
Kyle Williams
WR - New England Patriots
2025 Outlook
Availability
Kyle Williams enters the NFL as one of the most dynamic rookie wide receivers in the 2025 class. After a breakout 2024 season at Washington State (1,200+ yards, 14 TDs, 34% dominator rating), Williams showcased elite YAC skills (1st in class) and vertical playmaking (3rd in deep-ball catches, 58.3% success rate on 20+ yard throws). His tape backs it up - including burning Travis Hunter on one notable route - and his Tyler Lockett-style game makes him a strong fit with rookie QB Drake Maye in New England. With Stefon Diggs on a one-year prove-it deal and coming off a torn ACL, Williams has a legitimate shot to emerge as the Patriots' go-to target in Year 1.
Dynasty Outlook: Williams hive stand up! Williams gained a lot of traction in the fantasy community in the predraft process, with plenty of people hyping up the former Washington State late breakout. I remain a tad below consensus on Williams, but I agree that he is a viable third-round dart throw in dynasty rookie drafts. Williams didn't surpass 900 receiving yards or 2.25 yards per route run in any collegiate season until 2024 (per PFF). The hope for the Patriots' third-round draft pick is that he can avoid faceplanting like Ja'Lynn Polk and Javon Baker did last year. He'll need to hop Mack Hollins, DeMario Douglas, Kayshon Boutte, and Kendrick Bourne to see the field in 2025 as a full-time starter. We'll see if he can accomplish that task. If not, he could disappear into the ether in 2026 like New England's receiver draft picks from the last process are seemingly doing this year. With Williams concerning analytical profile, I don't think the ceiling is extremely high in fantasy, but he's worth selecting in the third round of dynasty rookie drafts if you need wide receiver depth and a flier for your squad.
Quick as a hiccup, Kyle Williams excels at getting open and should quickly endear himself to new teammate Drake Maye. The Patriots needed receivers and grabbed Williams in the third round of this year's draft. It's a good landing spot for the 5-11, 190-pound Williams, who lacks ideal size but certainly doesn't lack speed or elusiveness. Williams had 70 catches for 1,198 yards and 14 touchdowns at Washington State last year.