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Dynasty Nerds Podcast | Dynasty Fantasy Football

Dynasty Nerds Podcast | Dynasty Fantasy Football

By: Dynasty Fantasy Football
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The #1 Dynasty League fantasy football podcast. We talk fantasy strategy, trades, free-agent signings, weekly sits and starts, buy lows and sell highs, rookies breakdowns, and everything else NFL. Whether you're just starting a league or have been in a dynasty fantasy league for years this podcast has it all! We're here to help you create your dynasty and win league championships!2021 © Dynastynerds.com Football
Episodes
  • Top 20 Rookie WRs Rankings & Tiers! NFL Draft Podcast EP. 21
    Mar 27 2026
    Pro days are done, combine numbers are locked in, and the 2026 wide receiver class just got a full re-sort. Jagger May and Andrew Mott run through their updated top 20 WR tiers, debate where the consensus is getting it wrong, and make the case that this receiver class — despite lacking true superstar-level prospects — goes deeper than most people are giving it credit for. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00 Start 00:25 S Tier 02:38 A Tier 10:08 B Tier 14:57 C Tier 19:27 D Tier 42:54 F Tier Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    53 mins
  • 2026 Rookie WRs Pt. 1 (Tyson, Lane, Bell, Brown, Stribling, and Douglas)! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 810
    Mar 26 2026
    The 2026 wide receiver class is officially open for business on the Dynasty Nerds podcast. Rich Dotson, Matt O'Hara, and Garret Price kick off their multi-episode WR breakdown series with six prospects, headlined by one of the most debated players in the class and a few names that spark genuine disagreement on the film room tape. Jordyn Tyson out of Arizona State is the centerpiece of this episode and for good reason — some analysts have him as the number one receiver in the class, others as number three. The crew lands somewhere in between. Tyson earns nerd scores of 77.2 (Rich) and 76.5 (Garret), putting him in the same historical range as Jaylen Waddle and Drake London, with a few cautionary names like Jalen Reagor mixed in. The praise is real: he's a smooth, savvy route runner who gets open against zone at will, works every alignment, and has a 67% contested catch win rate by one metric. The concern is equally real: against press man coverage — specifically the Utah tape — he struggles to create separation, offers almost nothing after the catch, and carries an extensive injury history including a 2022 ACL/MCL, a 2024 broken collarbone, and multiple hamstring injuries in 2025 that prevented him from finishing a season for the third straight year. The consensus projection is WR 1.4 to 1.5 territory in SuperFlex rookie drafts, with Carnell Tate and Makai Lemon grading in a tier above him. His floor comp is Jerry Jeudy; his ceiling is Amari Cooper or Garrett Wilson in the right situation. Ja'Kobi Lane from USC is the kind of player who helps an NFL team more than he helps your dynasty roster — at least in the short term. At 6-4 with a 40-inch vertical, massive catch radius, and vice-grip hands that give him a clear advantage in contested situations, the tape is legitimately intriguing. Garret scores him a 75.8, Matt comes in at 73.4, and the gap reflects a genuine split on how much to weigh his route-running limitations. He's a build-up speed guy, not a burst guy, and physical corners can knock him around at the line. He played through a lower-body injury in 2025 that may explain a down statistical year, and the crew encourages revisiting his 2024 tape before locking in a final grade. Dream landing spots: the Raiders alongside Fernando Mendoza, or New England with Drake Maye. Ceiling: Tee Higgins. Floor: a big possession receiver who helps teams more than dynasty managers. Stay current on all of these receivers with the Dynasty Rankings and go deeper with the Film Room as four more wide receiver episodes drop in the coming weeks. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00:00 Start 00:01:17 Jordyn Tyson 00:23:04 Ja'Kobi Lane 00:37:14 Skyler Bell 00:48:05 FFPC 00:49:38 Barion Brown 00:58:37 De'Zhaun Stribling 01:08:17 Caleb Douglas Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    1 hr and 18 mins
  • 2026 Rookie RBs Pt. 3 (Price, Singleton, Moss, Miller, Hemby, Faison)! Dynasty Fantasy Football Podcast EP. 809
    Mar 25 2026
    Rich Dotson, Matt O'Hara, and Garret Price close out the class with six running backs who, outside of the top tier, struggle to inspire confidence in any dynasty format. Jadarian Price out of Notre Dame may carry the "consensus RB2" label in many dynasty circles, but all three hosts come away largely underwhelmed. Price earns nerd scores in the low-to-mid 73s — respectable for this class, but not the kind of tape that inspires first-round dynasty capital. His vision, patience, and contact balance are legitimate strengths, but his near-total absence from the passing game (just 15 career receptions) is a glaring red flag in PPR formats. The hosts land on Price as a prototypical 1.5-to-2-year window guy — the kind of back an NFL team leans on in a pinch before eventually upgrading. Solid, not special. Nick Singleton came into Penn State with first-round buzz and a reputation as the premier running back in his recruiting class. What the Dynasty Nerds film room found was something far less exciting. Singleton scores a 70.8 (Rich) and 69.8 (Garret) — RB5 by default in a shallow class. He has the size, speed, and pass-catching ability to intrigue NFL teams, but his vision is described as "atrocious," his hips are tight, and he offers zero wiggle in the open field. He's a straight-line athlete playing running back rather than a polished NFL prospect. The crew agrees he's a late Day 3 pick — a high-ceiling project that dynasty managers should treat as a third-round flier at best. Le'Von Moss from Texas A&M had just seven games last season before tearing his MCL and ACL, and the limited film makes a full evaluation nearly impossible. When healthy, the crew acknowledges real tools — initial burst, angry running style, low pad level, and surprisingly better lateral movement than Singleton. But with only 121 career carries at his peak and no involvement in the passing game (two career receptions in 2025), Moss falls into the fourth tier of this class. Garret scores him a 68.7. The health question mark simply overshadows everything else. Jam Miller from Alabama carries the stigma of Crimson Tide running backs without the résumé to back it up. His 4.42 40-yard dash was legitimately surprising, and his pass protection grades are a relative bright spot, but that's about it. Poor vision, missed cutback lanes, and a concerning inability to break tackles leave the hosts stumped on how he gets drafted. Rich scores him a 65.6; Garret gives him a 63.7. The consensus: great athlete in the real world, not a dynasty asset in this one. Roman Hemby out of Indiana is everything you expect from a backup running back — nothing more, nothing less. He reads blocks well, almost never fumbles (two career fumbles on 710 carries), catches the ball adequately, and runs with purpose. But he lacks burst, top-end speed, and any ability to make defenders miss after contact. Garret scores him a 67.5. Rich identifies him as the best run blocker in this entire class. He'll stay on rosters because coaches will like him — but if he's ever starting, his team is already making calls. A true baked potato. No butter. The wild card of the episode is Rahsul Faison from South Carolina — a 26-year-old prospect who started college football in 2019, before COVID, and somehow scores a 70.5 on Rich's nerd scale (sixth in the class on tape alone). The age kills his dynasty outlook, but the tape is surprisingly watchable: genuine elusiveness, strong instincts, natural hands, and a high forced-missed-tackle rate per PFF. The hosts agree he's more of a priority free agent or late-round flier than a dynasty stash — but in a class this thin, even a 26-year-old with good tape stands out. His taxi squad eligibility running out before he'd realistically age off your roster is half the selling point. The 2026 running back class outside of Jeremiyah Love is genuinely one of the weakest in recent memory. Nerd scores drop from the 80s (Love) to the low 70s (Mike Washington, Jonah Coleman, Jadarian Price) and then fall below 70 for everyone else. The hosts' advice: be patient, look for value in receivers and tight ends with your premium picks, and only reach for these backs if the landing spot justifies the risk. Monitor all of them as draft capital shakes out with the Dynasty Rankings. Start Using the Film Room Today! FFPC: New Users: Use promo code NERDS for $25 off your first FFPC Orphan Team! 00:00:00 Start 00:01:52 Jadarian Price 00:17:20 Nick Singleton 00:28:19 Le'Von Moss 00:38:56 FFPC 00:42:19 Jam Miller 00:47:16 Roman Hemby 00:54:27 Rahsul Faison Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    1 hr and 7 mins
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