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Top 10 Sleepers for 2026!

Top 10 Sleepers for 2026!
We are officially talking about the Top 10 Fantasy Football Sleepers for 2026, and yes — it’s way too early for some people. But if you actually want to win fantasy football, this is exactly when these conversations need to happen.
Sleepers are not random dart throws.
They are budding stars who were held back by:
Situation
Volume
Injuries
Coaching decisions
Poor quarterback play
These are the players who don’t pop in last year’s box scores, but when you dig deeper, you see clear top-10 upside at a fraction of the draft cost.
This list wasn’t easy to put together. There are a ton of moving parts — free agency, the NFL Draft, lingering veterans, and surprise signings that can destroy fantasy value overnight. That’s exactly why you need to stay ahead of it.
This is how sharp fantasy managers separate themselves from the pack.
What Defines a True Fantasy Football Sleeper?
Before we get into the list, let’s be clear:
A fantasy football sleeper is NOT:
A late-round flier with no upside
A random backup with no path to volume
A real sleeper is:
Underpriced due to last year’s finish
Trending upward based on talent and role
Suppressed by circumstances that can change
Most fantasy managers draft based on last year’s rankings. That’s where the value comes from — and that’s exactly what we’re exploiting here.
Top 10 Fantasy Football Sleepers for 2026
We’re counting this down 1 through 10, and yes — some of these names will surprise you. Stay to the end, because the final sleeper has real stash-and-smash upside.
Sleeper #1 – Tyler Shough (QB)
First sleeper on the list is Tyler Shough — and before we go any further, let’s clear something up.
It’s pronounced Shuff, not “Shuck.”
Now that we’ve got that out of the way, let’s talk football.
Shough quietly finished QB26, and a lot of people will dismiss that number without context. That’s a mistake.
Why Tyler Shough Is a Sleeper:
Second-round pick out of Louisville
6’5”, 219 pounds
26 years old (prime development window)
Finished the season strong
Late-Season Production:
Week 17: 22 fantasy points
Week 18: 22 fantasy points
Multiple games in the 17–22 point range
To put that in perspective:
Jalen Hurts scored 9 points in Week 17
Justin Herbert scored 15
Sam Darnold scored 6
Shough was steady, not flashy — and steady wins fantasy matchups.
The Saints roster still needs work. The offensive line needs help. Another receiver would go a long way. But what Shough has already shown is the ability to produce with very little.
If you wait on quarterback in 2026, Tyler Shough is exactly the type of sleeper who can give you weekly stability with upside.

RJ Harvey will be a solid draft value in 2026 (Photo by Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire)
Sleeper #2 – R.J. Harvey (RB)
R.J. Harvey is the definition of a value sleeper.
He finished 20th among running backs, and that number alone is going to push him down draft boards — which is exactly what we want.
R.J. Harvey 2025 Stats:
RB20 finish
540 rushing yards
3.7 yards per carry
7 rushing touchdowns
47 receptions
5 receiving touchdowns
Here’s what most people miss:
He didn’t really get going until Week 11.
Early in the season, J.K. Dobbins suppressed his role. Once Dobbins was sidelined, Harvey’s volume increased and his role stabilized.
If Dobbins was truly a one-year stopgap — and all signs point that way — Harvey enters 2026 with a clear path to RB1 volume.
That’s the exact profile of a breakout sleeper.
Sleeper #3 – TreVeyon Henderson (RB)
Some people will say Henderson isn’t a sleeper. I disagree.
Yes, he finished RB21 — but that finish is exactly why the value exists.
TreVeyon Henderson 2025 Stats:
911 rushing yards
5.1 yards per carry
9 total touchdowns
35 receptions
Early in the season, his volume was suppressed. Once he was unleashed, the talent was undeniable.
Week 11 was the turning point:
32.3 fantasy points
3 total touchdowns (2 rushing, 1 receiving)
This is Jahmyr Gibbs-level talent at a discounted price.
Most drafts will slot him as RB12–RB15. That’s a mistake. If the workload continues to trend upward, Henderson can blow past his ADP and flirt with top-10 production.
Sleeper #4 – Troy Franklin (WR)
Troy Franklin is one of my favorite wide receiver sleepers for 2026.
Troy Franklin 2025 Stats:
104 targets
65 receptions
709 yards
6 touchdowns
WR30 finish
Courtland Sutton is paid to be “the guy,” but he’s entering his 9th–10th season. Franklin, meanwhile, is entering his third year — the classic breakout window for wide receivers.
The gap between Sutton and Franklin is much smaller than the ADP will suggest.
Franklin has:
Youth
Rapport with his quarterback
Ascending usage
In an era of extreme wide receiver uncertainty, betting on the ascending player instead of the declining veteran is how you find value.

Fantasy football sleeper (Photo by Matthew Huang/Icon Sportswire)
Sleeper #5 – Marvin Harrison Jr. (WR)
Yes, this one will make people uncomfortable — and that’s exactly why it’s a sleeper.
Marvin Harrison Jr. 2025 Stats:
49th among wide receivers
68 receptions
4 touchdowns
On the surface, it looks ugly. But context matters.
He dealt with:
Poor quarterback play
Appendicitis
A heel injury
A team that fell out of contention early
Talent doesn’t disappear overnight.
Marvin Harrison Jr. was a top-five NFL draft pick, and if Arizona upgrades the quarterback position — even slightly — his fantasy outlook changes dramatically.
If he slips into Rounds 4–6, that’s a bet worth making.
Sleeper #6 – Emeka Egbuka (WR)
Egbuka finished WR23, and that’s with massive target dilution.
Emeka Egbuka 2025 Stats:
127 targets
63 receptions
938 yards
6 touchdowns
The problem?
Mike Evans. Chris Godwin.
Veterans clog the funnel. But fantasy football history is clear — eventually, youth wins out.
If injuries hit or the offense naturally transitions, Egbuka has the talent to jump tiers. The price won’t reflect that possibility.
Sleeper #7 – Brock Bowers (TE)
I told you not to draft Brock Bowers early last year — and I was right.
But now? Different story.
Brock Bowers Production:
Year 1: 262 fantasy points, 112 receptions
Year 2: 176 fantasy points, 64 receptions
That’s nearly a 100-point drop, which means value is back.
With a new quarterback likely coming in and potential offensive upgrades, Bowers could return to being a focal point — at a much more reasonable cost.
If he falls into the 4th–5th round, that’s where he becomes a sleeper.
Sleeper #8 – A.J. Barner (TE)
Not flashy. Just effective.
A.J. Barner 2025 Stats:
TE14 finish
519 yards
6 touchdowns
Elijah Royo didn’t emerge. Barner did.
He gives you:
Weekly stability
Red zone usage
Cheap acquisition cost
For a plug-and-play tight end, Barner is quietly one of the safest sleeper bets.

Ashton can really in 2026 (Photo by Michael Allio/Icon Sportswire)
Sleeper #9 – Ashton Jeanty (RB)
This one is criminally overlooked.
Ashton Jeanty 2025 Stats:
RB11 finish
975 rushing yards
3.7 YPC
10 total touchdowns
Worst offensive line in football
Despite everything working against him, Jeanty still finished top 11.
Compact build. Low center of gravity. Durable profile.
If his situation improves even marginally, Jeanty smashes his ADP.
Sleeper #10 – Jacory Croskey-Merritt (RB)
This is your deep stash sleeper.
Croskey-Merritt 2025 Stats:
RB33 finish
805 rushing yards
4.6 yards per carry
8 touchdowns
Yes, he was a seventh-round pick — and teams don’t always value those players.
But if Washington doesn’t bring in serious competition, Croskey-Merritt has a path to relevance.
As an RB4 or RB5 with upside?
That’s a bet I’m willing to make.
Final Thoughts: Why These Sleepers Matter
Fantasy football is won by:
Drafting players before they break out
Ignoring last year’s rankings
Understanding opportunity and trajectory
This list will evolve. Situations will change. But the process stays the same.
Your Turn
Who did I miss?
Who do you think is the top sleeper for fantasy football 2026? Make sure you bookmark this page for winning fantasy football advice!
Drop your thoughts below. Stay subscribed. Turn on notifications.
We’re just getting started — and this offseason is where leagues are won. 🏈🔥



