UPDATED 06/18/24
The brains over at Toilets to Titles all decided to put together this year’s team of Fantasy Football Redraft Rankers. For the 2024 NFL season, our team of rankers consist of:
- Justin Stephens: @JustinFF_
- Coach Schepps: @CoachSchepps
- Mark Simon: @MTSimon
- Dillon “Wicked” Carlson: @wicked_dynasty
- Nate Wallen: @nate_dirt19
- AJ Cola: @AJ_FFball
Each of these analysts ranked their top 84 WRs for the up-and-coming 2024 Redraft Season. Then Mark – the wizard behind the scenes – worked his mathematical and statistical magic to aggregate those rankings on the website for you at toiletstotitles.com.
Justin and Mark discussed the top Wide Receivers on last few week’s episodes of the Toilets to Titles flagship show on Tuesday Nights. In case you missed it, here is a rundown of some of our reasoning for our rankings…
Consensus Overall WR Redraft Rankings (19 – 36):
***It is important to note that we are basing these numbers and thoughts off of PPR Redraft formats, but the stats and many of the opinions will still work for most other Redraft leagues as well.
19) Stefon Diggs (HOU)
6th in targets and receptions. 13th in receiving yards, 20th in red zone targets, 13th in fantasy points per game (16.1) and he played in every game last season finishing as the WR 9 overall.
- High- 11 (Wicked)
- Low- 25 (AJ)
- Mark – 14
- Coach – 19
- Nate – 21
- Justin – 24
Justin’s thoughts – I know I’m low on him for being a guy that is coming off a WR 9 overall season and a run of 4 straight seasons as a WR 13 or better in points per game. However, I’m more concerned with the career long pattern we’ve seen with Diggs. Diggs was at his best for fantasy when he was with the Bills, and they had few other options for legitimate targets. He’s now going back to an offense where he doesn’t need to be force fed a more than 30% target share. He will not get that kind of opportunity in Houston. Also, when his teams tend to lean heavily on him, his teams lose more games than when his usage is down. This was more prominent the last 2 seasons in Buffalo as he was heavily targeted the first half of both of those seasons and the Bills struggled to start both seasons, then as they reached about the halfway point of the season when they stopped utilizing Diggs as much, they started to win.
Diggs is still an incredible talent, but so are Nico Collins and Tank Dell. This will be almost a 3-way split for targets and Diggs has too much of an Alpha mentality to tolerate being in a true split. If anything, his presence may help open up the field more for the other 2 options. This is why I have Nico ranked 12th, Tank at 19th and then Diggs at 24th.
20) Amari Cooper (CLE)
20th in targets and 6th in deep targets. 31st in red zone targets with only 5 total TDs. 10th in receiving yards with 1,250 on only 72 receptions. He had 15.1 fantasy points per game (17th), and he played in 15 games finishing as the WR 20 overall.
- High – 18 (Wicked)
- Low – 26 (AJ)
- Nate – 19
- Justin – 20
- Coach – 21
- Mark – 25
Justin’s thoughts – I have Amari ranked right at the average consensus. For me, this is the perfect spot for him. Draft him after you have taken a more solid and consistent WR1 and after 2 or 3 RBs. He provides the upside possibilities, and you still have the hope that the Human Predator (Watson) will somehow be great. If that happens, then the risk really pays off. However, because of the inconsistency, you will want to follow this pick up with another more consistent WR within the next couple of rounds.
21) Malik Nabers (NYG)
Drafted 6th overall to the Giants. His 1st big college breakout age was 19 years old in his 2nd season at LSU, but he had an even larger breakout last season at 20 years old. His 2-year average over his last 2 college seasons was 80.5/1,289/8.5. That’s a weekly average of 6/95.5/0.6. That would be 19.1 fantasy points per game. That would be equivalent to the WR 6 overall.
- High – 8 (Wicked)
- Low – 29 (Mark)
- Nate – 18
- AJ – 19
- Justin & Coach – 28
Justin’s thoughts – Darius Slayton was the Giants best WR last season as the WR 46 overall and this has been pretty much par for the course for Giants WRs since the departure of Odell Beckham Jr. The groundwork is set for Nabers to be the guy for the Giants, and I don’t even think 2nd place at the position is even close to him. He does have Daniel Jones at QB and an overall incompetent offense around him, so I don’t see the Giants moving the ball downfield enough to give Nabers many red zone targets and I don’t see Jones hitting him on a lot of deep passes, so his production will be capped. Tie that with the concerns of being a rookie and I’ll want him outside of my WR2 range.
Here’s a couple stats for you…
#1- No Giants team has produced any better than a bottom 10 season in production in passing yards since drafting Daniel Jones. Even with adding all the receiving success of Saquan out of the backfield, or the seasons that Saquon was injured and they threw the ball a ton, never once has a Daniel Jones led team finished better than the bottom 10 in the NFL in passing offense.
#2- In the last 10 years, of ALL rookie WRs whose team finished in the bottom 10 in passing yards for the season, only 1 finished in the Top 30 in fantasy points. That was Mike Evans and even he only had 68 catches for 1,051 yards. He just also happened to have 12 receiving TDs that season to get him into that top 30 range. He also had Vincent Jackson on the other side taking some coverage. Nabers will see all of the opposing defenses’ best coverage with only Darius Slayton and Wan’Dale Robinson on the other side. But even Mike Evans had to get 12 TDs to get into that top 30… There is no way this Giants offense will be good enough to produce even 8 TDs for Nabers.
Mark – In any other draft class Nabers would be the clear-cut number 1 WR or RB off the board, but he just happened to be in the same class as Marvin Jr. My ranking is just based on having no idea what we’re going to get out of Daniel Jones and the Giants. They downgraded at Running Back and last year was PFF’s worst ranked offensive line in the league and did very little if anything to improve on that in my eyes.
22) Cooper Kupp (LAR)
9th most red zone targets, even with missing 5 games. 23rd in fantasy points per game with 13.7. He played in 12 games fishing as the WR 40 overall.
- High – 16 (Justin)
- Low – 31 (Mark)
- Wicked – 17
- AJ – 20
- Nate – 23
- Coach – 24
Justin’s thoughts – We all want Kupp to be Kupp again, but alas, unless there is an injury to Puka, then he will never get the kind of aggressive opportunity shares that he had in each of the seasons that he finished as a top WR in points per game. In the seasons that he had a viable WR on the other side taking a large target share, he has finished as the WR 23 and 30 in fantasy points per game. If there is a shining light, it’s that Kupp started off the season missing the first 4 weeks and never really looked right all season. He should be able to outperform the WR 23 performance in PPG he had last season, but probably not by much. Also, if some teams choose to treat Puka as the number 1 and try to shut him down, then maybe he has high peak games with more than 1 TD or 125 yards and a TD, with the upside of high end WR 1 numbers should Puka get injured. This all makes him the ideal WR2.
Mark – I’m shocked I’m the lowest here. Which tells me I do need to monitor ADP closely because I do want to be above it as I do like his ceiling compared to where he’s going at. His current ADP as of right now is 37th WR off the board (Sleeper) So I am above it. For Kupp it all comes down to staying healthy and not just healthy enough to play but healthy enough to be Kupp. A lot of his games last year he was almost out there as a decoy for Puka. You could tell he just wasn’t running routes the same, but to get Kupp who’s only two seasons removed from being the number one player in fantasy after 25-30 plus other WRs come off the board… Sign me up all day long, because at that point your risk vs potential reward is so far in the green it’s an easy decision.
23) DK Metcalf (SEA)
6th in red zone targets equated to 8 total TDs. 10th in deep targets. He was the WR 22 (14.1) in fantasy points per game and played in all but 1 game finishing as the WR 21 overall.
- High – 20 (Coach)
- Low – 24 (Mark)
- Nate – 22
- Justin, Wicked, & AJ – 23
Justin’s thoughts – Aside from red zone targets, TDs, and deep targets, nearly all the other fantasy relevant stats to look for in a WR, DK finished as a WR 2 in almost all of those stats. This is on a per game basis. From what I can tell, a lot of this has to do with teams playing more zone against him than man. He has excelled over his career in man coverage but has always struggled more against zone defenses. A large part of that is also that Russell Wilson and Geno Smith have also struggled against zone defenses. Teams are seeing this and playing zone against the Seahawks. It is yet to be seen if or when Sam Howell will get his shot in Seattle, but for the time being, he fits my typical later WR 2 position with the big play potential. If he stays healthy and puts up numbers he is capable of, then he could be a 5th round league winner for you.
Mark – at first glance I thought I was a little low on DK as outside of his rookie season he’s finished as a WR2 or better every single year. Now while I still have him as WR2 it’s right on the border at 24, but then looking closer ever since his breakout 2nd season where he finished as the 7th overall WR he has slowly fallen back a little every season. Last season his Targets and receptions took a massive hit to the lowest of his career with 119 targets and 66 receptions. The previous 3 seasons he averaged 133 targets and just under 83 receptions. This goes in line with what Justin said with defenses figuring out Seattle and particularly DKs struggles against the zone. So, my fear is we’re closer to seeing more of the low end 2 DK then the potential #1 DK.
24) DeVonta Smith (PHI)
16th in receptions with 81, 20th in receiving yards with 1,066, 7 total TDs, 14.2 fantasy points per game (20th). He played in 16 games and finished as the WR 19 overall.
- High – 21 (Mark)
- Low – 27 (Nate)
- Wicked & AJ – 22
- Coach – 23
- Justin – 25
Justin’s thoughts – I had DeVonta as my WR 2 or WR 3 in many of my redraft leagues last season. Overall, I was pleased, but when he was bad, it was really bad. 5 games in single digits aren’t ideal for a WR 2 in redraft and one of those was championship weekend which kinda left a bitter memory. Putting recency bias aside, I’m also concerned about the arrival of Saquon Barkley. I feel QB Jalen Hurts’ attempts will go down, Barkley ability to play from the slot and be a great receiving back, his dump-offs and the designed passes to the RB position will all take away from Smith’s target share.
Mark – I love DeVonta this year. Kellen Moore is going to be a huge addition for this offense. There’s already talk of there being more freedom within the offense for the players to “win how they want to win”. I think you’re going to see a lot more one on one matchups created specifically for Smith leading to a lot more deep balls. I think it will also be better for Hurts as it will be closer to what he played in Oklahoma.
25) Deebo Samuel (SF)
9th in yards after the catch with 527 and that was on only 60 receptions. 892 total receiving yards was 32nd in the league. #1 in fantasy points per target and #2 in fantasy points per route run. 4th in Total TDs with 12. 16.2 fantasy points per game (12th). He played in 15 games finishing as the WR 15 Overall.
- High – 15 (Justin)
- Low – 31 (Wicked)
- AJ – 21
- Mark – 22
- Coach & Nate – 26
Justin’s thoughts – It’s simple Math here, people… I believe firmly that Aiyuk will not be a 49er when the season starts, or he’ll be one of those guys we see every year that sits out and finally gets a deal just before the season starts and he has soft tissue injuries to deal with all season because he was sitting out and not properly conditioning on his own. Either way, Deebo without Aiyuk on the field equates to incredible top end WR 1 numbers. He could easily be a top 5 WR if Aiyuk isn’t there. The Niners drafted Ricky Pearsall, but he’s going to be a rookie and while he is capable of running the ball as well, I think they will likely use him more in a traditional WR position. Worst case, Aiyuk does stay with the 49ers, and you spend a 4th round pick on Deebo as your WR 2 and he finishes as a WR 2, and it still isn’t a bad pick. Not a league winner, but not a bust either. Aside from injuries, there is no chance Deebo is a bust, so he is a safe and consistent WR 2 at worst.
Mark – Basically the same conversation we had about Aiyuk. Deebo eats into Aiyuk, Aiyuk eats into Deebo. I think it’s clear Deebo is not going anywhere, and I would say I’m pretty sure Aiyuk isn’t either. What we don’t know is if Aiyuk will play if he doesn’t get the bag he’s looking for. So, if Aiyuk sits, that obviously boosts Deebo’s value. So I’m at the point now until something tells me otherwise, I’m drafting Deebo over Aiyuk because in my eyes a holdout is more likely than either of them getting traded.
26) Zay Flowers (BAL)
26th in target, 20th in target share, 28th in red zone targets, 21st in deep targets, and 22nd in receptions. 33rd in yards with 858, but 15th in yards after catch with 391. His 12.9 fantasy points per game was good for 31st in the league and he played in 16 games finishing as the WR 31 overall.
- High – 22 (Justin)
- Low – 28 (Wicked & Nate)
- AJ – 24
- Coach – 25
- Mark – 27
Justin’s thoughts – In his first 11 games of his rookie season last year, he finished as the WR 13 overall or higher exactly 0 times. But in the last 5 games he was the WR 13 or higher in 4 of them. Factoring in the notable improvements he made, his increased usage later in the season, his solid efficiency rates, along with the addition of Derrick Henry which is sure to help open up more passing lanes for Lamar Jackson, and finally considering the jump he is likely to make from having another NFL offseason, I may be too low on Flowers, even with being the highest on him at WR 22. At least I know I’ll be able to get him as my WR2 in the 5th or 6th round with little problem. The downside is that the Ravens simply do not throw the ball much, but for a WR 2, his usage is adequate considering his abilities and potential effectiveness.
Mark – I’m just never going to be the guy you can convince Lamar will be a top passer and be able to utilize his WRs like they should be. They are always going to be a run first team that utilizes their TEs heavily as long as he is there. Now they add Derrick Henry to the mix. I don’t know if a WR will score a single TD this season! Now, obviously I’m kidding, but you get what I’m saying and why I will always be too low to draft a Baltimore WR while Lamar is there, especially a talented one with hype like Flowers has in the community.
27) Tank Dell (HOU)
45th in receiving yards with 709, 21st in yards per target and yards per reception, and 7 total TDs. He was 18th in fantasy points per game with 15 and played in 11 games finishing as the WR 39 overall.
- High – 19 (Justin)
- Low – 39 (Coach)
- Wicked – 24
- Nate – 25
- AJ – 27
- Mark – 35
Justin’s thoughts – My reason for such a high ranking is simple. Last season his best games were when he was facing sub-par DBs. His worst games were against some of the better DBs in the league. With the addition of Stefon Diggs, the opposing defense will have to decide which WR they want to shut down each week, so Dell will have weeks where he will straight up win you games. The downside is that he is highly inconsistent and while I like his explosiveness, his efficiency is also really bad. I have him listed as a mid-level WR 2, but I’m only taking him there if I’m completely confident in my WR 1 being consistently good. If not, I’ll hope that my league mates have him ranked like some of my fellow rankers here at T2T have him ranked, so I can steal him as my WR 3. Especially considering the added injury risk with his small stature as an NFL WR.
Mark – For me there are just too many guys ahead in the pecking order to finish as a WR2. Nico and Diggs are A1 and A2 so he’s the 3rd in the pecking order as far as WRs go but now you add Mixon to the mix and you have another person to contend with for touches. His current ADP according to Sleeper is higher than our consensus at 22. That’s just way too early for me for a guy who’s starting behind 3 guys who will out touch him in my eyes.
28) Keenan Allen (CHI)
10th in targets, 3rd in target share, and 3rd in fantasy points per game with 21.5. He finished 5th in receptions with 108 and 11th in receiving yards with 1,243. He played in 13 games finishing as the WR 8 overall.
- High – 19 (Mark)
- Low – 32 (AJ & Nate)
- Wicked – 29
- Justin & Coach – 31
Justin’s thoughts – Keenan had the 10th most targets in the league, even with missing the last 4 games of the season. He has been a target monster on a Chargers team that has been one of the heaviest passing teams nearly every year of his career. He has been insanely talented, but the large opportunities from targets have made him the consistent WR 1 on fantasy rosters for 8 of the last 9 years. Now we get a 32-year-old version of a player on a team that had the 5th fewest passing attempts last season and traditionally has always been a run heavy team in their franchise’s history. I have him listed as my WR 31 which is likely a little low, but my concerns of having a rookie QB in a run heavy offense and being the number 2 behind DJ Moore who has already established a good rapport with QB Caleb Williams, along with the talented rookie Rome Odunze challenging for targets, I’m just not certain of what we will get with Allen and in fantasy, I only want what I know I will get. Listing him at WR 31 for me ensures I likely won’t get him.
Mark – Let everyone keep doubting the old man. He finished as the 8th overall WR last year while only playing 13 games. One thing everyone will agree on is that Keenan is a target Monster. There’s a reason for that because his QBs love him. He’s a big body that gets open and gets to the right places at the right time. That’s not going to change with Caleb as a rookie QB. He’s going to be looking for exactly what Keenan will provide. A consistent big target where he knows exactly where he’s going to be at all times. If he’s coming off the board at 28 or later there’s not going to be many drafts where I don’t have him on my redraft roster.
29) Jayden Reed (GB)
40th in targets, but 21st in deep targets and 14th in red zone targets resulting in the 5th most total TDs with 10. He finished 26th in fantasy points per game with 13.6 and played in 16 games ending the season as the WR 25 overall.
- High – 24 (Nate)
- Low – 34 (Mark)
- Justin, Coach & AJ – 29
- Wicked – 30
Justin’s thoughts – Listed as the WR3 on the Packers depth chart, Reed is listed as the top ranked WR out of all of the Packers WRs for all 6 of us on the rankings team. For me, this is why it’s so difficult to rank any Packers WR as a WR2 or higher. His numbers escalated dramatically after the 8th game of the season. After that point, there was only 1 week where he didn’t finish as a top 25 WR and 4 of the final 7 fantasy weeks he finished as a WR 1, so the rapport with QB Jordan Love is strong and they know how to properly utilize him now. I would be very satisfied to walk away from drafts with Reed as my WR 3.
30) George Pickens (PIT)
10th in deep targets, 16th in receiving yards and yards after catch with 1,140 and 388. He only had 5 TDs. 1st in the league in yards per reception with 18.1 and 5th in yards per target. He played in 17 games finishing as the WR 30 overall and the WR 36 in fantasy points per game with 12.3.
- High – 27 (Coach)
- Low – 32 (Wicked)
- Mark – 28
- Nate – 29
- Justin – 30
- AJ – 31
Justin’s thoughts – I’m at the consensus here and I really thought I would be a bit higher than consensus, so I may need to adjust my ranking to help ensure I get more shares of Pickens. The talent is there, and he was only 2 TDs away from finishing as the WR 16 overall. In his first 2 seasons he went from 52/801/4 on 85 targets to 63/1,140/5 on 106 targets. Now he is due for his true 3rd year breakout with improved QB play and a better team around him, he is highly likely to improve into the WR 15 range with relative ease. He is a guy that I fully expect to see in the top 10 by the end of the season if he remains healthy and a few other WRs suffer injuries. I want Pickens as a high upside/low risk WR 3.
31) Christian Kirk (JAX)
14th most slot snaps at 67.4%. The rest of his stats were very mediocre across the board and screamed WR 3 stats. He was 33rd in fantasy points per game and played in 12 games finishing as the WR 47 overall.
- High – 26 (Mark)
- Low – 34 (Wicked)
- Coach & AJ – 30
- Nate – 31
- Justin – 33
Justin’s thoughts – If we throw out his statistically worst season of his career, which was his rookie season, then Kirk has averaged as the WR 33 in fantasy points per game any given year over the last 5 years of his career. This is a low-end WR 3 average. His best year, he was the WR 18 in points per game and that was 2 years ago when he was considered the WR1 for the team and only really had Zay Jones to contend with for targets at the WR position and it ended up being almost an even split between the 2. Now he will have a better version of Zay Jones in Gabe Davis, and a talented rookie in Brian Thomas to contend with. Also, as stated above, Kirk ran from the slot on 67.4% of the snaps last season with the Jaguars and 52% in 2022 in his first year with the Jags. I simply can’t see a true slot WR in a 3-way split for targets doing much better than a low end WR 3.
32) Tee Higgins (CIN)
16th in yards per reception with 15.6 and tied for 6th in drops. He finished as the WR 40 in fantasy points per game and played in 12 games finishing as the WR 51 overall.
- High – 23 (Mark)
- Low – 46 (Justin)
- AJ – 28
- Coach – 33
- Wicked & Nate – 35
Justin’s thoughts – If you still want to pretend that Joe Burrow will be 100% Joe Burrow in 2024, you’re fooling yourself. The injury he sustained last season to that wrist simply won’t allow him to be 100% Joe Burrow for at least a couple of seasons, if ever… But let’s play make believe and say he will. Higgins best season so far was 2021 with a healthy Joe Burrow and that’s what everyone wants to consider when they think about ranking Higgins, so let’s roll with that season. In that season, Higgins had competition from Ja’Marr Chase and edged out Tyler Boyd for the 2nd best overall production on the team. On any given week, Higgins averaged being the WR 32 overall for that given week. He was a WR 3 or better in 9 games and unstartable in 5. He had 4 games in single digit scoring but had 3 games where he scored more than 20.
All of that to say that now without Tyler Boyd, he should see a bump in targets, but even with the increased target share, he is way too inconsistent to rely on as even a WR 3, but if you draft like me and go late on WRs and need one to hit big on occasion, and you think Burrow will be back and able to sling it deep since that’s the only part of Higgins game that he’s really good at, then he may be worth taking as your WR 3. But if I’m correct and Burrow’s wrist prevents him from accurately slinging the deep balls, then Higgins numbers will be even worse than his best season where he was a mid-level WR 3 on average any given week.
33) Calvin Ridley (TEN)
14th in targets, 8th in deep targets, and 3rd in end zone targets. 11th in TDs with 8 and 27th in fantasy points per game with 13.5. He played in 17 games finishing as the WR 18 overall.
- High – 30 (Mark)
- Low – 38 (Wicked)
- Justin – 32
- Nate – 33
- Coach & AJ – 34
Justin’s thoughts – Ridley has had seasons where he has put up some impressive numbers. Unfortunately, he now finds himself on a Titans team that traditionally doesn’t throw the ball much and he faces more competition for targets than he has ever had in his career with DeAndre Hopkins, Tyler Boyd, and Titans stalemates, Kyle Philips, Nick Westbrook-Ikhine and even Treylon Burks as a potential gadget player. Fortunately, the Titans have done everything in the book this offseason to suggest that they will be moving to a very pass happy offense, not only with the addition of Ridley and Boyd, but also by letting long term face of the franchise Derrick Henry go to the Ravens this offseason and adding a more respectable receiving back in Tony Pollard to pair with an already well established receiving back in Tyjae Spears.
I can’t make Ridley a WR 2 even though he is talented enough for that role, simply due to all the questions, but I’d take him as a WR 3 with the hopes of a low-end WR 2 outcome if the cards all fall just right for the new look Titans this season.
34) Rashee Rice (KC)
Only 33rd in total targets, yet still 7th in red zone targets. Only 28th in total receiving yards with 938, yet 3rd in yards after the catch with 654. So, 70% of his yards last season were after the catch. 18th in total receptions with 79 and total TDs with 7. He was 28th in fantasy points per game with 13.3 and played in 16 games finishing as the WR 27 overall.
- High – 16 (Wicked)
- Low – 55 (Nate)
- Coach – 22
- Justin – 27
- Mark – 37
- AJ – 45
Justin’s thoughts – This is a boom or bust type of player with only 7 weeks as a WR 2 or better, but also 5 weeks where he was unstartable. However, the end of the season was far better than the start of the season, so he showed real progression and rapport with possibly the best QB in the league and was also a heavy red zone target for Mahomes as well. With the upward trajectory in his 2nd season, I could see him finishing as a WR 2. I simply want to avoid the off-field issues and the typical inconsistencies with KC WRs for one more season, but I could see myself regretting this one by October.
35) Terry McLaurin (WAS)
19th in targets, 8th in deep targets, and only 49th in red zone targets leading to only 5 TDs. 27th in receiving yards with 1,002 and was the WR 34 in fantasy points per game with 12.3. He played in 17 games and finished as the WR 29 overall.
- High – 27 (Wicked)
- Low – 37 (Justin)
- Mark – 33
- Coach – 35
- AJ & Nate – 36
Justin’s thoughts – Over his 5 year career, McLaurin has finished as the WR 20 in fantasy points per game in his best season and WR 34 in his worst season last year. He’s averaged as the WR He has averaged as a WR 27 in fantasy points per game over the course of his career. Last year the Commanders threw the ball more than any other team in the league and McLaurin still had his worst per game production of his career. Now he has a rookie QB and the team has added Austin Ekeler who is a dump off master of the game. I see literally no upside for a possibility of a top 30 finish and with no upside, why take him? If you’re taking a WR in this range, then you want one that will have a steady and reliable floor, with the possibility of peak high performances.
18) Chris Godwin (TB)
15th in receptions, 17th in yards after catch, 23rd in receiving yards. 18th in targets, 22nd in red zone targets and only 54th in deep targets. He was the WR 34 in points per game and he played in 17 games finishing as the WR 28 overall.
- High – 32 (Mark)
- Low – 40 (Justin)
- Nate – 34
- Coach – 36
- Wicked & AJ – 39
Justin’s thoughts – Much like with Terry McLaurin, my poor ranking of Godwin is due to the bad upside. We know he’s done it before, but with QB Baker Mayfield, the Buccaneers run more of a game management style offense, and they simply don’t throw it deep enough for there to be any real upside for any Buccaneers WR after Mike Evans.
Stay tuned for more as the guys will continue to add rankings, episodes, and articles for all of their 2024 Redraft Rankings at all of the typical Redraft Fantasy Football positions.
Authors
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Hi, I’m Justin. One of the founders and Co-Host of T2T. I’ve played fantasy football for 16 years and have commissioned for 15. I greatly appreciate your support for our team and feel free to reach out to me on Twitter @JustinFF_. I'm the funniest and best looking member of the Toilets to Titles team. My DMs are always open. Or just Email the team!
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