This is a four-round, 12-team Superflex dynasty rookie mock draft from the 1.07 slot. This class is top-heavy, and once you get past the early blue-chips, the board forces you to make real decisions.
The easy picks disappear fast. By round three, you are leaning more on your evaluations than on consensus. Here is how the draft played out.
- Dynasty Fantasy Football Rankings
- Best Fantasy Football Tools
- Dynasty Rookie Mock Drafts
- Fantasy Football Mock Draft Simulator
Dynasty Rookie Mock Draft
Round 1
- 1.01: Jeremiyah Love (RB – ARI)
- 1.02: Fernando Mendoza (QB – LV)
- 1.03: Carnell Tate (WR – TEN)
- 1.04: Makai Lemon (WR – PHI)
- 1.05: Jordyn Tyson (WR – NO)
- 1.06: KC Concepcion (WR – CLE)
- 1.07: Jadarian Price (RB – SEA) *My Pick
- 1.08: Ty Simpson (QB – LAR)
- 1.09: Omar Cooper Jr. (WR – NYJ)
- 1.10: Eli Stowers (TE – PHI)
- 1.11: Kenyon Sadiq (TE – NYJ)
- 1.12: Denzel Boston (WR – CLE)
Round 1 Notes
- Sitting at 1.07, I was anxious. The board was thinning fast, and a real decision was coming. Heading in, the debate was KC Concepcion versus Kenyon Sadiq — floor versus ceiling. That conversation ended quickly once Concepcion went at 1.06, and Jadarian Price fell right into my lap.
- I am a Jadarian Price believer. This did not feel like settling. It felt like winning. Seattle drafted him to be a major part of their offense. They lean on their backs on the ground and through the air, and Price fits that system perfectly. Zach Charbonnet is still working back from injury, meaning Price is not easing into anything. The 21-year-old running back could step into a meaningful workload immediately. He has one of the strongest combinations of immediate production and long-term value in the 2026 class. At worst, he is a weekly FLEX option. The upside value is a potential long-term RB2 who can deliver RB1 weeks.
Round 2
- 2.01: Ted Hurst (WR – TB)
- 2.02: Antonio Williams (WR – WSH)
- 2.03: Chris Bell (WR – MIA)
- 2.04: Germie Bernard (WR – PIT)
- 2.05: Jonah Coleman (RB – DEN)
- 2.06: Chris Brazzell II (WR – CAR)
- 2.07: Nicholas Singleton (RB – TEN)*My Pick
- 2.08: Elijah Sarratt (WR – BAL)
- 2.09: Zachariah Branch (WR – ATL)
- 2.10: Emmett Johnson (RB – KC)
- 2.11: Kaytron Allen (RB – WSH)
- 2.12: De’Zhaun Stribling (WR – SF)
Round 2 Notes
- I’ll be honest. It’s hard to look in the mirror after taking back-to-back running backs in a dynasty rookie draft. The board forced my hand.
- Every receiver I wanted was gone. Elijah Sarratt and Zachariah Branch disappeared early, and Chris Brazzell II went at 2.06, one pick before me.
- To make things worse, Jonah Coleman somehow slipped to 2.05, and I watched him go before I could react. I really like how Coleman fits into that Denver offense. Sean Payton feeds his backs who can catch. J.K. Dobbins‘ injury history remains a concern, and RJ Harvey was inefficient as a rookie. The former Washington Huskies running back fits the role. If this were one of my actual league drafts, I would have moved up to snag Coleman.
- I landed on Nicholas Singleton. He was not the running back I had circled, but the situation in Tennessee is volatile. Tony Pollard is another year older, and the production is not what it was. Tyjae Spears has shown flashes, but nothing consistent. Singleton had a remarkable freshman season at Penn State before tailing off, but the NFL landing spot gives him a legit path. Brian Daboll’s offense will find ways to use his NFL-ready skill set. Singleton should make an impact right away and head into next year as a featured option in Tennessee.
Round 3
- 3.01: Bryce Lance (WR – NO)
- 3.02: Carson Beck (QB- ARI)
- 3.03: Eli Raridon (TE – NE)
- 3.04: Malachi Fields (WR – NYG)
- 3.05: Mike Washington (RB – LV)
- 3.06: Oscar Delp (TE – NO)
- 3.07: Skyler Bell (WR- BUF) *My Pick
- 3.08: Max Klare (TE – LAR)
- 3.09: Kaelon Black (RB – SF)
- 3.10: Demond Claiborne (RB – MIN)
- 3.11: Adam Randall (RB – BAL)
- 3.12: Kevin Coleman (WR – MIA)
Round 3 Notes
- My dynasty philosophy in Superflex rookie drafts is simple. I want to come away with at least one quarterback in every draft. They are the wild card in your weekly lineups. Beyond that, I always try to secure a wide receiver or tight end, even if I am already stacked at the position. Depth wins championships.
- With that in mind, I did not think Carson Beck would fall to me at 3.07. He went 3.01. Oscar Delp was someone I was keeping an eye on, but he went one pick ahead of me.
- Skyler Bell at 3.07 was an easy decision. Bell is making real noise in training camp with Josh Allen. Bell was a playmaker at UConn and has a direct line to the No. 3 WR role in Buffalo. That offense is built for splash plays. Picture Allen scrambling, buying time and launching one downfield to Bell. He is a weekly big-play threat.
Round 4
- 4.01: Matt Hibner (TE – BAL)
- 4.02: Eli Heidenreich (RB – PIT)
- 4.03: Drew Allar (QB – PIT)
- 4.04: Ja’Kobi Lane (WR – BAL)
- 4.05: Justin Joly (TE – DEN)
- 4.06: Brenen Thompson (WR – LAC)
- 4.07: Cade Klubnik (QB – NYJ) *My Pick
- 4.08: Cyrus Allen (WR – KC)
- 4.09: Seth McGowan (RB – IND)
- 4.10: Caleb Douglas (WR – MIA)
- 4.11: Jam Miller (RB – NE)
- 4.12: Tanner Koziol (TE – JAX)
Round 4 Notes
- In round four, you identify your targets coming out of the third round, and hope they make it to you. However, mine did not.
- Ja’Kobi Lane went at 4.04. Justin Joly went at 4.05. Back-to-back picks wiped out my targets. I needed a quarterback, and Cade Klubnik was there for the taking.
- Klubnik is opening eyes in Jets camp. His accuracy has been sharp, and his mobility stands out. While he is competing for the backup job behind Geno Smith, the situation is worth monitoring given the legal allegations surrounding Smith. A path to playing time could emerge sooner than expected.
- Another factor that works in Klubnik’s favor is that Brendan Sorsby was ruled ineligible for the supplemental draft, eliminating a quarterback the Jets reportedly had interest in. With that option off the table, Klubnik’s standing on the depth chart looks stronger. For a fourth-round rookie pick, that is exactly the kind of upside worth stashing.
Bottom Line
Four rounds tell a different story than two. Dynasty managers do not just need to identify the best players. You have to manage chaos, absorb gut punches and pivot fast.
This draft produced a potential RB1 in Jadarian Price, a high-upside handcuff situation in Nicholas Singleton, a camp buzz wide receiver in Skyler Bell with one of the best quarterbacks in football throwing him the ball and a legitimate quarterback stash in Cade Klubnik with a path to playing time.
The board does not always give you what you want. The edge comes from knowing what you will do when it does not.
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | Stitcher | TuneIn | RSS | YouTube
Dennis Sosic is a featured writer at FantasyPros. For more from Dennis, check out his archive & follow him @THE_S0S83


