FastDraft Rabbit ADP Standouts: July 4

Fantasy football best ball drafts are in full-swing and FastDraft is one of the most exciting platforms to play. If you’ve taken us up on our FastDraft promo and have been playing their Origins or Flex-4 contests, then you may have also heard about their newest best ball contest – the Rabbit. If not, brace yourself. It’s what you’ve been asking for this whole time.
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While drafting in Origins limits you to the rookies and Flex-4 is only six rounds of running backs, wide receivers and tight ends, the Rabbit is a 15-round best ball draft that includes quarterbacks, but still avoids kickers and defenses. And best of all, you’re still looking at just a 20-second clock, so your FastDraft draft doesn’t take more than 20 minutes. And yes, you can also load up your rankings into Turbo Mode and enter the Rabbit for your shot at $50,000.
And just like the other contests, you can find Rabbit ADP as well. If you caught Thursday’s Fantasy Alarm Show on SiriusXM Fantasy Sports Radio, then you heard from FastDraft’s Jagger May as we discussed some of the players as we learned of several ADP standouts. Whether you consider some of them bargains or not, it was very interesting to match up the Rabbit ADP with our composite ADP here on Fantasy Alarm. I’ve always discussed how you need to adjust when drafting on different platforms and FastDraft is no different.
Here's a look at some of the more standout ADP numbers we are seeing in this new contest.
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FastDraft Rabbit ADP Standouts
Ladd McConkey, WR Los Angeles Chargers
FastDraft ADP: 17.70; Composite ADP: 25.33; Difference 7.63
While it’s not the biggest disparity in ADP, it’s definitely worth noting how the FastDraft community feels about McConkey. He’s the No. 1 target for Justin Herbert and with little competition in the Chargers receiving corps, he is expected to see another monstrous target share. Late second round in a 10-team draft does seem a little high given the fact that it is a run-first offense and Tre Harris could emerge as a strong target, but he should remain incredibly productive for PPR scoring formats.
Rashee Rice, WR Kansas City ChiefsÂ
FastDraft ADP: 26.23; Composite ADP: 41.52; Difference 15.29
He’s climbing up draft boards all over the place so don’t think this meteoric rise is exclusive to the FastDraft community. Rice is expected to step in as Patrick Mahomes’ No. 1 target and given the injuries to Hollywood Brown, the decline of Travis Kelce and the low aDOT of Xavier Worthy, the fantasy community is ready to push the chips all in on Rice. Not to mention, the suspension talk has dramatically declined which means we should get, injuries notwithstanding, a full season of dominance from the wide receiver standout. The potential competition for targets makes me think this ADP is a little high, but I’ll still have plenty of shares.Â
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Tetairoa McMillan, WR Carolina Panthers
FastDraft ADP: 41.56; Composite ADP: 70.46; Difference 28.90
This is where the ADP disparity starts getting a little crazy. I’m a big fan of McMillan and I do expect him to settle in with roughly a 25-percent target share, but we are certainly putting a lot of eggs into this rookie’s basket. He needs to show that he can get separation and come down with contested catches against big-time NFL defensive backs and Bryce Young still needs to prove that the final few games from last season were the real him and not just a hot streak where opposing defenses were taking their foot off the gas.Â
Kaleb Johnson, RB Pittsburgh Steelers
FastDraft ADP: 61.67; Composite ADP: 75.98; Difference 14.31
This disparity seems reasonable when you compare the differences for others such as McMillan, but it is worth noting that the FastDraft ADP for running backs is higher than composite pretty much across the board. Are there a few outliers? Maybe. But overall, it looks like the FastDraft community is feeling the RB love a lot more than the other best ball tournament players at sites like Underdog. Johnson will be competing for touches with Jaylen Warren and probably a few tight ends Arthur Smith wants to hand the ball off to, but he is a bull between the tackles and should handle the short-yardage and even goal-line work. Think of him as someone like Tyler Allgeier during Bijan Robinson’s rookie season.  Â
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Jauan Jennings, WR San Francisco 49ers
FastDraft ADP: 63.02; Composite ADP: 97.45; Difference 34.43
This is beyond bullish for me. I do like Jennings and believe he has carved out himself a nice role in this 49ers offense. Unfortunately, the role still seems fluid to me and we have to see what Kyle Shanahan is thinking once he has Brandon Aiyuk back a full health and he’s lining up with Ricky Pearsall and even George Kittle. I like the player and am a big fan of drafting him in fantasy, but when I see his ADP up here and there are guys like Chris Godwin, Zay Flowers and D’Andre Swift on the board, I cannot say I’m confident enough to take him over the rest.
FRIDAY PROMO for July 4 – Draft 1 Rabbit, 1 Origins & 1 Flex-4 for your chance at a 2026 Scott Fish Bowl Invitation
Complete one Rabbit draft, one Origins draft and one Flex-4 draft on Friday, 7/4 and you’ll be entered to win a #SFB16 invite. To be eligible, just take a screenshot of your drafts and post them to the #Rate-My-Team channel in the FastDraft Discord with a quick comment about your favorite pick.
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