The Weekly Bender: Is It Fantasy Football Draft Season Already?

Wed May 14 4:13pm ET
By HOWARD BENDER
Fantasy Writer

Related photo caption below

Bender is high on Walker this year


To answer the question in the title, you’re damn right it is! Sure, many of us are still trying to sort through the first month of the fantasy baseball season, but between the NFL Draft, May OTA’s and June mini-camps, fantasy football season is here and drafts are starting up all over the place. Add in the fact that on May 14th the NFL will announce its full schedule and we can finally line up the bye weeks properly, drafts are going to kick into high gear before you know it.

Some people are adamant about not drafting early. They like to see all the position battles take shape in training camp, which rookies are carving out roles for themselves and then see what injuries they will have to navigate through as Week 1 of the regular season approaches. There was a time when I was in that camp with both feet.

Today, I sing a bit of a different tune. There are definite advantages to drafting now as opposed to August. First and foremost is that the ADP is taking shape and we are going to find some spectacular bargains. We are still close enough to the draft where people are over-hyping the rookies and taking them far too early in drafts. That enables us to wait on some of the more productive, less-sexy veteran players who we know will perform well for us over the course of an 18-week season.

We are also at an advantage with regard to knowing who the coaches are and what schemes they will run this season. The more casual fantasy player will wait until training camp to see what roles are being established. This allows us to be more sensible with our speculative late-round picks. If you know how a coach/coordinator likes to run his offense, you can find useful fantasy components at bargain costs. Once training camp starts and roles are better defined for the public, the ADP will rise and you won’t find the draft cost to be as reasonable.

We’ll be going through this throughout the offseason, but it’s always great to see it in action too, right? That’s why I jumped into one of the drafts for The Fantasy Championship last week. I wanted to stake my claim on certain players, build a team using my post-Draft and preseason knowledge and see how it all stacked up with some of the fiercest high-stakes players here at RT Sports.

Below is a full round-by round, pick-by pick breakdown of my TFC draft last week. You can read all the player write-ups below and if you want to hear it all as it was happening live, check out the livestream I did with Jeff Paur. Enjoy!

Click Here for the Draft Board

Round 1:

Ja’Marr Chase, WR CIN – I’m not sure this even requires analysis, but for those wondering why him over someone like Saquon Barkley, it’s simple. Last season, he led all wide receivers in fantasy scoring by more than 60 points in PPR formats and he’s Joe Burrow’s No. 1 target in a pass-heavy scheme. The Bengals didn’t do much to bolster their already horrendous defense, so we can probably expect quite a number of shootouts once again.

Round 2:

Breece Hall, RB NYJ – The offense is going to look significantly different without Aaron Rodgers and with new offensive coordinator Tanner Engstrand bringing over elements of what he learned under Ben Johnson, we can be excited for the usage we should see for Hall. Is Braelon Allen going to be a thing? He may be involved, but Hall is the lead guy and will be used as such.

Round 3:

Kenneth Walker III, RB SEA – This might be considered a reach by some but I don’t see him coming back to me in the next round, based on my draft position. The Seahawks brought in Klint Kubiak as their new offensive coordinator and he, in turn, added famed offensive line coach Rick Dennison to set up the blocking scheme. If you’re not familiar with how Klint’s father Gary built offenses with Dennison back in the day, just go back into NFL history and look for names like Mike Anderson, Reuben Droughns, Orlandis Gary, Steve Slaton, Arian Foster and Dalvin Cook. Every single one of them had their best seasons working under Kubiak and Dennison.

Round 4:

Courtland Sutton, WR DEN – With two locked-in running backs and Chase on the roster, I opted to dive back into the wide receiver pool. Sutton has led the Broncos in targets and receiving yards since Sean Payton and Joe Lombardi took over and will continue his work as the X-receiver in this offensive scheme. This is another “buy into the coaching system more than the name of the player” situation as Payton and Lombardi funnel targets to the X-receiver constantly. Remember Marques Colston? Michael Thomas? Heck, even Mike Williams was dominant when Lombardi was with the Chargers.

Round 5:

Mike Evans, WR TB – New offensive coordinator John Grizzard wants to maintain what Liam Coen did in Tampa Bay last year which means it’s more Baker Mayfield to Mike Evans for us again. Will it now be 12 straight seasons with 1,000 yards for the wideout? Probably.

Round 6:

Tyrone Tracy Jr., RB NYG – Starting rosters have two running backs and two wide receivers, so with three top receivers on the roster, I wanted to make sure I had a legitimate third running back as well. This draft was extremely RB-heavy, so the pickings were getting slim. Tracy is expected to be the lead back for the G-Men with Cam Skattebo serving as the complementary runner – think Tony Pollard/Tajae Spears – so grabbing him now as my third back makes sense.

Round 7:

Bo Nix, QB DEN – I am very bullish on the Broncos offense this year and Nix is a huge part of it. With top mobile QBs off the board, I still wanted to make sure I drafted someone with that element as well. Nix finished the season eighth overall in rushing yards for quarterbacks and now that he has a legitimate threat behind him in RJ Harvey, the RPO work should prove more effective and even get us some extra rushing work. In Year 2 of this offense, I think 4,000 passing yards with 500 rushing yards is well within reach.

Round 8:

Evan Engram, TE DEN – And that completes by Broncos stack, a strategy I often like to apply to large-field tournaments. Payton and Lombardi have been looking for a player to serve as their “joker,” a non-receiver who can line up as such, run clean routes and has good hands. Engram showed us that he can play that part after dominating with targets and receptions in Jacksonville. The correlation between what Payton and Lombardi are doing now versus how they built their team in New Orleans is evident. Harvey plays the Alvin Kamara role, Sutton is the Michael Thomas role and that leaves Engram to be the next Jimmy Graham? Yes, please!

Round 9:

Marquise Brown, WR KC – He’s a field-stretcher who can go over the middle as well and he signed another one-year, prove-it deal with the Chiefs. He wants to pad his stats thanks to Patrick Mahomes and then head out to free agency again. It would have happened last year had he not gotten hurt. While the pick is solid, I probably made a mistake here, though. Seeing Zach Charbonnet go two picks later was a punch in the guy. He’s the handcuff to Walker and given the injuries Walker has sustained and with how Charbonnet received all the touches in his [Walker’s] absence, you know he’s going to be featured at times this season. If I could change one pick in this draft for me, this would be it.

Round 10:

Jaydon Blue, RB DAL – This was my “on-tilt, need RB depth pick” after steaming over Charbonnet for over a full round. Tough to believe in Javonte Williams or Miles Sanders at this point, so it does seem reasonable to believe Blue could end up the featured back by the early-to-middle of the season. If he does become a starter, my RB corps is fierce.

Round 11:

Cedric Tillman, WR CLE – He’s the field-stretcher for the Browns offense. Who’s throwing the football is still up for grabs, but regardless of who is under center, Tillman will be relied upon to be a strong, vertical threat. Hen playing in tournaments like this, you need some “boom or bust” guys.

Round 12:

J.J. McCarthy, QB MIN – Having been in situations like this and being forced to the waiver wire for QB help, I thought it best to grab a backup. Hopefully, when the NFL schedule comes out, I won’t have a bye week issue, but in the meantime, I’m going to push the chips alli n for McCarthy. He’s got a mobile element to his game, he’s in a pass-heavy offense and he’s got elite-level targets in Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison and T.J. Hockenson.

Round 13:

Tyler Conklin, TE LAC – While the rest of the world still believes Will Dissly is the Chargers top tight end, I’ll sneak in Conklin here because I believe he WILL be the team’s top pass-catching tight end. Greg Roman loves to use 12-personnel and Dissly profiles more as the in-line blocker. That’s why they added Conklin in free agency. I’m not saying he’s the next Mark Andres, but a similar snap count and potential target share? Maybe!

Round 14:

Darius Slayton, WR NYG – He’s the forgotten man in New York and that’s fine by me. Let the world focus on Malik Nabers. Slayton should work himself in opposite Nabers most of the way with Wan’Dale Robinson working out of the slot for shorter, chain-moving routes. Slayton can stretch the field with his speed and he’s been surprisingly strong with his given workload.

Round 15:

Roschon Johnson, RB CHI – He’s a depth-play running back for me here, but let’s face it – the Bears did nothing to beef up that running back room. D’Andre Swift takes the lead role but we’ve seen him fizzle out as the season rolls on. If the Bears don’t sign Nick Chubb (the rumor mill is spicy!), Johnson could earn a larger role.

Round 16:

Tyler Lockett, WR TEN – He can stretch the field and he can work out of the slot. The best way to get Cam Ward ready for his NFL career is to boost his confidence with some solid pass-catching veterans. I expect hi to work opposite Calvin Ridley and have some good “boom or bust” potential.

Round 17:

Pat Bryant, WR DEN – Yes, another man from the Broncos. Following the draft, Sean Payton discussed how Bryant reminds him of Michael Thomas. That’s a pretty big endorsement. If we aren’t enamored with Sutton, perhaps Bryant gets an opportunity to shine as a potential-receiver.

Round 18:

Houston Texans D/ST – We need to start a team defense, so considering the power, speed and ability to turn the ball over, we can lock in Will Anderson, Danielle Hunter and the Texans. Strong sack totals and their improving secondary led by Derrick Stingley should land us some picks in the defensive backfield.

Round 19:

Will Lutz, K DEN – Yes, we also need to start a kicker. Obviously, I’m bullish on the Broncos offense, but we also get the altitude and thin air in Denver which helps the ball travel further. Lutz was 16-for-18 in field goals over 40 yards. I’ll take that all day.

Round 20:

Miles Sanders, RB DAL – My own personal Mr. Irrelevant. He’s a potential handcuff for the Dallas running back room. We’ll see what he does. Nothing wrong with having two-thirds of a room this early in the preseason. It will sort out before the season starts and if he’s a first-cut, so be it.

So, there you have it, folks. A little pick-by-pick TFC breakdown. Again, if you want to hear the breakdown (and the Round 9 meltdown) in real time, check out the livestream Jeff Paur and I did on the RT Sports YouTube page. And don’t forget to join us every Wednesday night at 9 PM as we bring you more draft coverage throughout the preseason.

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Player Notes
Stefon Diggs Jul 24 8:50pm CT
Stefon Diggs

New England Patriots wide receiver Stefon Diggs has been "remarkably fluid in his routes and a consistent target" for quarterback Drake Maye, according to Chad Graff of The Athletic. It's a great sign for the 31-year-old coming off an ACL tear he suffered in October 2024. Diggs played well for the Houston Texans before the injury, hauling in 47 catches for 496 yards and three touchdowns in eight games. The Patriots signed him to a three-year, $63.5 million contract this past offseason, and he'll be relied upon to be the number one receiver in an offense that is desperate for playmakers in the passing game. Diggs may no longer have the same downfield juice he did in his peak, but he could be a PPR monster if healthy. In Drake Maye's second season, New England's offense should be improved to at least some degree relative to 2024.

From RotoBaller

Keon Coleman Jul 24 8:40pm CT
Keon Coleman

Buffalo Bills second-year wide receiver Keon Coleman "failed to deliver on several opportunities" in practice on Wednesday, according to Joe Buscaglia of The Athletic. Buscaglia notes that Coleman struggled to create separation, which has been a consistent issue throughout his NFL career so far. Buffalo used a second-round pick on Coleman in 2024, and he caught 29 passes for 556 yards and four touchdowns as a rookie. Khalil Shakir emerged as the team's top wide receiver target last season, and the Bills signed veteran Joshua Palmer to compete with Coleman on the outside. Coleman will have every opportunity to win a prominent role, but he's off to an inauspicious start to training camp after early reporting indicated he was also inconsistent during minicamp in the spring. He's a high-upside bet in fantasy, but he has a long way to go before he's can be counted on as a consistent contributor.

From RotoBaller

Quintez Cephus Jul 24 8:30pm CT
Quintez Cephus

The San Francisco 49ers have signed wide receiver Quintez Cephus, according to Jennifer Lee Chan of NBC Sports Bay Area. The team waived running back Israel Abanikanda to make room on the roster for Cephus. Originally drafted in 2020 by the Detroit Lions, Cephus has not appeared in an NFL game since 2022. He profiles as a depth piece in San Francisco, but the 49ers need all the help at wide receiver they can get. Top wideouts Brandon Aiyuk (knee) and Ricky Pearsall (hamstring) are on the active/physically unable to perform list, and Jacob Cowing (hamstring) left the team's practice on Wednesday due to injury. Jauan Jennings is healthy and practicing, but he's reportedly seeking a trade if the team does not offer him a new contract. Under head coach Kyle Shanahan, San Francisco has proven the ability to get production out of unheralded players. Even still, Cephus is a long shot to make an impact in fantasy in 2025.

From RotoBaller

Christian Wilkins Jul 24 8:30pm CT
Christian Wilkins

Las Vegas Raiders defensive tackle Christian Wilkins has been released by the team, according to Ian Rapoport of NFL Network. It's a shocking turn of events for the 29-year-old, who signed a long-term deal with Las Vegas worth over $100M in March 2024. Wilkins played 51 straight games for the Miami Dolphins from 2021 to 2023, but injuries limited him to just five appearances for the Raiders in 2024. Rapoport reports that Wilkins and the team disagree about how to treat his ongoing foot injury, with Wilkins preferring rehab and the Raiders pushing for surgery. When he's on the field, Wilkins is a difference-maker on the interior. He recorded nine sacks, 10 TFLs, and 23 QB hits in 2023. His health is a limiting factor, but Wilkins will surely have a chance to latch on somewhere else and prove he can still contribute.

From RotoBaller

Tucker Kraft Jul 24 8:20pm CT
Tucker Kraft

The Green Bay Packers are searching for ways to expand tight end Tucker Kraft's role in the passing game, according to Mark Oldacres of Packers Wire. Kraft took a step forward in his second season in 2024, recording 50 catches for 707 yards and seven touchdowns. However, Oldacres notes that 101 of his 118 career targets have been either behind the line of scrimmage or in the short area (zero to 10 yards). Heading into 2025, the coaching staff in Green Bay is working on how to get Kraft more involved down the field. Between Jayden Reed, Romeo Doubs, Dontayvion Wicks, and rookies Matthew Golden and Savion Williams, the Packers have a deep group of wide receivers, but none of them are cemented as a true go-to target for quarterback Jordan Love. If Kraft can grab hold of a larger share of the pass-game volume in Green Bay, he's talented enough to be a difference-making fantasy tight end.

From RotoBaller

Darnell Mooney Jul 24 6:40pm CT
Darnell Mooney

Atlanta Falcons wide receiver Darnell Mooney (undisclosed) came off the field with a trainer during training camp practice on Thursday after missing a catch and didn't return, according to Marc Raimondi of ESPN. It's unclear what type of injury Mooney is dealing with and how severe it is, but we should have clarification on his status soon. The 27-year-old had a nice bounce-back season in his first year in Atlanta last year, catching 64 of his 106 targets for 992 yards and a career-high five touchdowns in 16 starts. He also had career-highs in yards per catch (15.5) and yards per target (9.4). If healthy, Mooney should once again serve as the WR2 in Atlanta behind Drake London. While fantasy managers shouldn't necessarily be expecting a repeat of 2024, Mooney should still be useful as at least a WR4/flex with quarterback Michael Penix Jr. heading into his first full year as the starter.

From RotoBaller

Trevor Lawrence Jul 24 6:30pm CT
Trevor Lawrence

Speaking at the team's first training camp practice on Wednesday, Jacksonville Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence (shoulder) said he's 100 percent healthy after missing seven games last year due to a shoulder injury and a concussion, per Jags beat writer John Oehser. Lawrence required season-ending surgery in December on his left (non-throwing) shoulder. "I feel really good," Lawrence said. "It's the best I felt in a long time physically." In addition to rehabbing in the offseason, the 25-year-old former first overall pick spent time honing in on his footwork. Lawrence so far hasn't lived up to his draft billing, but he was a Pro Bowler in 2022 and should be able to have a bounce-back season in head coach Liam Coen's offense in 2025. He'll have a nice one-two punch of Brian Thomas Jr. and Travis Hunter at wideout as well, making him a decent QB2 target with upside in superflex fantasy formats.

From RotoBaller

Brandon Aubrey Jul 24 6:20pm CT
Brandon Aubrey

Dallas Cowboys kicker Brandon Aubrey (shoulder) made five of his six field-goal tries into the wind during training camp practice on Thursday, per Calvin Watkins of The Dallas Morning News. It's notable that Aubrey is practicing early on in training camp this summer after he had surgery on his shoulder in the offseason. The 30-year-old should be a full-go for the start of the regular season and should be considered one of the top fantasy kicking options going into his third year with Dallas. Aubrey has been a Pro Bowler in both of his first two NFL seasons and is coming off a 2024 in which he made 40 of a league-high 47 field-goal attempts, including a long of 65, in 17 regular-season games. He also made all 30 of his extra-point attempts. RotoBaller has Aubrey ranked as the top fantasy kicker.

From RotoBaller

Quinshon Judkins Jul 24 6:20pm CT
Quinshon Judkins

Cleveland Browns general manager Andrew Berry said on Thursday that he doesn't expect to see rookie second-round running back Quinshon Judkins on the field at training camp for a while. Judkins was arrested on July 12 in Florida on a charge of battery and domestic violence and remains unsigned. The Browns are in no rush to sign Judkins to his rookie deal as they gather information around his legal issues. The 21-year-old is a big-play threat any time he has the football in his hands and rushed for 1,060 yards and 14 touchdowns for Ohio State in 2024. He was drafted with the 36th overall pick in April and was viewed as the future lead back, but that might be put on pause as he faces missed games in 2025 due to a potential suspension. The longer Judkins remains away from the team, the more it helps the fantasy stock of both Jerome Ford (undisclosed) and rookie Dylan Sampson.

From RotoBaller

Jameson Williams Jul 24 6:10pm CT
Jameson Williams

Detroit Lions wide receiver Jameson Williams has noticed new offensive coordinator John Morton's aggressiveness in his approach to taking deep shots down the field, and it's one of the major areas that Williams thinks he has improved since a year ago, writes ESPN's Eric Woodyard. "My route running -- coach Johnny Mo is letting me run more routes," Williams said. "I knew I could run more routes, but he's putting me in position to run more routes so I'm getting better with cuts and angles and how to run this route and that route, so I would say I'm more polished in my route game." There is a lot of pressure on Morton after Detroit's offense averaged 29 points per game over the last three seasons under Ben Johnson, who is now in Chicago. Williams broke out in 2024, but there are a lot of mouth to feed in this offense, making him a boom/bust WR2/3 target in fantasy.

From RotoBaller

Michael Woods II Jul 24 6:00pm CT
Michael Woods II

Cleveland Browns wide receiver Michael Woods II (hand) was not on the field for training camp practice on Thursday due to a hand injury, according to Scott Petrak of The Elyria Chronicle Telegram. It's unclear how serious Woods' hand injury is, but it's yet another injury for the former sixth-round pick (202nd overall) in 2022. The 25-year-old had five catches for 45 yards and no touchdowns in his rookie campaign in 10 games, missed all of 2023 due to injury and caught just seven of 17 targets for 65 yards and no scores in only five games (two starts) in 2024. He missed the season finale last year with a knee injury that also caused him to miss some workouts this spring. Woods is going to need to stay healthy, but even if he does, he will probably be on the outside looking in for a starting spot behind Jerry Jeudy, Cedric Tillman and Diontae Johnson.

From RotoBaller

Cordarrelle Patterson Jul 24 5:40pm CT
Cordarrelle Patterson

Pittsburgh Steelers running back Cordarrelle Patterson (undisclosed) missed the team's first training camp practice on Thursday with an undisclosed injury, according to head coach Mike Tomlin. Patterson is considered day-to-day, which means he should be able to rejoin his teammates soon. In his first year with the Steelers in 2024, Patterson carried the ball 32 times for 132 yards and no touchdowns while catching 12 of his 14 targets for 80 yards and a touchdown. Although Najee Harris is out of town, the Steelers added Kenneth Gainwell and Trey Sermon in free agency and drafted Kaleb Johnson, so the 34-year-old Patterson once again figures to struggle for consistent touches in a backfield that also includes Jaylen Warren. Patterson is definitely versatile on offense, but he will be off the fantasy radar once again in most leagues.

From RotoBaller

Artie Burns Jul 24 5:20pm CT
Artie Burns

The Miami Dolphins announced on Thursday that they placed cornerback Artie Burns (knee) on Injured Reserve and waived offensive lineman Tedi Kushi. They also signed cornerback Cornell Armstrong and offensive lineman Obinna Eze in corresponding moves. Burns suffered a season-ending torn ACL in training camp practice on Wednesday and will miss the entire 2025 campaign. Storm Duck and Cam Smith are projected to start on the boundaries for the Dolphins secondary this year, with Kader Kohou being the primary nickelback. With the 30-year-old Burns now sidelined all year, Kendall Sheffield and John Saunders will see more opportunities as depth in Miami's defensive backfield.

From RotoBaller

Ja'Lynn Polk Jul 24 5:20pm CT
Ja'Lynn Polk

New England Patriots wide receiver Ja'Lynn Polk (undisclosed) missed another training camp practice on Thursday with what is considered minor muscle tightness, per Mike Reiss of ESPN. The Patriots are playing it safe with Polk early in camp, but any practice he misses could be crucial for last year's second-round pick who is battling for a roster spot this summer. The 23-year-old was previously dealing with a shoulder injury earlier this offseason, but he passed his physical, which is why he was left off the Physically Unable to Perform list to begin camp. Polk has plenty of ground to make up after he caught only 12 passes in 15 games for New England as a rookie in 2024. He will have opportunities with this new coaching staff, but it won't be easy to find playing time in what is now a somewhat crowded receiver room.

From RotoBaller

Justin Jefferson Jul 24 5:10pm CT
Justin Jefferson

Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Justin Jefferson (legs) had some mild tightness in his legs during training camp practice on Thursday and sat out the end of practice as a result, according to Kevin Seifert of ESPN. The Vikings have no concerns, even in the short term, and they are just being extra cautious to prevent the leg issues that Jefferson experienced in 2023. It doesn't make sense to put the 26-year-old All-Pro pass-catcher in harm's way so early in camp. Fantasy managers shouldn't be at all concerned for now as he heads into his first season catching passes from former first-round quarterback J.J. McCarthy. Jefferson has had over 1,000 yards receiving in all five of his NFL seasons and went for a 103-1,533-10 line in 17 regular-season starts with Sam Darnold at QB in 2024. He's the No. 2 fantasy wideout, behind only Ja'Marr Chase.

From RotoBaller

Ladd McConkey Jul 24 5:00pm CT
Ladd McConkey

The Athletic's Daniel Popper writes that Los Angeles Chargers wide receiver Ladd McConkey's chemistry with quarterback Justin Herbert continues to blossom in Year 2 and described it as a "seemingly telepathic connection." McConkey knows when to sit down on routes against certain defensive looks, when to manipulate defensive leverages and when to expect the ball from Herbert on either shoulder. Head coach Jim Harbaugh said this week that McConkey "is uncoverable right now by one guy." For the 23-year-old Georgia product to really thrive, he needs one of Quentin Johnston or rookies Tre Harris and Keandre Lambert-Smith to threaten defenses deep down the field. McConkey was a stud in his first year in the NFL, catching 82 of his 112 targets for 1,149 yards and seven touchdowns. Despite being in a run-first offense, he's a low-end WR1/high-end WR2 in fantasy.

From RotoBaller

Tre Harris Jul 24 4:40pm CT
Tre Harris

Los Angeles Chargers rookie wide receiver Tre Harris got more opportunities with the first-team offense in training camp practice on Wednesday with Jalen Reagor out with an undisclosed injury, but The Athletic's Daniel Popper writes that Harris was inconsistent. Meanwhile, rookie fifth-round wideout Keandre Lambert-Smith elevated his stock the most on Wednesday, making a couple nice adjustments on underthrown deep balls from quarterback Trey Lance. He missed most of the practices in the spring with an injury, but Lambert-Smith is healthy now and has an intriguing mix of deep-field speed, natural hands and elite body control. Ladd McConkey is the clear WR1 in L.A.'s passing attack, but Harris, Lambert-Smith and Quentin Johnston will all be battling for targets behind him this summer. Harris has gotten off to a slow start, but it's still early.

From RotoBaller

Jerome Ford Jul 24 4:20pm CT
Jerome Ford

Cleveland Browns running back Jerome Ford (undisclosed) will miss another day of training camp practice on Thursday, according to Daniel Oyefusi of ESPN. Head coach Kevin Stefanski said that Ford is dealing with something from the last couple of weeks but that "he'll be OK." Ford should join the rest of the team on the field sooner than later, and with rookie second-rounder Quinshon Judkins still unsigned in the wake of his domestic-violence charges, Ford will operate as Cleveland's RB1 going forward. With both Judkins and Ford out this week, rookie Dylan Sampson and Pierre Strong Jr. will more opportunities to impress the coaching staff. Judkins is expected to take over primary rushing duties for the Browns by season's end, but it remains to be seen when he'll join the team, and he could be facing a suspension on top of it.

From RotoBaller

Quentin Johnston Jul 24 4:20pm CT
Quentin Johnston

Los Angeles Chargers wide receiver Quentin Johnston had five touchdown catches in the first five days of training camp, according to The Athletic's Daniel Popper, and his ball-tracking looked vastly improved on throws down the field over his shoulder. However, Johnston took a step back on Wednesday and dropped a pass that hit him in the chest when he was wide open in the middle of the field. Popper writes that the fact that these type of lapses are still happening for the former first-rounder in his third season is concerning. The confidence that the 23-year-old showed early in camp appears to have dissipated somewhat. Mike Williams retired just before the start of camp, but Ladd McConkey will remain a target hog in L.A, and the Bolts also drafted Tre Harris and Keandre Lambert-Smith. Johnston must prove it to earn substantial playing time in 2025.

From RotoBaller

Roman Wilson Jul 24 4:10pm CT
Roman Wilson

Penn Live's Nick Farabaugh reports that Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Roman Wilson is starting in three-wide sets with the first-team offense alongside DK Metcalf and Calvin Austin III to start training camp practice this week. Wilson, a third-rounder (84th overall) last year out of Michigan, missed the majority of his first season in the NFL due to injury and was active for just one game. With George Pickens in Dallas, there's plenty of opportunity for Wilson to make a statement in what will essentially be his first year in the league. Behind Wilson and Austin, the Steelers have only veteran Robert Woods, Scotty Miller and Ben Skowronek -- not exactly the most threatening competition. Wilson will have opportunity, but as a speedy deep threat across from Metcalf, it might be hard for him to stand out on a weekly basis.

From RotoBaller