2025 NFL Draft Round One Fantasy Football Round Up

The first round of the 2025 NFL Draft is in the books, and it’s given us a new wave of promising talent to analyze for fantasy football. Sickos can now officially begin gearing up for the season, and it all starts with breaking down the most valuable picks in this draft. In this article, we delve into the fantasy football prospects of every player chosen in the first round, providing insights into their game with pre-draft evaluations, as well as their anticipated role on their new squad, and how that all combines to impact your fantasy team. Let’s get started with the same place as the 2025 NFL Draft: the Tennessee Titans.

Round 1, Pick 1: Cam Ward, QB, Miami (6’2” 219 lbs) to Tennessee

TALENT:

Cam Ward is an interesting prospect, since he seems to be the consensus #1 quarterback in this class, but he also wouldn’t crack the top-three in last year’s class. He’s fine, in the way that Bo Nix, J.J. McCarthy, and Michael Penix were fine last year. This is unlikely to be a replay of the Kenny Pickett draft, but much like I didn’t see Nix, McCarthy, or Penix as franchise-altering players, I struggle to justify spending a top-fifteen pick on Cam Ward. Unfortunately, NFL teams will do just that.

As a prospect, there are things to like about Ward. He understands the nuances of throwing, feathering balls to all levels, and uncorking ropes when necessary. Ward also does this with a high degree of accuracy, putting the ball where only his receiver can get it. He also uses his legs to extend plays, but is nearly always looking to pass when he does so. When Ward throws on the run, he can create creative angles to the receiver that seemingly defy physics. When he decides to take off and run, he isn’t a slouch, but he also isn’t that great at it, either.

While the game doesn’t look like it’s too fast for Ward, he will likely struggle at the NFL level as he develops blind spots when moving, often throwing dangerously close to players he seemingly didn’t know were there. His predilection for creating outside of structure and for varying his arm angles also causes his mechanics to fly out of control, with balls sailing on him as things break down.

It might take him some time to be a solid starter, but he has the IQ, skills, and creativity to make it in the league.

NFL Comparison: Baker Mayfield

2025 OPPORTUNITY:

Positional Depth Chart:

QB1: Cam Ward
QB2: Will Levis
QB3: Brandon Allen
QB4: Tim Boyle

Cam Ward will have every opportunity to start for the Titans, and it would make zero sense for anyone else on this roster to take a solitary first-team snap at any point unless Cam Ward needs a breather. Ward will be somewhat bereft of intriguing targets out of the gate, however. The Titans spent big on Calvin Ridley last year, but it thins out quickly behind him, with Tyler Lockett and Van Jefferson manning the other two starting slots. He will likely lean on Chig Okonkwo in the short area, as those other three are all downfield threats.

Brian Callahan’s offense should give Ward an ability to thrive, as it is predicated on quick reads and even quicker passes. That will get the ball out of Ward’s hands quickly, as he can grip and rip it to his receivers.

2025 FANTASY FOOTBALL OUTLOOK:

While Cam Ward can run a little bit, I am not super interested in his prospects from a fantasy football perspective in his rookie year. He would have been borderline to the Bo Nix and Michael Penix range last year, had he come out. We saw Nix thrive thanks to his legs, and Penix, who was a more traditional passer, struggled. I don’t want to draft Ward, as he could easily collapse out of the gate thanks to the weaponry around him failing to carry the quarterback to glory. He likely tops out as a streaming option in 1QB leagues and a backend QB2 in 2QB leagues in his rookie year, below even Drake Maye from last year.

 

Round 1, Pick 2: Travis Hunter, WR/CB, Colorado (6’0” 188 lbs) to Jacksonville

TALENT:

The WR/CB Heisman Trophy Winner is a slam-dunk NFL prospect, drawing immediate comparisons to Stefon Diggs and Malik Nabers. While he’s slightly lighter than those two players, his game isn’t predicated on weight, anyway. Hunter’s number one trait is his body control, his second number one trait is his soft and late hands, and his third number one trait is a preternatural ability to get open. That’s right, three number one traits for Hunter. He is a YAC machine, constantly looking for the extra yards, probably because the game looks incredibly slow to him. He regularly is already looking to juke the second guy looking to tackle him, and against NDSU, he somehow caught a ball through a guy, and then somehow juked another guy while in the air.

It seems like there’s nothing that Hunter can’t do. He’s one of the wiggliest receivers I’ve ever seen, and his speed is nothing to sneeze at, but his small stature comes out big in two areas. First, he struggles with contested balls. He had some highlight catches, but he mostly uses his speed and athleticism to stack the defender into comebacks. Hunter rarely has an opportunity to high-point a football, and I could count his over-the-shoulder targets in 2024 on one hand. Second, he goes down to the first man to touch him. That’s not as bad as it sounds, because Hunter’s elusiveness makes him one of the hardest receivers to touch.

His wiggliness is also a potential detriment, as he is so focused on juking the man in front of him that he fails to take the other defenders into account, as well. Compare him to Tet McMillan, who regularly toasts multiple defenders en route to long touchdowns.

NFL Comparison: Stefon Diggs/DeVonta Smith

2025 OPPORTUNITY:

Positional Depth Chart (WR)

WR1: Brian Thomas, Jr.
WR2: Travis Hunter, Jr. (?)
WR3: Gabriel Davis
WR4: Dyami Brown

This is where things get wild: we have no idea. Early reports are that the Jaguars intend to use him both on offense and defense, and given the package they gave up to get him (#5, #36, a 2026 1st, and change), they don’t do that to keep him on one side of the ball. The Jags seem dead set to not tip their hand, meaning we likely have to wait and see how this shakes out. However, if they give him a lot of looks at wide receiver, he should garner a ton of targets. The BTJ Killer is the only other viable option on that roster, as Christian Kirk and Evan Engram both moved on to greener pastures, Dyami Brown is a depth guy, and Gabe Davis is there to block. It’s ultimately too soon to tell, but I like where things are going, given what the Jags paid to get Hunter.

2025 FANTASY FOOTBALL OUTLOOK:

Hunter could finish inside the top fifteen or outside the top fifty. Again, this all comes down to something we truly don’t know, and anyone who says otherwise is likely lying to you. That having been said, I am going to bet on the talent with Travis Hunter and say that I am very willing to take a top-100 pick to find out what we might have in Hunter.

 

Round 1, Pick 6: Ashton Jeanty, RB, Boise St (5’9” 211 lbs) to Las Vegas

TALENT:

Vision. Patience. Contact balance. Speed. Elusivity. A natural desire to fight for extra yards. A brutal stiff arm. Which trait do you look for in a running back? Because Jeanty has them all. Every Jeanty play is a religious experience, even the ones that die the moment he touches the ball. He regularly turns tackles for loss into gains because he can see the future and positions himself to take hits in such a way that he can fall forward, rather than get blown up. When the line manages to give him the smallest sliver of a hole, he’s gone. The literal first play that I watched of Jeanty was a 60+ yard touchdown run against Utah State that saw three different players have Jeanty dead to rights, only to get thrown to the ground to get a great view of him celebrating his score.

There isn’t much to say about Jeanty because everything he does is impeccable. He has vision and a start-stop ability that we haven’t seen since Le’Veon Bell, he has contact balance that turns into long speed that we haven’t seen since Todd Gurley. Against Utah State, he ran in three scores and was responsible for a fourth with a strong and clean blitz pick-up, as well.

All of that ignores his hands. Jeanty is a great pass catcher out of the backfield and out of the slot. Opposing linebackers could only watch and flail as he put them on the ground or out of their shoes, easily catching difficult balls and turning them into touchdowns.

He’s the entire package. Some harp on his pass protection, but I didn’t see it.

NFL Comparison: Le’Veon Bell x Todd Gurley x Saquon Barkley x Alvin Kamara x Aaron Jones

AKA: LaDainian Tomlinson

2025 OPPORTUNITY:

Positional Depth Chart:

RB1: Ashton Jeanty
RB2: Raheem Mostert
RB3: Zamir White
RB4: Sincere McCormick

If you take a running back in the first quarter of the NFL draft, you plan on using that guy until he throws up. Jeanty is immediately going to be one of the more heftily used running backs in the league, and his talent should allow him to take advantage of that. The only thing keeping him back is the bottom-ten offensive line run blocking for him. That will be mostly academic, as the Raiders are all-in on improving and likely to take more offensive linemen in this draft, to bolster that position. Nobody is standing in his way, and he should be among the Christian McCaffreys and Saquon Barkleys concerning opportunity share.

2025 FANTASY FOOTBALL OUTLOOK:

Ashton Jeanty is a first-round pick. That’s the long and the short of it. In a world with De’Von Achane getting mocked as a top-five running back, there’s no reason to pass on Jeanty in the first round. I would take Jahmyr Gibbs, Saquon Barkley, and Bijan Robinson ahead of him, and arguably Christian McCaffrey or Derrick Henry. I would invariably take him over Achane, Jonathan Taylor, and Josh Jacobs. But, he’s immediately a top-six running back, and is an ideal end-of-the-first pick in twelve-team leagues.

 

Round 1, Pick 8, Tet McMillan, WR, Arizona (6’4” 219 lbs) to Carolina

TALENT:

Travis Hunter is the flashier receiver in this class, but Tet McMillan is quietly the best all-around receiver in this class. Whether you need a receiver who wins deep with contested catches or one who can work back on underneath routes to get open, then McMillan is your man. Some try to pigeonhole him into being a “possession receiver,” but he was a possession receiver since he would take possession of the football if thrown his way. He maximized his radius, being able to catch footballs all over his vicinity, frequently bailing out quarterback Noah Fifita on terribly off-kilter passes. Tet has elite ball skills and can contribute immediately wherever he ends up, as he works at all three levels on offense.

He dominates in all aspects of being a receiver except that he isn’t all that creative of a runner after the catch. Still, his athleticism, instincts for the ball, and natural ability to juke defenders with a simple bag of tricks made him a great receiver in college and will make him a great receiver in the NFL.

NFL Comparison: Drake London

2025 OPPORTUNITY:

Positional Depth Chart

WR1: Tet McMillan
WR2: Adam Thielen
WR3: Xavier Legette
WR4: Jalen Coker

McMillan immediately becomes the best wide receiver on the roster. That’s not hard when the other options are a 35-year-old, a sophomore gadget player, and Jalen Coker. There’s a lot of opportunity to be had here, as Bryce Young threw the ball 32 times per game after his benching last year, with most of those going to Thielen. While defenses will key in on McMillan, he is good enough to get open underneath to be the primary target for Bryce Young in his third season. Young hopefully takes another step forward in Dave Canales’ offense this season, which will give Tet a chance to thrive.

2025 FANTASY FOOTBALL OUTLOOK:

If a team takes a wide receiver in the first ten picks, then they plan to use him as much as humanly possible. With Tet McMillan, I don’t see much changing. I am not too worried about the quarterback situation, as his best comparison (Drake London) produced in his rookie year (72/866/4) with a bad quarterback. Tet will see those numbers as a good starting point, but something closer to 85/950/6 feels more like his sweet spot. If I can get him as a speculative WR4 in twelve-team leagues, then I am doing a backflip.

 

Round 1, Pick 10, Colston Loveland, TE, Michigan (6’6” 248 lbs) to Chicago

TALENT:

Colston Loveland is a winner at all three levels, winning with strong breaks on his stems to get open against unwitting defenders. I would say that his #1 trait is his route running, working him open, with a nod to his 50/50 skills. He’s an exceptional high-point pass catcher, and defenders struggle to bring him down once he has the ball in his hands. He’s a speed freak, with incredible body control, and he uses all of that to dominate so-called “defenders.” Loveland is capable of lining up all over the field, and wins from the backfield, inline, the slot, and out wide. The biggest gripe I have about his receiving game is that he had too many balls slapped out of his hands in contested catch situations, playing just slightly too soft to truly dominate.

That having been said, he’s a natural playmaker and maximizes every opportunity.

As a blocker, Loveland is a beast. He loves to block, taking out multiple defenders if he can, or just completely erasing his assignment from the play. However, bigger assignments give him fits, so he works best at the second level, taking out defensive backs. Loveland should be a day one starter in the NFL, and has a chance to break the rookie tight end curse. Scouts say he needs to add about 5-10 pounds to his frame, which means he could get even better. Still, he should make the starting lineup from day one, and could have a long career, should he stay healthy.

NFL Comparison: Mark Andrews

2025 OPPORTUNITY:

Positional Depth Chart

TE1: Colston Loveland
TE2: Cole Kmet
TE3: Durham Smythe

Rest in peace, Cole Kmet, we hardly knew ye. With Brad Johnson coming over from the Lions, he needed a more dynamic athlete at tight end, and he turned towards a player who many compared to his previous protégé, Sam LaPorta. While Loveland wasn’t my #1 tight end in the draft (he went four picks later), he lands in an ideal tight end situation. In Johnson’s last stop, he engineered a tight-end-heavy offense in Detroit, and Loveland gives him a chance to do it again. Loveland won’t break records like Sam LaPorta, but he will get plenty of opportunities out of the gate.

2025 FANTASY FOOTBALL OUTLOOK:

I usually detest rookie tight ends in redraft leagues, but we’ve seen two tight ends break that mold in the last two seasons, with Brock Bowers and Sam LaPorta both finishing as studs at the position in their respective rookie years. Loveland has a ton of LaPorta in him, and was handpicked by LaPorta, you have to sit up and take notice. By the end of draft season last year, Brock Bowers was a TE1 by draft capital. I could see the same thing happening for Loveland. It’s a lot of projection, but when it hits, it hits. There’s talent, opportunity, and a track record in the offense for a big rookie season for Loveland.

Round 1, Pick 14, Tyler Warren, TE, Penn St (6’6” 256 lbs) to Indianapolis

TALENT:

The test results are in, and Tyler Warren has #thatdog in him. He’s swinging it all over the field, as he is a massive and athletic tight end who dominates whatever assignment is given to him on a football field. He has soft hands and good speed, blasting through would-be tacklers and pinballing his way all over the field to make sure that if his team loses, it’s not going to be through a lack of his effort. Warren redefines high motor as every play is him attempting to physically and mentally dominate the competition.

Traffic doesn’t much concern Warren, as his good contact balance and hands make catching and running with the football a breeze. However, he is not without a knock in the receiving game. He doesn’t have a lot of speed to him, as his game is predicated chiefly on defenses being physically incapable of bringing him down. He also runs with intensely tight hips, giving him almost zero change of direction and exactly zero chance of juking anyone in the open field.

Warren should have a chance to contribute his rookie year, and is a candidate to be the next tight end to break the rookie tight end curse (which might be officially in the ground after 2025).

NFL Comparison: Trey McBride

2025 OPPORTUNITY:

Positional Depth Chart:

TE1: Tyler Warren
TE2: Drew Ogletree
TE3: Mo Alie-Cox
TE4: Jelani Woods
TE5: Albert Okwuegbunam

I’m sorry, I don’t really like this for Tyler Warren. It was the predestined outcome, but this team needs to figure out its quarterback situation before I can care about the opportunity that Tyler Warren will get. The Colts threw the ball the fifth-fewest times in the league last year, and they already have a crowded offense, with Michael Pittman, Josh Downs, A.D. Mitchell, Alec Pierce, and Jonathan Taylor already garnering targets. He will likely be ahead of Mitchell and Pierce, but you’re still chopping up limited targets too many ways for Warren to have draftable fantasy football upside in his rookie season.

2025 FANTASY FOOTBALL OUTLOOK:

I don’t like Warren’s setup for success in his rookie season. I wouldn’t draft him, but I would keep him on my Rolodex, in case something changes and the Colts start actually throwing the football.

Round 1, Pick 19: Emeka Egbuka, WR, Ohio St (6’1” 202 lbs) to Tampa Bay

TALENT:

Egbuka is a #slotgawd who dominated at Ohio State, and he’s fallen out of favor with a lot of folks thanks to a bit of prospect fatigue. However, he is perfectly primed to hit the ground running in fantasy football leagues. He is a force underneath and behind the line of scrimmage, taking shorter passes such as screens or slants for long gains. Ohio State gave him a lot of manufactured touches to get the ball in his hands, likely because he does not dominate as a downfield receiver. He struggles to catch balls away from his body downfield, though he is extremely adept at hauling in in-frame passes for receptions. He’s a vacuum at times, but tends to lose focus, causing drops.

There are still some things to tighten up in Egbuka’s game. He can get knocked off his spot by press coverage, and he is inconsistent, borderline lackadaisical, in his route running. He can rip off some crisp routes, and other times he seems as though he’s almost floating around out there. All in all, he’s a great prospect, and I am excited for him to go to a spot where he can get a lot of targets out of the slot.

NFL Comparison: Chris Godwin

2025 OPPORTUNITY:

Positional Depth Chart

WR1: Mike Evans
WR2: Chris Godwin (injured)
WR3: Emeka Egbuka
WR4: Jalen McMillan
WR5: Sterling Shepard

Now, this is intriguing. Chris Godwin likely misses the first half of the season thanks to his foot going the wrong direction at the back end of a blowout in 2024. So, that gives Egbuka a chance to contribute to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers roster immediately. The Bucs threw the ball a ton last year, with Baker notching the fifth-most pass attempts last year. Egbuka has a chance to immediately start to produce, as the Buccaneers not only pass a ton, but they pass to the slot a ton. They ranked eleventh in slot targets last season, with 183 (for 134 receptions, and 1,583 yards), and that’s where Egbuka will start his career.

Luckily for Egbuka, when Godwin returns… Godwin will play outside, leaving Egbuka to dominate the slot. I love his opportunity to produce this year, and I feel as though he has a chance to be the rookie WR1 for 2025 when all is said and done.

2025 FANTASY FOOTBALL OUTLOOK:

Whoops, I got ahead of myself: draft Emeka Egbuka. He’s going to a team in the middle of a playoff window with a pass-happy offense that is down a premier weapon. He is going to dominate opposing offenses out of the slot, and he is going to have a ton of value in PPR leagues. I have zero qualms taking him as a flex wide receiver, with a chance for more, in any twelve-team league. He is must draft in my eyes.

Round 1, Pick 22: Omarion Hampton, RB, UNC (6’0” 221 lbs) to L.A. Chargers

TALENT:

They don’t really make running backs like Hampton anymore, with few exceptions. He’s an old-school bowling ball who is huge and physical, and who has a punishing style to go with his massive build. Hampton is ridiculously good in the open field, though he doesn’t really have a top gear. He also doles out the punishment on anyone who tries to tackle him.

Unfortunately, that’s pretty much all there is to his game that is worth noting. He is a powerful grinder who is just okay in blitz pickup and who is proficient at catching the football. He’s a perfectly cromulent player, though he has some downsides. Mainly, he vibes his way through the line of scrimmage and decides that he is going to brute force his way through tacklers. That worked fine at college, but that could become a huge problem in the NFL. His vision is fine, but nothing spectacular.

NFL Comparison: Alfred Morris

2025 OPPORTUNITY:

Positional Depth Chart:

RB1a: Omarion Hampton
RB1b: Najee Harris
RB3: Hassan Haskins
RB4: Kimani Vidal

2025 OPPORTUNITY:

I’m not sure? What is Jim Harbaugh doing? Can someone help me? Please? After snagging Najee Harris in free agency, Harbaugh & Co. turn around and snag another tough runner in Omarion Hampton. The fit makes perfect sense, as Jim Harbaugh wants to run it up your backside as much as humanly possible. The use of capital on both Hampton and Najee makes little sense, especially since Justin Herbert to Ladd McConkey was making sweet music at the end of the season.

That having been said, the Chargers are likely to use Hampton in a 50/50 backfield split with Harris, who is very close to being the same player. His upside is predicated on losing Harris, which is something that might very well happen. Outside of that, he’s unlikely to top 15 touches in a game, with the vast majority of those being runs.

2025 FANTASY FOOTBALL OUTLOOK:

It’s fantasy football. We’ve seen Tyrone Tracy carve out a role at running back in his rookie year, and he was a wide receiver! Right now, this very moment, without any more information… I’m not taking Hampton as anything other than an upside dart throw in the second half of drafts. He isn’t worth much more, as he and Najee are going to suppress each other’s values immensely until one gets hurt.

 

Round 1, Pick 23: Matthew Golden, WR, Texas (5’11” 191 lbs) to Green Bay

TALENT:

Golden is a strong and quick receiver and returner who utilizes a running back (low to the ground) running style reminiscent of Deebo Samuel with the football. Unfortunately, he’s not as heavy as Deebo Samuel, so those who want to make him the newest wide receiver to get the Deebo Samuel comparison very wrong. Golden is a good contested catch receiver with nice YAC abilities, which meant that the Longhorns went out of their way to manufacture touches for him. Unfortunately, he struggled with big boy receptions, mostly because his downfield separation isn’t great, unless it was on a route cutting back to the quarterback. Slants, go routes, and in/out routes all found the opposing defender in his pocket. That, unfortunately, keeps him from being a top-tier receiver in this class in my book. His lack of separation and diminutive size see him frequently pushed off of his spot on contested catches downfield.

That having been said, he is going to feast against zones, as he is incredibly good at finding the holes and pressing upfield between the defenders once he gets the ball. He should thrive at the next level as a third-tier “alpha” receiver (in the Chris Olave mold) if a team uses him that way. Unfortunately, it doesn’t seem as though he entered one of those situations.

NFL Comparison: Chris Olave

2025 OPPORTUNITY:

Positional Depth Chart:

WR1: Matthew Golden
WR2: Jayden Reed
WR3: Christian Watson
WR4: Romeo Doubs
WR5: Dontayvion Wicks
WR6: Mecole Hardman

Golden likely separates himself from this group, but not by much, to be honest. He is the best player in this receiver room, but he isn’t the alpha receiver who would preclude the Packers from including all of these players in their weekly game plan. He could find himself at the top of the pecking order, but he’s still primarily a deep threat with some gadgetry who has a lot of other deep threats and gadgety players to contend with for targets every week. This doesn’t even include Josh Jacobs and Luke Musgrave, who both deserve targets!

2025 FANTASY FOOTBALL OUTLOOK:

It isn’t good. Golden is going to act as a deep threat a lot, though he is likely to shake out as the “first among equals” role that Jayden Reed inhabited last season. With targets getting split several different ways, and Jordan Love (he of the well-below-average 5.2 Accuracy Rating on PlayerProfiler.com) throwing them, I have very little interest in Golden in his rookie year. If I’m wrong, I’m wrong. But he just doesn’t intrigue me.

Round 1, Pick 25: Jaxson Dart, QB, Ole Miss (6’2” 223 lbs) to N.Y. Giants

TALENT:

Do you love Drew Lock? Do you yearn for Ryan Fitzpatrick? Does Gardner Minshew entice you? Well then,I have one lightly used Jaxson Dart for you. Dart has some incredibly high highs (2024 game against Kentucky), and some of the lowest lows (his 2024 game against Texas A&M). His range of outcomes is so wide that it looks like a horizon line. One game, I have myself wondering if he is better than Cam Ward. The next game, I have myself wondering if I’m watching the worst quarterbacking display that anyone has ever put on tape.

First, the goods. Dart has incredible arm talent, though his accuracy leaves a bit to be desired. He’s also extremely mobile in the pocket and looks to throw. His running is Ryan Tannehill/Joe Burrow/Alex Smith level. It will be a nice addition to his profile, but it will be an action of last resort.

Then, the bad. This guy can be a real numbskull sometimes. Oops, sorry. Let me put my “draft analyst” filter on. At times, Dart can struggle with decision-making. He will often make too many hero throws, catching Jimmy Garoppolo Disease. He also sometimes turns his mobility into a detriment, as he knows that he can extend plays and looks for the “perfect” throw. That often leads to the aforementioned JGD, as well as throwing wildly off platform with fussy mechanics.

NFL Comparison: Drew Lock, Smart Will Levis, Memeless Gardner Minshew

2025 OPPORTUNITY:

Positional Depth Chart:

QB?: Russell Wilson
QB?: Jaxson Dart
QB?: Jameis Winston
QB?: Tommy DeVito

I am going to keep this short and sweet: I have absolutely no idea how this is going to shake out. Dart could be kept on ice for his rookie year, or he could be the week one starter. All we know is that he’s ahead of Tommy DeVito on the depth chart, and hopefully ahead of at least one of Russ or Jameis. But, outside of that, we just have to wait and see how this shakes out. The weapons in New York aren’t spectacular (outside of Malik Nabers), and it’s a distinct possibility that Dart ends up starting 5-6 games in a strange rotation with Wilson and Winston.

Even if Dart gets more starts than that, can you trust it? Why have two established starters in the league on the roster if Dart is going to have a long leash? Winston certainly isn’t a mentor, and Wilson hasn’t successfully mentored a QB yet, either. So, what’s the plan? I truly have no idea. Head coach Brian Daboll said in his press conference after the pick that Russell Wilson is their starter. That’s easy to say in April, but when you’re 1-6 after losing 38-10 at home against Philly, are you really going to stick to that?

2025 FANTASY FOOTBALL OUTLOOK:

I have zero interest in Jaxson Dart in 2025 1QB leagues, and he is going to max out as a once or twice streamer.

About Jeff Krisko

You can follow me on twitter, @jeffkrisko for the same lukewarm takes you read here.

View all posts by Jeff Krisko →

Leave a Reply