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Superflex Dynasty Rookie Mock Draft (2026 Fantasy Football)

We’ll have you covered with our dynasty rookie draft rankings and advice to help you dominate your leagues. Here’s a look at a superflex dynasty rookie mock draft using our free draft simulator. We dive into a few of the picks below.

Superflex Dynasty Rookie Mock Draft

Here’s a five-round, superflex dynasty rookie mock draft. Here is the full draft board, and we dive into the dynasty rookie draft pick selection below.

Full Dynasty Rookie Draft Board

superflex dynasty rookie mock draft middle pick

Dynasty Rookie Draft Picks

Derek Brown provides his analysis of a few of the players selected in this superflex dynasty rookie mock draft.

1.06 – K.C. Concepcion (WR – Texas A&M)

Concepcion has outside/inside versatility. He played in the slot 82.1-92.7% prior to 2025 before transitioning to the perimeter (65.3%) in his final season. Concepcion has the skill set to play either role in the NFL. His speed is immediate and palpable on film (high 4.3/low 4.4 40 speed). Concepcion explodes off the line and can easily stack corners on nine routes. He has good bend in his routes and can change directions without losing speed. Concepcion is a threat at all three levels of a defense. His first step is devastatingly quick, which allows him to earn easy separation on crossers and drag routes. One area that he can improve in his route running is his hip sink and decelerating at the top of his stem. He can be more efficient and sudden at the top of his stem on whip routes and comebacks. He has a varied release package off the line and the upper body strength to handle press. I don’t have any concerns with his ability to separate in the NFL against man and press coverage. Concepcion adds all the little bells and whistles to his routes like jab steps, variations in pacing, head fakes, etc. He sets up corners well and has a strong sense of leverage and route pacing against zone coverage, with the feel of where to sit down in zone. His play strength serves him well during routes and at the catch point. He isn’t knocked off his routes and can play through contact. During his final collegiate season, Concepcion had a 66.7% contested catch rate. He plays bigger than his listed size as a ball winner at the catch point and as a receiver who can make difficult shoestring catches and play above the rim. Concepcion is a YAC threat that can also be utilized in the manufactured touch department and run game. He finished his collegiate career with 431 rushing yards (6.2 yards per carry) while also ranking inside the top 33 in YAC per reception twice in his three collegiate seasons. Drops will be part of the conversation of his eval with a 10.3% drop rate or higher in his final two seasons. I’m not worried about his hands, though. There are far too many occasions in his film where he comes down with an immensely difficult catch, or he secures a pass and immediately is hit and holds onto the ball, that I’m not worried about his hands.

2.06 – Jadarian Price (RB – Notre Dame)

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.

3.06 – Demond Claiborne (RB – Wake Forest)

4.06 – Bryce Lance (WR – North Dakota State)

5.06 – Taylen Green (QB – Arkansas)

Green is more likely moving up into the third round of dynasty rookie drafts after his NFL Combine performance. Some managers may want to take a flier as early as the second given the perceived lackluster nature of the class. Here is DBro’s take on the rookie.

Dual threat passer. Green averaged 113 rushing attempts and 600.8 rushing yards over the last four years of college (8.8 rushing touchdowns per season). Green has build-up speed and the size to be a goalline threat in the NFL. He’s a straight-line runner without a ton of wiggle. He’s best viewed as an opportunistic scrambler at the next level with some upside in the designed run game. Green has the arm strength to make every NFL throw necessary. He has easy flick of the wrist velocity. His windup can get long at times, leaving the ball coming out a touch late, though. His accuracy on intermediate throws is decent, with thoughtful ball placement at times, where he’s helping his receivers avoid hospital collisions. Green’s overall accuracy is spotty, though. His deep ball can lack touch, especially on boundary go balls or corner of the end zone shots. His footwork can lapse at times, which doesn’t help his accuracy issues. His second level passes lack touch at times as he resorts to line drive fastballs when he needs to layer the ball. His pocket presence needs refinement. Green is late to feel the rush many times and doesn’t have the quick-twitch abilities to bail him out of danger situations. He wasn’t tasked with full field reads at Arkansas, but he’ll hang on his first read or miss receivers running wide open at times. Green feels a tick late at times getting the ball out. His trigger has to speed up to the pace of the NFL game.


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