After an ugly final season in Tampa Bay that featured not only the end of the 1,000-yard streak but also introduced physical decline into the equation, it should be no surprise that the fantasy football industry is down on Mike Evans relative to any point over the past decade.
This, however, isn’t a conversation about 2026 Evans against himself, but rather against those in his ADP range. Katz feels that the shift from fantasy star to fringe option hasn’t been properly accounted for … the data I’m looking at tells the exact same story.
Why Mike Evans’ Efficiency Decline Is the Real Story
Evans’ fantasy points per target dropped 38.8% from 2024 to last season, and that’s not a one-game blip explained away by the hamstring and collarbone injuries that limited him to eight games. It’s an extended efficiency collapse that predates the health issues layering on top of it.
Evans finished 2025 with 30 catches for 368 yards and three scores, a scary stat line considering that touchdowns have always done heavy lifting in his profile. Roughly a third of his career fantasy points have come via TDs, and that kind of dependency is exactly the wrong trait to carry into a new offense where the target competition and red-zone pecking order are both unproven.
Volume backs up the concern. Evans had one game over 60 receiving yards last season, with five games under 35. Blend that with the age curve, and that’s a tough sell at any cost, never mind a pick in the fifth or sixth round neighborhood.
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San Francisco brought Evans in as the “X” receiver specifically for his contested-catch and red-zone ability, per George Kittle’s recruiting pitch and the team’s own framing of the signing, but that’s a role built around touchdown equity in an offense that already runs its passing game through Kittle and Brock Purdy’s other options.
When touchdowns dry up for even a stretch, there’s little target-share floor underneath Evans to fall back on.
Better Values Are Sitting Right Next to Him in ADP
This is the part that makes fading Evans easier, not harder. Jameson Williams is going in almost the same range and is a younger receiver who has his best football ahead of him after a 65-catch, 1,117-yard, seven-touchdown 2025.
D’Andre Swift is another name worth circling in this range. He’s one of the better value plays on the board relative to where he’s being drafted, and he sits within shouting distance of Evans in ADP: why inherit risk at WR when you can scoop up a potential league winner at the RB position?
If none of that appeals, there’s a case for punting the position entirely in this range and taking a onesie player instead. Caleb Williams and Tucker Kraft are both being drafted, on average, after Evans, and either one gives you a locked-in weekly starter that can compete with the very best at the position.
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None of this requires assuming Evans is finished. He’s a future Hall of Famer with a track record that speaks for itself. But drafting for what a player has done across a 12-year career is a different exercise than drafting for what he’s likely to produce in the range he’s currently going, and right now, the per-target decline, the touchdown dependency and the lack of a proven role in a new offense all point in the same direction.
He’s a DFS option for me in 2026 when the salaries work out just right, not a player that I’m remotely comfortable in penciling into season-long starting lineups on a consistent basis.
