1-10 NFL Fantasy Wide Receiver Rankings | 11-20 NFL Fantasy Wide Receiver Rankings
21-30 NFL Fantasy Wide Receiver Rankings | 31-40 NFL Fantasy Wide Receiver Rankings
41-50 NFL NFL Fantasy Wide Receiver Rankings
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| 41 |
Derrick Mason BAL |
68 |
750 |
11.0 |
2 |
79 |
| 2006 snapped a string of 5-straight 1000-yard receiving campaigns. Unfortunately, this year doesn't look a whole lot better than the last. Mark Clayton is looking to become the go-to guy in Baltimore and TE Todd Heap should steal plenty of catches as well. Mason's not much more than a No. 4 fantasy WR. |
| 42 |
Matt Jones JAC |
41 |
643 |
15.7 |
4 |
89 |
| Here's another player entering his third season in the NFL, traditionally the breakout year for wide receivers. His second year was your classic feast-or-famine season for fantasy owners. Jones has great size and speed with mediocre hands. Look at him as a late round selection with decent sleeper potential. |
| 43 |
Reggie Williams JAC |
52 |
616 |
11.6 |
4 |
75 |
| Williams is one of those players that you look at has having the goods to breakout and become a fantasy force. The problem is that he's summarily been a bust to this point. He started strong last year and has pretty good chemistry with Byron Leftwich, so he may be a solid choice in the late rounds of your draft as a backup wideout. |
| 44 |
Marty Booker MIA |
55 |
747 |
13.6 |
6 |
107 |
| Booker should be the No. 2 wide receiver in Miami next to Chris Chambers. How much that means from a fantasy standpoint is probably not much. He's getting up there in years and is probably not much more than a fantasy bench player. |
| 45 |
Amani Toomer NYG |
32 |
360 |
11.2 |
3 |
53 |
| Amani only played in 8 games last season due to a torn ACL. He should still be a starting wideout for the Giants and a functional bench player for your fantasy receiving corp. |
| 46 |
Devery Henderson NO |
32 |
745 |
23.3 |
5 |
103 |
| He pulled his hamstring in the first preseason game, but it doesn't appear to be a serious injury heading into the regular season. It will be interesting to see whether he can reproduce his 2006. I'm skeptical and I don't think of him as much more than a No. 4 fantasy WR. |
| 47 |
Michael Clayton TB |
33 |
356 |
10.8 |
1 |
38 |
| After busting out of the gates for 1193 receiving yards and 7 touchdowns as a rookie, Clayton has been largely MIA since then. At this point he's not much more than a late round selection as there have been no signs of a turn around. |
| 48 |
Greg Jennings GB |
45 |
632 |
14.0 |
3 |
69 |
| Jennings compiled most of his '06 stats in the first half of the season and then hit the rookie wall. With a year under his belt and as the No. 2 WR in Green Bay, he has some sleeper value as a late round pick and fantasy reserve at WR. |
| 49 |
Craig Davis SD |
-- |
-- |
-- |
-- |
0 |
| The San Diego wide receiving corp is filled with a bunch of good, but not great players (Eric Parker, Vincent Jackson, Malcom Floyd). So with Parker's toe injury, rookie Craig Davis may be able to jump into the mix and claim the No. 2 slot next to Vincent Jackson. As such he may be worth a late round flier. |
| 50 |
Mike Furrey DET |
98 |
1086 |
11.1 |
6 |
133 |
| It appears that Furrey will start the '07 campaign as No. 2 on the Lions' depth chart, but you have to figure that Calvin Johnson will quickly overtake that spot in the rotation. As such, you probably won't be able to count on Furrey at the end of the season when it really counts. If you can take him as your No. 4 fantasy WR, he should have some solid early season value to jumpstart your season. |
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