Superflex Dynasty Rookie Draft Rankings (2026 Fantasy Football)

We’ll have you covered as you prepare for your 2025 dynasty rookie drafts. In order to dominate your superflex dynasty rookie draft, check out our expert consensus superflex dynasty rookie draft rankings. And sync your dynasty league to practice with fast and free dynasty rookie mock drafts. Below, we dive into superflex dynasty rookie draft rankings from some of our fantasy football expert community.

    2026 Superflex Dynasty Rookie Draft Rankings

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

    RK PLAYER NAME POS AGE BEST WORST AVG. STD.DEV
    1 Jeremiyah Love RB1 20 1 1 1 0
    2 Fernando Mendoza QB1 22 2 5 2.7 1.1
    3 Makai Lemon WR1 21 2 7 3.6 1.2
    4 Carnell Tate WR2 21 2 7 3.9 1.4
    5 Jordyn Tyson WR3 21 3 11 5.5 2.5
    6 K.C. Concepcion WR4 21 5 13 7.6 2.5
    7 Kenyon Sadiq TE1 21 6 10 8.2 1.1
    8 Denzel Boston WR5 22 6 17 10.2 3.1
    9 Omar Cooper Jr. WR6 22 7 17 11.1 3.4
    10 Eli Stowers TE2 23 7 17 11.1 3
    11 Jadarian Price RB2 22 4 19 11.3 3.1
    12 Jonah Coleman RB3 22 6 18 11.6 3.3
    13 Ty Simpson QB2 23 5 25 12.1 5.1
    14 Mike Washington Jr. RB4 6 27 14.8 5.5
    15 Elijah Sarratt WR7 22 8 21 15.2 3.4
    16 Emmett Johnson RB5 22 9 23 16.1 3.4
    17 Nicholas Singleton RB6 22 13 23 17.7 2.9
    18 Chris Brazzell II WR8 15 29 20.1 3.7
    19 Kaytron Allen RB7 23 14 32 20.4 4.8
    20 Chris Bell WR9 15 41 22.1 6.5
    21 Germie Bernard WR10 22 14 36 23.6 5.3
    22 Garrett Nussmeier QB3 24 10 46 24.9 9.8
    23 Zachariah Branch WR11 22 17 41 26.4 5.8
    24 Ja’Kobi Lane WR12 21 22 39 29 4.8
    25 Skyler Bell WR13 23 15 52 30.5 9.6
    26 Seth McGowan RB8 22 42 30.6 4.9
    27 Antonio Williams WR14 21 20 46 30.6 7.6
    28 Malachi Fields WR15 19 46 31.4 7.4
    29 Max Klare TE3 21 51 32.5 9.6
    30 Drew Allar QB4 22 20 54 34.5 9.5
    31 Demond Claiborne RB9 22 22 52 31.5 8
    32 Ted Hurst WR16 20 56 35.8 11
    33 J’Mari Taylor RB10 23 57 37 9.3
    34 Bryce Lance WR17 20 53 37.3 9.9
    35 Carson Beck QB5 24 82 39 12.5
    36 Roman Hemby RB11 23 27 54 39.5 8
    37 Adam Randall RB12 22 65 36.3 11.8
    38 Justin Joly TE4 27 88 42.4 13.8
    39 Cade Klubnik QB6 22 25 55 39.8 8.7
    40 Le’Veon Moss RB13 26 73 43.6 11.2
    41 Michael Trigg TE5 26 97 44.6 15.4
    42 Cole Payton QB7 19 54 38.9 7.5
    43 Eric McAlister WR18 26 67 44.8 11.6
    44 Kevin Coleman Jr. WR19 33 68 50 8.5
    45 Jaydn Ott RB14 26 77 47.3 12.6
    46 Taylen Green QB8 20 56 39.4 10.4
    47 Jam Miller RB15 28 71 48 11.2
    48 Deion Burks WR20 33 67 48.1 10.5
    49 Robert Henry Jr. RB16 34 62 49.1 6.8
    50 Jack Endries TE6 41 86 56.6 12.2

     

    Superflex Dynasty Rookie Draft Rankings: Player Spotlight

    Chris Brazzell isn’t your typical Tennessee wide receiver prospect. He didn’t live in a world overrun by bunch and stacked formations in 2025. He wasn’t gifted free releases and schemed touches all season. That’s where the conversation of him as a prospect needs to start to debunk the worries when people just see Tennessee next to his name. Brazzell is a tall, lightning-fast field stretcher with route-running chops and good ball tracking that we don’t usually see for his size. Brazzell can sink his hips quite well for his size and has fluid change of direction. He can win on the linear/vertical plane, but that’s not all that he brings to the table. He has a strong understanding of leverage and inviting indecision into corners’ heads. He’s a detailed route runner who can dance in a corner’s blind spot and get them to commit to an angle before breaking off his route. Brazzell’s play strength can be an issue against physical corners who can run with him and at the catch point. Just by looking at his size, you’d assume that Brazzell is extremely physical, but it’s not the case. He lets corners into his body far too easily when pressed. He also isn’t a ball winner at the catch point. Many times, 50/50 balls don’t go his way as corners can disrupt him at the catch point. Brazzell finishes college with a 40.8% contested catch rate. Whether his technique needs to be polished and/or the need for more raw strength to be added, he’ll need to address this at the NFL level if he’s going to hit his ceiling as a player. Brazzell could develop into a WR1 for an NFL offense if he continues to hone his game and improve his play strength. Currently, he’s best viewed as a WR2/3 or field-stretching option.
    – Derek Brown