Free Agency Aftermath: Underdog Fantasy Football ADP Risers & Fallers
The NFL legal tampering period began on March 11 and with a ton of movement, fantasy football values were sure to change. With more than two weeks of best ball drafts since the tampering period opened, we can examine how Underdog ADP has shifted by comparing ADP data from March 10 to March 27.
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Underdog ADP Risers
Quarterbacks
Player | Pos | Team | ADP Change, 3/10–3/27 | Current ADP | Positional ADP | 4for4 Positional Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Will Levis | QB | Tennessee Titans | +22 | 168.3 | 25 | 28 |
Kirk Cousins | QB | Atlanta Falcons | +15 | 122.0 | 17 | 12 |
Gardner Minshew | QB | Las Vegas Raiders | +14 | 225.6 | 32 | 41 |
Bryce Young | QB | Carolina Panthers | +11 | 190.5 | 28 | 29 |
Russell Wilson | QB | Pittsburgh Steelers | +11 | 195.9 | 30 | 24 |
Will Levis, Titans
No team has made more changes so far this offseason than the Titans. With Brian Callahan in as the new head coach, Tennessee let Derrick Henry walk while adding wide receiver Calvin Ridley and a great pass-catching running back in Tony Pollard.
Ridley and DeAndre Hopkins form one of the better wide receiver duos in football while there’s still a chance that Treylon Burks and Chigoziem Okonkwo could make some noise in their young careers. There are no Titans currently being drafted in the top 60 picks on Underdog, making Levis and Co. intriguing for cheap best ball stacks.
Kirk Cousins, Falcons
The Raheem Morris era in Atlanta will begin with a new-look offense led by Kirk Cousins and offensive coordinator Zac Robinson. Cousins is one of the most efficient passers in recent history and his presence should elevate the entire passing game. Drake London, Kyle Pitts, and Bijan Robinson figure to dominate looks from Cousins with 36% of targets from last season vacated. ADPs on the pass-catchers might get out of hand this summer but Cousins looks like one of the better positional values in early best ball drafts, even with his recent ADP spike.
Running Backs
Player | Pos | Team | ADP Change, 3/10–3/27 | Current ADP | Positional ADP | 4for4 Positional Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gus Edwards | RB | Los Angeles Chargers | +61 | 125.3 | 39 | 32 |
Zack Moss | RB | Cincinnati Bengals | +53 | 110.3 | 34 | 31 |
Rico Dowdle | RB | Dallas Cowboys | +37 | 170.4 | 52 | 61 |
Alexander Mattison | RB | Las Vegas Raiders | +33 | 205.9 | 62 | 81 |
Zamir White | RB | Las Vegas Raiders | +26 | 102.1 | 31 | 25 |
Joe Mixon | RB | Houston Texans | +25 | 65.7 | 16 | 21 |
Josh Jacobs | RB | Green Bay Packers | +22 | 37.1 | 10 | 9 |
Antonio Gibson | RB | New England Patriots | +21 | 168.6 | 51 | 45 |
Derrick Henry | RB | Baltimore Ravens | +19 | 42.1 | 11 | 10 |
Devin Singletary | RB | NY Giants | +19 | 114.8 | 36 | 33 |
D'Andre Swift | RB | Chicago Bears | +15 | 89.6 | 26 | 17 |
Gus Edwards, Chargers
So far in 2024, the Chargers have hired Jim Harbaugh as head coach, Greg Roman as offensive coordinator, and let their two best pass-catchers sign elsewhere. All signs point to a run-heavy team in LA and with Austin Ekeler out of town, 230 backfield touches are up for grabs. Pending any changes during this year’s NFL Draft, Gus Edwards is in line to absorb 200+ touches. If the Chargers don’t add a significant name in the backfield, Edwards figures to be an RB2/flex-type player with some spike weeks sprinkled in.
Zack Moss, Bengals
Cincinnati traded Joe Mixon and signed Zack Moss, presumably to lead the Bengals backfield while Chase Brown sees an expanded role in 2024. As John Paulsen recently noted:
“In the eight games where Moss played at least half the snaps, he averaged 20.9 touches for 94 yards (4.12 yards per carry), and 0.63 touchdowns. The resulting 14.7 fantasy points per game (half-PPR) would have been the eighth-highest last year (ahead of David Montgomery and just behind Jahmyr Gibbs).”
While Moss may not be a 70% touch share back, he will have significant upside playing alongside Joe Burrow.
Joe Mixon, Texans
The public is bullish on Joe Mixon despite his wide range of outcomes. Mixon is coming off of a relatively inefficient 2023 and is entering his age-28 season but adds a pass-catching element that Houston lacked last season while stepping into a role with 266 vacated touches. This move relegates Dameon Pierce to a late-round dart throw while there’s still a chance that the Texans add a running back in April’s Draft.
Wide Receivers
Player | Pos | Team | ADP Change, 3/10–3/27 | Current ADP | Positional ADP | 4for4 Positional Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Darnell Mooney | WR | Atlanta Falcons | +62 | 155.4 | 70 | 74 |
Curtis Samuel | WR | Buffalo Bills | +50 | 130.7 | 59 | 50 |
Noah Brown | WR | Houston Texans | +43 | 188.8 | 80 | 73 |
Marquise Brown | WR | Kansas City Chiefs | +40 | 70.1 | 39 | 39 |
Joshua Palmer | WR | Los Angeles Chargers | +24 | 146.5 | 67 | 68 |
Diontae Johnson | WR | Carolina Panthers | +18 | 77.3 | 43 | 33 |
Gabe Davis | WR | Jacksonville Jaguars | +16 | 123.6 | 55 | 52 |
Mike Williams | WR | NY Jets | +14 | 100.4 | 49 | 41 |
Quentin Johnston | WR | Los Angeles Chargers | +14 | 139.5 | 63 | 79 |
Marvin Mims | WR | Denver Broncos | +14 | 146.2 | 66 | 82 |
Drake London | WR | Atlanta Falcons | +13 | 22.3 | 14 | 18 |
George Pickens | WR | Pittsburgh Steelers | +9 | 53.1 | 32 | 27 |
Marquise Brown, Chiefs
Marquise Brown is coming off of arguably the worst year of his career, at least from an efficiency standpoint, but will now be catching passes from the best quarterback in the league. Brown will have to compete with Travis Kelce and Rashee Rice for targets but we haven’t seen what this offense could be with three bona fide targets. Hollywood is ranked outside the WR3 tier by both 4for4 and ADP but will be one of the few players drafted that late with true week-winning upside anytime he is in your lineup.
Diontae Johnson, Panthers
There is arguably no wide receiver with a wider range of outcomes than Diontae Johnson—in 2022, Johnson’s 8.1 half-PPR points per game were the lowest ever for a wide receiver with at least 140 targets but he also has a chance to lead the league in targets in 2024. It’s easy to say that Johnson will struggle with Bryce Young throwing him the ball but new Panthers head coach Dave Canales had a hand in turning around both Geno Smith and Baker Mayfield. With a positional ranking eight spots higher than his positional ADP, Johnson’s risk is more than baked in.
Drake London, Falcons
We know that London is an instant winner with a new coaching staff and new quarterback but the public’s knee-jerk reaction may be a bit too extreme. Paulsen notes that “Falcons’ receivers could be looking at a 31% increase in fantasy points” but London’s current WR14 ADP is leaving little-to-no meat on the bone—he is 4for4’s WR18
Tight Ends
Player | Pos | Team | ADP Change, 3/10–3/27 | Current ADP | Positional ADP | 4for4 Positional Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jonnu Smith | TE | Miami Dolphins | +36 | 174.9 | 22 | - |
Kyle Pitts | TE | Atlanta Falcons | +19 | 66.9 | 6 | 8 |
Hunter Henry | TE | New England Patriots | +19 | 174.2 | 21 | 17 |
Noah Fant | TE | Seattle Seahawks | +18 | 198.2 | 26 | 31 |
Dalton Schultz | TE | Houston Texans | +8 | 115.5 | 13 | 13 |
Jonnu Smith, Dolphins
There’s a good chance Jonnu Smith is everyone’s “better in best ball” pick of 2024. Smith often out-targeted Kyle Pitts in Atlanta last season (how much of that was warranted is up for debate) and has an opportunity to be the number three option in an offense that can drop 50+ points in any given week. This iteration of the Dolphins' offense hasn’t shown that it cares much for a third option but as the 22nd tight end off the board, Smith is worth an add to rosters already with Tua Tagovialoa or as a Week 17 game stack option once we know the schedule.
Kyle Pitts, Falcons
Much like it did for London, the Kirk Cousins signing shot Kyle Pitts up to the no-man’s-land portion of the draft. Cousins’ elevated play may have put Pitts around TE7 territory last season but he is being drafted as the TE6 in 2024. Pitts, however, could see a spike in targets after averaging fewer than six per game last season and only exceeding 10 targets in a game once.
Underdog ADP Fallers
Quarterbacks
Player | Pos | Team | ADP Change, 3/10–3/27 | Current ADP | Positional ADP | 4for4 Positional Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Justin Fields | QB | Pittsburgh Steelers | -60 | 150.4 | 22 | 32 |
Daniel Jones | QB | NY Giants | -16 | 209.2 | 31 | 27 |
Justin Herbert | QB | Los Angeles Chargers | -15 | 108.0 | 13 | 20 |
Justin Herbert, Chargers
The Chargers lost Keenan Allen, Mike Williams, Austin Ekeler, and Gerald Everett this offseason after hiring two of the most run-happy offensive coaches in football. The hope is that the Chargers land a difference-making pass-catcher in the Draft but even then, Quentin Johnston showed little promise in his rookie season and Joshua Palmer is a role player. We usually want to buy ADP dips but Herbert has sadly tumbled to the QB20 in 4for4’s rankings.
Running Backs
Player | Pos | Team | ADP Change, 3/10–3/27 | Current ADP | Positional ADP | 4for4 Positional Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Roschon Johnson | RB | Chicago Bears | -40 | 167.1 | 50 | 44 |
Tyjae Spears | RB | Tennessee Titans | -33 | 101.2 | 30 | 36 |
Khalil Herbert | RB | Chicago Bears | -33 | 177.7 | 54 | 39 |
Ty Chandler | RB | Minnesota Vikings | -29 | 149.6 | 44 | 38 |
Brian Robinson | RB | Washington Commanders | -16 | 103.9 | 32 | 19 |
Roshchon Johnson & Khalil Herbert, Bears
D'Andre Swift to Chicago was one of the bigger dominoes to fall as far as the impact on a single depth chart. Swift got a bump in value while Roshchon Johnson and Khalil Herbert saw their ADPs plummet. The lead back role for the Bears is especially appealing with Justin Fields now in Pittsburgh since Fields won’t be stealing rushing opportunities. Swift overcame a similar obstacle with Jalen Hurt last year and still had the best season of his career. The new Bear looks like an easy value as he is still being drafted outside the RB2 ranks.
Tyjae Spears, Titans
After Tennessee let Derrick Henry walk, there was hope in the fantasy community that Tyjae Spears would get first crack at starting duties in Tennessee. The signing of Tony Pollard put a lid on that as it figures to be a split backfield in an offense that looks like it might want to focus more on the passing game. Even with his ADP dip, Spears may still be overvalued as 4for4 barely has him in the RB3 conversation.
Wide Receivers
Player | Pos | Team | ADP Change, 3/10–3/27 | Current ADP | Positional ADP | 4for4 Positional Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Treylon Burks | WR | Tennessee Titans | -40 | 226.3 | 95 | 84 |
Elijah Moore | WR | Cleveland Browns | -28 | 206.7 | 85 | 58 |
Khalil Shakir | WR | Buffalo Bills | -14 | 129.8 | 58 | 75 |
Adam Thielen | WR | Carolina Panthers | -12 | 165.9 | 73 | 56 |
Wan'Dale Robinson | WR | NY Giants | -12 | 170.8 | 75 | 60 |
Jordan Addison | WR | Minnesota Vikings | -11 | 65.5 | 38 | 35 |
Treylon Burks, Titans
Treylon Burks was already a dart throw at best but now his is nothing more than a last-round stab to finish Titans onslaughts—otherwise, he is undraftable. The third wide receiver behind two teammates being drafted in the top 75 is rarely going to offer much without injuries to the starters.
Elijah Moore, Browns
The first notable move of free agency actually happened before the tampering period began when the Broncos traded Jerry Jeudy to the Browns. Cleveland then extended Jeudy with a $58 million contract with $41 million guaranteed. That contract suggests that Jeudy will usurp Elijah Moore as the Browns’ WR2, relegating Moore to the fourth option behind Jeudy, Amari Cooper, and David Njoku. In an offense led by Deshaun Watson, who struggled mightily in 2023, Moore is a fantasy afterthought on all but the deepest Cleveland stacks.
Tight Ends
Player | Pos | Team | ADP Change, 3/10–3/27 | Current ADP | Positional ADP | 4for4 Positional Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tucker Kraft | TE | Green Bay Packers | -14 | 213.5 | 29 | 16 |
T.J. Hockenson | TE | Minnesota Vikings | -11 | 120.5 | 14 | 10 |
Cole Kmet | TE | Chicago Bears | -10 | 131.4 | 15 | 15 |
Luke Musgrave | TE | Green Bay Packers | -10 | 148.8 | 17 | 21 |
T.J. Hockenson, Vikings
With all the hype surrounding Cousins to the Falcons, there is equal worry in Minnesota with Cousins’ departure. Justin Jefferson will still get his because he’s Justin Jefferson but for now, the Vikings only have Sam Darnold and hope to get the fourth-best quarterback in the draft. Hockenson is a TE1 talent but is in a TE2 situation.