Fantasy Finish: Top 15 QBs of 2025 - How they finished and what to expect in 2026
No se pudo agregar al carrito
Add to Cart failed.
Error al Agregar a Lista de Deseos.
Error al eliminar de la lista de deseos.
Error al añadir a tu biblioteca
Error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
-
Narrado por:
-
De:
Send us a text
Fantasy finishes tell the truth your draft can’t. We break down the top 15 quarterback performances from the 2025 season and turn them into clear 2026 draft moves: who to target, who to fade, and which stacks actually win titles. From Daniel “Indiana” Jones sneaking into QB15 despite injury to Sam Darnold’s safe but capped resurgence in Seattle, we unpack what a real QB2 looks like in superflex and why your QB1 needs either rushing juice or concentrated weapons.
We dig into Jordan Love’s quietly elite efficiency and why a healthy Jaden Reed and Tucker Kraft could push him into locked-in QB1 territory. We contrast Baker Mayfield’s slide versus ADP with Jared Goff’s set-and-forget stability, showing how coordinator continuity and YAC-friendly backs like Jahmyr Gibbs lift non-rushing quarterbacks. Mid-tier stars offered lessons too: Patrick Mahomes’ passing dip but rushing spike, Justin Herbert’s identity swings in LA, and Jalen Hurts’ surprising rushing TD regression. Bo Nix’s growth under Sean Payton mirrors Hurts’ profile—steady per-game points without volume heroics.
Rising talents reshaped the top: Caleb Williams stabilized Chicago’s wild target tree under Ben Johnson, Dak Prescott demanded to be a stacking priority, and Trevor Lawrence broke out with nine rushing TDs under Liam Cohen. At the top, Matthew Stafford reignited with Puka Nakua for a league-winning stack, Drake May vaulted to QB2 with Stefon Diggs unlocking the offense, and Josh Allen remained the fantasy cheat code—dominant rushing, relentless usage, and a weekly ceiling no one else matches.
Actionable takeaways: prioritize QBs with coordinator stability, an alpha receiver, and either designed rushing or red-zone usage. Stack when the target tree is tight (Allen with any emerging WR1, Stafford with Puka, Dak with Lamb or Ferguson), and treat safe-floor passers as QB2s unless they gain a true difference-maker. Want more like this? Follow, subscribe, and drop a review with your QB1 for 2026—who are you building around?
Support the show
Thanks for Listening! Subscribe to our YouTube Channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBPAVRUduAUqHORYenFfo9w