Fantasy football best ball drafts may be slowing down in some places, but at FastDraft, they are not only going strong, but people are clamoring for even more contests. You typically expect the slow-down as more people tend to their season-long drafts, but considering you can do a FastDraft draft in under 20 minutes, they are still going strong. Contests are filling up fast (pun intended) but that doesn’t mean it’s too late for you to sign up and play.

If this is your first time hearing about FastDraft, then do yourself a favor and click here for a quick read. That article lays everything out for you about FastDraft, from the basic contest parameters and draft strategies to a full explanation of all the ins and outs of the app. You can also check out this Friday’s Fantasy Alarm Show on SiriusXM Fantasy Sports Radio as Billy Muzio, one of the creators of FastDraft, joined us to add further insights.

Bottom line is that FastDraft has revolutionized drafting. Short clock, short drafts. You’ve got contests like Origins (rookies only) and Flex-4 (draft six flex players, best-ball starts your best four), where the drafts take no more than five minutes. Even less if you set up your own rankings and load them into their Turbo Mode feature, where you can set up to auto-draft off of them for multiple teams – five, 10, 20, you set the number. 

If those drafts are too abbreviated for you, they also have a contest called The Rabbit, where you’re drafting a true, 15-round best-ball team. It’s the same 20-second clock, which means Rabbit drafts only take about 20 minutes each, and yes, you can also set up Turbo Mode here as well. The experience is spectacular because they make it so easy.

Best of all? They give you the tools to succeed, including a fully comprehensive FastDraft ADP. Not only do they tell you where everyone is going, but they also provide ownership numbers so you can see where the masses are going with their picks. You’ll also see that the ADP is broken up into the individual contests they run. Drafting players in Origins is obviously different from drafting them in the Rabbit, so why would you want one giant lump of ADP data that doesn’t tell an accurate story? The folks at FastDraft know this and, again, have made it as easy as possible for you to succeed.

With the Rabbit in full swing, we can begin to look at some of the ADP risers and fallers. Last week, we began our look at the FastDraft ADP to find a few notable names to keep tabs on. Today, we continue that journey.   

 

 

 

FastDraft Rabbit ADP Risers

Keon Coleman, WR Buffalo Bills (ADP: 117.95; +4.54)

The rise of Coleman shouldn’t come as much of a surprise if you have watched what’s been going on with the Bills' offense and how offensive coordinator Joe Brady likes to run things. He loves the short, high-percentage passing, which moves the chains up and down the field and helps quarterback Josh Allen remain efficient. But we all know Allen has a cannon for an arm and loves to throw downfield when it is available. Brady has assembled this group of receivers and tight ends who are basically interchangeable cogs in a machine. Khalil Shakir, Elijah Moore, Curtis Samiel, Joshua Palmer, Dalton Kincaid, and Dawson Knox all work well within that scheme. Coleman is, literally, the only field-stretcher. He will see a higher snap-count than all the rest because he’s the only one of his kind out there. I expect to see Coleman’s target share climb, and his explosiveness is going to be center-stage most weeks.

Jacory Croskey-Merritt, RB Washington Commanders (ADP: 146.35; +5.12)

This is where we start seeing Big Fantasy push its agenda and mainstream drafters find themselves duped into believing they have some explosive late-round sleeper in their pocket. JCM, who is actually on the sidelines with a shoulder issue right now, is the perfect example. The running back out of Arizona got some buzz during the NFL Draft, and now those who follow the college game closely are touting him as the next big thing in Washington. But JCM is already behind Brian Robinson, Austin Ekeler, and Chris Rodriguez and is multiple injuries away from seeing any regular work. Don’t be duped by the ADP ascension. He is not going to be a strong contributor all year, at least not enough for a format where cumulative points are a thing. 

Jalen Nailor, WR Minnesota Vikings (ADP: 150.27; +2.26)

Nailor is another riser you need to be careful with regarding your drafts here. Sure, Jordan Addison is going to be suspended for the first three games, but after that, where is Nailor’s value? The target pecking order is Justun Jefferson, Addison, and then T.J. Hockenson. Nailor may see his snaps and targets increase over the first three weeks of the season, but unless one of the two top receivers gets hurt, there isn’t going to be a whole lot of consistent action from him. To me, he’s more of a Week 1 DFS play than someone I wanted to be invested in for the whole season. 

 

 

 

FastDraft Rabbit ADP Fallers

RJ Harvey, RB Denver Broncos (ADP: 48.22; -2.38)

Buy the dip, baby! That’s what I’m talking about. People are being scared off that J.K. Dobbins is listed as the starter, and Harvey was listed as fifth on the team’s unofficial depth chart. But if you know Sean Payton, you know he does this every year. The rookies always start at the bottom and have to work their way up. He did it to Alvin Kamara and he did it to Michael Thomas when they were rookies. Harvey was taking first-team snaps in practice still and he started the last Broncos preseason game. Does he need to work on his pass-blocking? Yes. But that’s not going to affect how well we are expecting him to perform this season. 

Chris Olave, WR New Orleans Saints (ADP: 67.82; -2.54)

I wholeheartedly agree with this drop and will urge you to avoid Olave, especially in this format. His quarterbacks are a mess, and there should be genuine concern that he could end up injured trying to come down with one of their errant throws. If Olave had a legitimate quarterback throwing him the ball, I’d be fine with drafting him at his ADP. But with the way things are right now, this is not a value pick as his stock continues to plummet. Love the player, hate the situation.

Quinshon Judkins, RB Cleveland Browns (ADP: 91.44; -7.82)

I’d say it’s another “buy the dip,” but Judkins won’t be dropping in ADP anymore. Maybe over the next day or two, but now that the domestic violence charges have been dropped, we expect the Browns to get him his rookie contract and get him into camp. Neither Jerome Ford nor Dylan Sampson has been lighting it up for Cleveland’s backfield, so the competition isn’t all that fierce. Judkins showed us what type of runner he was at Ohio State, and he should be putting that on display very soon.

 

 

 

FastDraft Friday Promo: The Rabbitt Beauty Contest Returns

  • Users will post their prettiest Rabbit squad to the FastDraft Discord Rate-My-Team channel (discord.gg/b9J2sNAqcz) by Friday, August 15, 2025.
  • The "prettiest" team loosely judged based on team stacking and ADP value will receive $250 in FastDraft promo funds (25 Rabbit drafts). 

START DRAFTING FASTER TODAY