Rookies

joly

My Top-Owned Dynasty Rookies

This weekend, we wrapped up my final dynasty rookie draft of the offseason (outside of my home dynasty league, which drafts during the preseason). With rookies now rostered in 17 of my 18 leagues, I thought it was a good time to discuss my top-owned dynasty rookies. 

Using the “exposure” feature in the Dynasty Control Room, I’m able to see my ownership percentage of every single fantasy player. Being a “portfolio manager” in 18 leagues, this feature is especially useful, showing me who I need to invest more heavily in, as well as the guys I should look to lower my exposure on. The tool also shows you which players DFF expert consensus is above and below market on, to give you an idea of whether you’re investing in the right players. 

With that, let’s take a look at my top 5 most-owned rookies right now. 

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denzel

Denzel Boston – 2026 Dynasty Rookie Prospect

Denzel Boston Is Just a Good Football Player. He’s not the flashiest guy you’ll see, but he just keeps showing up. Some guys win with speed. Others win by being bigger or stronger. The ones that really stick usually win with technique, control, and knowing how to play the position. That’s where Denzel Boston stands out, and that’s why he’s my WR4 in the 2026 draft class. At 6’4” and 210 pounds, Boston looks the part right away. He uses his size, plays strong at the catch point, and consistently finishes through contact. He’s not just tall. He knows how to use his frame, shield defenders, and go get the football. Ball skills matter, and Boston has shown that over and over. That’s why I view him as a premier boundary X-receiver prospect. He doesn’t need to blow past defenders to win. He wins with body control, timing, and how he comes out of his breaks. He sinks his hips, stays balanced, and plays under control. That’s why his game works. Agility and short-area quickness show up more than straight-line speed, and Boston understands how to use that to his advantage. That showed up early in high school at Emerald Ridge, where he put together 105 catches for 1,572 yards and 23 touchdowns over his career. He played strong, attacked the ball, and dominated with a “my ball” mentality. That same physical approach carried with him into college. At Washington, his career didn’t happen overnight. He worked his way up. He went from a depth piece to a trusted target,

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