
The 1st Overall Pick for 2025!
The fantasy football offseason is officially here — but if you’re serious about winning your league, it’s never too early to start thinking about next year. While most managers are checked out, the sharp players are already looking ahead, studying trends, and positioning themselves to dominate.
In this article, I’m breaking down who should be the number one overall pick in fantasy football for 2026, which players are legitimate candidates, and why blindly drafting based on last season’s results is one of the biggest mistakes fantasy managers make.
This is early fantasy football 2026 draft strategy, but getting ahead of the curve now is how you separate yourself from the sheep in your league.
Why Last Year’s Fantasy Football Results Don’t Automatically Repeat
One of the most important lessons in fantasy football is this:
What happened last year will not necessarily happen this year.
Fantasy football is about following trends, not chasing box scores. Every season, managers fall into the same trap — drafting players at their absolute peak, ignoring workload trends, age curves, and changing situations.
That’s why we’re already talking about the first overall pick for 2026. The earlier you identify where the league is heading, the bigger the advantage you gain.
What Positions Are Even in Play for the First Overall Pick?
Let’s get one thing clear right away.
The number one overall pick in fantasy football is almost never:
A quarterback
A tight end
Quarterback is too deep, and tight end production is too volatile year to year. Every season we see breakout tight ends emerge later in drafts, making it unnecessary to spend a first overall pick there.
That leaves us with two realistic options:
Running back
Wide receiver
So the real question becomes: Which position gives you the biggest edge in 2026?
Why Running Back Scarcity Still Wins Fantasy Leagues
Despite how pass-heavy the NFL has become, elite running backs still decide fantasy championships.
Why?
The position is more scarce than ever
Committees are everywhere
True workhorses are extremely rare
Every year, managers think they’ve found a “safe” running back situation — and every year, another back gets siphoned touches, goal-line work, or passing-down snaps.
That’s why when you do find a running back with elite talent and true upside, they become incredibly valuable at the top of drafts.
The Christian McCaffrey Debate: Why I’m Out in 2026
Let’s address the elephant in the room.
Yes, Christian McCaffrey just had an elite fantasy season. Yes, his volume was massive. But here’s the problem:
He’s entering his 10th or 11th NFL season
He’s approaching 30 years old
His career has followed a boom-or-bust injury pattern
When you zoom out, McCaffrey has essentially been a coin flip over his career — elite when healthy, disastrous when not. That’s not the kind of profile I want with the first overall pick.
Decline is imminent. Injury risk is real. And history suggests regression is coming.
If someone else wants to take that gamble at 1.01 in 2026, I’m happy to let them.

CMC Going down in 2026? (Photo by David Buono/Icon Sportswire)
Other Running Back Candidates Worth Discussing
Bijan Robinson
Bijan remains one of the most talented backs in the league. The question isn’t talent — it’s workload and situation. If his role remains elite and consistent, he’s firmly in the conversation for the first overall pick.
Jahmyr Gibbs
Gibbs is one of the most intriguing fantasy assets heading into 2026.
Despite finishing near the top in fantasy points, his rushing volume was surprisingly low compared to other elite backs. He still produced at a high level, which tells you how special his efficiency is.
The key question:
Does his workload increase?
Does his situation open up even more?
If the answer is yes, Gibbs has clear first overall upside.
Ashton Jeanty
Jeanty quietly produced in a poor offensive environment. Finishing as a top-15 running back on a bad offense tells you a lot. He’s not the clear-cut first overall pick yet, but if his situation improves, his stock rises quickly.
Other Names to Monitor
Treveyon Henderson
RJ Harvey
These players have upside, but as of now, they’re better viewed as emerging assets, not locked-in first overall picks.

Clear-cut RB 1 in 2026 (Photo by Cliff Welch/Icon Sportswire)
Why Wide Receivers Are Riskier at 1.01 in 2026
Elite wide receivers are amazing — but the position is becoming increasingly diluted.
We’re seeing:
More rotational wide receiver usage
Fewer true alpha target hogs
Offenses spreading the ball around more than ever
Even elite receivers coming off massive seasons are vulnerable to regression. Betting on wide receivers at the very top often means paying for last year’s ceiling rather than next year’s reality.
That’s why, for me, the first overall pick in 2026 still leans toward running back.
The Fantasy Football Counselor Verdict: Who Is the First Overall Pick for 2026?
As of right now, the answer comes down to two names:
Bijan Robinson or Jahmyr Gibbs
Those are the two running backs I’m circling early. The final decision will depend on:
Offseason moves
Draft capital
Coaching decisions
Projected workload
What I do know is this:
The first overall pick in fantasy football 2026 will almost certainly be a running back
Volume, not hype, will decide it
Situation matters more than name value
Final Fantasy Football Draft Advice for 2026
Fantasy championships are won by managers who:
Think ahead
Ignore public narratives
Understand positional scarcity
Draft based on trends, not emotions
This is just the beginning. As the offseason progresses, we’ll break down:
Draft strategy
Positional rankings
Volume trends
Players to avoid
Players poised to explode
Your Turn: Who Is Your First Overall Pick in Fantasy Football 2026?
Are you rolling the dice on Christian McCaffrey?
Do you believe Bijan or Gibbs is the next league-winner?
Is there another running back you think could emerge?
Drop your pick below in the video and join the discussion!
Fantasy football is a year-round game — and we’re just getting started











