NFL training camps are fully underway, and preseason games have already begun. It’s the absolute perfect time to be throwing down in some fantasy football best ball drafts, and our friends at FastDraft have everything you need. With drafts underway at all hours of the day and night, you can take full advantage of staying on top of all the news, adjusting your rankings, and dominating your drafts. If you caught the Jordan Addison suspension when it was announced, you could have dropped him below everyone and come out on top. Same thing with watching games and seeing Anthony Richardson sidelined AGAIN with an injury. Things move quickly at FastDraft, and now is your time to set the trends, not just catch up to them.

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

Emeka Egbuka, WR Tampa Bay Buccaneers (ADP: 83.49; +9.18)

If you are staying on top of all the recent NFL news, this shouldn’t come as any kind of shock. A recent report from Greg Auman of Fox Sports states that, while head coach Todd Bowles believes Chris Godwin’s recovery remains “exactly where” the team hoped he would be, but they have yet to make a decision as to whether or not he will start the season on the PUP list, thus keeping him out of action until Week 5. There seems to be a lean in that direction, or at least that seems to be a general consensus among most of the Bucs beat writers. If he does open the year on the PUP list, then Egbuka, especially at this ADP, becomes a massive bargain. We know the game he plays, and it fits very well with what the Bucs are doing. He serves as a strong complement to Mike Evans as Godwin does, so his value is going to start taking off if/when Tampa makes its decision on Godwin’s health status.

Tyjae Spears, RB Tennessee Titans (ADP: 117.87; +8.64)

I’m still not convinced this is the right pick for this particular format of best ball, but Spears continues to be on the rise with every day that passes in training camp. He continues to run with the first-team offense, and head coach Brian Callahan has been adamant about the 50/50 split Spears will have with Tony Pollard. He’s never going to have the backfield to himself unless Pollard suffers a major injury, so that’s why I have concerns for him as a pick. Only half the workload of other starting running backs, playing on a team that will likely play from behind a ton in a format that runs cumulative points? I’d rather shoot for someone who has a greater chance of a full-time role, but again, it is 15 rounds, so you are going to need some depth. 

Jaydon Blue, RB Dallas Cowboys (ADP: 129.00; +9.19)

Things have taken a complete 180-degree turn for Blue over the past week or so, and that turn has definitely been for the better. A former Cowboys coach referred to Blue as “lazy,” and the internet, in only the way it knows how, blew the news up so big that head coach Brian Schottenheimer felt the need to personally address it in a press conference. Following that, Blue started getting first-team reps, and now he’s turning heads in camp. Oh, how fickle the fantasy football community can be. I’ve been pretty bullish regarding Blue’s opportunities and still firmly believe he will be the Cowboys’ starting running back by season’s end. If it happens even sooner than I think it will, this ADP is going to be a steal. 

 

 

 

FastDraft Rabbit ADP Fallers

Rashee Rice, WR Kansas City Chiefs (ADP: 40.59; -5.82)

Once Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Jordan Addison received a three-game suspension for his DUI arrest, all eyes immediately turned to Rice. Addison got a year of probation and three games. Rice got 30 days in jail and five years of probation. It only makes sense to believe that whatever suspension the NFL hands down, it’s going to be more. My guess is a six-game suspension that he pleads down to four or five, but there just doesn’t seem to be any way he gets less than that. As a result, he is dropping in drafts at a very rapid rate, even before a decision gets made. The only argument being made in favor of drafting Rice is that Addison’s arrest was in July of 2024, so it took a full year for the NFL to get off its ass. Maybe they drag on Rice’s suspension here? I don’t think that’s going to be the case, so I am likely avoiding him unless the ADP dips even more significantly. Six games – heck, even just four – is a big chunk of the season, and that’s a lot of zeroes you can’t afford.

Joe Mixon, RB Houston Texans (ADP: 73.62; -8.51)

The drop in ADP should come as no surprise, but the fact that he hasn’t fallen further might. The most recent reports, which came from NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport back in late-July cited that Mixon would miss extended time and probably would miss most, if not all, of training camp; that he would sit and be re-evaluated closer to the start of the regular season. The team had already drafted Woody Marks and also signed free agent Nick Chubb, so the handwriting was on the wall. However, as I cited in a recent video, reports are saying Chubb doesn’t have that same burst, Dameon Pierce was just making his way back from injury, and Marks was still running with the second team. Their performances don’t really say much about Mixon’s health, but the team hasn’t made any other moves or inquiries. My own personal move has been to let Mixon drop in drafts, but keep an eye on him for value, as it seems like the team wants to avoid putting him on the PUP list to open the year. It’s a gamble, but if he’s falling towards the 10th round like I see him in most drafts lately, the juice could be worth the squeeze.

Tre Harris, WR Los Angeles Chargers (ADP: 127.85; -8.66)

Not gonna lie – this one makes me a little sad. If you read the Top Rookies article in the Fantasy Alarm NFL Draft Guide, you know I’ve been quite bullish on Harris. But the signing of Keenan Allen has quickly halted my late-round drafting of Harris, and the pivots have gone elsewhere. It’s not that I don’t love the player and the talent, but knowing that Chargers OC Greg Roman loves 12-personnel, which only uses two receivers on the field, the question is, how many snaps will Harris really get? Ladd McConkey will stay on the field, which means Allen, Harris, and Quentin Johnston will likely have some sort of rotation going depending on the field position and play-call. When they do use three-receiver sets, it’ll be McConkey and Allen while Harris and QJ split reps. I still love the player in dynasty formats, but here on FastDraft, it’s gotta be a no from me, dawg.

FastDraft Friday Promo:

  • Set your rankings and create two Turbo Drafts: 1 Rabbit Turbo Entry and 1 Flex 4 Turbo Entry today, Friday, August 8, 2025, to enter a drawing to win 25 FREE Rabbit drafts ($250 in promotional credits).
  • Post your favorite turbo-drafted squad with username to the Rate-My-Team Discord channel to qualify for your chance to win $250 in FastDraft promotional funds. 

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