E.J. Manuel, Buffalo Bills
20-of-30 passing, 66.7 percent completion, 358 passing yards, three touchdowns and zero interceptions
While Manuel has performed extremely well in the preseason, it's highly unlikely he will start Week 1. The Bills quarterback competition is likely between Tyrod Taylor and Matt Cassel at this point.
Though, this could definitely be something to keep an eye on early in the season. If the player Rex Ryan chooses to begin the season under center struggles, he may very well end up going with Manuel. After all, the Bills did exhaust a first-round pick on this quarterback just two years ago.
Ryan Tannehill, Miami Dolphins
33-of-41 passing, 80.5 percent completion, 303 passing yards, three touchdowns and zero interceptions
With an ADP in the eighth round, Tannehill might very well be one of the most underrated fantasy players heading into the regular year. Not only did his finish last season as the eighth-best fantasy quarterback, his overall play has improved a great deal over the offseason. Now fully prepared to reach elite levels, it's ridiculous that Tannehill's ADP has him as the 13th quarterback off the board.
Sam Bradford, Philadelphia Eagles
13-of-15 passing, 86.7 percent completion, 156 passing yards, three touchdowns and zero interceptions
Much like Tannehill, Bradford's current fantasy value is so far from reality that it should force each and every one of you to draft him as a late-round QB1 option. Playing in a quarterback-friendly system under Chip Kelly, this injury-plagued veteran has been super impressive in his two brief outings thus far this preseason, leading the Eagles to touchdowns in all four drives in which he's been under center. He's currently the 16th quarterback off the board with an ADP in the 11th round.
Colt McCoy, Washington Redskins
19-of-24 passing, 79.2 percent completion, 208 passing yards, three touchdowns and zero interceptions
McCoy's fantasy relevance is solely limited to daily contests. Even if he's named the Week 1 starter by Jay Gruden and company, the career backup isn't a standard league option. Though, depending on matchups (and there promises to be a few good ones for McCoy against bad NFC East defenses), he could work as a solid daily play.
Alex Smith, Kansas City Chiefs
33-of-46 passing, 71.7 percent completion, 294 passing yards, three touchdowns and two interceptions
Showing more of an urgency to get the ball down the field this past weekend, Smith seems primed for a solid fantasy season. With new weapon Jeremy Maclin and the emergence of Travis Kelce at tight end, there's little reason to believe that Smith won't out-perform his current ADP of 180.