Fantasy Football Best Ball ADP 2025: Tracking Underdog ADP Movement in August

Get the latest 2025 best ball ADP trends in fantasy football. Discover undervalued picks, positional values, and stacking targets for your best ball drafts.
Fantasy Football Best Ball ADP 2025: Tracking Underdog ADP Movement in August

The last time we did this exercise was right on the eve of training camp, back when Jacory Croskey-Merritt was obscure and Rashee Rice was considered likely to avoid a suspension this season. Rice settled his legal case the same day I posted that article, setting him up for a 2025 suspension and anADP freefall.

Much else has happened since mid-July, including significant injuries for Matthew Stafford, Joe Mixon, Tyjae Spears, Rachaad White, Jayden Reed, Darnell Mooney, Jalen McMillan and Isaiah Likely. We haven't seen any trades with fantasy relevance, but that may change soon if the Brian Robinson rumors are to be believed.

This article specifically looks at best ball ADPs, but it's just as useful for any other type of fantasy interests as a sort of general stock-market update, showing which players gained or lost considerable value (in the eyes of best-ball drafters) during training camp and the preseason. Per usual, many of the biggest ADP risers are rookies, though we'll also see significant movement for veterans for a variety of reasons, ranging from injuries to new signings to positive camp reports.

I typically use data from multiple platforms when analyzing NFL best ball ADPs, but this time around we'll stick to just Underdog, where a huge volume of drafts allows them to cycle in fresh data constantly. It's nice to have numbers that are just from the past couple days at this time of year, when there are big ADP

The last time we did this exercise was right on the eve of training camp, back when Jacory Croskey-Merritt was obscure and Rashee Rice was considered likely to avoid a suspension this season. Rice settled his legal case the same day I posted that article, setting him up for a 2025 suspension and anADP freefall.

Much else has happened since mid-July, including significant injuries for Matthew Stafford, Joe Mixon, Tyjae Spears, Rachaad White, Jayden Reed, Darnell Mooney, Jalen McMillan and Isaiah Likely. We haven't seen any trades with fantasy relevance, but that may change soon if the Brian Robinson rumors are to be believed.

This article specifically looks at best ball ADPs, but it's just as useful for any other type of fantasy interests as a sort of general stock-market update, showing which players gained or lost considerable value (in the eyes of best-ball drafters) during training camp and the preseason. Per usual, many of the biggest ADP risers are rookies, though we'll also see significant movement for veterans for a variety of reasons, ranging from injuries to new signings to positive camp reports.

I typically use data from multiple platforms when analyzing NFL best ball ADPs, but this time around we'll stick to just Underdog, where a huge volume of drafts allows them to cycle in fresh data constantly. It's nice to have numbers that are just from the past couple days at this time of year, when there are big ADP changes every week based on hype and injuries from the preseason games or practices. Yesterday's price isn't always tomorrow's price -- something anyone interested in drafting Croskey-Merritt can attest to.

(All ADP data can be found at the bottom of this article, after my review of the most intriguing situations and biggest ADP movers.)

     

ADP Surging

       

There are a couple of interesting positional trends here, with ADPs rising for all of the elite QBs (Allen/Jackson/Daniels/Hurts) and also for nearly all of the tight ends in the mid-to-low-end TE1 range (Kelce/Hockenson/Andrews/Warren/etc). This can have a big impact on draft strategy, even in the early rounds, as it's no longer common that we get a shot at Jackson or Allen at the 2/3 turn.

       

Brown's ADP shot up in mid-August, thanks in part to a pair of preseason appearances in which he got all the first-team RB touches. Samaje Perine did sub in for passing situations a few times with the starters, but he's unlikely to take many snaps where the ball actually goes to the running back, while rookie sixth-round pick Tahj Brooks may not have a Week 1 role at all. That doesn't mean Brooks can't make a push in-season, but Brown's workload projection for the season opener is among the best of any running back, giving him a shot to repeat his production from the final eight games of last season (20.9 PPR points per game). He's not an elite talent, which opens up more doors for things to go wrong, but he's also on the short list of players with a realistic chance to average 20-plus per game.

          

Hampton's rise is a direct result of Najee Harris' fireworks accident and continued absence from practice, potentially leaving the Chargers with only Hassan Haskins, Kimani Vidal and Jaret Patterson as Week 1 backup options behind the rookie. It's a situation that could allow Hampton to take 40-plus snaps and 20-plus touches right out of the gate, with upside to maintain a huge workload all season if Harris never makes it back (or isn't the same as before, be it due to poor conditioning or issues with his vision). Running backs in Greg Roman offenses don't usually see many passes, but Hampton will at least add something there, and his rushing stats alone could provide third-round value. 

          

Henderson undoubtedly looks fantastic this preseason, and with his in-game performance backed by glowing reports out of training camp, but it nonetheless feels suspicious to see an ADP rise so much in a short period of time without a major teammate injury or transaction involved. Then again, Henderson might've been too cheap in the first place, either due to underestimating his talent or overestimating Rhamondre Stevenson, who hasn't practiced the past couple weeks (but isn't thought to be dealing with a significant injury). Just don't throw your chair through the television if Henderson only gets 10-12 touches in the season opener.

          

Egbuka hit the fantasy-value trifecta this summer. First, there were glowing reports out of training camp, with comments not only from beat reporters but also coaches and teammates. Second, fellow Bucs wideout Chris Godwin (ankle) missed all of camp and still isn't back at practice, making him unlikely to play Week 1. Last but not least, Bucs WR Jalen McMillan suffered a severe neck sprain during the team's second preseason game, ruling him out for at least September and perhaps much longer. 

Drafted 19th overall this spring, Egbuka landed in a high-powered offense, but one where it appeared he'd have to compete with McMillan for the No. 3 receiver job. Instead, the rookie figures to enter Week 1 as Tampa's No. 2 receiver, playing a vast majority of the snaps on offense. Egbuka can be fired up as a WR3 starter for fantasy in Week 1, arguably ranking ahead of fellow 2025 first-round picks Tetairoa McMillan and Matthew Golden

          

The summer of "Bill" continues, with numerous training-camp hype articles (puff pieces?), Brian Robinson trade rumors and now a Croskey-Merritt preseason touchdown. Granted, Chris Rodriguez got the start and ripped off a 40-yard carry before Croskey-Merritt's TD on Monday, but the rookie was first through Washington's RB rotation in the prior preseason game (Robinson and Austin Ekeler didn't play in either contest).

This is definitely a case where there's enough smoke to identify some kind of fire -- I just doubt it's a JCM-workhorse fire. The more likely outcome, at least to start the season, is a three-way committee between Ekeler, Croskey-Merritt and either Rodriguez or Jeremy McNichols. It's possible, of course, that the seventh-round pick would then earn a larger share of the work as the season progressed, but he isn't the type of overwhelming talent where that should be assumed. 

He's a 24-year-old rookie who didn't have a dominant college career and is merely average by NFL lead-back standards in terms of straight-line speed (4.45 pro day 40) and size (5-10, 206). A successful season might just look similar to what Robinson did the past few years, in which case Croskey-Merritt would be worthy of a fantasy roster spot but not desirable as a weekly starter.

     

How do these players stack up against the rest of the NFL? Visit our fantasy football PPR rankings for a list of the top players for the remainder of the season.         

             

Others

          

ADP Sinking

   

Due to Injury       

QB Matthew Stafford (back) finally began practicing this week, but there's still a lot of concern that his back won't hold up for an entire season. While Stafford isn't a fantasy priority, teammates Puka Nacua and Davante Adams certainly are. Both have experienced ADP drops, while Kyren Williams curiously has gone up a few spots. The Rams might want to run more often with a backup QB, but that's unlikely to make up for the reduced quality of the offense overall, especially for a player like Williams who is already maxed out on volume. Granted, Williams' rise is also related to the lack of hype surrounding Blake Corum and Jarquez Hunter this summer. That's kind of similar to the Chase Brown situation, with a non-elite talent in an excellent situation seeing his ADP rise after backfield competition fails to materialize during camp/preseason.

Looking at the other names on this list, I'd say drafters are correct to be concerned about most of these injuries, although Jefferson's hamstring sounds like it'll be fine well before Week 1. On the other hand... Hill, Jennings, Godwin, Mixon, Mooney, Aiyuk, Spears, Harris and White come with varying degrees of risk to miss time early in the season.

For the last two guys on the list, Gesicki and Johnson, drops in ADP aren't strictly related to preseason injuries. Gesicki fell when the Bengals signed Noah Fant, while Johnson seems to be losing support due to positive reports on both D'Andre Swift and Kyle Monangai.

   

Contract Concerns and Suspensions   

I've been assuming a three-game suspension for Addison all offseason and was drafting him anyway without hesitation. The first three games are the best ones to miss for fantasy, in my opinion, because the early part of the season has less injury attrition and no bye weeks. 

Rice and McLaurin, meanwhile, remain somewhat of mysteries, with further ADP fluctuations almost certainly ahead in the weeks/days leading up to Week 1. Speaking of fluctuations, Judkins actually dropped much further than his current price in Round 11, before rebounding due to recent news about charges being dropped. He's still unsigned, and may not be ready for Week 1, but the lack of a legal case nonetheless helps his chances of earning a role in Cleveland this year (even if a suspension remains possible). There was talk before about Judkins remaining unsigned well into the regular season or possibly landing on the commissioner's exempt list once he signed. Now it should be a simpler league investigation, without risk of the most extreme measures at Roger Goodell's disposal.

          

Others

McConkey's drop is a straightforward reaction to the Keenan Allen signing impacting LA's target share projections, while the stuff involving Jets is more complicated, with Justin Fields (100.5 > 108.3) also dropping. General pessimism about the Jets offense is perfectly reasonable, but it's also sort of an evergreen thing that's largely been baked into rankings and projections all year. In Hall's case, Braleon Allen hype is driving a much larger ADP drop relative to Wilson and Fields. I also don't really agree with that, especially if it's based on concerns over Allen getting a bunch of first-team work in a preseason game (a game where Hall took 11 of the first 19 snaps, with seven carries for 26 yards).

In some situations, like for elite players, no news is good news. But for some of the guys listed above, especially rookie wideouts, a lack of hype/updates seems to be hurting their fantasy value. There's been no sign so far of Williams, Harris, Bryant or Noel earning first-team reps as more than an occasional thing at training camp. And then Harris additional hits from not only the Keenan Allen signing but also some hype around fellow Chargers rookie KeAndre Lambert-Smith (a fifth-round pick who replaced Quentin Johnston when Johnston was knocked out of the second preseason game)

        

The ADP Comparison Chart (August vs. July)

PosPlayer8/20 ADP7/19 ADPΔ ADPΔ%
1WRJa'Marr Chase1.11.100.0%
2RBBijan Robinson2.43.10.722.6%
3WRCeeDee Lamb3.54.81.327.1%
4RBSaquon Barkley4.54.1-0.4-9.8%
5RBJahmyr Gibbs4.65.6117.9%
6WRJustin Jefferson5.62.8-2.8-100.0%
7RBChristian McCaffrey77.80.810.3%
8WRNico Collins8.510.31.817.5%
9WRMalik Nabers9.79.4-0.3-3.2%
10WRAmon-Ra St. Brown10.511.71.210.3%
11WRPuka Nacua11.57.8-3.7-47.4%
12WRBrian Thomas12.513.20.75.3%
13RBAshton Jeanty12.612-0.6-5.0%
14RBDerrick Henry13.814.10.32.1%
15RBDe'Von Achane15.214.3-0.9-6.3%
16WRDrake London15.215.90.74.4%
17WRA.J. Brown1817.1-0.9-5.3%
18TEBrock Bowers18.719.10.42.1%
19RBChase Brown1927.28.230.1%
20WRLadd McConkey20.518.6-1.9-10.2%
21RBBucky Irving20.922.21.35.9%
22RBJonathan Taylor21.521-0.5-2.4%
23RBJosh Jacobs22.925.22.39.1%
24WRTyreek Hill25.222.7-2.5-11.0%
25WRTee Higgins25.624.9-0.7-2.8%
26TETrey McBride26.126.60.51.9%
27QBJosh Allen28.231.83.611.3%
28RBOmarion Hampton28.44213.632.4%
29QBLamar Jackson28.933.64.714.0%
30WRMarvin Harrison30.428.1-2.3-8.2%
31RBKyren Williams31.235.44.211.9%
32WRJaxon Smith-Njigba32.332.90.61.8%
33WRGarrett Wilson33.429-4.4-15.2%
34WRDavante Adams35.430.1-5.3-17.6%
35WRMike Evans35.636.81.23.3%
36TEGeorge Kittle36.139.63.58.8%
37QBJayden Daniels37.638.81.23.1%
38RBJames Cook38.543.24.710.9%
39WRTetairoa McMillan39.540.91.43.4%
40WRXavier Worthy40.546.35.812.5%
41WRTerry McLaurin42.232.3-9.9-30.7%
42WRGeorge Pickens43.550.16.613.2%
43RBBreece Hall43.634.4-9.2-26.7%
44QBJalen Hurts43.644.71.12.5%
45RBTreVeyon Henderson44.164.420.331.5%
46WRJameson Williams45.646.50.91.9%
47RBKenneth Walker46.6536.412.1%
48WRDJ Moore4842-6-14.3%
49WRCourtland Sutton49.348.6-0.7-1.4%
50WRDK Metcalf49.744.1-5.6-12.7%
51WRCalvin Ridley51.255.44.27.6%
52WRDeVonta Smith51.948.5-3.4-7.0%
53WRRashee Rice54.621.1-33.5-158.8%
54RBChuba Hubbard54.751.6-3.1-6.0%
55WRJaylen Waddle5552.9-2.1-4.0%
56RBAlvin Kamara56.556.1-0.4-0.7%
57WRTravis Hunter56.854.8-2-3.6%
58WRZay Flowers57.455-2.4-4.4%
59RBJames Conner59.362.334.8%
60RBRJ Harvey59.563.23.75.9%
61QBJoe Burrow60.560.500.0%
62WRRicky Pearsall60.974.513.618.3%
63WREmeka Egbuka63.187.524.427.9%
64WRRome Odunze63.560.2-3.3-5.5%
65WRDeebo Samuel65.9704.15.9%
66WRChris Olave66.564-2.5-3.9%
67RBD'Andre Swift68.173.35.27.1%
68WRStefon Diggs68.979.710.813.6%
69WRMatthew Golden68.978.29.311.9%
70WRJerry Jeudy70.568.5-2-2.9%
71RBIsiah Pacheco71.1775.97.7%
72WRJakobi Meyers71.871.7-0.1-0.1%
73RBTony Pollard72.282.610.412.6%
74WRJauan Jennings7461.6-12.4-20.1%
75WRJordan Addison74.365.9-8.4-12.7%
76RBDavid Montgomery75.370.7-4.6-6.5%
77TESam LaPorta76.775.4-1.3-1.7%
78RBKaleb Johnson7771.7-5.3-7.4%
79RBAaron Jones80.384.44.14.9%
80WRJayden Reed8178.8-2.2-2.8%
81QBPatrick Mahomes8283.61.61.9%
82WRKhalil Shakir83.280.5-2.7-3.4%
83RBJordan Mason83.792.99.29.9%
84TET.J. Hockenson85.589.13.64.0%
85WRJosh Downs86.283.7-2.5-3.0%
86RBJaylen Warren88.397.79.49.6%
87RBTyrone Tracy89.3104.415.114.5%
88WRJayden Higgins89.996.46.56.7%
89WRKeon Coleman91.6102.61110.7%
90QBBaker Mayfield92.193.81.71.8%
91TETravis Kelce94.599.85.35.3%
92WRChris Godwin94.567.3-27.2-40.4%
93WRMichael Pittman94.692.1-2.5-2.7%
94RBBrian Robinson94.687.4-7.2-8.2%
95RBJoe Mixon95.558.1-37.4-64.4%
96QBKyler Murray97.195.2-1.9-2.0%
97TEMark Andrews97.5106.48.98.4%
98TETyler Warren97.7118.821.117.8%
99QBBo Nix97.898.60.80.8%
100WRCooper Kupp98.895.1-3.7-3.9%
101RBTravis Etienne102.298.1-4.1-4.2%
102QBBrock Purdy102.2103.10.90.9%
103RBJ.K. Dobbins102.4113.911.510.1%
104QBDak Prescott104111.67.66.8%
105RBZach Charbonnet104.6115.310.79.3%
106WRDarnell Mooney104.986-18.9-22.0%
107TEEvan Engram106107.71.71.6%
108WRRashid Shaheed106.2107.210.9%
109QBJustin Fields108.3100.5-7.8-7.8%
110TEColston Loveland110128.818.814.6%
111QBDrake Maye111.7115.43.73.2%
112QBCaleb Williams112.6109-3.6-3.3%
113WRRashod Bateman114.9111.6-3.3-3.0%
114WRLuther Burden115.1116.61.51.3%
115TETucker Kraft115.91259.17.3%
116WRBrandon Aiyuk117.290.8-26.4-29.1%
117RBCam Skattebo119.1110.1-9-8.2%
118QBJared Goff119.6118.1-1.5-1.3%
119WRChristian Kirk119.9123.73.83.1%
120TEDavid Njoku120.21210.80.7%
121RBTank Bigsby123.5159.836.322.7%
122RBQuinshon Judkins124.177.2-46.9-60.8%
123QBJ.J. McCarthy124.4122.4-2-1.6%
124WRMarvin Mims124.71283.32.6%
125RBRhamondre Stevenson126.3121.4-4.9-4.0%
126QBJustin Herbert126.7124.7-2-1.6%
127WRKeenan Allen126.8198.671.836.2%
128QBJordan Love128.1127.5-0.6-0.5%
129QBTrevor Lawrence130.31332.72.0%
130RBJacory Croskey-Merritt130.7215.284.539.3%
131TEDalton Kincaid130.9136.964.4%
132RBRay Davis132.8134.821.5%
133QBC.J. Stroud132.9133.910.7%
134RBJavonte Williams134.3128.8-5.5-4.3%
135TEJake Ferguson135.5143.78.25.7%
136RBBhayshul Tuten135.9132.2-3.7-2.8%
137RBTrey Benson137139.62.61.9%
138WRJoshua Palmer138.2156.918.711.9%
139RBBraelon Allen138.4170.632.218.9%
140TEKyle Pitts139.2157.618.411.7%
141WRTre Harris139.5107.2-32.3-30.1%
142TEDallas Goedert140138.5-1.5-1.1%
143QBMichael Penix142.1142.100.0%
144RBTyjae Spears143.3125.2-18.1-14.5%
145RBJaydon Blue144.5148.542.7%
146WRHollywood Brown145.7136-9.7-7.1%
147RBDylan Sampson145.9190.344.423.3%
148WRKyle Williams147.7132.9-14.8-11.1%
149WRDeMario Douglas148169.621.612.7%
150QBBryce Young150153.53.52.3%
151WRRomeo Doubs151153.92.91.9%
152QBCam Ward151.7160.89.15.7%
153WRCedric Tillman152.4144.5-7.9-5.5%
154TEBrenton Strange152.9159.86.94.3%
155RBTyler Allgeier155.6151.3-4.3-2.8%
156RBNajee Harris156.2115.4-40.8-35.4%
157QBTua Tagovailoa156.5149.3-7.2-4.8%
158TEHunter Henry158.9164.55.63.4%
159RBRachaad White160.7141-19.7-14.0%
160RBAustin Ekeler160.8152.8-8-5.2%
161QBGeno Smith161.61631.40.9%
162WRXavier Legette161.7148.8-12.9-8.7%
163TEZach Ertz162.6172.59.95.7%
164WRDont'e Thornton162.8191.228.414.9%
165RBIsaac Guerendo163.3143.4-19.9-13.9%
166RBNick Chubb164.6184.119.510.6%
167WRWan'Dale Robinson168.3171.43.11.8%
168TEChig Okonkwo168.8187.919.110.2%
169TEIsaiah Likely171.3141.3-30-21.2%
170RBJerome Ford172.1204.632.515.9%
171WRAdam Thielen172.5165.4-7.1-4.3%
172WRJalen McMillan173167.5-5.5-3.3%
173RBRico Dowdle175.6174.8-0.8-0.5%
174WRTory Horton177.621638.417.8%
175QBMatthew Stafford178.5153.8-24.7-16.1%
176RBJaylen Wright179.2161.3-17.9-11.1%
177RBWill Shipley179.5177.4-2.1-1.2%
178TEJonnu Smith179.5156.8-22.7-14.5%
179QBAnthony Richardson180198.718.79.4%
180QBSam Darnold180176.4-3.6-2.0%
181WRQuentin Johnston180.3145.8-34.5-23.7%
182WRPat Bryant184.1163.1-21-12.9%
183TECade Otton184.2180.6-3.6-2.0%
184WRDyami Brown184.9184.2-0.7-0.4%
185TEMason Taylor185.2184.9-0.3-0.2%
186RBWoody Marks186.121629.913.8%
187RBKeaton Mitchell187.4210.723.311.1%
188WRAlec Pierce192179.1-12.9-7.2%
189RBRoschon Johnson192.5168.5-24-14.2%
190WRMichael Wilson192.9180.3-12.6-7.0%
191RBOllie Gordon1942162210.2%
192TEMike Gesicki194.5170.8-23.7-13.9%
193WRDarius Slayton195191.7-3.3-1.7%
194QBAaron Rodgers195.1182.1-13-7.1%
195TEJa'Tavion Sanders195.2203.17.93.9%
196WRIsaac TeSlaa195.9214.818.98.8%
197WRDeAndre Hopkins197.9186.5-11.4-6.1%
198WRJalen Coker198.3210.211.95.7%
199WRElic Ayomanor200.2212.312.15.7%
200WRAdonai Mitchell202.2212.19.94.7%
201RBKyle Monangai202.2214.512.35.7%
202TEElijah Arroyo202.3214.912.65.9%
203RBTahj Brooks204.6213.28.64.0%
204WRJaylin Noel204.9180-24.9-13.8%
205RBMiles Sanders206.4184.1-22.3-12.1%
206QBJaxson Dart206.4212.462.8%
207RBDJ Giddens206.6191.3-15.3-8.0%
208RBSean Tucker206.9215.58.64.0%
209WRAndrei Iosivas207.5204.5-3-1.5%
210WRJack Bech208.2154.7-53.5-34.6%
211TETheo Johnson208.3211.331.4%
212TEDalton Schultz209.1199.3-9.8-4.9%
213TEHarold Fannin209.9215.35.42.5%
214WRTroy Franklin209.9214.14.22.0%
215QBDaniel Jones210.1203.4-6.7-3.3%
216RBKareem Hunt210.82110.20.1%
217RBBlake Corum211.3208.9-2.4-1.1%
218QBRussell Wilson211.5211.80.30.1%
219WRTre Tucker212.1215.33.21.5%
220RBChris Rodriguez212.32163.71.7%
221WRJalen Royals212.4215.12.71.3%
222TEDarren Waller212.5187.6-24.9-13.3%
223RBJustice Hill212.7193.8-18.9-9.8%
224WRKeAndre Lambert-Smith212.92163.11.4%
225TEJuwan Johnson213207-6-2.9%
226WRRay-Ray McCloud213.2213.70.50.2%
227WRTyler Lockett213.2207.9-5.3-2.5%
228TEPat Freiermuth213.5208.8-4.7-2.3%
229WRRoman Wilson213.5215.31.80.8%
230RBBrashard Smith214.2201.7-12.5-6.2%
231QBJoe Flacco214.22161.80.8%
232WRJalen Nailor214.4214.3-0.10.0%
233WRCalvin Austin214.6194.4-20.2-10.4%
234RBDameon Pierce214.62161.40.6%
235WRMalik Washington214.6215.10.50.2%
236WRJosh Reynolds214.82161.20.6%
237WRDiontae Johnson214.8215.10.30.1%
238QBShedeur Sanders214.9215.50.60.3%
239WREfton Chism21521610.5%
240QBTyler Shough215.1210.2-4.9-2.3%
241RBJarquez Hunter215.1199.4-15.7-7.9%
242RBMarShawn Lloyd215.1196.7-18.4-9.4%

             

Dominate your fantasy football league this season by exploring our ultimate draft kit. Packed with expert insights, rankings, and strategy tips, the kit features our interactive mock draft simulator to prepare you for every scenario. Streamline your draft-day decisions using our printable cheat sheet and stay ahead of the competition with our up-to-date rankings for all formats. RotoWire has everything you need to win. To learn more, subscribe now and start optimizing your roster today.

Want to Read More?
Subscribe to RotoWire to see the full article.

We reserve some of our best content for our paid subscribers. Plus, if you choose to subscribe you can discuss this article with the author and the rest of the RotoWire community.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jerry was a 2018 finalist for the FSWA's Player Notes Writer of the Year and DFS Writer of the Year awards. A Baltimore native, Jerry roots for the Ravens and watches "The Wire" in his spare time.
RotoWire Logo

Continue the Conversation

Join the RotoWire Discord group to hear from our experts and other NFL fans.

Top News

Tools

NFL Draft Kit Logo

NFL Draft Kit

Fantasy Tools

Don’t miss a beat. Check out our 2025 NFL Fantasy Football rankings.