Fantasy Football Rankings: Initial PPR Top 200 for 2025

It’s never too early to start thinking about next season, especially if you work for a fantasy sports website and already had to do the first run of 2025 projections

Below you’ll find a comparison between my personal PPR rankings (far left column) and early ADP results from Drafters.com (second column), followed by the difference between the two (third column). Keep in mind that Drafters is a best ball site, whereas my personal rankings are intended for the lineup-setting, redraft leagues that most people play on Yahoo, ESPN, etc. The biggest difference between those two formats, in terms of draft strategy, is that every team in a best-ball league is taking 2-4 QBs and TEs. That means QB20 and TE20 have real value, which isn’t the case in a typical redraft league where a lot of teams only draft one quarterback and one tight end.

After the rankings, I’ll discuss and explain some of the noteworthy cases where my personal rankings diverge considerably from the early ADP results on Drafters. There are a couple of general themes that stand out. First, I have most of the rokies ranked much earlier than where they’re going in best-ball drafts. Second, I have the top QBs and TEs going slightly earlier than their Drafters’ ADPs. 

At the bottom of the page I’ll discuss some of the more interesting cases in which my rankings are far different from early ADP.

My Rank ADP DIFF Player Pos Team
1 1 0 Ja’Marr Chase WR

It’s never too early to start thinking about next season, especially if you work for a fantasy sports website and already had to do the first run of 2025 projections

Below you’ll find a comparison between my personal PPR rankings (far left column) and early ADP results from Drafters.com (second column), followed by the difference between the two (third column). Keep in mind that Drafters is a best ball site, whereas my personal rankings are intended for the lineup-setting, redraft leagues that most people play on Yahoo, ESPN, etc. The biggest difference between those two formats, in terms of draft strategy, is that every team in a best-ball league is taking 2-4 QBs and TEs. That means QB20 and TE20 have real value, which isn’t the case in a typical redraft league where a lot of teams only draft one quarterback and one tight end.

After the rankings, I’ll discuss and explain some of the noteworthy cases where my personal rankings diverge considerably from the early ADP results on Drafters. There are a couple of general themes that stand out. First, I have most of the rokies ranked much earlier than where they’re going in best-ball drafts. Second, I have the top QBs and TEs going slightly earlier than their Drafters’ ADPs. 

At the bottom of the page I’ll discuss some of the more interesting cases in which my rankings are far different from early ADP.

My Rank ADP DIFF Player Pos Team
1 1 0 Ja’Marr Chase WR CIN
2 2 0 Saquon Barkley RB PHI
3 5 2 Bijan Robinson RB ATL
4 3 -1 Jahmyr Gibbs RB DET
5 4 -1 Justin Jefferson WR MIN
6 8 2 CeeDee Lamb WR DAL
7 6 -1 Puka Nacua WR LA
8 12 4 Brian Thomas WR JAC
9 10 1 Nico Collins WR HOU
10 7 -3 Amon-Ra St. Brown WR DET
11 14 3 De’Von Achane RB MIA
12 13 1 Christian McCaffrey RB SF
13 15 2 Ashton Jeanty RB  
14 9 -5 Malik Nabers WR NYG
15 11 -4 Derrick Henry RB BAL
16 18 2 Brock Bowers TE LV
17 19 2 Ladd McConkey WR LAC
18 23 5 Josh Jacobs RB GB
19 27 8 Bucky Irving RB TB
20 20 0 Jonathan Taylor RB IND
21 16 -5 Drake London WR ATL
22 24 2 Breece Hall RB NYJ
23 22 -1 Tyreek Hill WR MIA
24 17 -7 A.J. Brown WR PHI
25 33 8 Lamar Jackson QB BAL
26 32 6 Trey McBride TE ARZ
27 34 7 Mike Evans WR TB
28 31 3 Josh Allen QB BUF
29 37 8 Jayden Daniels QB WAS
30 30 0 Jaxon Smith-Njigba WR SEA
31 25 -6 Terry McLaurin WR WAS
32 26 -6 Garrett Wilson WR NYJ
33 29 -4 James Cook RB BUF
34 21 -13 Tee Higgins WR CIN
35 35 0 Marvin Harrison WR ARZ
36 28 -8 Kyren Williams RB LA
37 52 15 Tetairoa McMillan WR  
38 44 6 Chuba Hubbard RB CAR
39 39 0 Xavier Worthy WR KC
40 65 25 Omarion Hampton RB  
41 36 -5 Chase Brown RB CIN
42 38 -4 DJ Moore WR CHI
43 42 -1 Jalen Hurts QB PHI
44 56 12 Courtland Sutton WR DEN
45 49 4 Davante Adams WR NYJ
46 41 -5 Joe Mixon RB HOU
47 50 3 Jordan Addison WR MIN
48 40 -8 DeVonta Smith WR PHI
49 43 -6 Rashee Rice WR KC
50 51 1 George Kittle TE SF
51 53 2 Alvin Kamara RB NO
52 45 -7 Jameson Williams WR DET
53 68 15 Kaleb Johnson RB  
54 55 1 Rome Odunze WR CHI
55 57 2 Kenneth Walker RB SEA
56 46 -10 Joe Burrow QB CIN
57 66 9 James Conner RB ARZ
58 60 2 Sam LaPorta TE DET
59 47 -12 Zay Flowers WR BAL
60 73 13 Tyrone Tracy RB NYG
61 59 -2 George Pickens WR PIT
62 54 -8 Chris Olave WR NO
63 62 -1 Chris Godwin WR TB
64 81 17 Emeka Egbuka WR  
65 48 -17 DK Metcalf WR SEA
66 63 -3 Jerry Jeudy WR CLE
67 58 -9 Jaylen Waddle WR MIA
68 61 -7 David Montgomery RB DET
69 72 3 Khalil Shakir WR BUF
70 93 23 Luther Burden WR  
71 80 9 Jalen McMillan WR TB
72 70 -2 Calvin Ridley WR TEN
73 78 5 Quinshon Judkins RB  
74 71 -3 TreVeyon Henderson RB  
75 76 1 Jauan Jennings WR SF
76 69 -7 Jayden Reed WR GB
77 64 -13 Patrick Mahomes QB KC
78 77 -1 Jakobi Meyers WR LV
79 97 18 Ricky Pearsall WR SF
80 86 6 Tony Pollard RB TEN
81 83 2 Isiah Pacheco RB KC
82 121 39 Cam Skattebo RB  
83 79 -4 T.J. Hockenson TE MIN
84 85 1 Bo Nix QB DEN
85 98 13 Rhamondre Stevenson RB NE
86 96 10 Rashid Shaheed WR NO
87 94 7 J.K. Dobbins RB LAC
88 82 -6 Mark Andrews TE BAL
89 90 1 Jonnu Smith TE MIA
90 84 -6 Aaron Jones RB MIN
91 92 1 Darnell Mooney WR ATL
92 95 3 Matthew Golden WR  
93 75 -18 Travis Kelce TE KC
94 74 -20 Brandon Aiyuk WR SF
95 89 -6 Baker Mayfield QB TB
96 105 9 Travis Etienne RB JAC
97 123 26 Tre Harris WR  
98 67 -31 Deebo Samuel WR SF
99 87 -12 Jaylen Warren RB PIT
100 107 7 D’Andre Swift RB CHI
101 101 0 Kyler Murray QB ARZ
102 88 -14 Josh Downs WR IND
103 120 17 Tyler Warren TE  
104 109 5 Najee Harris RB PIT
105 102 -3 Zach Charbonnet RB SEA
106 103 -3 Brock Purdy QB SF
107 113 6 Marvin Mims WR DEN
108 112 4 Keon Coleman WR BUF
109 118 9 Travis Hunter WR  
110 100 -10 Cooper Kupp WR LA
111 122 11 Drake Maye QB NE
112 140 28 Isaiah Bond WR  
113 156 43 Xavier Restrepo WR  
114 151 37 Colston Loveland TE  
115 125 10 C.J. Stroud QB HOU
116 145 29 Trey Benson RB ARZ
117 152 35 J.J. McCarthy QB MIN
118 99 -19 David Njoku TE CLE
119 104 -15 Caleb Williams QB CHI
120 115 -5 Rashod Bateman WR BAL
121 108 -13 Stefon Diggs WR HOU
122 91 -31 Jared Goff QB DET
123 137 14 Jake Ferguson TE DAL
124 110 -14 Michael Pittman WR IND
125 111 -14 Dallas Goedert TE PHI
126 153 27 Blake Corum RB LA
127 119 -8 Keenan Allen WR CHI
128 116 -12 Justin Herbert QB LAC
129 136 7 Isaiah Likely TE BAL
130 127 -3 Tyjae Spears RB TEN
131 106 -25 Brian Robinson RB WAS
132 133 1 Christian Kirk WR JAC
133 159 26 Ollie Gordon RB  
134 154 20 Cam Ward QB  
135 138 3 Anthony Richardson QB IND
136 170 34 Adam Thielen WR CAR
137 157 20 Tyler Allgeier RB ATL
138 124 -14 Rico Dowdle RB DAL
139 126 -13 Tank Bigsby RB JAC
140 130 -10 Dak Prescott QB DAL
141 147 6 Devin Neal RB  
142 161 19 Ray Davis RB BUF
143 150 7 Jalen Coker WR CAR
144 117 -27 Tucker Kraft TE GB
145 149 4 Rachaad White RB TB
146 167 21 Elic Ayomanor WR  
147 139 -8 Quentin Johnston WR LAC
148 174 26 Dontayvion Wicks WR GB
149 177 28 Austin Ekeler RB WAS
150 132 -18 Trevor Lawrence QB JAC
151 114 -37 Jordan Love QB GB
152 148 -4 Jerome Ford RB CLE
153 155 2 Amari Cooper WR BUF
154 131 -23 Evan Engram TE JAC
155 135 -20 Xavier Legette WR CAR
156 184 28 DeMario Douglas WR NE
157 230 73 RJ Harvey RB  
158 134 -24 Michael Penix QB ATL
159 158 -1 Dylan Sampson RB  
160 141 -19 Bryce Young QB CAR
161 189 28 Harold Fannin TE  
162 164 2 Justin Fields QB PIT
163 129 -34 Dalton Kincaid TE BUF
164 128 -36 Hollywood Brown WR KC
165 162 -3 Pat Freiermuth TE PIT
166 172 6 Isaac Guerendo RB SF
167 187 20 Jordan Whittington WR LA
168 171 3 Hunter Henry TE NE
169 186 17 Jalen Royals WR  
170 192 22 Nick Chubb RB CLE
171 235 64 Jalen Milroe QB  
172 143 -29 Romeo Doubs WR GB
173 165 -8 Shedeur Sanders QB  
174 163 -11 Cole Kmet TE CHI
175 146 -29 Cade Otton TE TB
176 144 -32 Kyle Pitts TE ATL
177 169 -8 Zach Ertz TE WAS
178 142 -36 Tua Tagovailoa QB MIA
179 173 -6 Geno Smith QB SEA
180 166 -14 Jaylen Wright RB MIA
181 201 20 DJ Giddens RB  
182 216 34 Kayshon Boutte WR NE
183 182 -1 Wan’Dale Robinson WR NYG
184 160 -24 Cedric Tillman WR CLE
185 194 9 Jayden Higgins WR  
186     Dameon Pierce RB HOU
187 205 18 Mike Gesicki TE CIN
188 197 9 Ja’Tavion Sanders TE CAR
189 195 6 Woody Marks RB  
190 227 37 Jaleel McLaughlin RB DEN
191 199 8 Noah Gray TE KC
192 185 -7 Adonai Mitchell WR IND
193 175 -18 Braelon Allen RB NYJ
194 246 52 Brenton Strange TE JAC
195 245 50 Ben Sinnott TE WAS
196 198 2 Dyami Brown WR WAS
197 202 5 Justice Hill RB BAL
198 256 58 Devin Singletary RB NYG
199 168 -31 Alec Pierce WR IND
200 242 42 Gabe Davis WR JAC
  176   Sam Darnold QB MIN
  178   Kareem Hunt RB KC
  179   Andrei Iosivas WR CIN
  180   Matthew Stafford QB LAR
  181   Roschon Johnson RB CHI
  183   DeAndre Hopkins WR KC
  188   Javonte Williams RB DEN
  190   Jahan Dotson WR PHI
  191   Dalton Schultz TE HOU
  193   Jordan Mason RB SF
  196   Derek Carr QB NO
  200   Kendre Miller RB NO

     

  • WR Brian Thomas

My Rank: 8

ADP: 12

In my mind, Thomas’ massive production at the end of 2024 makes him a solid first-round pick more so than a 1/2 turn guy. He averaged 23.9 PPR points over the final six weeks while catching passes from Mac Jones, and he’ll now head into 2025 with Trevor Lawrence as his quarterback and Liam Coen as his head coach. I’m not sure if Coen will be a good head coach, but I know he was one of the best playcallers / scheme designers in the league last year, lifting Tampa Bay’s offense about two levels higher than Dave Canales did in 2023. 

           

  • RB Bucky Irving

My Rank: 19

ADP: 27

This is a similar case to Thomas’, albeit with a lesser talent. Irving averaged 18.3 PPR points after a Week 11 bye, despite missing the final three quarters of one game with an injury. It’s fair to wonder if a player his size can handle huge workloads in the long run, but at this price he can miss a few games and still be a successful pick. A third-round price is too cheap for a RB who finished his rookie season with 1,122 rushing yards and 392 receiving yards while improving both his usage and production as the year progressed.

           

  • WR Tee Higgins

My Rank: 34

ADP: 21

2024 was easily Higgins’ best season in terms of per-game production (18.7 PPR points), but he missed five games for a second straight year, struggling with upper-leg injuries again. As much as I normally like to target players that had high scoring averages but missed a bunch of games, Higgins feels incredibly expensive for a player with a career average of 14.3 PPR points and a lengthy history of similar injuries. He has six hamstring/thigh/quad injuries on record since entering the NFL in 2020. I’m guessing he’ll stay with the Bengals but will drop back to his normal range of 7-8 targets per game, after averaging 9.1 last year. 

           

  • RB Omarion Hampton (Rookie – UNC )

My Rank: 40

ADP: 65

This should perhaps be taken with a grain of salt, as I don’t watch much college football or claim to be any kind of expert on prospects. I mostly defer to people with expertise in that area, and nearly all of what I’ve seen on Hampton is extremely positive, with mock drafts and prospect rankings consistently putting him as the RB2 in a strong class for the position, behind only Ashton Jeanty. Hampton is an early declare who put up two seasons of massive numbers on mediocre teams, and a lot of people are expecting a sub-4.5 40-yard dash at around 220 pounds. He already seems locked in as a second-round pick and could even slip into the first round with a strong 40 time. Generally speaking, the ADPs on top rookies likely will rise over the next couple months, and Hampton could eventually be a late-R2 fantasy pick if he lands with the right team. There’s obviously risk, as it’s also possible he falls to late in the second round of the real-life draft and then gets taken by a team with an established starting RB, in which case his fantasy ADP likely would drop to Round 8-9.

           

  • WR Courtland Sutton

My Rank: 44

ADP: 56

A fifth-round ADP probably seems fair if you consider that Sutton produced as a WR2 last season, a WR3 in 2023 and at a sub-fantasy-starter level in 2021 and 2022. What that misses is how his 2024 numbers improved as Bo Nix improved, with Sutton averaging 17.7 PPR points after Week 7 while reaching double digits in all 11 games. That level of production is commensurate with second-round value, giving Sutton plenty of room to fall back and still be a valuable pick at his fifth-round price. I may eventually move him as high as a Round 3 ranking if the Broncos only add modest competition for targets this offseason.

           

  • WR DK Metcalf

My Rank: 65

ADP: 48

While Seattle’s firing of OC Ryan Grubbs and subsequent hiring of Klint Kubiak feels more favorable for Metcalf than for Jaxon Smith-Njigba, I’m nonetheless sticking to my guns on the idea that 2024 was DK’s final opportunity to prove he’s capable of something more than WR3 fantasy production. He’s reliable for that, at least, but I prefer shopping for more upside around the 4/5 turn, rather than drafting a guy with four straight seasons in the range of 13.0 to 14.4 PPR points.

           

  • RB Cam Skattebo (Rookie – ASU)

My Rank: 82

ADP: 121

It sounds like Skattebo is more likely to be a mid-round pick than a second-round guy, but it won’t surprise me if some team falls in love with him and takes him in the range of 50-75 overall. He finished 2024 with 1,711 rushing yards, 605 receiving yards and 24 TDs, making him a threat to handle both goal-line carries and passing-down work in the NFL even if he’s nothing special as a pure runner. And, for what it’s worth, I thought he looked pretty darn good in the CFB playoffs, showing enough power and agility to get by in the NFL even if he runs something like a 4.6 40-yard dash. My naked-eye guess is that he’ll land closer to 4.5.

           

  • WR Deebo Samuel

My Rank: 98

ADP: 67

Samuel has long been one of my favorite real-life players, and he conceivably could get more targets if/when he’s traded. The problem for me is that he simply didn’t look good or play well in 2024, which becomes even more of a concern given his history of nagging injuries and the possibility that his unique skill set won’t age well. 

           

  • WR Xavier Restrepo (Rookie)

My Rank: 113

ADP: 156

Restrepo’s pre-draft profile is that of a second-round pick, while his ADP is more in line with what we normally see for rookie WRs taken in the third round of the NFL Draft. It’s possible he ends up being taken in the third round, of course, in which case this ADP might end up sticking. If he goes in the second round to a receiver-needy team with a decent QB, he’d likely land around ADP 90.

           

  • QB J.J. McCarthy

My Rank: 117

ADP: 152

McCarthy’s youth and athleticism give him a  much higher ceiling than Sam Darnold, who just threw for 35 TDs under Kevin O’Connell. If McCarthy is merely an average starting quarterback in real life, he’ll be a great fantasy pick at ADP 152. If he’s the standout the Vikings hope he is, McCarthy’s combination of mobility and A+ team context could make him a solid QB1 for fantasy immediately, commensurate with fifth/sixth/seventh-round value.

           

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