

He’s not the first guy I had in mind, but he’s the most Pro-ready quarterback after Willis in this class. 1.04 Kenny Pickettįor a Superflex draft, I had one plan in mind at the 1.04…Quarterback, of course. If he goes to a team with a good quarterback already in place, watch out. His size and range give him an edge over other receivers who might get taken by teams without such an accurate passer, which makes him safe to me. A physically imposing receiver at 6’5 220 pounds who thrives at making the contested catch will be just what the doctor ordered for many teams this year. 1.03 Drake Londonīeing a die-hard Buccaneers fan, I can’t help but think of Mike Evans when I watch Drake London. He has the tools to be nearly that, but the biggest question is whether or not he will be given the same structure and support in order to do so. His scouting report is very similar to Josh Allen’s was as a rookie. The dual-threat quarterback possesses the highest floor in fantasy and that is none more than Malik Willis. 1.02 Malik WillisĪ man among boys on the field, and not just comparing him to his Liberty teammates. Plus, barring injury, he’s essentially guaranteed to start Week 1 and pay instant dividends.

You can take the flawed quarterback that would normally never go in the 1st round of the NFL Draft just because it’s a Superflex league, or you can take the only running back that profiles as the rare and valuable three-down back in Breece Hall. This draft is a 12-Team, Superflex, PPR rookie mock draft. We gathered together some of our Faceoff writers and some of the writers from Loaded Box, randomized the draft order, and kicked off a three-round rookie mock draft. For this mock, we teamed up with our friends over at Loaded Box Fantasy Football. However, the term “worst” is relative here because 1,561 rushing yards is hardly a poor season.Welcome to our latest dynasty rookie mock draft. The 5-5, 179-pound undersized back had his sights set on an ultra-productive junior year to boost his NFL Draft stock, but he took a slight step backward with the “worst” dominator rating of his career (28%). Vaughn ended 2021 with the second-highest single-season dominator rating (48%) in his d]Draft class. The Kansas State product was once again heavily involved as a receiver, commanding a team-high 66 targets for 49 catches and 441 receiving yards. And Vaughn built on his start with an elite sophomore season that saw him finish as PFF’s second-highest graded running back behind only future Houston Texan Dameon Pierce. He was the Kansas State backfield the minute he stepped foot on campus in 2020, leading the team in both rushing and receiving yards (31% dominator rating). Vaughn totaled over 4,800 yards from scrimmage and 43 TDs en route to a class-leading 35% career college dominator rating. It’s hard to look past the sheer dominance Deuce Vaughn displayed in his three years at Kansas State. He was selected in the 7th of the 2023 NFL Draft by the Minnesota Vikings. With desirable size at 5-10 and 209 pounds, McBride is emerging as one of my favorite sleeper running backs in the incoming class. Per PFF, his 36 percent missed tackle rate ranks third all-time since the data started being tracked. Aside from being a complete afterthought in the passing game, McBride checks off a lot of boxes you want to see from a smaller school prospect, and he easily saved his best for last as a junior, finishing second in the FBS in rushing yards (1,702, 155 yards per game), second in yards after contact per attempt (4.6) and fifth in dominator rating (35 percent) among the 2023 Draft class. His production is captured in his PFF grades, with him finishing second, eighth, and third in PFF grading the last three seasons, respectively. He ranks first in the class in career yards per play (4.18) for being so efficient anytime he is on the field. But Levis is coming off a somewhat disappointing final college season at Kentucky, and he’s expected to serve an apprenticeship behind incumbent Titans starter Ryan Tannehill in his first NFL season.ĭeWayne McBride has been doing it all for the UAB Blazers over the last three seasons, totaling a top-five dominator rating (27 percent) for his excellent efforts.

Expected to be drafted in the first round but instead selected early in the second, Levis has prototypical size (6-3, 232 pounds), a cannon arm and dynamic rushing ability.

Rookie Will Levis has immense potential but might need a few years before he’s ready to fulfill it.
