In a previous article, I analyzed how to approach rookie WRs in redraft leagues. My approach was simple: gather historical data on rookie average draft positions (ADP) and compare it to how they finished the season amongst all WRs. In this article, I will apply this learned logic to this year’s rookie WR draft class.
The Framework, Refreshed
The graphic below shows rookie WR end-of-season PPR finishes plotted against their starting-season ADP, now updated through the 2025 class (highlighted in red). The trend line tells a softer story than the one for RB – there is a slight signal, but there is also a ton of noise. WRs develop on different timelines than RBs, and the position has produced more late-ADP breakouts (Puka Nacua and Brian Thomas Jr., for example) than the RB position does in any given window.


A few takeaways before we get to this year’s names:
- The top quadrant is dense and reliable. Rookie WRs going inside the top 100 picks of ADP hit on a top-30 WR PPR finish more than 60% of the time. The early-ADP names cluster tightly in the upper-right of the chart, and this has become more pronounced over the last three classes.
- The middle is a graveyard. Rookie WRs going between picks 130-200 in ADP have the worst hit rate of any tier – worse than the cheap dart-throw range. This is the “decent prospect, bad situation” bucket. Do not pay middling prices for rookie WRs with role uncertainty.
- The late-round outliers are real but unpredictable. Puka Nacua (ADP ~230, finished WR5 as a rookie) and Brian Thomas Jr. (ADP ~110, finished WR3) are the modern proof points. But pointing to them ex post does not make them findable ex ante – the average outcome at their ADP was still a miss.
- The 2025 class fit the upper-right pattern cleanly. McMillan (overall ADP ~65 → WR9), Egbuka (~115 → WR11), and pre-injury Hunter (~90, on a top-20 WR pace) all delivered when their volume materialized. The framework worked.
In other words: draft capital plus opportunity is the cleanest signal we have, and it has been getting stronger. Let’s go through this year’s class with that frame in mind.
The 2026 Rookie WR Class
1. Carnell Tate: Tennessee Titans
Current ADP: ~60 overall
The first WR off the board at pick four overall, Tate has the cleanest path to a WR1 role of anyone in this class. The Titans gave Cam Ward an offense without a true alpha last year – Calvin Ridley is on the back end of his deal, Wan’Dale Robinson is a slot, and Elic Ayomanor and Chimere Dike are depth. Tate is the X receiver they haven’t had, and the team’s investment level (fourth overall pick) makes the role essentially guaranteed.
For redraft, the ADP is fair-to-slightly-discounted. Take him as your WR3 with WR2 upside.
2. Jordyn Tyson: New Orleans Saints
Current ADP: ~63 overall
The second-highest-drafted WR (number eight overall), Tyson has a higher ceiling than Tate but materially more risk. The talent is plain – best route-runner in the class, separation against top corners, the kind of player who draws prime OBJ comparisons when you watch his tape. He led Arizona State with 75/1101/10 in 2024 and was on pace for a similar season in 2025 before a hamstring injury.
The injury history is the entire reason his ADP isn’t above Tate’s. Tyson tore his ACL, MCL, and PCL in one play in 2022. He broke his collarbone in 2024. Finally, he missed three games last season with a hamstring injury. For a year-one WR whose value depends on getting on the field early, that is a meaningful tax.
While the injury risk is a concern, his high ADP value shows he is likely to be a successful pick, in terms of finishing within the top 30 for WRs.

IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
3. Makai Lemon: Philadelphia Eagles
Current ADP: ~72 overall
The Eagles traded up with Dallas to jump Pittsburgh and grab Lemon, which tells you what they think of him. His talent is real – many analysts had him as the WR1 of the class on tape, and his contested-catch and route diversity profile is the best in the group. He fits both inside and outside, which is exactly what Sean Mannion‘s new system in Philly will want.
With AJ Brown gone, Lemon will have a great opportunity to carve out a WR2 role in the Eagles’ scheme.
Again, being a sub-100 ADP player, he is likely to finish close to WR30 this season. Makai Lemon has strong value as a rookie.
4. KC Concepcion: Cleveland Browns
Current ADP: ~118 overall
Concepcion went in Round 1 to a team with real WR need but a bad QB situation. The Browns added Concepcion alongside Denzel Boston in the second round, signaling a full WR room rebuild. Jerry Jeudy was the team’s leading WR last year, and Harold Fannin Jr. (TE) led the team in receptions, which tells you everything you need to know about the state of this passing game.
The 2027 outlook is much more interesting than the 2026 outlook – the Browns are widely expected to draft a QB high next year, and Concepcion could be a major beneficiary of that. For 2026 redraft, this is a stash with weekly streaming potential at best.

Grace Hollars/IndyStar / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
5. Omar Cooper Jr.: New York Jets
Current ADP: ~139 overall
Cooper Jr. landed in the late first round to a team where Garrett Wilson is the entrenched alpha and the offense is, charitably, in transition. The skill set is intriguing – boundary WR build with a strong contested-catch profile – but the situation forces him into a clear WR2 ceiling at best.
The Jets are a difficult offense to bet on for fantasy. Even Wilson, who has been a consistent target hog, has finished outside the top 24 PPR WRs in two of his three seasons because of the QB situation. Cooper’s path to a meaningful role assumes either Wilson misses time or the offense leaps, and neither is something I would bet on at ADP.
Skip in most leagues. Deeper redraft formats only.
6. De’Zhaun Stribling — San Francisco 49ers
Current ADP: ~170 overall
The 49ers used the top of the second round on Stribling, which was widely considered a reach. The Shanahan offense supports WR production at a high rate, but the room is crowded – Mike Evans signed in free agency, Christian McCaffrey and George Kittle are still the focal points, and Ricky Pearsall is coming into his second season as a high-upside WR for the team.
While Stribling is an interesting pick for dynasty leagues, he is not worth looking at for redraft.
In the end, history repeats itself, and the framework we have discussed holds. Trust the top names, within the top 75 in ADP. Don’t chase the middle, and ignore the low-tier receivers.
Best of luck this draft season!
