
In today's Fantasy Life Newsletter, presented by Underdog Fantasy, we dive into breaking down the Browns backfield, WR tiers for 2024, and more.

In today's Fantasy Life Newsletter, presented by Underdog Fantasy:
It feels like every year NFL backfields get messier and messier.
This is both a blessing and a curse.
When a messy situation breaks right—like it did with the Miami Dolphins’ backs last year—drafters can stumble on multiple league-winning backs.
On the flip side, a three-way committee in a poor offense can lead to endless fantasy headaches.
Last week, I lamented the whiplash in reports surrounding the Denver backfield—which provides us a wide range of outcomes on either side of the spectrum I just outlined.
Over the weekend, ESPN’s Dan Graziano shed light on another backfield with muddied waters, the Cleveland Browns.
Here’s what we know about the four backs in the mix. Yes, I said four:
I’m generally more willing than most to embrace these ambiguous backfields, but this RB room is close to a stay-away situation for me.
Chubb is way too expensive in home leagues (he’s going 87th overall on Yahoo, for example) where he’s likely to clog your bench for a long time.
Ford is too expensive on Underdog (ADP: 128) because you have zero guarantee he’s the starter when it matters the most in the fantasy playoffs.
And even if Ford and Chubb share a baton-passing moment, you’re still going to have to deal with Foreman vulturing high-value TD touches. Woof.

by Ian Hartitz
These guys are incredible real-life football players and the engine of their respective offenses. MAYBE we could nitpick one or two factors, but even then that's probably overthinking things…
Unlock Ian's full set of 2024 fantasy football rankings by signing up for FantasyLife+ today!
The history of rookie QBs enabling high-end fantasy WRs is, well, not good. The No. 1 fantasy WR in PPR points per game has posted the following production from 41 offenses that have started a rookie QB for at least 10 games in a season since 2010:
Of course, Justin Jefferson isn't your everyday No. 1 WR. The man has averaged 106 and 107 receiving yards per game over the past two seasons, emerging as the typical frontrunner on count-down lists of the game's very best players at the position.
Overall, only Tyreek Hill has averaged more yards per route run than Jefferson (2.67) since the latter WR entered the league back in 2020. The QB concerns here are real, but MAN is it tough to wrap the mind around fading this sort of ascending talent.
Ultimately, Jefferson should see enough volume to still return top-five goodness in fantasy land with his talent level. While I've usually drafted Lamb, Hill and Chase ahead of him this offseason, you should never be completely out on anyone with a realistic path to achieving a target total starting with a two.

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The latest fantasy nuggets, silliness, and NFL gossip from our merry band of football nerds:
👀 Sleepers, breakouts, draft strategies and more. Your complete RB guide for 2024.
🤝 ICYMI: An industry expert dropped by to share his QB strategies for 2024. Watch now!
😡 Garrett Wilson and Aaron Rodgers getting into it. Here we go…
✍️ Training camp roundup. Good intel in here.
🤩 Can’t stop, won’t stop. We aren’t leaving drafts without these QBs.
😆 Ja’Lynn Polk did not say this! But it would have been funny if he did…
👀 This Bengals RB taking the majority of the first-team reps. This is big.
🚀 The oft-injured RB about to have a ‘special’ season? Hmmmm.
🤑 Jordan Love and Tua got paid. Congrats.
