Shawn Siegele breaks down early rookie draft ADP and works through your best opportunities to beat the dynasty competition.
Today’s piece is intended as a post-mortem of the FFPC rookie drafts with the goal that’s actionable for you in . . .
- future rookie drafts throughout the summer and fall.
- new dynasty startups where managing rookie prices is the most essential part of your trade-down strategy.
- dynasty trades to perpetually reload and portfolio balance.
- redraft and best ball leagues where beating the market on rookies is still the easiest way to get a leg up on your competition.
The follow-up piece, which I’ve fully written and hope to have edited soon, is the big dynasty portfolio analysis article where I place all of the player selections within the context of our broader dynasty strategy. (I’ve had a few people reach out about that piece, and I’m glad it’s of interest, as I do think seeing the players and strategies combined and then placed within the context of real events is directly actionable.)
The biggest takeaway from that article will be that while first-round picks are obviously important, the portfolio has achieved its impressive successes of recent years due to the picks in Rounds 2 through 4.
A few years ago, we hit on Rashee Rice and Sam LaPorta in the second round of almost every league. The following year it was taking the top-five value on Bo Nix in Round 2 and Bucky Irving in the third round. Last year we told you to take Cam Skattebo and the beginning of the second and recommended Harold Fannin everywhere, even if you had to reach. Those selections only work if you’ve followed our guidelines to stockpile a lot of picks, but they also only work if you . . . well, if you take the right guys.
We won’t always get those right, of course, but in working through this post-mortem, one thing becomes even clearer: although this isn’t a particularly strong draft, it’s a draft with a ton of opportunities. For example, our current list of the priority targets will include . . .
- a poor man’s Justin Jefferson. As hard as it is to believe, there’s an inexpensive player in this year’s draft that shares a lot statistically and athletically with Jefferson and D.K. Metcalf,
- a dead ringer for Rashee Rice,
- a Bucky Irving clone with a bit more of a depth chart climb ahead of him,
- a Nico Collins doppelganger but in an explosive passing offense,
- a position change freak who combines the best elements of Antonio Gibson and Tyrone Tracy,
- a wildly productive, almost free TE who is almost as underappreciated as Oronde Gadsden a year ago,
- a faster version of the pre-injury Tank Dell,
- the perfect Malik Willis/Taysom Hill stash,
- a late-round selection who excels in the key metric that would have helped you locate Puka Nacua and Ladd McConkey,
- and I shouldn’t really suggest it because it’s not going to happen, but we even have a small-school star who trips the Cooper Kupp klaxon.
From a more global perspective, today’s exercise will give you a detailed breakdown of 2026 rookie draft ADP and how to play the prices. It may be that you have numerous remaining rookie drafts, or it may be that you’re mostly looking at trades and future startups, but working through the fallout from a highly competitive format like the FFPC’s RV TriFlex should be part of your process either way.
I’ll also provide two additional mini-strategy pieces.
- The most misunderstood dynasty position in 2026, and historical data from the RotoViz Screener that will help you avoid making the same error that is rampant across dynasty right now.
- A look at the biggest strategic mistake that drafters make in FFPC rookie drafts. Make better trades this summer and avoid this key mistake in 2027.
What RV TriFlex Drafts Can Tell Us About Other Dynasty and Fantasy Formats
In this article, I’ll be working through the top-50 players by ADP order, providing their rank position, their average draft position, my previous rookie ranking (post-NFL draft but pre-rookie draft) and my updated rank (post-rookie draft).
Each player heading is broken down like this:
Rank (ADP) Player Name (Previous Rank / Updated Rank)
To help the eye pull out potential opportunities, I’ve added a few designations. The player’s name is in green if they are a target at that price, in red if they are a fade. Their updated rank is in green if I’ve moved them up, in red if I’ve moved them down.
So that you don’t have to refer back to a previous article, the most important player notes/metrics from my pre– and post-draft rankings pieces are included in the blurb. Those notes are italicized and placed in the quote text so that your eye can jump right by them if you’re not specifically trying to reference them.
Use the Dynasty ADP Tool
You can explore rookie draft ADP in our Dynasty ADP tool. In this exercise, I have excluded Best Ball leagues, but you can include them, look at them specifically, and/or look at the standard version of FFPC dynasty that includes both 1-QB and SF versions.
I’ve also called out some of the bigger tier breaks as we move through the selections. These are ADP breaks, not rankings breaks.













