2024 fantasy football: 10 overvalued/undervalued NFL players to know before you draft (2024)

Fantasy Football

Published: Aug 05, 2024 at 03:07 PM

2024 fantasy football: 10 overvalued/undervalued NFL players to know before you draft (1)

Marcas Grant

Fantasy Analyst

In a click-driven world, ratings are currency catalysts. Search the words "overrated" and "underrated" … and block off a few hours on your calendar. You're gonna be busy.

We all have opinions on things ranging from politics to sports to food. Some of these opinions are more impactful to your daily life than others. Like the choices so many of us will make this fall that will have far-reaching consequences in our lives.

I'm talking about the choice of NFL players you select for your fantasy football teams. What did you think I meant?

Avoiding overrated players in favor of underrated ones is the name of the game. Finding value is how to not only build a winning squad, but also to show off that you are a supreme ball-knower. So let's go on a journey to figure out the players going too soon and the ones going too late.

There's certainly no way the internet could argue against these at all, right?

NOTE: Average draft position was pulled from Fantasy Football Calculator.

Related Links

  • Fantasy football 2024: Top 10 RB values
  • Fantasy football 2024: Top 10 TE values
  • Fantasy football 2024: QB rankings and tiers

OVERRATED

Project draft position: RB4, Round 1

Last season, fantasy managers were excited at the prospect of Gibbs in an ascending Lions offense. Those same managers were dismayed that Gibbs didn't immediately get a large share of Detroit's backfield work. David Montgomery was the fly in the ointment for the first few weeks of the season as the rookie eased into his role. Eventually, Gibbs saw a share of touches that eager drafters could feel comfortable with, though much of that came because of an injury to Montgomery.

No sane person would doubt Gibbs' talent and upside within the offense. Alas, Montgomery persists. The veteran isn't the sexiest option, but he's steady. He's had more than 1,000 scrimmage yards and at least six touchdowns every season of his career. And he's not going away in the Detroit attack. That's not the level of competition you want for a player who's going as the fourth running back off the board.

2024 fantasy football: 10 overvalued/undervalued NFL players to know before you draft (3)

Deebo Samuel

San Francisco 49ers · WR

Project draft position: WR11, Round 2

Some players are much better in real football than they are in fantasy football. Samuel is one of those guys. He's been a jack-of-all-trades for Kyle Shanahan's offense. There was also his mind-bottling 2021 season, when he was the NFL's best hybrid offensive weapon. Those two things have combined to give fantasy enthusiasts an overinflated view of Samuel's potential.

The truth is that while Samuel's weekly ceiling is high, the weekly floor can also be very low. He presents scary volatility for a player being drafted as a low-end WR1. Even scarier for a player who is coming off the board ahead of his much steadier teammate, Brandon Aiyuk. Maybe this ADP inflation is tied to the trade rumors that swirled around Aiyuk all summer. If we see Samuel's draft price come down, I'm willing to buy back in. At this price, however, I'm out.

2024 fantasy football: 10 overvalued/undervalued NFL players to know before you draft (4)

De'Von Achane

Miami Dolphins · RB

Project draft position: RB13, Round 3

Achane is a similar case to Jahmyr Gibbs. While the Dolphins back didn't have as much immediate hype, there was a belief that he could earn a sizable role in an otherwise confusing backfield. What few expected was just how well his elite speed would translate to the next level. He was essentially a big play waiting to happen each time he touched the ball, averaging nearly 8 yards per carry last year. Those kinds of numbers are usually only found in Madden or Derrick Henry's high school stats page.

And therein lies the rub. That level of efficiency is impossible to believe in for another season. The only way to bridge the gap would be for Achane to see a significant workload increase. That seems unlikely, with Raheem Mostert still holding court in South Florida. The most believable outcome is that those two split most of the work (to say nothing of the role rookie Jaylen Wright could occupy). I’m also willing to predict that Miami won't have a 70-point game this season that includes four Achane touchdowns. Call it a hunch. Achane's ADP has fallen from the start of draft season, but I'd still rather take the shot on Mostert much later in drafts.

2024 fantasy football: 10 overvalued/undervalued NFL players to know before you draft (5)

Rashee Rice

Kansas City Chiefs · WR

Project draft position: WR34, Round 6

Rice's ascension to fantasy relevance last season was borne mostly from necessity. The Chiefs needed a wide receiver -- any wide receiver -- to step up and help Travis Kelce. Rice was the man to answer the call. Last season, the rookie made his bones as a YAC maven. He finished fifth among receivers in yards after the catch. That's good! But when you stack him against the top 20 YAC receivers, he's dead last in completed air yards and is the only one with less than 500 completed air yards. That's ... concerning

The issue is that most of Rice's touches last year were manufactured. He averaged 5 air yards per target in an offense that resigned itself to playing close to the line of scrimmage. This year's Chiefs don't plan to be last year's Chiefs. New additions to Patrick Mahomes' supporting cast (Marquise Brown, Xavier Worthy) suggest the two-time MVP QB will go back to attacking downfield. Add in that Kelce again is expected to be the team's top target, and that Rice's offseason troubles could lead to some type of league discipline, and it's hard to see the second-year wideout having a similar impact this year. It's eye-raising enough that he's going ahead of both Brown and Worthy. It's even more head-scratching that he's in the same neighborhood as Jayden Reed and Terry McLaurin.

2024 fantasy football: 10 overvalued/undervalued NFL players to know before you draft (6)

T.J. Hockenson

Minnesota Vikings · TE

Project draft position: TE14, Round 11

On the one hand, I get it. While the fantasy tight end position has gained some much-needed depth in recent seasons, there's still a lack of consistency outside of the top tier of players. Most of the tight ends drafted outside of the top eight could finish just about anywhere, from the bottom of the top 10 to outside the top 20. Hockenson is a known commodity who offers TE1 upside when healthy.

It's the last part that makes Hockenson's ADP hard for me to swallow. His outstanding 2023 ended prematurely because of an ACL tear suffered in Week 16. Having it happen so late in the year will undoubtedly impact his availability for the start of this season. As for just when he'll return, we don't know. This is before we get into a quarterback situation that has scared drafters away from Vikings skill-position players in general. If the prospect of Sam Darnold under center is making us hesitant about a healthy Jordan Addison, how can we have any level of confidence in a recovering T.J. Hockenson? This is one dart throw I'd prefer to keep in my pocket.

UNDERRATED

2024 fantasy football: 10 overvalued/undervalued NFL players to know before you draft (7)

Amari Cooper

Cleveland Browns · WR

Project draft position: WR 23, Round 4

Cooper had a respectable, if not remarkable, WR20 finish in 2023. If you're looking for silver linings, it's that Cooper finished as a top 20 receiver despite Cleveland's revolving door at QB last season. Five different players started a game under center for the Browns. Everyone remembers Deshaun Watson's uneven beginning to the year and Joe Flacco's torrid finish. What a lot of us gloss over, though, were the games started by Dorian Thompson-Robinson, PJ Walker, and Jeff Driskel.

Through it all, Cooper maintained a 21 percent target share -- even if the percentage of catchable targets fluctuated from week to week. The volume was there ... and it should continue to be. Until we see otherwise, it's hard to envision Elijah Moore or Jerry Jeudy as true threats to Cooper's target share. And while David Njoku was a stud at the end of the season, we've yet to see him produce with Watson at quarterback. WR20 feels like Cooper's absolute floor this year, with a finish inside the top 12 being a real possibility.

2024 fantasy football: 10 overvalued/undervalued NFL players to know before you draft (8)

George Pickens

Pittsburgh Steelers · WR

Project draft position: WR31, Round 6

Pickens had a couple of notable runs during the 2023 season. The first came early in the year after Diontae Johnson went down with an injury. During that four-game period, Pickens averaged more than eight targets and 16.6 fantasy points per game. The next stretchcame during the final month of the 2023 season. He was the WR7 over the final three weeks while seeing a bump in targets per route run. That was with Johnson on the field.

With Johnson shipped off to Carolina this offseason, Pickens no longer has serious target competition. The quarterback situation does give some reason for pause, though. There's no certainty that Russell Wilson (who's dealing with a calf issue) keeps the job all year, with Justin Fields waiting in the wings. But either should provide more consistent play under center than what the Steelers previously had with Kenny Pickett. Pickens' improved situation should be enough to move him several spots up draft boards, ahead of other receivers in more crowded offenses.

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2024 fantasy football: 10 overvalued/undervalued NFL players to know before you draft (9)

Kyle Pitts

Atlanta Falcons · TE

Project draft position: TE7, Round 8

Yeah, I said it. By now, you've planted a flag about how you feel about Pitts. Maybe you jumped on the bandwagon early on, only to get burned a couple of years in a row. Now, you've vowed to stay away. Maybe you look at the major changes Atlanta has made this offseason and have decided to buy back in. Or maybe you’re part of the crew that never wavered. There are dozens of us. Dozens!

We finally have a perfect storm of upside for Pitts. Improved quarterback play, an aggressive-but-not-wacky play-caller and a clean bill of health. Has that really been too much to ask? Let's be honest: If it doesn't happen this year, then it might never happen. Another underwhelming campaign from the former first-rounder, and I'll refund what it cost to read this article.

2024 fantasy football: 10 overvalued/undervalued NFL players to know before you draft (10)

Trey McBride

Arizona Cardinals · TE

Project draft position: TE6, Round 6

As bullish as I am on Pitts in 2024, I'm even more optimistic about McBride. From Week 8 until the end of last season, he was the third-best tight end in fantasy. It was enough to overshadow Marquise Brown and make Zach Ertz expendable.

McBride is everything we want in a fantasy tight end. Young, attached to a good quarterback and facing minimal target competition. Although this year's edition of the Cardinals will feature Marvin Harrison Jr. heavily, McBride, at worst, will be the second option in an offense that will need to throw the ball much more than it did last season. While McBride could certainly pay off an earlier ADP, maybe it's best to forgo breaking the bank for Sam LaPorta or Travis Kelce and take the discount on a tight end with similar upside.

2024 fantasy football: 10 overvalued/undervalued NFL players to know before you draft (11)

Austin Ekeler

Washington Commanders · RB

Project draft position: RB35, Round 8

First of all, it's weird to write about Ekeler as a Commander. After seven seasons with the Chargers, the versatile back now moves to the nation's capital for a fresh start. So far, fantasy drafters don't seem impressed. Ekeler is 29 years old, coming off an injury-riddled season and transitioning to a new offense. Not exactly a combination that inspires confidence.

On the flip side, Ekeler still won't hit the dreaded "30-year-old" age cliff until next May. He's (hopefully) fully healthy after some nagging ankle issues last year. And he's reuniting with his former head coach, Anthony Lynn, who now oversees Washington's running backs. Even with a running quarterback in Jayden Daniels, Ekeler should be featured heavily in the passing game. It will be interesting to see how the goal-line work is split with Brian Robinson, but Ekeler has repeatedly shown a nose for the end zone. His days as an elite fantasy option might be passed, but it's hard to think he can't muster at least a top-25 finish this year.

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2024 fantasy football: 10 overvalued/undervalued NFL players to know before you draft (2024)

FAQs

2024 fantasy football: 10 overvalued/undervalued NFL players to know before you draft? ›

Perfect 2024 fantasy football draft strategy, round by round for 12-team leagues: Picks 4-6. A top-five wide receiver is all but guaranteed: The top six picks in most drafts should be Christian McCaffrey and the top-five wide receivers. Ja'Marr Chase is the ideal option from Picks 4-6.

Who to pick in fantasy football 2024? ›

Perfect 2024 fantasy football draft strategy, round by round for 12-team leagues: Picks 4-6. A top-five wide receiver is all but guaranteed: The top six picks in most drafts should be Christian McCaffrey and the top-five wide receivers. Ja'Marr Chase is the ideal option from Picks 4-6.

Who to look out for in fantasy football? ›

These rankings have been generated using our award-winning 3D projections.
RankingADPProjected Points
Positional RankADPRedraft
1Christian McCaffreySF1.01266.6
2CeeDee LambDAL1.02241.8
3Tyreek HillMIA1.03223.9
55 more rows

What positions are most valuable in fantasy football? ›

Running back: This is arguably the most important position in fantasy football. A great running back will far outscore a mid-tier running back. Running backs are often taken early in drafts and are hard to come by after the first few rounds.

What position to draft first in fantasy football? ›

Your first pick should be a running back, preferably Robinson, and so is your second pick — either Jacobs or Kansas City's Isiah Pacheco, who will have plenty of scoring opportunities with little competition for touches in the backfield.

What is the best fantasy draft strategy? ›

The best fantasy football strategy boils down to drafting for value in every round of your draft. If you get guys who over-perform their ADP, you'll be a consistent winner. If not, you'll constantly be near the bottom of your league.

Who is the number one fantasy football pick? ›

Round 1, Picks 1-3: Draft a wide receiver or Christian McCaffrey. Anyone with the top overall pick should take McCaffrey with little hesitation. He scored over 100 more PPR points than any other running back last season and has the perfect combination of talent, opportunity and situation.

Who are the top players for fantasy football? ›

2024 fantasy football rankings & depth charts
  • Christian McCaffrey, SF (RB1)
  • Tyreek Hill, Mia (WR1)
  • CeeDee Lamb, Dal (WR2)
  • Breece Hall, NYJ (RB2)
  • Bijan Robinson, Atl (RB3)
  • Amon-Ra St. Brown, Det (WR3)
  • Ja'Marr Chase, Cin (WR4)
  • Justin Jefferson, Min (WR5)
7 days ago

What does SOS mean in fantasy football? ›

Each team's Strength of Schedule (SOS) displays the relative ease or difficulty of their matchups for the season. SOS is based on each opponent's Fantasy Points Allowed to a position, adjusted for strength of schedule.

What order should I pick players in fantasy football? ›

Some fantasy leaguers try to form a pre-draft plan of how to construct their roster by position. For example, they might intend to start with a running back in the first round, then a wide receiver in the second, another wide receiver in the third, and a second running back in the fourth.

What is the best spot to draft in a 12-team Snake fantasy football draft? ›

It's best to be picking inside the top three in 12-team non-PPR drafts, with the No 1. spot checking in as easily the best draft position according to ADP.

What is the best spot to draft in the 10 team league? ›

Perfect 2024 fantasy football draft strategy, round by round for 10-team leagues
  • Round 1, Picks 1-10: Draft a wide receiver.
  • Round 2, Picks 11-20: Draft a running back or wide receiver.
  • Round 10, Picks 91-100: Draft a running back or wide receiver.
  • Rounds 14-18: Fill Depth.
Jul 15, 2024

What players to pick for fantasy? ›

This leaves running backs and wide receivers as the best options for both picks. Saquon Barkley, Kyren Williams and Jahmyr Gibbs are the top running back options while Puka Nacua, Garrett Wilson and Davante Adams are the best wide receivers. If Nacua is available, he should be selected.

Who should I pick for QB fantasy? ›

Most fantasy football quarterback rankings will start with Josh Allen at No. 1, then Jalen Hurts, Patrick Mahomes and Lamar Jackson round out a "Big Four" at the position. The Bills' standout has finished as a top QB2 in each of the past four seasons and rushed for a career-best 15 TDs in 2023.

Who to pick for fantasy premier league? ›

Top-scoring player? Breakout star? Some of the world's top Fantasy managers tell us what they expect
Most ptsBreakout star
Pranil ShethHaalandNkunku
Holly ShandHaalandSmith Rowe
Az PhillipsHaalandSmith Rowe
Sam BonfieldHaalandSmith Rowe
5 more rows
8 hours ago

When to draft a QB in the PPR league? ›

More importantly, TIAV validates standard deviation and should be used as a guideline for the order positions that should be drafted. RBs should be drafted first in all leagues. QBs can be picked as late as the third round in standard leagues and the sixth round in PPR leagues but an elite one is mandatory.

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