
Late-Round ADP Values For Fantasy Football 2026: Target Greg Dulcich At His Price
Justin Carlucci finds three late-round flyers to taret for the end of your benches in 2026.
It’s hard to believe we’re almost through June, and more and more contests across the fantasy football industry are starting to fill up. This week, we’re going further down the board into late-round ADP territory where we’re hunting for value and untapped upside at a price that won’t hurt if it doesn’t hit. Let’s get into three names I’m happy to keep buying right now.
Late-Round ADP Targets For 2026
Jalen Nailor | WR | LV
Jalen Nailor suddenly became very important at work. The Raiders did next to nothing at wide receiver in the spring outside of bringing Nailor in on a three-year, $35 million deal.
It’s a little weird considering Las Vegas took Fernando Mendoza No. 1 overall—a quarterback we’ll likely see at some point this year after Kirk Cousins gets his shot to play bridge. But as it stands, the Raiders’ receiving room is Nailor, Tre Tucker (a 5-foot-8 speedster who’s very good in his role but is the furthest thing from an alpha), and second-year players Jack Bech and Dont’e Thornton.
In my eyes, tight end Brock Bowers and Nailor are the clear winners in the passing-game pecking order, at least until something shifts on the depth chart.
Nailor’s consensus ADP is 178.3, and he’s going at 151.5 on Underdog. At that price, this is the kind of low-risk play I’m happy to keep gobbling up shares of in June. If the Raiders end up trailing in a lot of games—which is very much in play—there should be plenty of second-half passing volume for Nailor to soak up.
Nailor had just a 65% route share last year, but the underlying metrics popped. He posted a 13.3 average depth of target and an 8.88 yards per target mark, both better than ex-Vikings teammates Jordan Addison and Justin Jefferson.
He also outpaced both of his former Vikings teammates in yards per reception, and he was perfectly serviceable in the red zone, with 11 targets inside the 20, tied for second on the team with Addison and tight end T.J. Hockenson.
There’s untapped potential here. If Nailor pushes his route share into the 80% range—entirely realistic given this depth chart—I’m extremely interested at the current price. Even if Las Vegas adds another body before the preseason, the path to a meaningful role is obvious. My guess is Nailor will jump up at least a round or two by September.
Gunnar Helm | TE | TEN
Next up, tight end Gunnar Helm of the Tennessee Titans, who has a consensus ADP of 180.7 and is going at 178.2 on Underdog Fantasy.
This is still a bargain for a guy who can absolutely score for you as a streaming TE most weeks, with real shots at finishing inside the low-end TE1 conversation if the role grows. This should be Helm’s tight end room to lose. Tennessee brought in Daniel Bellinger to add depth and provide familiarity with Brian Daboll from their time together with the New York Giants, but that seems like a depth move to me.
Helm played on just 37% of the team’s offensive snaps last year. Despite that, he still ranked fourth on the team in receiving yards and tied for second in targets inside the 20-yard line. At 6-foot-5 and 240 pounds, with the kind of natural hands he flashed throughout his rookie year, there are plenty of reasons to believe.
Last season, the Titans’ offense was caught between Brian Callahan’s sloppy schematic route concepts and what later became a Mike McCoy–led group as interim HC. They actually looked more formidable down the stretch, but no offense to McCoy, we can’t pretend that he’s an offensive savant.
Under a new staff with Cam Ward in his second year and a hopefully more coherent passing concept, Helm has real upside. I expect a snap-share jump, more red-zone work and a better overall offense to lift his ceiling. At this cost, that’s a bargain.
Greg Dulcich | TE | MIA
I’m going back to the tight end well with Greg Dulcich. There’s some really sneaky value at the end of drafts, and Dulcich has a consensus ADP of 194.5, going at 185.6 on Underdog Fantasy.
Dulcich got a career revitalization in Miami last year. We’re about to find out a lot more about former Dolphins head coach Mike McDaniel—is he the tight-end whisperer? We saw Dulcich come back from being a completely forgotten commodity under McDaniels’ guidance, Jonnu Smith absolutely smash and Darren Waller climb out of retirement for some impactful weeks.
Even if you take the McDaniel correlation out of it with him now in LA, there just aren’t many proven NFL pass catchers on this Dolphins team. Malik Washington is the receiver in the room, and honestly, you can throw him on a list like this, too.
Jalen Tolbert is in the building after proving to be a fine NFL receiver in Dallas, and Tutu Atwell—the ex-Ram with a downfield streak—kind of spearheads the rest of the WR group.
That leaves one obvious security blanket, and it’s the 6-foot-4, 245-pound Dulcich. It feels like he’s been in the NFL for two decades, but he’ll only be entering his fifth season. Down the stretch last year, he looked good. He totaled 15 targets across his last four games, including a touchdown, with at least 46 receiving yards in three of those four contests. Across the nine games that he saw at least one target, he racked up 26 catches for 335 yards and a touchdown.
If we get a full season out of him, I’m not going to sit here and tell you it’s fair to double last year’s line, but he can absolutely hit your optimal lineup with his role on a thin Dolphins team. He was highly touted throughout his Denver years; he just couldn’t stay on the field, never playing more than 10 games in any of his first four seasons.
That’s the risk that’s baked into the price. When you combine the lack of target competition in Miami, his clear role as a security blanket, and his current cost, there’s real upside here at almost no risk.
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