1.  
WR  CIN
Rec
110
Rec Yds
1375
Rec TD
11
Rec Avg
12.5
Rush Att
3
Rush Yds
17
Rush TD
-
Rush Avg
5.7
Chase scored 403 PPR points last season, the fourth most ever by a wide receiver, and became the fifth player since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger to win a receiving triple crown. In non-fantasy terms, he's been close to infallible since Cincinnati picked him fifth overall in 2021, grading out as elite in terms of speed (4.34 40), leaping (41-inch vertical), route-running and after-catch skills (6.2 career YAC average) -- all while sporting a denser-than-usual build (6-0, 201) for a wide receiver. He's never averaged less than 16.4 PPR points, yet there arguably was a slight element of disappointment for fantasy before last season, as he'd been unable to maintain the frequency of big plays from 2021 (eight TDs of 30+ yards) once the Bengals started feeding him a steady diet of short targets in 2022 and 2023. It was only a matter of time before he combined both elements in a single season, although the extent to which that was true last year may not have been predicted even by Chase himself. He now enters his age-25 season as the popular No. 1 overall fantasy pick, with a near-perfect setup for continued production after he and running mate Tee Higgins finally joined QB Joe Burrow in signing long-term extensions with the Bengals. The nature of Chase's 2024 production was such that he can lose 15-20 percent of it in 2025 and still be a successful No. 1 pick, giving him plenty of leeway for regression when it comes to stuff like touchdowns (17 last year) or team pass volume (38.4 attempts per game).
2.  
WR  MIN
Rec
101
Rec Yds
1455
Rec TD
8
Rec Avg
14.4
Rush Att
2
Rush Yds
13
Rush TD
-
Rush Avg
6.5
Kirk Cousins' departure from Minnesota last offseason dropped Jefferson from his familiar perch as an early first-round fantasy pick, leaving him as more of a mid-Round-1 guy amidst concerns about Vikings QBs Sam Darnold and J.J. McCarthy. It ended up being good value, with an average of 18.7 PPR points representing Jefferson's lowest mark since his 2020 rookie season and yet still enough to finish second among WRs in total points and fourth in points per game. There seems to be less concern about a new QB this time around, after Jefferson and Vikings coach Kevin O'Connell coaxed 35 TD passes out of Darnold. We don't yet know if McCarthy, last year's 10th overall pick, will end up being an upgrade, a downgrade or about the same as Darnold, but it's safe to say the 22-year-old's statistics will look better than the reality of his performance. O'Connell not only likes to chuck the ball around but also is among the best at scheming it up, and the Vikings have talented ancillary pass catchers (WR Jordan Addison, TE T.J. Hockenson) to take some of the heat off Jefferson without truly threatening his volume. If Jefferson goes in the middle part of Round 1 rather than the early part this year, it's seemingly a matter of optimism regarding RBs Bijan Robinson, Saquon Barkley and Jahmyr Gibbs more so than fears about McCarthy. Early ADP feedback has Jefferson safely in the WR2 spot, behind only Ja'Marr Chase.
3.  
WR  DAL
Rec
108
Rec Yds
1242
Rec TD
8
Rec Avg
11.5
Rush Att
14
Rush Yds
84
Rush TD
1
Rush Avg
6.0
Lamb's first four NFL seasons were marked by steady improvement, including a surge forward in 2023 when he scored a league-high 403.2 PPR points, the third most ever by a wide receiver. His momentum finally slowed last season, with Lamb dropping back to his 2022 rate of scoring (17.6 PPR ppg), although it took bad luck to push him down to what was still a high level, finishing eighth among WRs in both total PPR points and points per game. He might've finished as high as second or third, if not for the Week 9 game at Atlanta in which QB Dak Prescott suffered a season-ending hamstring injury and Lamb an AC joint sprain. The shoulder injury cost Lamb snaps in a couple other games and eventually led the Cowboys to shut him down for Weeks 17-18, although he first proved capable of putting up solid numbers with a backup quarterback, averaging 6.9 catches for 76.3 yards in the seven games both he and Cooper Rush started. Prescott should be ready for Week 1, and there's still not much in the way of target competition in Dallas, but there's no guarantee new Cowboys coach Brian Schottenheimer will force-feed Lamb quick passes and carries the way Mike McCarthy did. For all his merits, Lamb isn't on the same level as Justin Jefferson or Ja'Marr Chase as a downfield threat, which means he'll need a lot of those cheap, easy receptions to get back toward his 2023 status as a tip-top WR1.
4.  
WR  LAR
Rec
99
Rec Yds
1262
Rec TD
7
Rec Avg
12.7
Rush Att
13
Rush Yds
77
Rush TD
1
Rush Avg
5.9
After setting the rookie record for receiving yards, Nacua was even more productive on a per-game basis in his second pro season, averaging 7.2 catches for 90.0 yards even though a knee injury cost him five games and limited his snaps in three others. His 3.7 yards per route last season were a league high, well above his 2.7 YPRR (8th) in 2023. Nacua is one of the strongest and most physical wide receivers in the league, with his ability to break tackles and win contested catches more than making up for average speed. He's a perfect fit in Sean McVay's offense, although the competition for targets got slightly tougher this offseason when the Rams swapped out a post-prime Cooper Kupp for a post-prime Davante Adams. It's otherwise a fantastic situation, as the team lacks secondary receivers that demand considerable target shares and still has QB Matthew Stafford playing at a high level. The two drawbacks are a sketchy injury history dating back to college and a lack of touchdowns (nine on 184 career receptions), but there are only a handful of WRs that can reasonably be projected for similar quantities of catches and yards per game.
5.  
Rec
103
Rec Yds
1191
Rec TD
9
Rec Avg
11.6
Rush Att
2
Rush Yds
12
Rush TD
-
Rush Avg
6.0
St. Brown caught 90 passes as a rookie and has since hit triple digits three straight years, with his combination of crisp route-running and physicality making him one of the league's top possession receivers from both the slot and the perimeter. Deep targets remain few and far between, but that didn't stop him from scoring 10 TDs in 2023 and 12 in 2024. His volume declined some last year, going from 164 targets in 16 games the year before down to 141 targets in 17 games in 2024, but he made up for it with a career-high 81.6 percent catch rate (after landing in the 72-76 percent range each year previously). While that level of efficiency is hard to maintain, St. Brown remains one of the annual favorites to lead his position in catch rate, serving as the top receiver in an offense with elite blocking, solid QB play and an excellent group of weapons. The biggest concern is the departure of offensive coordinator Ben Johnson, who is now head coach for the Bears and has been replaced in Detroit by John Morton. The good news is that Detroit otherwise opted for continuity, with RG Kevin Zeitler being the only key contributor from 2024 who isn't under contract for 2025. St. Brown figures to average six or seven catches per game again, but there is risk of a significant drop off in touchdowns, be it due to regression to the mean, inferior playcalling or a larger share of the scores going to Detroit's other standout playmakers (namely WR Jameson Williams, TE Sam LaPorta and RB Jahmyr Gibbs).
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