When they said this wide receiver class was loaded, they weren’t lying. Even though it’s a Superflex league, wide receivers will dominate the first round with some sprinkles from other positions. Let’s dive into the 2024 dynasty prospect rankings for your Superflex leagues.
2024 Dynasty Prospect Rankings – Superflex Pre-Draft
1.01 Caleb Williams, QB
Don’t overthink it. With the 1.01 in the real draft and the 1.01 in our Superflex leagues, Williams has a nice blend of security and upside to be a long-term asset.
1.02 Jayden Daniels, QB
If and when Daniels gets top-five draft capital, he’s going to be on everyone’s love list for dynasty quarterbacks. His film study highlights some insane tools that other prospects don’t have. Hopefully, he goes to the Commanders, not the Patriots, as weapons matter for QB development.
1.03 Marvin Harrison Jr, WR
There are plenty of good reasons to believe Malik Nabers is the WR1 in this class. But Harrison Jr. will likely end up in Arizona with Kyler Murray, and the pedigree is going to be unmatched. A plug-and-play WR1 from the moment he steps on the field.
1.04 Malik Nabers, WR
“Lightning in a bottle, but there is no bottle” as a wise man once said. He would have been the WR1 or rivaled them in the last five classes outside of Ja’Marr Chase. There’s a lot to love, and at cost, he might be a better investment than MHJr.
1.05 Drake Maye, QB
The slide is real, but hopefully not a Will Levis type slide. He has all the tools in his toolbox, but his supporting cast at UNC left a lot to be desired. Maye’s upside is Justin Herbert, but his downside might scare some folks off.
1.06 Rome Odunze, WR
People will be clattering for someone else here, but getting a top WR talent at 1.06 is money. Most teams here just needed a little oomph to push them into the playoffs, and a super-charged Chris Olave should do the trick.
1.07 Brock Bowers, TE
Bowers is an out-of-this-world talent. But drafting tight end early was a strategy decision to try and get ahead in a desolate position. Now the position has some charge to it, and Bowers could fall down rookie boards. If he’s in the right system, expect a TE1 season out of the gates.
1.08 J.J. McCarthy, QB
The whispers are real. McCarthy has all the talent to be a first-round quarterback and was only a low-volume passer due to the system he played in. He pops on film, and when sorted by third down in the lab he’s making plays left and right.
1.09 Brian Thomas Jr, WR
Big, fast, strong. He lit the combine ablaze and didn’t even look like he was trying. If Nabers didn’t exist, we’d be talking about Brian Thomas Jr as one of the top names in the class, but he played second fiddle to an absolute monster at LSU.
1.10 Xavier Worthy, WR
Holy smokes. If you strapped a rocket ship on the back of Diontae Johnson, you’d get Worthy. There’s a lot to like in the nuance of his routes, and when paired with a 4.21 40 he’s going to keep corners up at night.
1.11 Trey Benson, RB
Every year we try to explain that RBs are a bad investment. But Trey Benson had me fall in love. Between overcoming adversity in his knee injury, to the smooth transition from receiver to asteroid in open space, he’s the real deal. He’s not in the same atmosphere as Bijan and Breece, but he’s the RB1 in this class comfortably at the moment.
1.12 Troy Franklin, WR
The gauntlet drill is going to haunt Franklin. Well, until he breaks out as a rookie and we all look silly. He’s a talented receiver able to separate effectively at all levels of his route tree. Being able to draft Franklin here is a dream come true for folks who just won their leagues.
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