That makes him one of the heaviest quarterbacks in this class despite being under 6’1″. He measured in at 6’0 ¼” 221 lbs at the Senior Bowl. This came down to Sam Howell and Isaiah Spiller, and I decided to go with my current QB1 in the class. Hopefully, Corral can land on a team with a quality coaching staff that will help him with the transition and continue his development. Some owners may aim for the home run and take Willis here, but I worry about his transition to the NFL. While he lacks the elite size you may be looking for in a prospect Corral checks a lot of boxes. While this QB class hasn’t jumped off the page for anyone yet, I believe Corral has all the tools to become a promising young QB in the NFL: accuracy, mobility, poise, awareness, and leadership. If I am going to swing and miss, I will do so at the QB position every time. While I still like several RBs and WRs on the board, I can’t pass up the opportunity to add a possible franchise QB in a Superflex league. I wasn’t a Trey Lance fan, and I’m not a Malik Willis fan. I think Pickett is a much, much safer NFL prospect than rolling the dice on a very inconsistent Willis, and I do not like to bet on small-school outliers. In order to score fantasy points, NFL coaches have to trust you to get on the field and succeed, and at some point in this process, we have to take off our fantasy hats and put on our NFL coaching hats when evaluating these players. True, he does not have the same fantasy upside as Willis, but I think Pickett is much more NFL ready. For me, it’s still Kenny Pickett off the board first, and I’d still take him ahead of the three players drafted here so far. The first quarterback off the board in a rookie Superflex draft doesn’t come off the board until the 4th pick? Say it ain’t so! Now, I know people bumped Malik Willis up their boards after his Senior Bowl week. Coming in at 6’3″ and 225, he has the tools to become an alpha receiver in the NFL. At Arkansas, he faced some of the most difficult competition in the SEC and still managed to dominate. On the flip side, Burks has all the athleticism and measurables that anyone would want. I think Wilson has his skills honed in and is more ready for the pros at this point. Right now, it seems like a toss-up between Wilson and Burks for who will go off the board first. I’m perfectly fine with grabbing a WR who has a potential path to be a WR1 in his career. Wilson is plenty fast and has elite route running, ball skills, and RAC ability- everything I want from a modern NFL WR. There are several more guys with high-end traits who are likely to have favorable outcomes- Spiller, Burks, London, Willis- but I’m taking my surefire hits before dabbling in potential, regardless of positional value, particularly without landing spots. There are two locked-in studs in this draft: Hall and Wilson. Take Hall at the top of your rookie draft and enjoy having an RB1 on your team. On top of that, he is a more than capable pass-catcher, hauling in at least 20 receptions every year of college. He led the nation in broken tackles while also falling in the top ten in missed tackles forced. Hall has all of the traits you look for in a bellcow running back at the NFL level. No one individual stood out or elevated himself enough to warrant not taking Breece Hall at the top of the class. Post Senior Bowl hasn’t changed much for this quarterback class. 1.01 Breece Hall, RB 6’1″ 220ĭan Toomey Credit: The Des Moines Register You can find the Superflex v1.0 here and the 1QB v1.0 here. This week, the Dynasty Nerds team breaks the huddle with two- 2 round mocks drafts, a 1QB, and a Superflex. In a year when the quarterback class underwhelms, we could get some surprises early in the rookie drafts. The Senior Bowl is in the rearview mirror, and we are looking forward to rookie draft season.
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