
Ian Hartitz breaks down his QB tiers for 2024, highlighting some of the biggest questions facing fantasy football's top signal-callers.

Shit happens in fantasy football land. Whether it's another manager deciding they need the exact player you were hoping would fall just one more spot, or irrational roster construction ruining your carefully crafted strategy: The only certainty during any given fantasy draft is the general uncertainty surrounding what the hell everyone is going to do.
While this inherent randomness can be tilting at times, it also makes fantasy football a lot of fun — particularly when we can use it to our advantage.
Enter: Tier-based drafting. This is essentially the practice of asking yourself "What can I get now that I can't get later" before every pick and acting accordingly. This practice certainly goes hand in hand with fantasy football rankings and general draft strategy; just realize leaning on tiers is really useful when attempting to discern whether or not you have the luxury of waiting on the position in question, or if the time to act is meow.
Today's goal: QB tiers with superlatives to highlight some of the biggest questions facing the involved signal-callers. The QBs are listed in order of my personal rankings inside the tiers and are followed by one specific superlative-themed write-up. Check out my team preview series for full thoughts on every team's QB room.
As always: It's a great day to be great.
QBs with high-volume rushing roles tend to be cheat codes in fantasy football land. These signal-callers are all expected to have just that, with the one exception quite possibly being an actual alien …
Five quick awesome things about Murray's fantasy football prognosis:
And you're telling me there are 85-plus players who ESPN drafters would apparently rather draft at the moment? Couldn't be me: Murray is my QB6 and 64th-ranked player off the board — both highs among the Fantasy Life rankings staff.
The lack of a true high-end rushing role might leave these more pocket-oriented QBs outside of the position's top-five producers in fantasy land, but make no mistake about it: These players remain some of the position's very best real-life talents, and the ceiling remains sky-high — particularly in formats that reward more than four points per passing TD…
Burrow looked like a complete shell of himself during the first month of the season, rarely leaving the pocket or even taking a snap under center. The results were atrocious and largely nuked his numbers on the year.
Things started to really change after someone woke him up when September ended (see what I did there):
Overall, Burrow posted top-seven marks in EPA per dropback (+.180, 7th), completion percentage over expected (+7.1%, 1st), PFF pass grade (83.3, 6th) and passer rating (107, 2nd) during this five-game stretch of good health. Even against some truly great defenses, he once again looked every bit like anyone's idea of an elite professional QB.
Reminder: Only Josh Allen (24.2), Jalen Hurts (23) and Patrick Mahomes (22.9) averaged more fantasy points per game than Burrow (20.8) during the 2021 and 2022 seasons. Don't discount the potential for a return to top-five standing from the Bengals' 275-million-dollar man.
It's common for first-year signal-callers to struggle at the NFL level, but things like rushing volume and a strong supporting cast can help offset that. Enter: The top two picks of the 2024 NFL Draft, who each tentatively seem set up well enough to produce top-12 fantasy production sooner rather than later in their promising careers…
While Daniels shouldn't necessarily be considered the favorite to achieve this relative to every QB in the league — it's possible and not erroneous to believe Daniels will be one of the position’s top-five most-productive rushers the second he steps on an NFL field. The man posted 11-163-1, 12-234-2, 10-96-2 and 11-120-0 rushing lines during his final four collegiate games, regularly proving capable of making men miss in the open field and erasing pursuit angles from second-level defenders on his way to racking up chunk gains:
The fact that Daniels achieved this against the best competition that college football had to offer also matters. Our only red flag here is Daniels' recklessness in the open field: He can slide, but as Yahoo’s Nate Tice points out: There’s some Johnny Knoxville to his game.
Fifteen of 16 QBs to rack up 125-plus carries in a season ever went on to post top-12 numbers in fantasy points per game — including 11 top-five finishes. This is certainly something Kingsbury has plenty of experience with dating back to his time with Kyler Murray in Arizona: Only the Saints (s/o Taysom Hill) utilized more designed QB runs than the Cardinals during the 2019 to 2022 seasons.
These signal-callers are a bit like Batman: No special superpowers, but the toolkit is DEEP in each QB's respective fantasy-friendly environment, and they accordingly deserve to be prioritized in the QB2 landscape…
Just look at his fantasy points per game by month over the past two seasons:
Tagovailoa put up solid fantasy production in 2022 (17.8 fantasy points per game, QB10) and (to a lesser extent) in 2023 (15.9, QB18). The passing efficiency and counting numbers are tough to argue with, but the floor here is low due to the lack of any rushing upside: Tua has totaled 144 yards on the ground over the past two seasons and has never reached even 50 rushing yards in a game during his collegiate or professional career.
Of course, getting to throw to one of the NFL's very best WR duos helps matters, and head coach Mike McDaniel consistently puts this passing game in a position to succeed thanks to some of his work with pre-snap shift/motion (84.3% in 2022-23, 1st) and play-action (34.1%, 2nd).
Would Tua be ranked this high in fantasy land if he was forced to play for a team with less fantasy-friendly pass-game resources like the Chargers or Steelers? Nope, but guess what: Style points don't matter in fantasy football, so perceived "system" QBs tend to be pretty solid assets when said system happens to be one of the best in the league.
This looks a lot like the last group of signal-callers who you could SOMEWHAT realistically see finishing among this season's top-12 producers. Then again, your argument would likely fare quite a bit better after a handful of alcoholic beverages …
Watson has started just 12 football games over the past three seasons. Glass-half-full optimists can point to the ever-brutal December weather in Cleveland as well as rotator cuff and shoulder injuries as reasons why the three-time Pro Bowler hasn't managed to catch his stride with his new employer.
That said: We're talking about a guy who ranks among the league's bottom-10 QBs in virtually any meaningful advanced passing metric over the past two seasons. Quite the falloff for someone who trailed only Patrick Mahomes and Drew Brees in EPA + CPOE composite score during the 2017 to 2020 seasons.
This brings us to the primary question here: What are the chances that Watson turns things around ahead of a CRUCIAL 2024 season that could represent his last opportunity to work as the team's full-time starter? Don't get it twisted: The Browns can't realistically get out of this hideous contract without forfeiting over $60 million in dead money before 2027, but another lackluster campaign could feasibly be the last straw considering how much public ridicule this team has faced since trading for his services in the first place.
The bear and bull cases for Watson ahead of next season:
Priced well outside the top 150 picks over at ESPN, Watson is essentially a free LATE round pick who would instantly vault back into the weekly QB1 conversation with a Week 1 performance even somewhat similar to what fans regularly saw in Houston a few short years ago.
The rushing upside here is basically non-existent, but maybe these mostly old men can string together one last hurrah inside offenses that do have some solid avenues to go with the football. Of course, they're as cheap as they are for a reason in fantasy land: There are plenty of red flags here…
The "Wait Matthew Stafford is actually really good" tour has continued this offseason, most notably with Texans QB C.J. Stroud stating that the ex-Lions signal-caller would have more rings than Aaron Rodgers if he had spent the early portion of his career in Green Bay.
Offseason speculation is a helluva drug. Regardless, there is plenty of evidence that, at a minimum, Stafford functioned as a pretty damn good QB in the year 2023.
Stafford among 32 QBs with 300-plus dropbacks in 2023:
The performance was particularly impressive considering longtime No. 1 WR Cooper Kupp missed time with a hamstring injury and generally didn't look like his usual self throughout the season. Credit to Puka Nacua as well as (to far lesser extents) Demarcus Robinson and Tutu Atwell for picking up the slack; just realize Stafford wasn't exactly dealing with the world's great pass-catching core here.
Of course, having Sean McVay will always help from a play-calling perspective, and the league's ninth-ranked rushing attack in terms of raw yards per carry consistently kept opposing defenses honest. This offense was grooving by the end of the season, scoring 37, 36, 31, 28, 30, 26 and 23 points in their final seven meaningful games.
The potential for multi-TD spike weeks is certainly still here. I'm more than fine with Stafford as my second QB, even if cheaper options like Deshaun Watson and Will Levis probably present higher best-case *fantasy* ceilings in the year 2024.
None of these QBs are locks to start all 17 games ahead of 2024. While each deserves credit for at a minimum being a top-40 or so QB on planet Earth, it's tough to be overly optimistic about their fantasy upside inside these mostly anemic offensive environments…
The 2024 NFL Draft's No. 3 overall pick's 2022 campaign (4,321 pass yards, 38 TDs) was a bit more prolific than the encore in 2023 (3,608 yards, 24 TDs), but maybe that’s just life after losing your top-two WRs to the NFL (Josh Downs, Antoine Green) and dealing with a pretty meh offensive line (and sore ankle) all season long.
PFF's highest-graded passing QB over the past two seasons also possesses some sneaky-solid rushing upside. His rushing production wound up being more prolific than any of the big-six QBs not named Jayden Daniels when removing yards lost from sacks:
Fantasy points per game from purely rushing production 2022-23:
For reference, Maye (57 rushing yards per game in 2022-23) finds himself in the same group as guys like Anthony Richardson (59 in 2022) and Justin Fields (55 in 2019-20). Having this extra bit of dual-threat goodness could really help Maye surprise early on in fantasy land, even if his real-life development takes a bit to get going.
Top-10 QBs seldom spend much time on the bench as rookies, so failure to win the job by Week 1 shouldn't necessarily be seen as a full-season issue for Maye. The team's unproven (to put it nicely) group of pass-catchers and probable run-first offense doesn't bode too well for Maye's chances of returning too much fantasy goodness, but then again, fantasy managers don't need to look back too far to find the last time a top-three QB immediately elevated his offense and emerged as a late-round gem in fantasy land.



