PFN Fantasy analyst Kyle Soppe says drafting around Zay Flowers as a boring name is “a mistake you pounce on and ride to a championship,” and I’ll go a step past him: Flowers is my bet to be this year’s Jaxon Smith-Njigba. Everything Soppe lays out is right. The only thing he undersells is the ceiling.
Flowers just posted career bests with 86 catches for 1,211 yards on 118 targets, good for a WR12 finish in points per game. He did it as Baltimore’s undisputed alpha, commanding a 27.7% target share while the next Ravens wideout drew 39 targets all season. That is not a committee. That is a No. 1 receiver priced like a complementary piece.
Why Zay Flowers Is a Draft-Day Steal at WR16
The trajectory is the whole case. Flowers has raised his yards per route every year and ranked seventh among all receivers at 2.61 in 2025, and he pairs that with hands that travel. Soppe lines his catch rate on short throws right up next to Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Ja’Marr Chase, Nico Collins, and Puka Nacua. That is the company you want, and it is not an accident.
Now the setup gets better. Declan Doyle arrives as offensive coordinator from the Ben Johnson coaching tree, the same room that just built around a young Chicago receiving corps, and Baltimore let Isaiah Likely walk in free agency. Every route Flowers runs in 2026 comes without the tight end who used to eat into the middle of the field. A 27.7% share had room to climb even before the target competition thinned.
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He is coming off the board as the WR16 despite finishing WR12 a year ago. Paying a discount for a rising alpha is how you win the pick before the season starts.
The Jaxon Smith-Njigba Leap Is on the Table
Here’s the swing. Smith-Njigba was a sure-handed, ascending young receiver whose environment finally caught up to his talent, and he turned it into the best fantasy season at the position. Flowers fits that mold almost exactly. He’s a 26-year-old entering year four with an elite catch rate and rising efficiency, and he’s now the clear No. 1 in a passing game that could open up under a new play-caller.
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The one box left to check is touchdowns. Flowers has never scored more than five receiving touchdowns in a season, and he saw just 11 red zone targets in 2025. That’s the ceiling cap, and it’s also the exact thing a new scheme is built to fix. If Doyle scripts him even a handful more looks inside the 20, a receiver already producing at a WR1 clip on volume alone climbs into the overall WR1 conversation.
Bet on the arrow. Flowers has climbed every year, the target path just widened, and the play-caller comes straight from the tree that manufactures breakouts. Draft him ahead of his ADP if you have to, and let the leaguemate who called him boring watch it happen. This is the pick you pounce on.
