Upside wins fantasy football championships. It’s a cliche, but it’s true. To win a league with 10+ teams, you need to have at least one or two players massively outperform their average draft position (ADP), which means chasing upside. Today, we’re here to find that upside at the wide receiver position. Here are three WR3s (based on early Underdog ADP) with the potential to provide legit WR1 fantasy seasons.
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Fantasy Football WR3s to Target
Jaylen Waddle (WR – MIA) | ADP: WR25
The thing about Jaylen Waddle is that he is a straight-up excellent receiver. Since entering the league as the sixth-overall pick in the 2021 NFL Draft, he has done nothing but produce borderline-elite or actually elite peripheral stats. His career yards per route run is 2.11, including two years above 2.50 — only three wideouts reached that threshold on high volume in 2025.
Of course, there are reasons to worry about Waddle this season. The Dolphins head into 2026 with a new head coach and no clear starting quarterback. Say what you will about Mike McDaniel and Tua Tagovailoa, but Waddle found fantasy success with them, including a WR7 overall finish in 2022. There’s a very real chance that Jeff Hafley and … Quinn Ewers, I guess, are a downgrade for Waddle’s fantasy production.
But this article is about upside, and it’s impossible to deny that Waddle has it. With Tyreek Hill out of town, he is the Dolphins’ undisputed top target. If the Dolphins are bad (which seems likely), he should rack up tons of targets playing from behind. And a talented receiver in his prime who is set to see elite volume is exactly the kind of player who can surprise the fantasy community with a WR1 season.
Carnell Tate (WR – Ohio State) | ADP: WR26
Makai Lemon (WR – USC) | ADP: WR29
Jordyn Tyson (WR – Arizona State) | ADP: WR31
There’s no better way to inject upside into a fantasy roster than by selecting a first-year player. Of course, this upside is usually counterbalanced by the downside — rookies have uniquely wide ranges of outcomes. But top-tier prospects with top-tier draft capital bring genuinely elite upside, especially compared to their draft-day costs.
This year, we have three top-tier wide receiver prospects. Each of Carnell Tate, Makai Lemon and Jordyn Tyson is essentially a lock to be selected in the first round of the 2026 NFL Draft, and it wouldn’t be shocking if all three were off the board in the first 10 picks.
I’ll admit that it’s kind of a cop-out to list all three of these young wideouts instead of picking my favorite. But that’s the thing about rookies: There’s so much we don’t know that targeting just one at the expense of the other two would probably be a mistake. All three have very impressive college metrics, but we’ve seen plenty of highly touted prospects disappoint at the NFL level, and less-touted ones explode to fantasy superstardom.
If I had to choose one member of this trio to prioritize, it would be Tyson, but that’s mostly because his ADP is the lowest. If you’re looking for upside, you really can’t go wrong with any of these three rookies. Especially if they are all selected in the top half of the first round, it’s more likely than not that at least one is producing like a legit fantasy WR1 by the end of the season.
Mike Evans (WR – FA) | ADP: WR34
Mike Evans will be 33 by the time the season starts, and he is coming off an injury-riddled 2025. But when he played, the veteran still posted impressive metrics. Even in a very crowded Buccaneers receiver room, his 28% target per route run rate ranked eighth in the NFL (minimum 100 routes). Evans also ranked sixth in air yards per game, even including multiple injury-shortened outings. He finished the season strong, too, with top-30 outings in three of his final four games after returning from injury for the second time.
The elephant in the room is that Evans is a free agent, and it seems unlikely that he will remain in Tampa Bay. Normally, it’s not a good sign when an aging player switches teams. But I think this could be a blessing in disguise for Evans’ fantasy value. He is almost certainly going to sign with a contender, and whatever team signs him will have a plan to use him. We’re hoping for “Davante Adams to the Rams” and not “Julio Jones to the Titans” here.
And there are some very intriguing potential landing spots for Evans. After the Buccaneers, who are still the favorites, the next four teams in betting odds to add Evans are the Chiefs, Ravens, Bills and Patriots. Those are four very exciting offenses with elite quarterbacks and targets to go around. It wouldn’t be at all surprising for the potential future Hall of Famer to have a vintage season while catching passes from Josh Allen or Drake Maye.
At the end of the day, Evans has been a half-PPR WR1 in six of the last eight seasons. Although last year was one of his two misses, he still posted genuinely elite marks in terms of earning valuable downfield targets. Right now, his price is low because of uncertainty. But I expect his ADP to rise when he signs, and most of the likely landing spots would see his value skyrocket. Drafting him right now as a backend WR3 is a no-brainer.
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Ted Chmyz is a fantasy football contributor for FantasyPros.com. Find him on Twitter and Bluesky @Tchmyz for more fantasy content or to ask questions.