He had the fastest 3-cone at 6.89 seconds, the third best 20-yd-shuttle at 4.19 and ran a Top 8 40 time at 4.49. Sanders’ Combine numbers thrust him from a Top 10 pick to my RB1 and fourth overall in my Superflex rankings. Unfortunately for him, he will forever be linked to Barkley and he is being unfairly downgraded because he “is not Saquon Barkley” - but no one in this year’s draft class is.Ĭlick Here and Get 10% Off at He has one of the best jump cuts we’ve seen since…well…his former teammate Saquon Barkley. A great landing spot could move him up to my 1.01, however, pre-draft based on talent alone, he checks in at 1.04 in Superflex. Not many people will have Sanders as their RB1, however, I’ve seen more and more ‘experts’ coming around on him. I don’t think many people expected him to be that fast and, because of that, he moved up to my No. He ran a respectable, and somewhat surprising, 40 time of 4.49 at the combine. Brown is one of the most complete WRs in this class, and, while he played mostly slot in college, has the size and speed to play on the outside as well. The 1.03 is the first spot that I feel could go in a few directions, but ultimately I landed on Brown as the player with the highest floor and a high enough ceiling. He is one of the few - if not only - players in this draft that landing spot won’t affect him, he will be a stud anywhere he goes. He routinely made highlight reel catches and always seem to win the 50/50 balls. He had nearly 3,000 yards to go along with 26 total TDs (22 receiving, 3 rushing, 1 punt return) in his three years at Arizona State. I didn’t have Harry as my top WR until after the combine, as I thought he was going to test out much slower in his 40 - but - after respectable 4.53 combined with his ball skills and route running, Harry is an easy decision here at the 1.02. Harry is my 1.01 in PPR non-Superflex leagues but in SF he slips to No.
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