
Ronald Jones was a remarkable bust in his rookie year, but his value is on the rise after the Buccaneers declined to draft any running backs.

Eighth overall selection T.J. Hockenson projects well for the long term, but in re-draft formats he carries a razor-thin margin of error at his post-draft acquisition cost.

Jerry Donabedian takes a look at undrafted players from the 2019 rookie class, hoping to find the next Phillip Lindsay, Gus Edwards or Robert Foster.

Liss and Jeff talk about the crowded the rookie WR field, with plenty of top options for ranking receivers for keeper league drafts.

It's rare to find a rookie class where a quarterback warrants the top overall spot, but Kyler Murray offers stability in a class otherwise lacking it.

Liss explains to Jeff why the Giants' Daniel Jones pick at number six might be valid. Jeff thinks he's rationalizing.

John McKechnie offers his analysis on the receivers and running backs taken on Day 2. Mecole Hardman could be one of Patrick Mahomes' top targets, his stock among rookies soaring.

There was some thought Bryce Love might last until the sixth or seventh round, but Washington scooped him up in the fourth, presumably with plans for a 2019 redshirt.

Joe Bartel gives his spin on a first round that was light on skill position players. Now that Kyler Murray is officially an Arizona Cardinal, what's next for him as the catalyst of a rebuild in the desert?

Heading into tonight's NFL Draft Day 1, Mario joins Liss and Jeff to discuss Kyler Murray's fantasy forecast for the 2019 season.

John McKechnie offers his final mock with the first round of the NFL Draft on tap for Thursday. Mississippi's D.K. Metcalf is a unique receiver prospect, but is he at risk of falling out of the first round?

The popular theory of the moment is that Duke's Daniel Jones will go ahead of Ohio State's Dwayne Haskins, but this mock rejects the possibility.

John McKechnie rolls out his version 1.0 of his mock draft series with an in-depth look at the first round. If Arizona goes with Kyler Murray at No.1 overall, how do the rest of the quarterback dominoes fall?

Best ball markets seemingly welcomed the Jordan Howard trade initially, but the change of scenery isn't necessarily good news.

The markets will eventually catch on, but for now Latavius Murray is an obvious best ball target after switching from Dalvin Cook's backup in Minnesota to Mark Ingram's replacement in New Orleans.

Derek Carr might not be a good quarterback, but it's easy to argue that he's a bargain with upside at his current best ball ADP now that he's throwing to Antonio Brown and Tyrell Williams.

Donte Moncrief will never be a model of consistency, but Ben Roethlisberger needs to throw to someone other than JSS in the slot, and Moncrief is big and fast on the outside.