🖥 CYBER WEEK - TAP TO SAVE 50% WITH CODE CYBER
X
Lost password?

Don't have an account?
Gain Access Now

X

Receive free daily analysis

NFL
NBA
NHL
NASCAR
CFB
MLB
MMA
PGA
ESPORTS
BETTING

Already have an account? Log In

X

Forgot Password


POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Import Your Leagues
Weekly Rankings
Compare Any Players
Projections
Articles & Tools
Weekly Planner
24x7 News and Alerts

Fantasy Football Wide Receivers You Must Draft in 2024 - Part II

Cooper Kupp - Fantasy Football Rankings, NFL Injury News, Draft Targets

An in-depth look at three fantasy football WRs available at different rounds of your draft that need to be selected in 2024. This is Rob's second entry in the series.

In 2024, fantasy football managers are all about wide receivers, but we’re also about value. With prices skyrocketing everywhere else, we don’t want to pay above market value for a player. We also don’t want to pay for a player at the cost of their 90th-percentile outcome. We need the potential to get a positive return on our investment. In the second entry of this series, we’ll be identifying receivers fantasy managers need to draft this season at their current cost.

Our first entry already dropped and discussed three receivers every fantasy manager should try to leave their draft with because of their upside and reasonable price tag, which allows for a positive return on the investment. We’ll be adding three more receivers in this edition.

At RotoBaller, we want to help make your fantasy football season great. Our premium tools can help you win your league’s championship. To get a 10% discount on your subscription, please use promo code “BOOM” at checkout.

Be sure to check all of our fantasy football rankings for 2025:

 

Cooper Kupp, Los Angeles Rams

It’s amazing how much can change in a season. Kupp can be drafted as the WR21 in Yahoo! drafts and WR24 on the Underdog platform. Those rankings aren’t egregious by any means, but it was just 2021 when Kupp had the best all-time regular and fantasy season for a receiver. Then, in 2022, he was on pace for 197 targets, 153 receptions, 1,727 yards, and 13 touchdowns. Sure, his 2023 was slightly down after an early-season high-ankle sprain and Puka Nacua’s emergence, but those factors are just helping create a nice buying window for Kupp this year.

Kupp played in 12 games last year, but he played just 27% of the snaps in one. Since no one can predict injuries, let’s eliminate that game to see what Kupp was doing in games he played from start to finish. In those 11 other contests, Kupp averaged 8.55 targets, 5.27 receptions, 66 yards, and 0.45 touchdowns per game. Those numbers equate to 145 targets, 90 receptions, 1,122 yards, and 7.5 touchdowns.

Since Stafford has been with the Rams, he’s averaged over 35 pass attempts per game. In the Rams' final seven games, Kupp had a 23.4% target share, which would work to around 140 targets per game. This passing offense will operate through Nacua and Kupp in a big way. It has to. There’s no one else. It’s Demarcus Robinson, Tutu Atwell, or whichever tight end ends up starting over Tyler Higbee, who suffered a torn ACL late in the season. Seeing Nacua and Kupp commandeer 50-55% of Stafford’s targets shouldn't be surprising.

It should be noted that for Kupp’s entire career before 2023, he had a 73.0% catch rate. That fell to 62.1% in 2023. If we’re working off of Kupp having around 140 targets, giving him just a 70.0% catch rate would result in him having 98 receptions. Using his career yards-per-reception average of 12.5, he’d finish with 1,225 yards.

Fantasy managers will likely have forgotten, but in 2021, Kupp was the WR1. In nine games, Robert Woods had a 12.7 half-PPR PPG average, which ranked WR14 on the season. In 2019, Kupp was WR9 and Woods was WR20. Woods was WR11 and Kupp was WR13 in 2018 in half-PPR PPG. Head coach Sean McVay having two receivers finish in the top 20 shouldn’t be all that surprising. His offenses have accomplished the feat multiple times, and I expect it to happen again this season.

 

Amari Cooper, Cleveland Browns

Since being traded to the Browns in 2022, Cooper has been incredibly consistent. In his first season, he finished with 132 targets, 78 receptions, 1,160 yards, and nine touchdowns. Last year, he finished with 128 targets, 72 receptions, 1,250 yards, and five touchdowns in 15 games. His per-game averages in Cleveland equate to 138 targets, 80 receptions, 1,280 yards, and 7.5 touchdowns. Since 2022, Cooper ranks 13th in targets, 22nd in receptions, eighth in yards, and 11th in touchdowns. Cooper also has the 13th-best full-PPR PPG average among receivers, with at least 15 games played since 2022 at 14.78.

Last season, Cooper finished with a 23.6% target share (22nd highest) and a 42.4% air yards share (fourth highest). His 1,820 air yards were the seventh highest among receivers. He still managed to finish with 841 unrealized air yards, which was the 10th highest. Cooper averaged 2.35 yards per route run (15th highest), 9.8 yards per target (12th highest), 17.4 yards per reception (third highest), and 2.20 yards per team pass attempt (13th highest).

Fantasy managers are drafting him as the WR29 on Underdog and WR27 on Yahoo! This is despite Cooper finishing as the WR13 in 2022 and WR16 in 2023. Fantasy managers are likely concerned about Deshaun Watson; however, in five games where Watson started over 20% of the snaps last season, Cooper averaged 14.8 half-PPR points. Below, you can see Cooper's five-game stretch with Watson under center in 2023.

Week Targets Receptions Yards TDs Half-PPR WR Rank
Week 1 7 3 37 0 5.2 WR61
Week 2 10 7 90 0 12.5 WR32
Week 3 8 7 116 1 21.1 WR9
Week 9 5 5 139 1 22.4 WR4
Week 10 9 6 98 0 12.8 WR20
Average 7.8 5.6 96.0 0.4 14.8

During those five weeks with Watson, Cooper averaged 2.79 yards per route run, 12.3 yards per target, 17.1 yards per reception, and 2.89 yards per team pass attempt. Among receivers, he would've ranked sixth in yards per route run, third in yards per target, fourth in yards per reception, and third in yards per team pass attempt.

There's certainly an argument for this being a small sample size, but the results are encouraging nonetheless. From a statistical perspective, his per-game averages would amount to 133 targets, 95 receptions, 1,632 yards, and seven touchdowns over 17 games. His 14.8 half-PPR PPG average would've finished sixth last season. From an efficiency standpoint, Cooper ranks in the top six in several of the most predictive efficiency metrics.

There are many young and exciting receivers, which is part of the reason Cooper is being pushed down draft boards, but being able to draft him near the WR30 mark should be considered stealing. He's excelled with multiple different quarterbacks the past two seasons in Cleveland.

The concerns with Watson, while understandable, should be alleviated based on his performance with Watson last year. If you're still concerned about Watson's shoulder or performance, the Browns signed Jameis Winston, who might be the best backup quarterback in the NFL. When he found himself on the field for the Saints last season, Chris Olave's fantasy production increased over that of starter Derek Carr. Based on his play in the last two seasons, Cooper is a fantastic bet to outplay his current ADP.

 

Chris Godwin, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Godwin is currently being drafted as the WR36 on Yahoo! and this is wild -- the WR41 on Underdog! Based on his 2023 finish, those ADPs don't seem wild because he finished as the WR37 in half-PPR scoring last year with an average of 10.0 PPG.

However, there's more than meets the eye in this case. Godwin's final receiver finish doesn't exactly consider his entire 2023 season. If you could, I'm asking you to completely forget what you've read about Godwin thus far. Forget his current ADP. Forget where he finished last season. Forget his 2023 half-PPR PPG average. Look at these stats below:

  • 137 targets (18th most among receivers)
  • 83 receptions (15th most)
  • 1,024 yards (23rd most)
  • 25 red zone targets (25th most)
  • 10 end zone targets (18th most)
  • 11 targets inside the 10-yard line (sixth most)
  • Finished with a 10.4 expected half-PPR PPG (WR29)

Considering the numbers above, does it make much sense that he finished as the WR37? He finished in the top 24 in targets, receptions, yards, and red-zone targets. He also finished as the WR29 in expected half-PPR PPG average. How did he finish all the way down at WR37? Simple -- touchdowns, or rather, a lack thereof. He finished with just three total touchdowns among receivers, which tied for 58th. However, it gets even more wild because Godwin was tied for sixth (!!!) in targets inside the 10-yard line with 11.

Looking at the receivers who meet these criteria -- 120 total targets, 15 red-zone targets, and seven targets inside the 10-yard line -- we find that 14 receivers accomplished all three. 11 of them had six or more touchdowns, and four of them had double-digit touchdowns. The average number of touchdowns scored by these 14 players was 7.7.

Godwin scored the fewest with just two. The two other qualifying receivers who failed to score six touchdowns were Adam Thielen and Garrett Wilson, who had to deal with Bryce Young and Zach Wilson as quarterbacks, respectively. Young threw 10 touchdowns. Wilson threw eight. Baker Mayfield threw 28.

I understand we just had a really exciting batch of rookie receivers get drafted, but doesn't it feel wild that someone who finished as the WR37 in half-PPR PPG scoring despite that atrocious touchdown luck could be drafted at WR41 this year? Are we expecting his touchdown luck to get worse? Can it get worse? Godwin was at the bottom of the barrel last year among receivers in touchdowns over expected at -3.9. The numbers indicate he should've scored four more touchdowns based on his usage.

Not only that, but Godwin finished the season on a tear. In fact, over the final seven games of the season for Tampa Bay, Godwin outproduced Mike Evans. From Week 14 through their playoff loss in the Divisional round, Godwin had a 23% target share compared to Evans’ 21%. Godwin also averaged more targets (8.3 vs 7.7), receptions (5.4 vs 4.1), and yards (71.9 vs 62.6) per game.

Fantasy managers can draft Godwin at his floor, which presents a tremendous buying opportunity. There's little to no risk in drafting him at his current price. If his touchdowns bounce back to what is expected, Godwin could become a big positive value swing for drafters. His cost is extremely reasonable and given the volume he should receive, the strong play of his quarterback, and the above-average state of his team's offense, Godwin looks like a very appealing bounce-back candidate.



Download Our Free News & Alerts Mobile App

Like what you see? Download our updated fantasy football app for iPhone and Android with 24x7 player news, injury alerts, rankings, starts/sits & more. All free!

More Fantasy Football Analysis


Check out all of RotoBaller's fantasy football rankings. Staff rankings are updated regularly for all positions and include standard formats, PPR scoring, tiered rankings and dynasty leagues.




POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Import Your Leagues
Weekly Rankings
Compare Any Players
Projections
Articles & Tools
Weekly Planner
24x7 News and Alerts

REAL-TIME FANTASY NEWS

Brandon Aiyuk

49ers "Hopeful" Brandon Aiyuk Will Play in 2025
Brayden Point

Without Timetable for Return
Jake Walman

Still Out Tuesday
Mason Appleton

Misses Tuesday's Contest
Oliver Ekman-Larsson

Good to Go Tuesday
Conor Garland

Out on Tuesday
Petr Mrazek

Considered Day-to-Day
Tyson Foerster

Hurt in Monday's Loss
Trey Murphy III

May Skip Another Game Tuesday
Zion Williamson

Back in Pelicans Lineup Tuesday
Draymond Green

Probable for Tuesday Night
Jimmy Butler III

Questionable to Play Tuesday
Derrick White

Likely Available Tuesday
Paul George

Listed as Questionable for Tuesday
Joel Embiid

Won't Play Against Wizards
Tyrone Tracy Jr.

Carted Off With Hip Injury on Monday Night
Edwin Díaz

Mets Still Interested in Re-Signing Edwin Diaz
Devin Williams

Agrees to Three-Year Deal With Mets
Cole Ragans

Red Sox Targeting Cole Ragans in a Trade?
CFB

Kentucky Hires Oregon Offensive Coordinator Will Stein As Head Coach
Davante Adams

Not Dealing With a Serious Injury
Brandon Miller

Unavailable on Monday
Kyler Murray

Surgery Not on the Table for Kyler Murray
Duncan Robinson

Absent Against Atlanta
Marvin Harrison Jr.

in Danger of Missing Week 14?
Jalen Duren

Back in the Lineup on Monday Evening
Noah Clowney

Cleared to Play Versus Charlotte
Giannis Antetokounmpo

Active On Monday
Danila Yurov

Won't Play on Tuesday
Michael Porter Jr.

Back in Action on Monday
Sam Merrill

Unavailable Versus Pacers
David Pastrnak

to Remain Out Tuesday
Alexandre Sarr

Won't Play Versus Milwaukee
Adam Gaudette

Iffy for Monday
CFB

Kalani Sitake the Top Target for Penn State Coaching Job
Logan Cooley

a Game-Time Decision Monday
Josh Norris

Available Monday
Neal Pionk

Remains Out Monday
Lonzo Ball

Ruled Out on Monday
Jimmy Snuggerud

to Miss Six Weeks After Wrist Surgery
Justin Herbert

Having Hand Surgery on Monday
Steven Adams

Out Against Jazz
Kyler Murray

Cardinals Won't Open Kyler Murray's Practice Window This Week
Darius Garland

Unavailable Monday
Sauce Gardner

Not a Candidate to Go on Injured Reserve
Kristaps Porzingis

Out of Action Versus Pistons
Jayden Daniels

Not Cleared for Contact, Decision on Week 14 Status Delayed
Daniel Gafford

Sidelined Again on Monday
CFB

Josh Heupel Says He's Not a Candidate for Penn State Head Coach Job
Trey Hendrickson

Doubtful to Return in Week 14
Tee Higgins

Still in the Concussion Protocol
Drake London

"has a Chance" to Play in Week 14
J.J. McCarthy

in Line to Start in Week 14?
Aaron Jones Sr.

Not Dealing With Serious Shoulder Injury, Likely Day-to-Day
Sam Darnold

Dealing With Ankle Injury, "Should be Good" for Week 14
CFB

Will Stein, Brian Hartline the Top Candidates for Kentucky Job?
CFB

Nebraska Fires Defensive Coordinator John Butler After One Season
CFB

UCLA Expected to Hire Bob Chesney as Next Head Coach
Sauce Gardner

Officially Week-to-Week with Strained Calf
CFB

Lane Kiffin to Make $13 Million Salary, Ties Kirby Smart
CFB

Buster Faulkner, Joey Halzle Candidates for Florida Offensive Coordinator Job?
CFB

Kentucky Officially Fires Mark Stoops
Justin Herbert

Has Metacarpal Fracture in Left Hand
Amon-Ra St. Brown

Week 14 Availability Up in the Air
VEG

Carter Hart Expected to Make Golden Knights Debut Tuesday
Andre Drummond

Leaves Early, Status Now in Question
Pyotr Kochetkov

Remains Without Timeline For Return
Boone Jenner

Close to Returning
Lian Bichsel

Exits With Injury Sunday
Petr Mrazek

Injured in Sunday's Loss
Adam Fox

Placed on Long-Term Injured Reserve
Zach Ertz

Leads Washington in Receiving in Overtime Loss
James Cook

Handles Career-High 32 Carries for 144 Yards in Win
Justin Herbert

Planning to Play Through Broken Bone in Left Hand in Week 14
CFB

Lane Kiffin to be Introduced as LSU's Next Head Coach on Monday
CFB

Florida Poised to Land Jon Sumrall as Next Head Coach
CFB

Alex Golesh Taking Over Auburn Head-Coaching Job
CFB

Arkansas Expected to Hire Ryan Silverfield as Next Head Coach
Joel Hofer

Shuts Out Mammoth
Zack Wheeler

Likely to Return in May
Ryan Helsley

Agrees to Two-Year Deal With Orioles
Dylan Cease

Agrees With Blue Jays on Seven-Year, $210 Million Deal
Anthony Rendon

Angels Could Buy Out Final Year of Anthony Rendon's Contract
Josh Hader

Says his Shoulder is "Back to Normal"
Ketel Marte

Diamondbacks "Actively Listening" on Ketel Marte

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP