Dynamic Tier Fantasy Football Player Rankings Tight End Primer

Dynamic Tier 2022 Tight End Rankings Primer
Tight end is arguably the hardest part of your fantasy football rankings. And folks often respond to that by avoiding the issue entirely. They might reach early in their draft for someone like Travis Kelce, Mark Andrews, or Kyle Pitts, sometimes losing value in the process. Or they fall victim to another fantasy football myth; that all tight ends after the top few are the same. They’re all just touchdown dependent and inconsistent. So they just draft whoever and then just leave him in there, hoping their running backs, wide receivers, and quarterback will carry their team. If that’s how you’ve looked at the position in the past, no amount of fantasy football cheat sheets or mock drafts have really been able to save you from yourself.
Fantasy Alarm members, however, know that we’ve found a new way to look at tight end. A late-round tight end drafting strategy that helps you beat the fantasy football waiver wire (or, at the very least, helps you identify the right waiver adds early). For a couple of years now, it’s been our secret weapon in finding fantasy football sleepers. It’s called Yin & Yang Tight End.
The concept is simple enough that you may have even done a version of it in the past without realizing it. Most fantasy leagues are 10-12 team leagues with one tight end. That means, if your tight end isn’t in the top five or six, you have a below-average tight end. That’s Math. The idea for our strategy is that, if you don’t get an elite tight end, you wait and take two. You take one player who is relatively “safe” early on but doesn’t offer a particularly high ceiling (Yin). And you take another that is potentially too risky to start week one but has some path to the high-end upside (Yang). You start the Yin early on in the season hoping that the Yang breaks out. If the Yang doesn’t look like he’s going to hit, you drop him and stash another upside play. Rinse and repeat until you find this year’s breakout.
We’ve done this in the past to find guys like Mark Andrews, Darren Waller, Logan Thomas, etc. If you think back to those seasons, you really couldn’t trust those guys to be your only tight end right from the jump. In hindsight, it seems easy to just draft and start guys like that but that’s ignoring all the hyped-up breakout picks that just did nothing and really hurt your fantasy teams while you scrambled to find a replacement. Looking at you, Jonnu Smith. So, you either needed to draft and stash these potential sleepers or get lucky off the wire. If you were in a league with us, where we were using Yin & Yang Tight End, they were not available on the wire. Because we already drafted them. So it’s high time you joined us in BEATING the waiver wire so you don’t need to leave your season up to chance or spend your entire season starting some boring, low upside option. That’s a great way to come in third place.
Dynamic Tier Tight End Fantasy Football Player Rankings
To help you with this process, we’ll be providing the Yin & Yang tight end options via our new Dynamic Rankings. If guys break out (or even if Yin guys prove more reliable than we thought) they will get moved up to the Standalone section. After Week One and each subsequent week, we will shuffle around the rankings so that you can create the right balance for your team and give yourself a shot at glory. Here is a look at the system.
And here is a quick rundown of how the different sections work.
Standalone: If you’ve invested in one of these tight ends, you plan to start them every week. If you have deep enough benches maybe you can hold a second tight end but you only need to plan for their bye. If guys from the second tier prove they are worthy, they will be moved up here.
Yin: This player is safe enough to draft and start week one. But there are factors that might be preventing them from having high upside (not being a top-two target on their team, lack of athleticism, scheme issues etc.) So you still want to be using one bench spot trying to hit on a breakout.
Yang: These are your high-risk, high-reward options. It’s hard to trust them as your starter in week one but some of these guys could either lead their team in targets or at least be second, presenting an interesting path to upside. You stash them to see what it looks like early on then move on to the next guy if need be.
Injury Stash: This section says “injury” but can also be a spot for suspended players or interesting free agents. They have zero viability early but have some sort of long-term upside.
Fantasy Alarm Members
Fantasy Alarm members who have been with us for a while are familiar with this system. They’re obviously advanced fantasy gamers who stopped relying on casual, linear rankings a long time ago. Plus they know that they have access to expert advice either in the Discord Chat or via our Thursday and Sunday LiveStreams every week so they don’t need to go at it alone. If you aren’t a Fantasy Alarm member yet, it’s about time you joined the #FAmily so you can start thinking outside of the box and take your game to a new level. And have a lot of fun with us along the way!
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Related Links
- Dynamic Tier Player Rankings Quarterback Primer
- Dynamic Tier Player Rankings Running Back Primer
- Dynamic Tier Player Rankings Wide Receiver Primer
Player News
The New York Post’s Paul Schwartz reports Giants OL Evan Neal is moving from tackle to guard.
Neal was selected seventh overall by the Giants in 2022 to play right tackle. Injuries have led to just 29 games played in three seasons for the 24-year-old, including 27 starts. Neal has struggled amidst the injuries; he posted a 61.2 PFF grade last season, good for No. 73 out of 140 qualifying tackles. The Giants signed James Hudson III and Stone Forsythe to back up at tackle, leaving Neal - who graded better as a run blocker than a pass blocker - to kick inside and compete for the right guard spot. It is a contract year for Neal, so his attempt to become a starter at guard will be crucial to watch throughout the season.
Chiefs released TE Anthony Firkser.
Firkser joined the Chiefs’ practice squad halfway through the 2024 season after he was released by the Jets. He appeared in three games for the Chiefs and four for the Jets, not seeing a target and primarily playing special teams last season. The 30-year-old veteran last caught a pass in the NFL for the Falcons in 2022 and was a productive rotational tight end for the Titans from 2018-2021. Now a free agent, Firkser will look to support a team’s tight end depth in 2025.
Bills signed WR Elijah Moore, formerly of the Browns, to a one-year contract.
Cleveland placed the rarely-used free agent tender on Moore earlier this week, allowing the Browns to potentially net a compensatory pick if he signed elsewhere. Moore’s visit with the Bills proved fruitful and he will now play for “up to” $5 million. Moore struggled to find his footing after the Jets traded him to Cleveland and he went for a measly 538 yards in 2024. He will now get another chance to reset things in Buffalo, but Moore is far from a guarantee for playing time with the Bills.
Patriots did not exercise the OL Cole Strange’s fifth-year team option for 2026.
The move, or lack thereof, doesn’t come as a surprise. Strange was a stunning first-round selection by Bill Belichick in 2022, with Sean McVay saying he thought the Rams would have a shot at landing Strange with the 104th pick. Strange suffered a torn patellar tendon late in the 2023 season that cost him most of 2024. A left guard by trade, Strange made two starts at center last year. A replacement-level player at best, Strange enters his contract year in need of a breakout season.
Cowboys waived RB Malik Davis.
Clearing roster space for their rookie class, the Cowboys also parted ways with OG Jack Anderson, LB Brock Mogensen, and OT Earl Bostick Jr. Davis spent 2024 on the Cowboys’ practice squad and signed a reserve/futures contract with them at the end of the season. He is a long-shot to make an NFL roster this year.
Jets QB Jordan Travis retired from the NFL after one season.
Travis suffered a catastrophic ankle injury late in his final season at Florida State in 2023. The Jets took a shot on him in the fifth round of the draft, but Travis suffered a setback in his recovery and did not play as a rookie. In his statement via the team, Travis said his leg never responded the way he had hoped and the medical staff advised him to return. It’s a sad ending for a player who had a future in the NFL before his tragic injury.