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Three fantasy losers from the 2024 NFL Draft
Atlanta Falcons first round draft pick quarterback Michael Penix Jr. Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports

Three fantasy losers from the 2024 NFL Draft

The 2024 NFL draft is over which means fantasy football drafts are just months away. Fourteen skill position players were taken in the first round, but these three could take a while to have fantasy success.

Michael Penix Jr. (QB) Atlanta Falcons

Penix led all FBS quarterbacks with 4,903 yards last season but few believed he’d be an immediate NFL starter. No kidding. Less than two months after signing Kirk Cousins to a four-year, $180M deal ($100M guaranteed) the Falcons turned the draft upside-down by taking Penix eighth overall.

With so much money guaranteed to Cousins, Penix holds little value in dynasty or redraft formats. Here’s what The Athletic’s Jake Ciely had to say about his fantasy prospects

"Penix needs to improve his anticipation, and even then, his upside is Matthew Stafford, and more in his later years. Penix is off the redraft radar, and this is far from a good landing spot for fantasy, as we're looking two-plus years out."

We don’t anticipate many fantasy managers will wait two years for Stafford-like numbers, which makes Penix a fantasy afterthought unless Cousins gets injured.

Ricky Pearsall (WR) San Francisco 49ers

Wait, did the team trade Brandon Aiyuk? As a skilled route runner with good size and soft hands, Pearsall became something of a sleeper pick in the days leading up to the draft. But not many had him going in the first round, much less to the 49ers.

With talented pass-catchers like Aiyuk, Deebo Samuel and George Kittle on the roster, Pearsall could struggle to see snaps in the NFL’s fourth-ranked passing offense. Aiyuk and Samuel finished 14th and 15th in fantasy points last season while Kittle finished fifth among tight ends.

Pearsall led all Florida receivers with 965 yards last season, but barring a trade he should see a fraction of that with San Francisco.

Rome Odunze (WR) Chicago Bears

As a prospect, Odunze has it all. At 6-foot-3 and 215 pounds, he’s taller than the Giants’ Malik Nabers and 10 pounds heavier than Arizona’s Marvin Harrison Jr.

Unfortunately, the team already has a pair of quality wide receivers in Keenan Allen and DJ Moore. Odunze led college football with 1,640 yards last season, but Moore and Allen combined for 2,607 yards to finish 2023 as the sixth- and eighth-leading receivers in fantasy football.

Look for new quarterback, and top pick, Caleb Williams to lean on his veteran receivers next season and for Odunze to break out sometime in 2025.

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