TAP FOR 6 MONTHS OF PREMIUM FREE 💰
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

Top 10 Fantasy Football Busts Of All Time - Le'Veon Bell, Peyton Hillis, LeSean McCoy, and more

John dives into the biggest fantasy football busts of all time. Which players are in the top 10 biggest busts of all time for fantasy football?

Fantasy football managers have the fear of picking busts fresh in their minds every season because every year, players who are thought to be headed for productive seasons, whether due to injury, not reaching overly high expectations, or other reasons, bust hard.

Those who drafted San Francisco 49ers running back Christian McCaffrey are well aware of this reality. He played in just four contests last season, failed to score more than 20 PPR points in any games, and got reinjured, ending his 2024 campaign prematurely. He provided very little value to fantasy football managers.

This article will absolutely not feature any recency bias because I can argue that the two players from 2024 who are on it had such ridiculously high expectations, even in this era where fantasy managers are more knowledgeable than ever, and still faceplanted. Let's dive in!

Featured Promo: Looking for some more fantasy football action? Adopt a dynasty orphan team over at FFPC. Sign up today and get $25 off any FFPC league. Sign Up Now!

 

10. LeSean McCoy, Buffalo Bills, 2018

McCoy, the Philadelphia Eagles' all-time leading rusher, entered his fourth year with the Bills in 2018 with high expectations. He had finished as the RB4 in 2016 and the RB7 in 2017, and he was entering his age-30 season, so it seemed that he had some value left.

That wasn't the case. He played in 14 games, yet mustered just 514 yards on 161 carries, averaging under 3.2 yards per rush, scored just three rushing touchdowns, and caught 34 passes for 238 yards, failing to log a single receiving touchdown.

It was a shocking result for anyone who had watched McCoy play for the Eagles, and though he wasn't quite his old self with the Bills, it was reasonable to think he still had some gas in the tank. Instead, he never came close to finishing as a top-10 back again and was out of the league entirely after just two more unproductive seasons.

 

9. Tyreek Hill, Miami Dolphins, 2024

He was widely regarded as being on the short list of best wide receivers in the NFL after his monster 2022 and 2023 seasons with the Miami Dolphins and was picked universally in the first round of fantasy drafts. His first game went very well, and many fantasy managers were probably happy with his production, especially after seeing his 80-yard touchdown reception. He scored 26 PPR fantasy points in Week 1.

Then things all came crashing down. Miami's starting quarterback, Tua Tagovailoa, suffered a severe concussion in Week 2 against the Buffalo Bills. Hill's totals in PPR were 6.6, 7.0, 8.2, 12.9, and 2.3 fantasy points in the next five games, including Week 2, as Tagovailoa was placed on injured reserve and missed all those weeks.

Tagovailoa's return was heralded as team-saving for Hill managers, but much to their shock, Hill would go on to log just two more games with 20 or more PPR fantasy points, including duds of 11.7, 9.8, 5.6, and 4.0 scoring totals. Hill never looked like his old self, often failing to create the wild separation due to his elite explosiveness that he had in previous seasons.

The Hill we were accustomed to seeing from previous years simply wasn't there. And while he did have a few good games, he's a massive bust considering how high expectations were for him after his 119-catch, 1,799-yard, 13-touchdown season in 2023.

 

8. Christian McCaffrey, San Francisco 49ers, 2024

This past season's other huge bust, McCaffrey, finished as the dominant RB1 in fantasy football in 2023, and expectations for him to have another massive season were widespread. He clearly showed he was elite, both in real football and as a fantasy asset, when he totaled over 391 PPR fantasy points just a season prior.

Much like with the No. 1 bust on this list, fantasy managers didn't know what they were getting themselves into. At the time of most drafts, they believed the lies that they were told by 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan -- that McCaffrey had a calf strain that wasn't serious and that he'd be ready for Week 1.

Instead, they were dragged along through an awful saga, continually teased that he'd be returning soon, then watched as his condition magically worsened (yes, I didn't buy it, either), and he was placed on injured reserve. He didn't play his first down until Week 10.

Many fantasy managers simply held the bag, and he scored 16.7 and 14.6 PPR fantasy points in his first two games. Then he mustered just 7.8 a week later, and the week after that, he went down with a knee injury that ended his season.

It's hard to blame him for his troubles, but he was far from a league winner in 2024, which is what he was drafted to be.

 

7. Larry Fitzgerald, Arizona Cardinals, 2012

Fitzgerald racked up 153 catches for 1,411 yards and eight touchdowns in 2011, his eighth season in the league. It was the fifth straight year that he gained over 1,000 receiving yards and scored six or more touchdowns, and he was in the midst of a core stretch that would contribute to his eventual spot in the NFL Hall of Fame.

So, he was seen as an elite pick in fantasy football drafts and taken off the board very early in most leagues. But despite playing in 16 games and matching his 153 targets from the year prior, his 71 catches in 2012 amounted to just 798 yards and four touchdowns of production.

The quarterback situation was just about the complete opposite of the WR situation, though. While Fitzgerald did what he always did, get open, the quarterbacks struggled to hit him with any consistency, and a massive load of production was left out on the field. It was part of a long three seasons where Fitz failed to reach 1,000 yards receiving, until he did so again in 2015.

 

6. Zac Stacy, St. Louis Rams, 2014

After a solid rookie season in which Stacy rushed for 973 yards and seven touchdowns and caught 26 passes for 141 yards and a score, most fantasy managers viewed him as the clear RB1 moving forward and a safe pick relatively early in fantasy football drafts. Stacy rewarded them by being a massive bust in 2014.

Instead, Stacy was outproduced handily by rookie RB Tre Mason, was let go before the following season, and washed out of the league after just one more year with the New York Jets.

 

5. Peyton Hillis, Cleveland Browns, 2011

Hillis had a legendary breakout season in 2010. Seemingly coming out of nowhere, he quickly became the face of the Browns franchise by running for 1,177 yards and 11 touchdowns and catching 61 passes for 477 yards and two scores, finishing as one of the best RBs in fantasy football that season. His 194 yards from scrimmage and three-touchdown game against the Carolina Panthers was truly special.

The Madden curse, a series of injuries, and a poor roster around him did him in for the 2011 season, though. In 10 games played, he rushed for only 587 yards and three touchdowns and caught just 22 passes for 130 yards. Hillis' career took a nosedive after that, and in his last three seasons combined, he failed to match his numbers from the 2010 season alone.

 

4. Braylon Edwards, Cleveland Browns, 2008

Edwards put together a monster breakout campaign in 2007. After a solid 2006 season in which he caught 61 of 125 targets for 884 yards and six scores, he smashed those numbers with 80 receptions for 1,289 yards and 16 receiving touchdowns the subsequent year. He was a dominant WR1, and many believed he would remain so for many years to come.

Edwards started 2008 very slowly, gaining just 95 receiving yards and one touchdown. But against the New York Giants in Week 5, he caught five passes for 154 yards and a score. This would have been the perfect time for fantasy managers to trade him away, but in a tale as old as the game itself, many saw it as his "get right game" of the season.

He would go on to average just 56.7 receiving yards and score a single more touchdown over his final 11 games, and his career mostly fizzled from there, interrupted by just one solid season for the New York Jets.

 

3. Rudi Johnson, Cincinnati Bengals, 2007

Johnson was a monster in fantasy football for three straight seasons with the Bengals. His rushing totals for 2004, 2005, and 2006 are as follows: 1,454 rush yards and 12 touchdowns, 1,458 rushing yards and 12 TDs, and 1,309 rush yards and 12 rush scores, respectively.

So, naturally, he was seen as an elite, safe pick in fantasy drafts, with his workhorse usage and production leading to great games.

In 2007, though, his massive usage caught up to him. The season prior, he had averaged just 3.8 yards per carry, a drop-off of 0.5 YPC from the season before that, which is always a big red flag you should pay attention to when evaluating running backs.

Johnson played just 11 games in 2007, failed to reach even 500 rushing yards, scored just three times on the ground, and averaged an abysmal 2.9 yards per carry. He was a bona fide league loser and washed out of the NFL just one year after that.

 

2. Tom Brady, New England Patriots, 2008

Brady's 2007 MVP season still stands as one of the best in the history of the NFL for a quarterback. He broke the NFL record for passing touchdowns with 50, eclipsed 4,800 passing yards in just 16 games, tossed only eight interceptions, and led his team to a 16-0 record, the first and only undefeated regular season in history after the league switched to a 16-game schedule.

Brady's demolition of the Tennessee Titans, in which he threw five touchdowns in the second quarter, is perhaps his most memorable regular-season game to date. So, at a time when quarterbacks were often selected in the first round, Brady was seen as on the cusp of having another historic season.

The problem was not that he disappointed, but that he blew out his ACL in Week 1. Can't do much to fix that.

 

1. Le'Veon Bell, Pittsburgh Steelers, 2018

The biggest bust of all time has to be Bell. After a huge season in which he rushed for 1,291 yards and nine touchdowns and caught 85 passes for 655 yards and two touchdowns, Bell was the No. 1 overall pick in many fantasy football drafts. He was an all-purpose weapon for the Steelers, and his volume and production were that of a league winner the year prior.

The saga that unfolded sank many fantasy teams' hopes. Bell ended up holding out for the entire season, not playing a single down and not scoring a single fantasy point. Those who drafted him were left high and dry, and it's often extremely difficult to win leagues if your first-round pick produces absolutely nothing.

Aside from immediately trading him to another manager who thought he would end his holdout, there were no options for his fantasy managers to extract value from his presence on their rosters. Instead, they were left with a roster clogger. A No. 1 overall pick that misses games due to injury or produces as a top-20 player at their position rather than a top-5 player can at least be useful.

But Bell presented the worst possible case -- nothing.



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




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

Mitchell Marner

Collects Three Points on Wednesday
Tomas Hertl

Scores the Overtime Winner
Oakland Athletics

A's Open to Kyler Murray Exploring a Return to Baseball
Coby White

is Available on Wednesday
Kelly Oubre Jr.

Won't Play on Wednesday
Jeremy Peña

Jeremy Pena Suffers Small Fracture in his Finger
VJ Edgecombe

is Ruled Out on Wednesday
Isaiah Hartenstein

to Play on Wednesday
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

is Cleared for Wednesday's Contest
Collin Murray-Boyles

to Remain Sidelined on Thursday
Egor Demin

Ruled Out for Thursday's Game
Brandon Ingram

Considered Questionable For Thursday
Kyshawn George

Slated to Miss Thursday's Matchup With Jazz
Drey Jameson

Could be a Sleeper Out of the Arizona Bullpen
Brandon Williams

Expected to Suit Up Against Magic on Thursday
Rafael Devers

Feeling Much Better, Could Return This Weekend
Abner Uribe

Dominates Tigers; a Saves Candidate in Milwaukee?
Dylan Crews

Returns to Grapefruit League Lineup on Wednesday
Cooper Flagg

Considered Questionable For Thursday
Trae Young

Off Injury List For Thursday
Shane McClanahan

Throws Two Scoreless Innings in Spring Debut
Kirby Yates

Is Kirby Yates the Favorite for Closing Duties in Anaheim?
Klay Thompson

Probable For Thursday's Clash With Magic
Stefon Diggs

Patriots Releasing Stefon Diggs
Mick Abel

Making his Case as Twins Starter in 2026
Corbin Carroll

Progressing to Batting Practice Swings
Byron Buxton

Looking Like a Draft-Day Value
Merrill Kelly

Scheduled for Bullpen Session on Thursday
Cam Schlittler

to Make Grapefruit League Debut on Friday
Andrew Kittredge

Dealing With Shoulder Inflammation
Walker Jenkins

Reassigned to Minor-League Camp
Cody Bellinger

Scheduled to Return to Grapefruit League Action on Thursday
Matt Shaw

to Start Seeing More Time in the Outfield
Hunter Greene

Says he Doesn't Have UCL Damage
Nolan McLean

Feeling Better, to Throw 50-55 Pitches in Sim Game
Trent McDuffie

Chiefs Sending Trent McDuffie to Rams in Blockbuster Deal
Hunter Greene

to Undergo MRI for Elbow Injury
Taylor Moore

Looking to Build on Cognizant Classic Finish
Robert MacIntyre

Brings Solid Form to Bay Hill
Scottie Scheffler

the Tournament Favorite at Bay Hill
Jonathan Drouin

Ready to Go Wednesday
Xander Schauffele

Trending Well Ahead of API
Jake Walman

Avoids Major Injury Tuesday
Marcus Johansson

Makes Early Exit Versus Lightning
Cole Smith

Golden Knights Pick Up Cole Smith From Nashville
Michael McCarron

Sent to Wild for Second-Round Pick
Ryan O'Reilly

Sustains Eye Injury Tuesday
Artturi Lehkonen

Deemed Week-to-Week
Kevin Love

Active Wednesday Night
Jaden Ivey

to Miss Five-Game Road Trip
Zach Edey

Has Season-Ending Ankle Surgery
Matas Buzelis

Exits Early Tuesday
Josh Giddey

Hurts Ankle Tuesday
Jarrett Allen

Exits Early With Knee Injury
Si Woo Kim

Looking to Return to Top Form at Bay Hill
Leon Draisaitl

Dominates With Five-Point Game
Ben Griffin

Looking to Return to Form at Arnold Palmer Invitational
PGA

Nico Echavarria Looks to Build on Cognizant Classic Win at Arnold Palmer
Sam Burns

Searching for Consistency at Arnold Palmer Invitational
Daniel Berger

Offers Sneaky Upside at Bay Hill
Jack Hughes

Contributes With Two Assists
Dougie Hamilton

Picks Up Two Points in Win
Jacob Markstrom

Cruises to Win
Dylan Guenther

Picks Up Two Points on Tuesday Night
Jeremy Swayman

Defeats the Penguins
Zion Williamson

Ready to Take on Lakers
VJ Edgecombe

Sustains Back Injury Tuesday
Justin Thomas

Making Season Debut at API Following Lower-Back Surgery
NASCAR

Collin Morikawa Hopes To Better Last Year's Runner-Up Finish at API
Emmet Sheehan

Behind in Camp Due to Illness
Tommy Fleetwood

Isn't As Confident of a Start at Bay Hill as Previous Weeks
Blake Lizotte

Unavailable Against Bruins
Marcus Foligno

Considered Week-to-Week
Jonas Brodin

Rejoins Wild Lineup
John Carlson

Misses Fourth Consecutive Game
Mikael Granlund

Troy Terry, Mikael Granlund Remain Out Tuesday
J.T. Miller

Lands on Injured Reserve
Kyler Murray

Will be Released
Trey Hendrickson

Bengals Not Using the Franchise Tag on Trey Hendrickson
Daniel Jones

Colts Place Transition Tag on Daniel Jones
Adam Scott

Might Endure Tough Times at Bay Hill
Aldrich Potgieter

Extremely Risky When it Comes to Bay Hill
PGA

Sungjae Im to Make Season Debut at Arnold Palmer Invitational
Jordan Spieth

an All-or-Nothing Option at Bay Hill
Harry Hall

Trying to Rebound After the Genesis Invitational
Ryan Gerard

Needs Better Start at Bay Hill
Kenneth Walker III

Won't Get the Franchise Tag
Patrick Cantlay

Still Plagued by Bad Putting Ahead of Arnold Palmer Invititational
Daniel Jones

Colts Expected to Use Transition Tag on Daniel Jones
Breece Hall

Jets Placing Franchise Tag on Breece Hall
CFB

Mark Stoops Joining Texas Coaching Staff
Jason Day

Attempts to Bounce Back from The Genesis Invitational
Jacob Bridgeman

Rolling into Arnold Palmer Invitational
Russell Henley

Looks to Defend Title at the Arnold Palmer Invitational
Khalil Mack

Will Play in 2026
MMA

Lone'er Kavanagh Gets Back In The Win Column
Brandon Moreno

Gets Outclassed
Marlon Vera

Loses Fourth Fight In A Row
Daniel Jones

Colts Have "50/50" Chance to Get a Deal Done With Daniel Jones
David Martinez

Remains Undefeated In The UFC
Daniel Zellhuber

Loses Third Consecutive Fight
King Green

Gets Second-Round TKO Win
Felipe Bunes

Drops Decision At UFC Mexico City
Édgar Cháirez

Edgar Chairez Wins Back-To-Back Fights
Ryan Blaney

Falls to Eighth Despite Running Most of the Race in the Top Five At COTA
Ty Gibbs

Wins A Stage and Finishes Fourth At COTA
Christopher Bell

Earns First Top-Five Finish of the 2026 Season at COTA
Kyler Murray

"Repeatedly" Linked to Jets
Shane Van Gisbergen

Falls Short of Victory At COTA
Tyler Reddick

Wins At COTA and Makes NASCAR History
David Montgomery

Texans Acquire David Montgomery From Lions
Kyler Murray

Likely to be Released
Travis Etienne Jr.

Not Expected to be Franchise-Tagged
Aaron Jones Sr.

Vikings Planning to Release Aaron Jones Sr.?
Tyler Reddick

Could Make History at COTA
Shane Van Gisbergen

Shane van Gisbergen Still the Favorite at COTA
Christopher Bell

Will Be Tough to Beat at COTA
AJ Allmendinger

Could Contend at COTA
Connor Zilisch

Carries Plenty of Upside for DFS at COTA
Chase Elliott

May be A Strong Contender Again at COTA
Chris Buescher

Is Nothing But Consistent at Road Courses
Ross Chastain

May Be An Underrated Competitor for the Win at COTA
William Byron

Is William Byron a Viable DFS Option for COTA?
Carson Hocevar

Needs Clean Race at COTA
Kyle Larson

Could be A Decent DFS Option for COTA Lineups
Ryan Blaney

Could Ryan Blaney be A Sleeper DFS Option for All Formats for COTA?
Chase Briscoe

Should DFS Players Roster Chase Briscoe at COTA?
NASCAR

Bubba Wallace Is A Favorable Value Option for COTA DFS Lineups
Ty Gibbs

Could Ty Gibbs Be A Rosterable DFS Play for COTA?
A.J. Brown

Patriots "Have Explored Trade Talks" Involving A.J. Brown
Lone'er Kavanagh

Set For UFC Mexico City Main Event
Brandon Moreno

Looks To Bounce Back
David Martinez

Set For UFC Mexico City Co-Main Event
Marlon Vera

In Dire Need Of Victory
King Green

Looks To Win Back-To-Back Fights
Daniel Zellhuber

Aims To Snap Two-Fight Skid
Felipe Bunes

Looks To Get Back In The Win Column
Édgar Cháirez

Edgar Chairez A Favorite At UFC Mexico City
George Pickens

Cowboys Not Interested in Trading George Pickens
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF