James Conner, Cardinals (RB12): We mentioned it is a bad team, but there is little question about his volume.ĥ9. Alexander Mattison, Vikings (RB11): His fifth season should be his best, but Vikings could share his volume early on.ĥ3. Mac Jones, Patriots (QB23): Even the quarterbacks you do not want are valuable in superflex formats.ĥ2. Baker Mayfield, Buccaneers (QB22): Someone has to start at QB, but if he struggles, it could soon be someone else.Ĥ8. Will be interesting to see if Packers play it safe early on.Ĥ7. Jordan Love, Packers (QB20): Finally gets his chance to shine. DeVonta Smith, Eagles (WR15): Do not be surprised if he becomes Philly's top WR soon.Ĥ5. Allen was terrific in his 10 games last season.Ĥ4. Nobody doubts the talent, but it has been a while.Ĥ3. Calvin Ridley, Jaguars (WR12): That was a fantastic 2020 season. Nick Chubb, Browns (RB8): Great running back, but still barely a factor in the passing game. Matthew Stafford, Rams (QB18): Expectations seem low for him, more so if Kupp has to miss time.ģ7. Sam Howell, Commanders (QB17): The Cardinals are not a good football team, so Howell has no excuses here.ģ5. DK Metcalf, Seahawks (WR7): One big game versus the Rams last season, and one disappointing one. Garrett Wilson, Jets (WR6): Should be fun to see how much more efficient he becomes with a Hall of Fame QB.ģ0. Anthony Richardson, Colts (QB16): Wide range of possibilities for this talented rookie, so there is risk. The question is, will the numbers bounce back?Ģ8. Aaron Rodgers, Jets (QB14): You know you cannot stop watching him. Josh Jacobs, Raiders (RB7): He is a happy man now, but anything short of 20 touches in Week 1 and there will be panic.Ģ6. Tony Pollard, Cowboys (RB5): Hardly piled on the volume last season, so it will be interesting to see who else sees touches.Ģ5. Bijan Robinson, Falcons (RB4): Hotshot rookie guaranteed to thrive based on his ADP, but we rarely have guarantees.Ģ3. Davante Adams, Raiders (WR4): New season, new QB, but fantasy managers rarely doubt him for good reason.Ģ2. Deshaun Watson, Browns (QB11): Also not exactly one of the 2022 stars, though everyone seems to expect his old Texans numbers.ġ9. Russell Wilson, Broncos (QB10): Not exactly a stellar 2022 season, and the pressure is on right away. Tyreek Hill, Dolphins (WR3): Main concern here would be his quarterback staying on the field.ġ5. Christian McCaffrey, 49ers (RB2): May be interesting to see if 49ers scale back the volume a bit, to keep him healthy.ġ3. Ja'Marr Chase, Bengals (WR2): Sailed past 100 receiving yards and caught a TD pass in his only meeting with Browns last season.ġ2. Justin Herbert, Chargers (QB7): Easy to view matchup with Dolphins as a potential shootout.ġ0. Geno Smith, Seahawks (QB6): May not be starting for most in 10-team leagues, but he is deserving.ħ. Lamar Jackson, Ravens (QB3): He should enjoy his Texans matchup, but he may not have to produce big stats.Ħ. Josh Allen, Bills (QB2): He did not produce big stats versus the Jets last season, but you would never sit him.ģ. Jalen Hurts, Eagles (QB1): No reason to believe he struggles this season, even with a tougher schedule.Ģ. (Updated Friday to remove players from Thursday's Chief-Lions game)ġ. If your league is of the standard flex variety, just ignore the presence of quarterbacks. It might look odd to see the lowest-ranked fantasy passers ranked ahead of typical RB2 and WR2 options, but the potential scoring impact demands it. We know many of you compete in superflex formats that invite/covet second quarterbacks in starting lineups, so these rankings account for that. Welcome to Week 1 of the 2023 NFL season and our weekly PPR fantasy football superflex rankings. You have reached a degraded version of because you're using an unsupported version of Internet Explorer.įor a complete experience, please upgrade or use a supported browserįantasy football flex and superflex rankings for Week 1
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