “better” than Love.
  • After these two, the certainty drops sharply.

Tier takeaway: In superflex, one of these two will go 1.01 in almost every league. If neither hits, the class looks bleak.

Tier 2: The “Big Three” Wide Receivers

  • Carnell Tate (WR – Ohio State)
  • Jordan Tyson (WR – Arizona State)
  • Mai Lemon (WR – Southern California)

How the hosts framed it

  • This was repeatedly described as a three-way coin flip.
  • Preference varied slightly, but nobody felt strongly enough to “pound the table.”

Internal ordering logic

  • Tate: safest profile, elite hands, cleanest projection.
  • Lemon: volume, versatility, slot juice.
  • Tyson: highest ceiling, but injury history is the tiebreaker.

Key quote vibe

  • “It’s just ice cream flavors.”
  • “Any order is defensible.”
  • “Tyson is last for me only because of injuries.”

Tier takeaway: These three form the cleanest WR tier in the class. Once they’re gone, WR certainty drops.

Tier 3: Secondary WRs + Clear TE1

  • Denzel Boston (WR – Washington)
  • Casey Concepcion (WR – Texas A&M)
  • Kenyon Sadiq (TE – Oregon)

How the hosts framed it

  • Boston and Concepcion are the next WR bucket, but clearly below the Big Three.
  • Sadiq is TE1, but more because of the class than dominance.

Important context

  • Fitz explicitly said Sadiq is not as good a prospect as last year’s top tight ends.
  • Still, positional scarcity pushes him into the mid-first.
  • After Concepcion, Fitz said “the floor starts to crumble.”

Tier takeaway: This is where structure starts to matter more than raw talent.

Tier 4: RB2–RB5 Cluster (Landing Spot Tier)

  • Jadarian Price (RB – Notre Dame)
  • Jonah Coleman (RB – Washington)
  • Emmett Johnson (RB – Nebraska)
  • Katron Allen (RB – Penn State)

How the hosts framed it

  • These backs are very close.
  • Order depends heavily on PPR preference and landing spot.

Individual notes

  • Price: elite runner, unknown receiver.
  • Coleman: safest PPR floor.
  • Johnson: best pass-catching résumé.
  • Allen: grinder, vision, less athletic but productive.

Tier takeaway: This group will reshuffle constantly post-draft. None are “must-have,” but all are usable.

Tier 5: QB2–QB3 Range (Scarcity Tier)

  • Ty Simpson (QB – Alabama)
  • Trinidad Chambliss (QB – Ole Miss)

How the hosts framed it

  • Nobody loves these quarterbacks.
  • They matter because quarterbacks always matter in superflex.

Key themes

  • Simpson: safer, likely first-round NFL draft capital.
  • Chambliss: rushing upside, massive volatility, eligibility uncertainty.

Tier takeaway: This is where process overrides preference. You take the QB because the board tells you to.


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