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    Fantasy Football Rankings 2024: Top Options at Tight End Include Sam LaPorta, Travis Kelce, and Dalton Kincaid

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    Fantasy rankings are a matter of personal preference, but with extensive research, here is the framework for ordering the fantasy TEs.

    Fantasy rankings look different for everyone. There are so many moving pieces to consider on the player evaluation side of things, not to mention your specific league setup (scoring format, roster construction, team count, etc.).

    That said, I am here to help you as best I can. I’d encourage you to use the below list as a guide – move your favorite options around and create tiers. By stepping back and evaluating the position as a whole, you allow yourself to be flexible when the bullets start flying for real and you’re on the clock in fantasy football.

    Ranking the Top Fantasy Tight Ends

    FIND MORE POSITIONAL RANKINGS: QB | RB | WR | K | DEF | SF

    1) Sam LaPorta | Detroit Lions
    2) Mark Andrews | Baltimore Ravens
    3) Travis Kelce | Kansas City Chiefs
    4) Trey McBride | Arizona Cardinals
    5) Evan Engram | Jacksonville Jaguars
    6) Dalton Kincaid | Buffalo Bills
    7) George Kittle | San Francisco 49ers
    8) Jake Ferguson | Dallas Cowboys
    9) David Njoku | Cleveland Browns
    10) Kyle Pitts | Atlanta Falcons
    11) Brock Bowers | Las Vegas Raiders
    12) Dallas Goedert | Philadelphia Eagles
    13) Dalton Schultz | Houston Texans
    14) T.J. Hockenson | Minnesota Vikings
    15) Luke Musgrave | Green Bay Packers
    16) Pat Freiermuth | Pittsburgh Steelers
    17) Isaiah Likely | Baltimore Ravens
    18) Mike Gesicki | Cincinnati Bengals
    19) Taysom Hill | New Orleans Saints
    20) Cade Otton | Tampa Bay Buccaneers
    21) Cole Kmet | Chicago Bears
    22) Hunter Henry | New England Patriots
    23) Tyler Conklin | New York Jets
    24) Tucker Kraft | Green Bay Packers
    25) Juwan Johnson | New Orleans Saints
    26) Noah Fant | Seattle Seahawks
    27) Chigoziem Okonkwo | Tennessee Titans
    28) Michael Mayer | Las Vegas Raiders
    29) Gerald Everett | Chicago Bears
    30) Dawson Knox | Buffalo Bills
    31) Ja’Tavion Sanders | Carolina Panthers
    32) Tyler Higbee | Los Angeles Rams

    Who Are the Best Tight Ends To Draft in Fantasy?

    Travis Kelce, Kansas City Chiefs

    If I’m spending a late-second/early third-round pick on a onesie position (his current ADP checks in ahead of all quarterbacks), I want to be confident that said player has a level of fantasy upside that we have yet to see.

    Kelce is great, but his best football is pretty clearly behind him. He averaged a career-low 1.83 PPR points per target in 2023, and while he always seems to have plenty of gas in the tank during the NFL playoffs (32-355-3 during the Super Bowl run last year), the same cannot be said for crunch time during the fantasy season.

    • Top-five finishes: Three
    • Top-12 finishes: Seven
    • Finishes outside of the Top 12: Seven
    • Finishes as TE20 or worse: Five (doesn’t include one DNP)

    That’s Kelce’s resume over the past three seasons from Weeks 13-17. As Kansas City manages his body, he’s been just as likely to finish outside of the top 12 as inside it and hasn’t been better than TE20 22.7% of the time.

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    I’m sorry, but that’s unacceptable. It’s also something that I have a hard time seeing reverse for a player who will be 35 when that stretch approaches this season. There’s simply too much talent at the position now to justify spending this sort of capital. Mark Andrews is available 2+ rounds later if you want a veteran and Jake Ferguson 5+ rounds later if you want to be attached to a pass-centric offense.

    Dalton Kincaid, Buffalo Bills

    The Buffalo Bills are going to look different this year than last with Stefon Diggs and Gabe Davis moving on, leaving the role of primary target earner very much up for grabs. I’d argue that it’s Dalton Kincaid’s role to lose.

    The slot can be an advantageous spot to be on the field due to the high efficiency of those targets, and that’s even more true when an offense is undergoing significant changes across the board in terms of pass-catching options.

    As a rookie, Kincaid operated out of the slot on over 52% of his snaps six times — four of them came after Joe Brady took over this offense. He led the position in slot rate in the Brady era (Weeks 11-18) and, for the season, scored the majority of his points from there.

    The NFL has been trending toward shorter passes. If that is going to be the case with an unproven cast of receivers, Kincaid could rack up top-five volume at the position.

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