
The NFL Draft is officially in the rearview mirror, which means our team at Fantasy Points has been crunching the numbers and fully digesting these rookie landing spots. Whether you’re prepping for your dynasty rookie drafts, or just familiarizing yourself with some fresh faces, we’ve got you covered.
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Brain Trust: 2026 Favorite Rookie Landing Spots
The Fantasy Points staff identifies its favorite 2026 NFL rookie landing spots for redraft fantasy football drafts, including best ball.
RB Jadarian Price (SEA)
The combination of Round 1 draft capital and a dream landing spot in Seattle puts Price in an almost impossible-to-fail setup. Over the last decade, Round 1 RBs have averaged 15.5 FPG as rookies (~RB12), and only two of 14 RBs (Rashaad Penny, Sony Michel) failed to clear 13.5 FPG (~RB20). Zach Charbonnet is coming off ACL reconstruction and probably won’t be back until the second half of the season at the earliest, and that’s if he returns at all. (Long term, Charbonnet is also a free agent after this season.) It’s tough to come up with a realistic scenario where Price doesn’t finish the year as a mid-range RB2 at worst.
WR Jordyn Tyson (NO)
The fear of being the WR2 behind Chris Olave will be strong enough to suppress Tyson’s ADP, but don’t let it scare you off…
Plus, Saints HC Kellen Moore has consistently ranked near the top of the NFL in pace (with more plays meaning more fantasy points), and his offense just supported two top-24 WRs by XFP/G in 2025 (17.6 for Olave, 13.4 for Rashid Shaheed) over the nine weeks they remained on the team together — with mostly Spencer Rattler at QB.
WR Germie Bernard (PIT)
The Alabama product should slide right into the slot for Pittsburgh, and HC Mike McCarthy's primary slot WR has finished top-10 in FPG in seven of his last 13 full seasons as an NFL head coach. He’s also used 3+ WR sets on 80% or more of dropbacks in each of his past two seasons, and he hasn’t dipped below 76% since 2021. While Bernard doesn’t have a prospect profile worth pounding the table for, his situation makes him an intriguing target in fantasy drafts.
Read the full article HERE for more insight on prospects who found fantasy-friendly homes.
Gremminger’s 2026 Dynasty Rookie Rankings
Theo Gremminger ranks the incoming 2026 NFL rookie class for FFPC superflex, TE-premium dynasty fantasy football leagues.
1) RB Jeremiah Love (ARI)
The biggest no-brainer chalk 1.01 rookie draft pick in several years. Love is already a top-4 dynasty RB without even playing a down. He has the potential to be a future 1.01 in redraft in the near future. A soon-to-be 31-year-old James Conner and Tyler Allgeier are only minor impediments to a rookie year smash season.
5) WR Makai Lemon (PHI)
A number of sharp analysts are concerned about Lemon’s fit in the Eagles’ offense, but Gremminger thinks they're overthinking it. He has a clear path to early-career usage, especially with a potential A.J. Brown trade likely after June 1. Both Nick Sirianni and Howie Roseman have praised his toughness, his ability to win both in the slot and outside, and his playmaking skills with the ball in his hands. K.C. Concepcion is very close, and Jadarian Price is also in the mix, but the edge at #5 goes to Lemon.
10) TE Eli Stowers (PHI)
Stowers has some 2025 Harold Fannin Jr. parallels with his landing spot and situation — albeit with better draft capital and in a much better offensive environment. He is a mismatch/move TE playing for a franchise that has hit big on their last two 2nd-round picks at the position (Zach Ertz, Dallas Goedert). There are only three TEs in SEC history with 60+ receptions in a season: Brock Bowers, Evan Engram, and Stowers. Bowers and Engram each went on to have at least one 100+ catch season at the NFL level.
Read the full article HERE for Gremminger’s entire top-40.
2025 Ceiling-Adjusted FPG: WRs
Kyle Menton analyzes 10 WRs who had high ceilings and low floors for fantasy football in 2025, and how to approach these players in 2026.
Drake London (ATL)
The Falcons WR started and ended the season on low notes — 9.1 FPG (WR50) over his first and last three games — but was dominant in between, averaging 24.5 FPG (WR1) in Weeks 4-11. Across that 6-game ceiling stretch, London ranked top-3 in every pertinent efficiency and production metric, producing at a league-winning level. As for his floor split, it demands context — a shoulder injury in Week 1, a hip injury in Week 6, and a PCL injury in Week 11 limited his effectiveness and cost him five games. A fully healthy London should easily earn 150+ targets in 2026 — making him Menton’s dark horse WR1 overall candidate for next season.
Rome Odunze (CHI)
Odunze opened Year 2 as one of the most productive fantasy receivers — ranking as the WR3 through the first four weeks (19.9 FPG) — before completely falling off, averaging 8.3 FPG (WR55) from Week 5 onward. His connection with Caleb Williams completely collapsed — 43.6% catch rate (last), 60.0% catchable target rate (last), and 57.0 passer rating when targeted (last). Odunze also led the league in uncatchable air yards per game over that 8-game stretch with 54.1. But it turns out he suffered a stress fracture in his foot as early as Week 7 or 8, which was evident in his inability to separate from that point onward:
0.452 average separation score vs. man coverage in Weeks 1-7 (WR1)
0.038 average separation score vs. man coverage in Weeks 8-13 (WR70)
Given the upside he’s flashed, Menton is targeting Odunze at his suppressed WR29 redraft ADP (the cheapest Bears receiver).
Parker Washington (JAX)
Washington has quickly become a fantasy community favorite after his strong finish to Year 3 (18.4 FPG in Weeks 15-18). His 100.0 receiving YPG during that stretch doubled that of anyone else in Jacksonville’s receiver room (Brian Thomas, Jakobi Meyers, and Brenton Strange were all healthy by the way). Following Travis Hunter’s Week 7 season-ending injury, Washington solidified himself as the team’s primary slot receiver and Lawrence’s favorite target, earning a team-leading 0.23 TPRR over the remainder of the season. Given HC Liam Coen’s history with slot receivers, Washington is a bet Menton’s willing to make in 2026.
Read the full article HERE for insight on other polarizing WRs.
2026 Super Bowl 61 Odds
Betting expert Tom Brolley looks at the movement in the NFL Super Bowl odds after the 2026 NFL Draft.
Risers:
Cincinnati Bengals (from +3000 to +2500 odds)
Cincy allowed the 4th-highest adjusted YBC/ATT (2.48) and the most rushing YPG (147.1), but that should change after they traded their 10th overall pick for Dexter Lawrence and signed Jonathan Allen (MIN). The trade for Lawrence is also a sign that the front office wants to win now after missing the postseason in three straight seasons after reaching the 2022 AFC Championship Game.Dallas Cowboys (from +3500 to +3000 odds)
America’s Team had the largest improvement in their implied Super Bowl odds (+.45%) after landing a pair of defenders (Caleb Downs and Malachi Lawrence) in the 1st round to instantly improve a defense that ranked last in PPG allowed (30.1) and 30th in YPG allowed (377.0).
Fallers:
Jacksonville Jaguars (from +2500 to +3000 odds)
They added only Chris Rodriguez in free agency and lost key contributors like Devin Lloyd (CAR), Travis Etienne (NO), and Greg Newsome (NYG). It didn’t help that with their 2nd round pick (their 1st pick in the draft), they reached multiple rounds to select TE Nate Boerkircher, who totaled just 38 receptions in five college seasons.Minnesota Vikings (from +5000 to +5500 odds)
Minnesota’s odds rose after signing Kyler Murray, but settled back a bit after reaching for Caleb Banks at No. 18 to replace Javon Hargrave and Jonathan Allen. The Vikings also traded Jonathan Greenard to the Eagles during the draft, who had 12+ sacks in back-to-back seasons before a down 2025 campaign.
Read the full article HERE for more of the biggest post-draft risers and fallers.

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