2025 Dynasty Rookie Mock Draft: Dominating a 5-Round SuperFlex Draft From a Late Pick

2025 Dynasty Rookie Mock Draft: 5-Round Fantasy Football SuperFlex

The 2025 NFL Draft is right around the corner, which means it’s time to sharpen your draft boards, overanalyze every prospect, and pretend you won’t trade away half your picks by mid-May.

In this 2025 Dynasty Rookie Mock Draft, I fired up the FantasyPros Mock Draft Simulator to see how things might shake out in a 5-round SuperFlex format when drafting from the 1.10 spot. I wanted to give managers an example of how to draft at the end of the round after already drafting from the middle.

Was it perfect? Not quite—ex-Cavinder triplet Carson Beck was apparently still in the system—but it gave us a solid look at how the draft could unfold.

READ: 2025 DYNASTY ROOKIE RANKINGS & BIG BOARD

Let’s break it down and see how to dominate your SuperFlex 2025 Dynasty Rookie Draft.

2025 DYNASTY ROOKIE MOCK DRAFT FROM THE 1.10

1.10: TREVEYON HENDERSON, RB OHIO STATE

I’m not sure how TreVeyon Henderson fell to me at 1.10, but I’m not asking questions.

After breaking out as a true freshman, Henderson hit a few bumps thanks to injuries during his sophomore and junior years. But instead of bolting early for the NFL, he pulled the ultimate move: ran it back at Ohio State, shared the backfield with Quinshon Judkins, and won a natty in the process.

Henderson flashed elite burst, vision, and pass-catching chops — all while continuing his streak of never, ever fumbling (667 career touches, zero cough-ups!). Then he wrapped things up by helping Ohio State win a natty and proceeded to torch the NFL Combine like he had a grudge against turf. We’re talking 23.38 MPH on GPS (second-fastest among RBs) and a spicy 9.43 RAS score.

This is the kind of electric, do-it-all back who can tilt fantasy matchups — and leagues — all by himself. At 1.10, that’s a home run swing I’m thrilled to connect on.

2.10: JAYDEN HIGGINS, WR IOWA STATE

Choosing between Iowa State’s dynamic receiver duo will haunt me in the second round when both are available. But this time, I went with Jayden Higgins, the bigger X prototype, over the silky smooth Jaylin Noel.

Higgins is your classic outside alpha — long, strong, and plays like he knows it. He has a big frame, a wide catch radius, and the kind of physicality that makes DBs uncomfortable. But don’t let the size fool you, he’s surprisingly light on his feet. His release is quick, his routes are snappy, and he glides through space like a much smaller receiver at his 6’4″ stature.

Sure, he’s not blowing the top off defenses with pure speed, but he knows how to win. Reliable hands? Check. Toughness over the middle? Yup. Red zone upside? Absolutely.

Higgins has all the tools to be a steady X receiver in the league — and potentially a steal in Round 2.

3.10: BHAYSHUL TUTEN, RB VIRGINIA TECH

I’ve been pounding the table for Bhayshul Tuten long before the ECR caught up. Now he’s RB10 on the consensus board, but he’s been sitting pretty there on mine since late-February.

Tuten may be compact, but he runs like he’s got a point to prove. He has a low center of gravity, bounces off contact, and navigates traffic with vision and wiggle. Over the past two seasons, he piled up 2,022 rushing yards and 29 total TDs at Virginia Tech — not too shabby for a guy who began his career at North Carolina A&T.

And then came the Combine. Tuten lit it up with a 4.32 40, a 40.5” vert, and a 10’10” broad jump, all while packing 206 pounds into a 5’9″ frame.

He’s the kind of electric back who could thrive in a creative offense that knows how to get him in space. At 3.10, I’m swinging on upside and Tuten’s got it in spades.

4.10: ELIJAH ARROYO, TE MIAMI

Not to flex too hard, but I was on the Elijah Arroyo train way before it left the station in Mobile. I was +5 vs ECR with him locked in as my TE6 before the Senior Bowl. Now the consensus has rocketed him up to TE3.

Arroyo balled out at the Senior Bowl, torching linebackers and bullying defensive backs. At 6’5″, 250, he has that classic “move tight end” build with plus-athleticism. In Mobile, he was one of the top pass-catchers on the field and not just at the tight end position.

Injuries did him no favors when he blew out his knee in 2022, which lingered into 2023. But on the bright side, he rebounded nicely with Cam Ward slinging it his way. His career numbers won’t wow anyone, but his final season line of 35-590-7 shows what he can do when healthy and featured.

TE premium or not, I’m thrilled to snag a big-bodied, high-upside pass-catcher this late.

5.10: RICKY WHITE, WR UNLV

So far, I’ve completed two mock drafts and both times I left with one of my favorite late-round taxi fliers: Ricky White. I wanted upside at this pick, so I went with the UNLV product—part route-running technician, part YAC machine.

Now, full disclosure: his NFL Combine and RAS score were not ideal. But he redeemed himself at Pro Day with a 4.44 forty and matched the tape.

The production? Oh, it’s there. White put up 167 catches, 2,524 yards, and 19 TDs over the last two seasons. He led all combine-invited receivers with a bonkers 46.9% Dominator Rating in 2024, and he broke out at 18.6 years old, the second-youngest in the class.

Translation: he was the UNLV offense.

On tape, White is a smooth mover with polished routes and slippery YAC ability. He knows how to get open, and more importantly, knows what to do once he has the ball. That’s exactly the kind of upside I want on my Taxi Squad.

CONCLUSION: DRIPPING IN PLAYMAKERS

All in all, picking from the 1.10 spot, I walked away feeling pretty great about how this rookie mock played out. I added serious juice to my roster with TreVeyon Henderson, Bhayshul Tuten, and Elijah Arroyo — three explosive, athletic playmakers who bring elite speed and big-play potential to the table. Each one has the kind of upside that can shift fantasy matchups, and all three could realistically carve out meaningful fantasy roles.

On top of that, I landed a prototypical X receiver in Jayden Higgins, who has the size, hands, and physicality to develop into a reliable outside threat, and snagged Ricky White III, one of my favorite deep-sleeper stashes, to round things out. With four potential day-one contributors and a sneaky-good taxi stash, I’ve boosted both my starting lineup and my bench depth. Not bad for a team already in win-now mode.

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