Dynasty

Malik Willis

The Superflex Cheat Code: Stashing Backup Quarterbacks

In Superflex leagues, your quarterback room is absolutely vital. It can make or break your season. In 2024, 59 signal-callers started at least one NFL game. In 2025, that number grew to 63. Every year, more and more, weโ€™re seeing Dynasty contenders have their campaigns derailed by injuries or benchings. Having a stash of QBs at your disposal could help you get through those rough patches.ย The reality is a backup QB who gets even a start or two is almost always more useful โ€” and valuable โ€” than a WR9 or TE5 rotting away on your bench. You can either plug them into your lineup as needed or flip them for picks or an upgrade at another position.ย Those fringe skill players will rarely ever crack your lineup. Get those roster cloggers out of there. Instead of keeping them, use those precious spots on backup QBs who can become instant difference-makers should they get thrust into a starting gig. With that in mind, here is a list of backup QBs I believe you should be trying to acquire for 2026.ย 

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Demond Claiborne

Running Back Sleepers to Target in Your Rookie Drafts

Everyone gets excited for their rookie draft picks, hoping to find the next superstar. It can really change the trajectory of your team if you hit on your picks, but it can also destroy your team if you do a poor job drafting. In this article, I will examine running backs who are sleepers, drafted outside the top 100. The players that should be picked in Rounds 3 or 4 of rookie drafts. If you hit on one of these guys, they can help make you a contender year in and year out and provide valuable targets for your rookie drafts. Most third and fourth-round picks are busts in rookie drafts, so hitting on one of these gives you a big edge on your league mates. First, let us look at how many running backs have been drafted in Rounds 4 and 5 since 2015. Since 2015, 75 players have been drafted in Rounds 4 and 5. A lot of them are landmines in rookie drafts, and my goal is to help you avoid them.

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Drake Maye

Why You Should Fade Quarterbacks (Including Drake Maye) in Dynasty Startup Drafts

Dynasty startup drafts are where leagues are won or lost. Not because of flashy picks. Not because you landed a superstar quarterback. Theyโ€™re won through positional leverage โ€” understanding where real weekly edges exist and where managers are paying for name recognition instead of production. After reviewing five Dynasty startup drafts and comparing positional scoring, one conclusion became impossible to ignore: Quarterbacks are being massively overdrafted in early rounds.

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Eric McAlister

Wide Receiver Sleepers to Target in Your Rookie Drafts

First, let us look at how many wide receivers got drafted since 2010 in Rounds 4 and 5. There have been 120 guys drafted in Rounds 4 and 5 since 2010. Next, I looked at guys who scored fantasy points in college because we want guys who are going to score fantasy points. I looked at guys who scored 15 or more points because there seemed to be a big drop-off after that. After that, I looked at guys who broke out early in college. I picked 20 years old as my cut-off age, again, that seemed like a big drop off for the guys who broke out later than that. Lastly, I looked at their height, and the guys who were 71 inches tall or shorter were not doing well in the NFL, so I went with greater than 71 inches tall and narrowed down my list to something I am happy with.

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Kaytron Allen

Kaytron Allen: The Rookie Running Back Who Wins the Boring Way

Kaytron Allen is the type of running back I fall in love with. Not because heโ€™s going to run away from everyone. Not because heโ€™s going to give you 60-yard highlights every week. But because heโ€™s the kind of back that keeps drives alive. He finds the hole, stays square, and gets you whatโ€™s there. Over and over. At ~5โ€™11โ€ and 220-225 pounds, Allen is built like a real NFL runner. Compact. Strong. Low center of gravity. Heโ€™s hard to stop once he gets moving, and when contact shows up, heโ€™s still finishing forward.

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Ty Simpson

2026 Dynasty Fantasy Football Rookie Draft Quarterback Model

My goals for this Quarterback model are to help us win more championships and have fewer busts in our rookie drafts for Dynasty football. Some players get hyped up with the Senior Bowl and the NFL Combine each year, but they are landmines, and I want to help you avoid them if possible. Quarterbacks should always be one of the first pieces of your team, but you should always take the best player available in your rookie drafts and trade for needs.

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Chris Brazzell II

Chris Brazzell II: The Size is Real with this 2026 Rookie Draft Prospect and the Game is Catching Up

Chris Brazzell II doesnโ€™t look like most receivers you see on Saturdays. At 6โ€™5โ€ and ~200 pounds, he stands out immediately. Long frame. Long strides. Big catch radius. But what made his jump at Tennessee matter isnโ€™t just the size. Itโ€™s how much cleaner his game has become since making the move from Tulane to the SEC.

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Nick Singleton

Nick Singleton: The Home Run Hitter You Need to Target in Rookie Drafts

Nick Singleton is widely regarded as one of the most physically gifted, yet polarizing, running backs in his class. While he possesses elite athletic traits that NFL teams covet, his collegiate production and consistency have fluctuated, leading to a wide range of evaluations. He is a “Home Run Hitter” with a prototype NFL build. He is a height-weight-speed anomaly who can score from anywhere but struggles with positional nuances, such as vision and creativity, in tight spaces.

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