
Dynasty Nerds Podcast | Dynasty Fantasy Football
860 episodes — Page 1 of 18
Buy These QBs & RBs Right Now! | Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast Ep. 834
The Best Trade Target On EVERY NFL Team! | Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast Ep. 833
8 Players That Could Bust At ADP! | Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast Ep. 832
A HUGE RB Pivot - The Data Show (What Are The Odds) | Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast Ep. 831
Deep Dynasty Stashes That You NEED Before The Season | Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast Ep. 830
The Biggest Dynasty Breakouts (Get Them Now) | Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast Ep. 829
You Need To Trade These Players Away In Dynasty | Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast Ep. 828
Post NFL Draft Rookie Rankings Update! | Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast Ep. 827
The Best Dynasty ADP Values! | Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast Ep. 826
Startup Mock Draft (SF TEP) | Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast Ep. 825
Vets That Are RISING In Value Post-NFL Draft | Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast Ep. 824
3 Round Post NFL Draft Rookie Draft (SF TEP) Part 2 | Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast Ep. 823
3 Round Post NFL Draft Rookie Draft (SF TEP) Part 1 | Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast Ep. 822
SF TEP Rookie Mock Draft (Round 2&3)! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 821
SF TEP Rookie Mock Draft (Round 1)! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 820
Top 5 Pre-Draft Dynasty Rookie Rankings By Position! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 819
Predicting NFL Draft Landing Spots (For Dynasty Players)! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 818
2026 Rookie TEs Pt. 2 (Eli Stowers, Max Klare, Jack Endrews, Eli Raridon, Koziol, Royer))!
2026 Rookie TEs Pt.1 (Kenyon Sadiq, Michael Trigg, Justin Joly, Roush, Cuevas, Delp)! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 816
10 NFL Draft Sleepers You NEED TO KNOW! NFL Draft Podcast EP. 26
Reacting to Peter Schrager's NFL Mock Draft! NFL Draft Podcast EP. 25
2026 Rookie WRs Pt. 5 (KC Concepcion, Chris Brazzell, Bryce Lance, Burks, Daniels, Wallace)! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 815
2026 Rookie WRs Pt. 4 (Denzel Boston, Chris Bell, Omar Cooper Jr., Anderson, McAllister, Roberts)! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 814
Picking Between Rookies and Vets in Dynasty! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 813
Full 2-Round NFL Mock Draft! NFL Draft Podcast EP. 24

Ranking the 10 Best College QBs for the 2027 Draft! NFL Draft Podcast EP. 23
Jagger May and Andrew Mott are already looking past 2026 and breaking down a quarterback class that could rival some of the best in recent memory. With at least four first-round-caliber passers and an S-tier that could produce the next franchise QB, the 2027 class deserves your attention right now. Dante Moore sits at number one with high-upside tools and the most to gain or lose in 2027. He now faces stiff competition from transfer portal newcomer Dylan Raiola at Oregon, making his season a must-watch storyline. Julian Sayin at Ohio State is drawing massive buzz as a potential QB1, while Arch Manning showed real improvement late in the season at Texas. Jayden Maiava at USC, DJ Lagway (now at Baylor), and LaNorris Sellers round out a tier of big-armed, high-ceiling prospects still learning the game. Josh Hoover transferring to Indiana may be the sleeper of the class, and John Mateer at Oklahoma brings electric athleticism if he can rein in the decision making. Brendan Sorsby heads to Texas Tech as a name to watch. The dynasty advice is simple: stockpile 2027 picks now before the market catches up. Check out the latest Rookie Big Boards and Dynasty Rankings to get ahead. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00 Start 01:07 1. Dante Moore 04:37 2. Julian Sayin 10:35 3. Arch Manning 15:32 4. Jayden Maiava 18:09 6. DJ Lagway 20:32 7. LaNorris Sellers 24:01 5. Josh Hoover 28:18 8. Dylan Raiola 32:45 9. John Mateer 35:40 10. Brendan Sorsby Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
2026 Rookie WRs Pt. 3 (Lemon, Sarratt, Williams, Hurst, Coleman, Hudson)! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 812
The Dynasty Nerds Show is back with Episode 3 of the 2026 wide receiver tape breakdown. Rich Dotson, Matt O'Hara, and Garret Price work through six more receivers, and this group brings a mix of high-end talent, intriguing sleepers, and a couple of names the crew is ready to move past entirely. Makai Lemon opens the show and earns some of the highest praise of the entire series. Garret scores him at 77.8 and Matt at 79.0, putting him right alongside Carnell Tate as the clear top two receivers in the class. The crew calls him a dog in every sense of the word, a Puka Nacua comp who plays with relentless toughness, attacks the catch point, blocks downfield, and refuses to lose. His only concern coming out of the combine was some chatter around his interviews and attitude, but nothing in the tape supported that. The crew sees him as a PPR machine with WR1 upside depending on landing spot. Elijah Sarratt is the toughest evaluation of the episode. He was technically sound at Indiana with 15 touchdowns, but the crew noticed he looked a half step slow at the combine compared to everyone else running identical routes. His tape showed very limited separation, a heavy reliance on back shoulder throws with Fernando Mendoza, and a contested catch conversion rate that raised flags. The crew has him in the WR14 range and needs to see athleticism numbers before feeling comfortable. Antonio Williams draws a Jayden Reed comp and slots into that same mid-tier cluster as a gadget chess piece who lives in the slot, turns every catch into a punt return situation, and adds value with no wasted motion in his routes. The injury history is the one real concern. Ted Hurst out of Georgia State is the breakout name of the episode. Six foot four, a 4.42 at the combine, and a Josh Gordon comp from Matt that the whole crew got behind. His ball tracking grade was his highest mark, his speed glides effortlessly on tape, and his Senior Bowl week was one of the best of any receiver in this class. The crew projects him as a day two pick with a true X receiver ceiling. Kevin Coleman and Jordan Hudson close the show and both land off most boards. Coleman disappears against top competition and Hudson offers a little more with the ball in his hands but neither generates dynasty interest from the crew. Visit the Dynasty Nerds Film Room to watch Ted Hurst and Makai Lemon tape, and check the latest Rookie Big Boards and Dynasty Rankings as the NFL Draft approaches. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00:00 Start 00:00:47 Makai Lemon 00:16:15 Elijah Sarratt 00:27:50 Antonio Williams 00:37:42 FFPC 00:38:40 Ted Hurst 00:52:59 Kevin Coleman 00:58:10 Jordan Hudson Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
2026 Rookie WRs Pt. 2 (Tate, Bernard, Fields, Branch, Rivers, Montgomery)! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 811
The Dynasty Nerds Show is back with Episode 2 of the 2026 wide receiver tape breakdown. Rich Dotson, Matt O'Hara, and Garret Price work through six receivers from their personal tape grades, and the early takeaway is that this class is notably cleaner than the running back group. There are no players the crew wants completely off their boards, which makes the tier separation between them all the more important heading into draft season. Carnell Tate opens the show and earns unanimous WR1 status. Garret's tape score of 79.18 puts him in the same all-time company as Ja'Marr Chase, CeeDee Lamb, and Malik Nabers. His 86% contested catch rate ranked third in the entire country, he had zero drops on the season, and the passer rating when targeting him was 151.8, best nationally. The crew calls him the safest player in the 2026 draft class and a multi-contract dynasty asset who wins in every area of the field. Germie Barnard draws a Robert Woods comp from the crew: reliable, smart, and landing-spot dependent for his fantasy ceiling. Malachi Fields is the most debated name on the show. His ball skills, catch radius, and physicality grade at an elite level, but only 36 catches at Notre Dame left too many questions about route tree and burst. Garret has him with a first-round grade. Zachariah Branch is viewed as a special teams ace and gadget piece with limited dynasty value, while Eric Rivers falls even further for the group due to poor hands and unrefined routes despite running a 4.35. The episode closes with a strong endorsement of small-school sleeper Tyren Montgomery, a former walk-on basketball player at LSU turned polished route runner out of John Carroll who turned heads at the Senior Bowl. The crew plans to draft him in rounds 4 to 5 as a high-upside stash with real development upside. Check out the Dynasty Nerds Film Room for all-22 tape on Malachi Fields and Carnell Tate, and stay current with the latest Rookie Big Boards and Dynasty Rankings as the NFL Draft approaches. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00:00 Start 00:03:17 Carnell Tate 00:17:28 Germie Barnard 00:28:41 Malachi Fields 00:42:47 FFPC 00:44:19 Zachariah Branch 00:56:18 Eric Rivers 01:02:07 Tyren Montgomery Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Ranking the Worst Possible Landing Spots for NFL Draft Prospects! NFL Draft Podcast EP. 22
Great prospects end up on bad teams every year — and dynasty managers pay the price. Jagger May and Andrew Mott go through all 32 NFL teams and tier them out by rookie landing spot quality, with the rules locked in: one S tier, two A tier, everything else is fair game. The result is a practical roadmap for where you want your first-round picks to land — and where you absolutely do not. Explore more tools and resources to stay ahead of your league. 📊 Rookie Big Boards 📝 Rookie Mock Drafts 📈 Dynasty Rankings 📱 Dynasty Nerds App 🧱 IDP Hub 👉 Upgrade your strategy and dominate your dynasty league. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00 Start 00:51 Bengals 02:34 Bills 04:38 Patriots 05:24 Dolphins 06:40 Dolphins 07:17 Jets 07:57 Dolphins 08:14 Dolphins 08:53 Dolphins 09:10 Steelers 09:54 Dolphins 11:09 Dolphins 11:30 Ravens 13:38 Dolphins 14:24 Texans 16:36 Colts 16:59 Dolphins 18:16 Dolphins 18:42 Jaguars 18:53 Dolphins 19:30 Dolphins 20:03 Dolphins 20:13 Titans 21:35 Dolphins 21:49 Dolphins 22:38 Bronocs 24:13 Chiefs 26:18 Raiders 27:39 Chargers 27:55 Dolphins 28:29 Cowboys 29:04 Dolphins 30:21 Dolphins 30:27 Giants 30:49 Dolphins 31:23 Dolphins 32:25 Eagles 34:24 Commanders 35:07 Dolphins 35:16 Bears 36:44 Lions 37:49 Packers 39:10 Vikings 41:16 Falcons 43:28 Panthers 43:56 Dolphins 44:43 Dolphins 45:28 Saints 45:31 Dolphins 46:06 Buccaneers 46:26 Dolphins 47:29 Cardinals 49:17 Dolphins 49:47 Rams 50:40 49ers 51:11 Dolphins 51:31 Dolphins 51:40 Seahawks Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Top 20 Rookie WRs Rankings & Tiers! NFL Draft Podcast EP. 21
Pro days are done, combine numbers are locked in, and the 2026 wide receiver class just got a full re-sort. Jagger May and Andrew Mott run through their updated top 20 WR tiers, debate where the consensus is getting it wrong, and make the case that this receiver class — despite lacking true superstar-level prospects — goes deeper than most people are giving it credit for. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00 Start 00:25 S Tier 02:38 A Tier 10:08 B Tier 14:57 C Tier 19:27 D Tier 42:54 F Tier Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
2026 Rookie WRs Pt. 1 (Tyson, Lane, Bell, Brown, Stribling, and Douglas)! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 810
The 2026 wide receiver class is officially open for business on the Dynasty Nerds podcast. Rich Dotson, Matt O'Hara, and Garret Price kick off their multi-episode WR breakdown series with six prospects, headlined by one of the most debated players in the class and a few names that spark genuine disagreement on the film room tape. Jordyn Tyson out of Arizona State is the centerpiece of this episode and for good reason — some analysts have him as the number one receiver in the class, others as number three. The crew lands somewhere in between. Tyson earns nerd scores of 77.2 (Rich) and 76.5 (Garret), putting him in the same historical range as Jaylen Waddle and Drake London, with a few cautionary names like Jalen Reagor mixed in. The praise is real: he's a smooth, savvy route runner who gets open against zone at will, works every alignment, and has a 67% contested catch win rate by one metric. The concern is equally real: against press man coverage — specifically the Utah tape — he struggles to create separation, offers almost nothing after the catch, and carries an extensive injury history including a 2022 ACL/MCL, a 2024 broken collarbone, and multiple hamstring injuries in 2025 that prevented him from finishing a season for the third straight year. The consensus projection is WR 1.4 to 1.5 territory in SuperFlex rookie drafts, with Carnell Tate and Makai Lemon grading in a tier above him. His floor comp is Jerry Jeudy; his ceiling is Amari Cooper or Garrett Wilson in the right situation. Ja'Kobi Lane from USC is the kind of player who helps an NFL team more than he helps your dynasty roster — at least in the short term. At 6-4 with a 40-inch vertical, massive catch radius, and vice-grip hands that give him a clear advantage in contested situations, the tape is legitimately intriguing. Garret scores him a 75.8, Matt comes in at 73.4, and the gap reflects a genuine split on how much to weigh his route-running limitations. He's a build-up speed guy, not a burst guy, and physical corners can knock him around at the line. He played through a lower-body injury in 2025 that may explain a down statistical year, and the crew encourages revisiting his 2024 tape before locking in a final grade. Dream landing spots: the Raiders alongside Fernando Mendoza, or New England with Drake Maye. Ceiling: Tee Higgins. Floor: a big possession receiver who helps teams more than dynasty managers. Stay current on all of these receivers with the Dynasty Rankings and go deeper with the Film Room as four more wide receiver episodes drop in the coming weeks. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00:00 Start 00:01:17 Jordyn Tyson 00:23:04 Ja'Kobi Lane 00:37:14 Skyler Bell 00:48:05 FFPC 00:49:38 Barion Brown 00:58:37 De'Zhaun Stribling 01:08:17 Caleb Douglas Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
2026 Rookie RBs Pt. 3 (Price, Singleton, Moss, Miller, Hemby, Faison)! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 809
Rich Dotson, Matt O'Hara, and Garret Price close out the class with six running backs who, outside of the top tier, struggle to inspire confidence in any dynasty format. Jadarian Price out of Notre Dame may carry the "consensus RB2" label in many dynasty circles, but all three hosts come away largely underwhelmed. Price earns nerd scores in the low-to-mid 73s — respectable for this class, but not the kind of tape that inspires first-round dynasty capital. His vision, patience, and contact balance are legitimate strengths, but his near-total absence from the passing game (just 15 career receptions) is a glaring red flag in PPR formats. The hosts land on Price as a prototypical 1.5-to-2-year window guy — the kind of back an NFL team leans on in a pinch before eventually upgrading. Solid, not special. Nick Singleton came into Penn State with first-round buzz and a reputation as the premier running back in his recruiting class. What the Dynasty Nerds film room found was something far less exciting. Singleton scores a 70.8 (Rich) and 69.8 (Garret) — RB5 by default in a shallow class. He has the size, speed, and pass-catching ability to intrigue NFL teams, but his vision is described as "atrocious," his hips are tight, and he offers zero wiggle in the open field. He's a straight-line athlete playing running back rather than a polished NFL prospect. The crew agrees he's a late Day 3 pick — a high-ceiling project that dynasty managers should treat as a third-round flier at best. Le'Von Moss from Texas A&M had just seven games last season before tearing his MCL and ACL, and the limited film makes a full evaluation nearly impossible. When healthy, the crew acknowledges real tools — initial burst, angry running style, low pad level, and surprisingly better lateral movement than Singleton. But with only 121 career carries at his peak and no involvement in the passing game (two career receptions in 2025), Moss falls into the fourth tier of this class. Garret scores him a 68.7. The health question mark simply overshadows everything else. Jam Miller from Alabama carries the stigma of Crimson Tide running backs without the résumé to back it up. His 4.42 40-yard dash was legitimately surprising, and his pass protection grades are a relative bright spot, but that's about it. Poor vision, missed cutback lanes, and a concerning inability to break tackles leave the hosts stumped on how he gets drafted. Rich scores him a 65.6; Garret gives him a 63.7. The consensus: great athlete in the real world, not a dynasty asset in this one. Roman Hemby out of Indiana is everything you expect from a backup running back — nothing more, nothing less. He reads blocks well, almost never fumbles (two career fumbles on 710 carries), catches the ball adequately, and runs with purpose. But he lacks burst, top-end speed, and any ability to make defenders miss after contact. Garret scores him a 67.5. Rich identifies him as the best run blocker in this entire class. He'll stay on rosters because coaches will like him — but if he's ever starting, his team is already making calls. A true baked potato. No butter. The wild card of the episode is Rahsul Faison from South Carolina — a 26-year-old prospect who started college football in 2019, before COVID, and somehow scores a 70.5 on Rich's nerd scale (sixth in the class on tape alone). The age kills his dynasty outlook, but the tape is surprisingly watchable: genuine elusiveness, strong instincts, natural hands, and a high forced-missed-tackle rate per PFF. The hosts agree he's more of a priority free agent or late-round flier than a dynasty stash — but in a class this thin, even a 26-year-old with good tape stands out. His taxi squad eligibility running out before he'd realistically age off your roster is half the selling point. The 2026 running back class outside of Jeremiyah Love is genuinely one of the weakest in recent memory. Nerd scores drop from the 80s (Love) to the low 70s (Mike Washington, Jonah Coleman, Jadarian Price) and then fall below 70 for everyone else. The hosts' advice: be patient, look for value in receivers and tight ends with your premium picks, and only reach for these backs if the landing spot justifies the risk. Monitor all of them as draft capital shakes out with the Dynasty Rankings. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00:00 Start 00:01:52 Jadarian Price 00:17:20 Nick Singleton 00:28:19 Le'Von Moss 00:38:56 FFPC 00:42:19 Jam Miller 00:47:16 Roman Hemby 00:54:27 Rahsul Faison Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
These Players are TOO RISKY for us! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 808
With the NFL Draft just a month away, Garret Price and Andrew Mott are back on the Dynasty Nerds Podcast to break down the players carrying the most risk heading into draft season. Nobody on this list is dead in the water, but all of them could see their dynasty value shift dramatically depending on what happens over the next few weeks. Aaron Jones and Jordan Mason headline the risky running back conversation, with Minnesota's unsettled front office and draft capital pointing toward potential reinforcements in the backfield. Rookie names like Jadarian Price, Kayron Allen, and Emmett Johnson could all find their way to Minnesota and steal touches. In Kansas City, Rashee Rice and Xavier Worthy are both vulnerable with the Chiefs holding a top-ten pick in both the first and second round and a clear need for a true pass-catching weapon alongside Patrick Mahomes. Over in Arizona, Tyler Allgeier enters a crowded backfield with an uncertain quarterback situation and the very real possibility the Cardinals add a running back in the draft, making him a prime sell candidate at current value. Geno Smith heads back to the Jets as nothing more than a bridge quarterback, with Ty Simpson or another young signal-caller likely to take over before the season is out. Ricky Pearsall in San Francisco gets a longer leash with Mike Evans and Christian Kirk added around him, but picks 27 and 58 put the 49ers squarely in range for receivers like Omar Cooper or KC Concepcion who would immediately threaten his long-term role. Finally, Malik Nabers carries the most risk of the bunch, with an injury recovery running behind schedule, a new receiver potentially coming at pick five, and an ADP of ten overall that prices in a best-case scenario the offseason has not supported. Stay current on all of these players with the Dynasty Rankings as the draft picture continues to develop. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00 Start 01:10 Viking's RBs 04:47 Rashee Rice 08:41 Juwan Johnson 11:26 Tyler Allgeier 15:27 Geno Smith 18:42 Ricky Pearsall 23:13 Giant's Skill Players Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

UPDATED Dynasty Rookie Mock Draft! NFL Draft Podcast EP. 20
The Draft Nerds are back with a four-round rookie-only mock draft in a tight end premium, PPR super flex format. Jagger May and Andrew Mott break down every pick, debate positional value, and reveal exactly how they're approaching one of the more wide-open rookie classes in recent memory. Jeremiyah Love goes first overall without hesitation, and from there the board gets interesting fast. Andrew grabs Fernando Mendoza at 1.03, leaning into super flex format value over the wide receiver run happening around him. Jagger follows with KC Concepcion while both hosts agree that Jonah Coleman, Jadarian Price, and most running backs not named Jeremiyah Love should wait. The consensus is clear: this is a pass catcher draft, and wide receivers and tight ends carry more reliable value than nearly any running back in the class. Andrew doubles down on positional strategy by snagging Ty Simpson at 2.03, building a quarterback asset he can either start or flip for future capital. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00 Start 00:30 Round 1 06:18 Round 2 11:13 Round 3 16:09 Round 4 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Ranking the Top 10 Rookie RBs for the 2026 NFL Draft! NFL Draft Podcast EP. 19
The Dynasty Nerds College Show is back, and Garret Price, Jagger May, and Andrew Mott are breaking down their composite top ten running backs in this year's NFL Draft class. Spoiler alert: there's one unanimous number one, a clear top tier, and then a whole lot of questions. Jeremiyah Love is the unanimous RB1 in this class and it isn't close. The crew compares him to Bijan Robinson as one of the best receiving backs any of them have scouted. Behind him, Mike Washington Jr., Jadarian Price, and Jonah Coleman form a clear second tier, though the hosts admit Washington carries the highest ceiling while Price offers the safest floor. Coleman's refusal to test at the combine left Garret scratching his head, dropping him from RB2 to RB4 on his personal board. From RB5 on, this class is defined by uncertainty. Emmett Johnson boasts elite underlying metrics including a 39% Dominator Rating, the highest of any back discussed, but his combine testing raises red flags. Nick Singleton has the tools but not the technique. Kayron Allen, Le'Veon Moss, Demond Claiborne, and Jadyn Ott each carry their own unique set of questions, making this a draft class where landing spot and opportunity could matter more than prospect profile. Check the Dynasty Rankings before your rookie draft and stay sharp with the Rookie Big Boards as the class continues to take shape. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00 Start 01:20 1. Jeremiyah Love 02:40 2. Mike Washington Jr. 06:24 3. Jadarian Price 10:42 5. Jonah Coleman 15:39 5. Emmett Johnson 21:05 6. Nick Singleton 25:25 7. Kayron Allen 28:41 8. Le'Veon Moss 32:07 9. Demond Claiborne 36:37 10. Jadyn Ott Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
14 Round Startup Mock Draft (With Rookies)! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 807
Welcome back into the Dynasty Nerds Podcast, where Garret Price is joined by Jagger May for a fast paced Superflex tight end premium startup mock with a third round reversal, and rookie picks included. The twist is simple. With only 30 seconds per selection, the guys are forced to make decisions in real time, react to ADP surprises, and explain how to stay flexible instead of drafting by a rigid script. The biggest takeaway is the “play jazz” approach. Take what the board gives you, collect value, and do not force positions early. The room flies through elite anchors like Bijan Robinson and Josh Allen, then shifts into a debate over whether it is smarter to chase early quarterback security or lock in high end wide receiver scoring like CeeDee Lamb and Garrett Wilson. As the draft gets deeper, the focus turns to win now builds and exploiting ADP pockets, including veterans like Baker Mayfield, Michael Pittman Jr., Davante Adams, and Mark Andrews. It is a real look at how contenders are built in March, and why the best drafters stay patient, then strike when the board makes a mistake. 00:00 Start 01:38 Round 1 04:05 Round 2 07:00 Round 3 10:37 Round 4 13:00 Round 5 16:20 Round 6 19:47 Round 7 22:47 Round 8 25:44 FFPC 26:53 Round 9 29:20 Round 10 31:24 Round 11 34:17 Round 12 36:26 Round 13 38:53 Round 14 Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Winners and Losers of the Offseason (So Far) Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 806
We are now deep into offseason noise season, and Garret Price brings in Jagger May to sort out what actually matters. With Rich Dotson and Matt O’Hara out, the show turns into a real-time litmus test for free agency moves, especially the ripple effects that change dynasty values before rookie drafts. The headline is Jaylen Waddle landing in Denver, and the guys break down what it means for Courtland Sutton and the rest of the receiver room. They also question how much this really changes the outlook for Malik Willis in Miami, since the Dolphins now have extra picks and feel locked into adding pass catchers in the draft. From there, they pivot into teams most likely to add a real wide receiver, plus the “next tier” of teams where it is less certain. They also run through backfield winners and losers after moves involving Travis Etienne, Kenneth Walker, Tyler Allgeier, J.K. Dobbins, Kenneth Gainwell, and Rico Dowdle, with a blunt note on Trey Benson. The tight end segment closes it out with quick fantasy reactions to signings including Isaiah Likely, Daniel Bellinger, and Travis Kelce. 00:00 Start 01:11 Jaylen Waddle Fallout 08:11 Malik Willis Outlook 09:35 JJ McCarthy's Situation 12:59 Teams That Need WR Help 31:43 FFPC 32:53 RB Moves and Impacts 39:05 TE Signings and Fantasy Impact Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Jaylen Waddle Reaction + Dynasty Trade Show! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 805
We are now getting to the time of year when dynasty league mates wake up, and this live trade show is built for that exact window. Garret Price and Andrew Mott take questions from the chat and Nerd Herd, then work through real deals with a clear theme: understand your window before you chase “needs.” Listen to This Episode: 🎧 Apple Podcasts 🎙️ Spotify ▶️ YouTube The guys open with a tier-based debate between Breece Hall and Kenneth Walker, and why a contender might lean one way while a long-term build leans the other. They also address noise like Justin Fields potentially vulturing goal line work, while keeping the focus on what actually changes projections. The show hits bigger structure questions too, including whether 2027 picks are getting overpriced and when it makes sense to “zig” away from the market. There are also quick takes on moving for veterans like Mike Evans, Davante Adams, and Terry McLaurin, plus a sharp reminder that it is still March and you do not need to force a roster fix before the season is even close. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 0:00:00 Intro 0:01:00 Breece Hall + 2027 2nd for Kenneth Walker 0:02:10 Justin Fields goal line concern (Kenneth Walker) 0:02:50 De’Von Achane for an early 2027 1st + Brian Thomas Jr. 0:04:35 2027 late 1st + Josh Downs for the 1.02 (1QB) 0:07:00 Justin Herbert vs Jaxson Dart 0:10:20 Judkins buy update 0:11:53 Are 2027 picks overpriced? 0:14:53 What 2027 pick return for TreVeyon Henderson 0:18:37 Moving up for Fernando Mendoza in Superflex rookie drafts 0:21:30 Malik Willis trade value 0:23:57 AJ Brown + DJ Moore + AJ Barner for Sam LaPorta + Jaylen Waddle 0:27:04 Breece Hall + Drake London vs Javonte Williams + Justin Jefferson 0:30:00 Kenneth Walker for Jaylen Waddle + 2027 2nd 0:34:12 Wan’Dale Robinson + 2.01 + 3.03 for Mike Evans + Davante Adams + Terry McLaurin 0:37:08 Burrow + Barkley + Kittle for Travis Hunter + 1.01 + 1.07 (Superflex) 0:41:45 Breaking news: Jaylen Waddle traded to Denver 0:47:56 1.07 + 2027 late 1st for 2026 1.02 (1QB) 0:49:27 Roster build question (Dart, Kyler, Nabers, multiple young TEs) 0:53:39 Wrap up Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Updated Draft Needs for Every NFC Team! NFL Draft Podcast EP. 18
Jagger May is joined by Andrew Mott as they connect free agency fallout to draft needs, and it keeps coming back to one idea: do not force luxury picks when the roster still has clear holes. The conversation hits teams that missed on Max Crosby and pivoted, including the “consolation” angle around Rashan Gary, plus how bringing back Javonte Williams impacts what a team can justify early. There is also a clear skepticism about overvaluing stopgap receivers as long-term answers, especially when a team still needs a real running mate for Malik Nabers. The Jeremiyah Love debate shows up again, with pushback on trying to force a top-ten running back landing spot when several teams already have capable backs. Instead, the focus shifts to guards, corners, and roster construction. Washington’s needs are framed as “get offense,” while the tight end discussion ties Chigoziem Okonkwo to the Zach Ertz style role, and the Eagles angle leans toward finding answers at safety and interior line. The episode also touches teams like the Rams preparing for life after Matthew Stafford, the Vikings’ upside if they ever landed Love, and the 49ers’ urgency to protect Brock Purdy if Trent Williams becomes a real question. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00:00 Start 00:00:22 Dallas Cowboys 00:03:15 New York Giants 00:09:00 Philadelphia Eagles 00:13:05 Washington Commanders 00:18:59 Chicago Bears 00:22:56 Detroit Lions 00:25:49 Green Bay Packers 00:33:12 Minnesota Vikings 00:37:27 Atlanta Falcons 00:42:09 Carolina Panthers 00:45:41 New Orleans Saints 00:48:16 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 00:50:27 Arizona Cardinals 00:52:58 LA Rams 00:56:27 San Francisco 49ers 00:59:29 Seattle Seahawks Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Best NFL Draft Fits for Every AFC Team After Free Agency! NFL Draft Podcast EP. 17
In this episode, Jagger May is joined by Andrew Mott to rip through AFC free agency moves and what they change heading into the draft. The big theme is simple. Teams that helped the quarterback and the trenches now have the freedom to draft the best players instead of forcing a reach. Buffalo grabbing D.J. Moore is the type of move that changes everything. Josh Allen finally gets real help, and now the Bills can focus on needs like left guard and slot corner instead of forcing a wideout early. Miami feels more like a reset year than a true push, with cap cleanup and physicality taking priority while the quarterback plan stays flexible. New England lands Romeo Doubs and still looks trench-first, using the signing to avoid desperation at receiver and keep options open for value later. The Jets keep leaning defense after major secondary moves, while the Ravens debate is all about priorities. Do they chase an outside receiver, or fix corner and the offensive line first? The episode closes with quick hits on the rest of the AFC, including Houston’s non-negotiable need to protect C.J. Stroud and the Chargers continuing to build through guard and edge so Justin Herbert is not running for survival. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00 Start 00:30 Buffalo Bills 02:22 Miami Dolphins 06:07 New England Patriots 08:52 New York Jets 12:13 Baltimore Ravens 15:08 Cincinnati Bengals 17:32 Cleveland Browns 21:21 Pittsburgh Steelers 24:18 Houston Texans 28:10 Indianapolis Colts 29:58 Jacksonville Jaguars 32:33 Tennessee Titans 36:43 Denver Broncos 39:03 Kansas City Chiefs 41:19 Las Vegas Raiders 46:35 LA Chargers Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Rookie RBs Pt. 2 (Coleman, Johnson, Ott, Washington, McGowan, Black) Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 804
Welcome to the Dynasty Nerds Fantasy Football Podcast, where we discuss dynasty strategy, rankings, and all things NFL. In this episode, Rich Dotson is joined by Garret Price and Matt O'Hara as they continue their rookie running back series and dig into a group of backs who could shape the middle rounds of rookie drafts. Jonah Coleman gets the spotlight early as the “safe” profile. They like the compact power, reliable vision, and real three down utility thanks to pass protection and receiving ability. The big question is the top end speed, and they note how much testing could impact draft capital and landing spot. Emmett Johnson brings production and real receiving volume, but the discussion centers on whether the athletic ceiling is high enough for more than a role player outcome. Jaydn Ott is a tougher eval, since the most relevant production is further back and the recent usage makes the projection messy. They get noticeably more excited when they hit Mike Washington Jr., who flashes size, speed, and legitimate pass catching upside. The concerns are pass protection and ball security, plus the idea that the “value window” may be gone now that more people are caught up to him. To close, Seth McGowan is framed as a unique late dart with NFL traits but plenty of red flags, while Kaelon Black is viewed as an older, average profile without a clear fantasy path. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00:00 Start 00:01:20 Jonah Coleman 00:12:48 Emmett Johnson 00:23:58 Jaydn Ott 00:32:23 FFPC 00:35:48 Mike Washington Jr. 00:51:32 Seth McGowan 01:00:29 Kaelon Black Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Rookie RBs Pt. 1 (Love, Allen, Claiborne, Randall, Taylor, Henry) Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 803
Rich Dotson, Garret Price, and Matt O'Hara kick off Part 1 of their 2026 rookie running back breakdown with a blunt message. This class is thin, free agency already filled several backfields, and dynasty managers need to be careful chasing names just because the position looks desperate. Jeremiyah Love sits alone at the top of this group, and the discussion centers on why the fantasy ceiling is built through the passing game. They highlight the movement skills, open-field timing, and route ability that could translate into real PPR volume, while still acknowledging the minor flaws that keep the profile from being “perfect.” Once Love is off the board, the episode shifts into dart throw territory. Kaytron Allen gets credit for vision and reliability, but the lack of juice and limited receiving upside caps the dynasty ceiling. Demond Claiborne brings speed and twitch, but the show debates whether drops and ball security could keep him from earning consistent NFL touches. Adam Randall is the ultimate “traits and projection” swing, with a path that might be more creative usage than true every-down work. They also run through J'Mari Taylor and Robert Henry Jr. as deeper bets where the flashes are there, but the margin for error is tiny in a class that already feels like a tough bet. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00:00 Start 00:04:36 Jeremiyah Love 00:18:21 Kaytron Allen 00:26:56 Demond Claiborne 00:41:53 FFPC 00:45:02 Adam Randall 00:55:45 J'Mari Taylor 01:03:00 Robert Henry Jr. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Biggest Winners and Losers in NFL Free Agency! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 802
Garret and Andrew go live by accident and roll straight into a rapid-fire dynasty reaction show as NFL free agency reshapes the 2026 landscape. From quarterback contracts to running back bags to sneaky value swings at tight end, the biggest takeaway is simple: the market is moving fast, and the dynasty “buy window” on some players is already closing. They start with Malik Willis landing a three-year deal in Miami and explain why the rushing upside could create a short-term QB1 window, but also why this is now a “hold or sell” market, not a buy. At running back, Kenneth Walker in Kansas City gets framed as a splashy move with real upside, but enough role and durability questions to keep expectations in check. Travis Etienne gets the biggest bullish push as a volume bet in a friendly system, while JK Dobbins returning to Denver is treated as a loud signal that caps RJ Harvey optimism. They hit the messy middle fast: Kenny Gainwell to Tampa Bay changes the conversation around Bucky Irving, while Rico Dowdle in Pittsburgh draws real excitement because of the coaching fit and role clarity. At wide receiver, Alec Pierce gets labeled as a price-inflated asset worth exploring as a sell, and the Wan’Dale Robinson versus Rashid Shaheed debate comes down to weekly PPR value versus spike-week appeal. They close with tight ends, including a small bump for Cade Otton, and a meaningful tier jump for Isaiah Likely if the Giants keep the target tree thin. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00 Intro 01:22 Quarterbacks 06:51 Running Backs 32:31 Wide Receivers 44:04 Tight Ends 48:07 Wrap-up Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Best NFL Team Fits for 2026 Rookie QBs! NFL Draft Podcast EP. 16
Jagger May and Andrew Mott break down best NFL fits for the 2026 rookie quarterback class, starting with the easiest call on the board and then working through a tier of prospects where development path matters more than immediate upside. They land on a clear QB1 destination, debate the most polarizing “where should he go?” fit, and round out the show with Day 3-style swings that need patience, structure, and the right staff to have any chance of becoming more than backups. They kick off with Fernando Mendoza and make it simple. The Raiders are the best fit, and it is not close. They like the structure around him, the offensive environment, and how clean the transition feels from a roster-building standpoint. If there is one quarterback spot that feels locked in before draft night, this is the one. From there, the conversation shifts into “who can actually develop” territory. Garrett Nussmeier gets framed as a top-three quarterback in the class, with a preferred fit that allows him to sit and grow rather than getting forced onto the field too early. The show also spends time on the biggest fit debate of the episode with Ty Simpson, with Andrew pushing the Rams as the ideal landing spot for a year or two of development behind a veteran, while Jagger defends a more aggressive “teams will trade and take their guy” view of how the first round can unfold. They also place Carson Beck in the bridge-quarterback lane, and talk through why the right coaching environment could matter more than raw traits for Drew Allar, Cole Payton, Taylen Green, Cade Klubnik, and Diego Pavia, where the realistic goal is often “earn a roster spot and get time to develop” before anything else. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00 Start 00:17 Fernando Mendoza 02:11 Garrett Nussmeier 09:03 Join the #NERDHERD 10:07 Ty Simpson 17:10 Carson Beck 21:28 Drew Allar 26:24 Cole Payton 30:15 Taylen Green 34:31 Cade Klubnik 37:04 Diego Pavia Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

NFL Mock Draft (1st Round)! NFL Draft Podcast EP. 15
Garret Price, Jagger May, and Andrew Mott run a full one-round, 32-pick NFL mock draft built for chaos. This is not a fantasy mock. It is a true “every position counts” exercise where Combine buzz, roster needs, and team-building philosophy collide fast. It starts the way most people expect, with the Raiders taking Fernando Mendoza at 1.01. From there, the draft leans heavily into premium value: edge, secondary, and trench help. The early run features the Jets grabbing Arvell Reese, the Cardinals building up front with Spencer Fano, and the Titans selecting David Bailey as a foundational defensive add. By the time the Giants land Sonny Styles, the board is already setting up a key theme for the rest of the mock: teams that are not truly ready to win still have to decide whether to chase a “finishing piece” or keep stacking long-term pillars. A major pivot point comes with the Commanders selecting Jeremiyah Love, which sparks the conversation about how early a team should take a running back. Later, the Chiefs land Carnell Tate, and the back half of the round becomes about fit and roster construction more than pure hype, including Mansoor Delane to the Dolphins, Caleb Downs to the Cowboys, and Jordyn Tyson to the Rams. The late first round continues to load up on immediate contributors, with Makai Lemon, Zion Young, and Ty Simpson all coming off the board, before the mock closes with defenders and trench picks that could quietly matter a lot if the landing spots hit. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00 Start 01:17 1. Raiders (Fernando Mendoza) 01:57 2. Jets (Arvell Reese) 04:07 3. Cardinals (Spencer Fano) 06:18 4. Titans (David Bailey) 08:11 5. Giants (Sonny Styles) 09:25 7. Commanders (Jeremiyah Love) 13:36 9. Chiefs (Carnell Tate) 15:05 10. Monroe Freeling 16:06 11. Dolphins (Mansoor Delane) 18:50 12. Cowboys (Caleb Downs) 20:05 13. Rams (Jordyn Tyson) 22:47 Picks 14 and 15 24:00 16. Jets (Makai Lemon) 25:43 17. Lions (Zion Young) 28:15 18. Vikings (Ty Simpson) 34:29 19. Panthers (Akheem Mesidor) 35:19 20. Cowboys (Cashius Howell) 36:07 22. Chargers (Olaivagega Ioane) 37:33 22. Eagles ( Caleb Lomu) 38:29 24. Browns (Blake Miller) 39:14 25. Bears (Caleb Banks) 40:21 26. Buffalo Bills (T.J. Parker) 41:34 27. 49ers (Omar Cooper Jr.) 42:27 28. Texans (Emmanuel Pregnon) 43:10 29. Chiefs (Avieon Terrell) 44:06 30. Broncos (CJ Allen) 45:50 31. Patriots (Kadyn Proctor) 48:00 32. Seahawks (Jacob Rodriguez) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Rookie QBs Pt. 2 (Simpson, King, Beck, Klubnick, and More)! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 801
Rich, Matt, and Garret return for Part Two of their 2026 rookie quarterback reviews, and the theme is pretty blunt: this group has far more projection risk than certainty. They still break down the paths to relevance, but most of the discussion comes back to what NFL draft capital will say about these evaluations. They open with Ty Simpson, and the argument is all about risk tolerance. He does a lot of things “fine,” with a quick release and solid short-to-intermediate accuracy, but the limited starts and shaky deep ball outcomes keep him from feeling like a safe Round 1 bet. The overall takeaway is that he is much easier to like if he lands as a Round 2 investment instead of being treated like a franchise cornerstone. Haynes King is the cleanest example of “testing and rushing production are not enough.” The athleticism and rushing numbers create obvious fantasy temptation, but the passing profile is too inconsistent for them to buy him as a real NFL quarterback. The more realistic path they keep circling is a role player or chess-piece type usage rather than a full-time starter you build around. With Carson Beck, the discussion centers on what happens when a quarterback does not have rushing outs. He can operate an offense when things are clean and structured, but heavy feet, pressure issues, and inconsistent ball placement limit the fantasy ceiling. They frame him more as a bridge outcome than a long-term fantasy starter. They are very low on Sawyer Robertson. The size and arm are there, but the tape reaction is overwhelmingly negative, especially on accuracy and throws outside the numbers. This is the clearest “do not draft” profile of the episode. Cade Klubnik lands in the uncomfortable middle. He has enough athletic ability and quick-game traits to survive, but they question whether the pressure response and inconsistency can ever be cleaned up enough to matter in the NFL. The most likely outcome they describe is a borderline starter or backup track, with only a narrow path to something more. They close with Cole Payton, who is difficult to pin down because the mechanics look messy but the production and athleticism still pop. The conversation frames him as a developmental bet you only take if an NFL team commits real coaching time to him. Compared to some other pure tools bets, they see more potential for him to be molded, but it still depends heavily on draft capital and situation. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00:00 Start 00:00:49 Ty Simpson 00:18:20 Haynes King 00:25:24 Carson Beck 00:36:48 FFPC 00:38:07 Roster Rescue 00:39:20 Sawyer Robertson 00:44:22 Cade Klubnik 00:56:36 Cole Payton Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Rookie QBs Pt. 1 (Mendoza, Nussmeier, Allar, and More)! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 800
Rich, Matt, and Garret kick off their 2026 rookie prospect reviews with the position that breaks the most hearts every year: quarterbacks. The group emphasizes how much draft capital and landing spot shape outcomes, but also why weak classes can create value pockets in Superflex, especially if a QB can buy fantasy points with rushing. They start at the top with Fernando Mendoza, presenting him as the cleanest profile in the class and the safest Superflex bet. The discussion centers on accuracy, ball placement, decision-making, and leadership, with a debate on ceiling. One view sees him living as a reliable QB1 or high-end QB2 type. The other argues he can climb higher if the team build around him hits and the offense keeps evolving. Next up is Garrett Nussmeier, framed as a tricky evaluation because the 2025 tape looks heavily impacted by injury, while the 2024 tape shows a much more live arm and a more confident, pro-style passer. The group keeps coming back to one key point: draft capital will tell the story. If he lands in the right range, he becomes a real swing worth taking in Superflex rookie drafts. They move into Drew Allar as the “looks the part” quarterback that coaches will want to develop. The upside is obvious in the frame and arm talent, but the concerns show up when the pocket collapses and the processing speeds up. The consensus is that he needs time, structure, and the right coaching situation to see if the tools translate. They then cover Diego Pavia, giving credit for competitiveness and production, but making it clear the size limitation creates a massive barrier to draft capital and long-term opportunity. For fantasy purposes, they frame it as the kind of player where any real playing-time window would likely be the sell window. They also hit Taylen Green as the ultimate “tools vs quarterbacking” prospect. The athletic profile is wild and the rushing upside creates fantasy intrigue, but the concerns are about processing, mechanics, and whether he can consistently function as an NFL passer. The takeaway is that he is a pure swing pick, not a stable bet. They close with Luke Altmyer, who gets credit for playing on time, protecting the ball, and being coach-friendly, but is framed as a capped-ceiling profile for fantasy. Even if he sticks in the NFL as a backup type, the upside is limited compared to the quarterbacks who can generate fantasy points with rushing. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00:00 Start 00:06:51 Fernando Mendoza 00:26:00 Garrett Nussmeier 00:39:26 Drew Allar 00:49:27 FFPC 00:51:16 Roster Rescue is BACK! 00:52:19 Diego Pavia 01:02:07 Taylen Green 01:14:27 Luke Altmyer Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Predicting the Landing Spots of NFL Free Agents for Dynasty 2026! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 799
Garret Price and Andrew Mott shift from Combine takeaways into the real domino period: NFL free agency. The focus is how quickly dynasty value can swing based on tags, cap space, and surprise landing spots. The quarterback section starts with Daniel Jones as the cleanest call to return. From there, they frame Kirk Cousins as more of a bridge or depth option than a true long-term starter, with potential fits depending on how a team wants to handle the next rookie class. The most discussed “swing” outcome is Malik Willis. They see logical scenarios where he lands in a spot that gives him a chance to start sooner rather than later, but they also push back on the idea that he becomes a franchise saver. The upside is real for fantasy. The long-term NFL outlook is still more uncertain. At running back, they spend time on the tension around Breece Hall, with the tag scenario creating downside risk for both fantasy managers and the player’s perceived freedom. Kenneth Walker is treated as more likely to stay put, but with enough uncertainty that it is worth tracking closely through the deadline. From there, the conversation turns to possible landing spots and role fits. Travis Etienne is one of the biggest pieces on the board if he changes teams. Rachaad White gets framed as a committee and depth type of option rather than a clear starter. Rico Dowdle, Tyler Allgeier, and JK Dobbins round out the “next tier” of backs who could become important depending on how a backfield is built and how much money a team is willing to spend. On the wide receiver side, they start with Alec Pierce as a clean field-stretcher fit for multiple teams. Mike Evans is the headliner name if the longtime situation finally changes, with a clear expectation that any move would be tied to chasing a title. They also run through veteran and role-based fits, including Wan’Dale Robinson, Romeo Doubs, Jauan Jennings, and Christian Kirk, with the key point being that teams with cap space and obvious needs can reshape the entire room quickly. They close the receiver discussion with Deebo Samuel and Rashid Shaheed, focusing on how either player could change an offense’s geometry depending on usage and price. At tight end, they highlight David Njoku as the kind of addition that can immediately upgrade an offense that needs a true middle-of-the-field presence. Isaiah Likely is treated as a talented option whose market may not be as hot as fantasy managers expect. Cade Otton is discussed as a solid, reliable tight end piece who can fit multiple teams without needing to be the entire passing game. Explore more tools and resources to stay ahead of your league Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00 Start 01:23 Daniel Jones 02:10 Kirk Cousins 05:56 Malik Willis 10:14 Breece Hall 12:50 Kenneth Walker 17:34 Travis Etienne 19:09 Rachaad White 20:25 Rico Dowdle 24:35 Tyler Allgeier 28:06 JK Dobbins 29:22 Alec Pierce 32:59 Mike Evans 35:55 Wan'Dale Robinson 38:04 Romeo Doubs 39:12 Jauan Jennings 41:32 Christian Kirk 43:26 Deebo Samuel & Rashid Shaheed 47:26 David Njoku 48:40 Isaiah Likely 50:08 Cade Otton Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Winners and Losers From the NFL Combine! NFL Draft Podcast EP. 14
Jagger May and Andrew Mott are back with a post-Combine check-in on who helped themselves and who created new concerns. Their main point is consistent throughout the episode: testing is not the whole evaluation, but bad numbers and bad interview moments can matter a lot more than a great 40. At running back, the conversation keeps coming back to how thin the class feels behind Jeremiyah Love. Mike Washington Jr. is the testing standout they spend the most time on, while Emmett Johnson is the most disappointing result, turning “interesting traits” into a much tougher projection based on how the numbers landed. At quarterback, they treat Ty Simpson and Garrett Nussmeier as winners mostly because they did what they needed to do on the field and in interviews. On the other side, Diego Pavia is the clear cautionary tale of how quickly interviews can tank confidence. At wide receiver, the biggest storyline is Makai Lemon, where the discussion is less about tape and more about the Combine week optics. They also note that some players did not test, which naturally creates skepticism until pro days. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00:00 Start 00:07:19 WR Winners and Losers 00:18:04 QB Winners and Losers 00:28:16 RB Winners and Losers 00:34:35 EDGE Winners and Losers 00:41:06 Offensive Linemen Winners and Losers 00:45:47 TE Winners and Losers 00:51:37 Conspiracy Theory Time 00:53:48 IDL Winners and Losers 00:55:05 LB Winners and Losers 00:56:51 DB Winners and Losers Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Using the BEST Attributes From Rookie WRs to Build the ULTIMATE WR! NFL Draft Podcast EP. 13
Garret Price and Andrew Mott go full “Frankenstein mode” for Combine week, building the ultimate 2026 wide receiver by assigning one prospect to each key trait. The only rule is you can only use each player once, which forces some gamesmanship as they decide where each name has the most value. They start with Malachi Fields as the easy winner for size, the receiver who “looks like WR1 getting off the bus.” For pure long speed, both land on Brenen Thompson, the track-speed bet who could be among the fastest in the class. For yards after catch, they give the nod to Omar Cooper, emphasizing open-field playmaking and how that trait translates across offensive systems. When it comes to hands, they agree Makai Lemon brings the best mix of reliability and highlight-level catches. Route running is the one category they treat as a clear lock, selecting Jordan Tyson as the best separator and tempo-based technician in the class. Contested catch goes to Denzel Boston, largely because of strength through contact and the ability to win at the catch point with “vice grip” hands. For the tougher “vibes” category, IQ, they settle on Skyler Bell, a player they credit for constantly being in the right place, understanding scramble drill rules, and winning with savvy rather than pure athletic dominance. Pedigree goes to Carnell Tate, based on recruiting profile and the full “pipeline” context. For burst and early acceleration, they choose KC Concepcion, with a quick note that measurements and speed will be huge for how the NFL views the role. They close physicality with Chris Bell, describing a tank-built receiver who plays with real edge and contact tolerance. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00 Start 01:40 WR Size 03:48 Speed 05:41 YAC 07:48 Hands 10:33 Route Running 12:21 Contested Catch 14:18 Football IQ 19:27 Pedigree 21:41 Burst 23:29 Physicality Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices