
Quarterbacks To Upgrade in Guillotine Leagues: Boost Matthew Stafford in 2025
Hey everyone, it's Charch here, the foremost expert in Guillotine Leagues, the newest, hottest way to play fantasy football. Guillotine league drafts are deep, strategic, and a little exotic for the uninitiated.
Like every fantasy league, winning a guillotine league starts on draft day. You can definitely recover from a bad draft more easily in a guillotine league—after all, you can simply spend your way to a better roster. But, a great draft means that you don't have to spend money early, giving you a major late-season advantage.
So, let's take a look at the different decisions I'd make at the quarterback position with four players who I value higher in Guillotine Leagues formats than in redraft formats.
QB Upgrades in Guillotine Leagues for 2025
Jalen Hurts - Eagles
- 11 spots higher than consensus
The tush push is back for 2025, and that's a Konami code to guillotine greatness. His rushing touchdowns give Hurts both an ultra-high floor and a top-heavy ceiling. In 18 full games last year, including playoffs, Hurts had zero chop-worthy games. Words don't adequately express how dominating he was in the guillotine format, carrying teams forward every week. Outside of Week 14, when he got knocked out in the first quarter, Hurts never finished a game below QB19 all year. And he finished as a top-four fantasy quarterback seven different times.
Dak Prescott - Cowboys
- 16 spots over consensus
I like the idea of buying low on Dak Prescott in the guillotine format. The addition of George Pickens is a huge bonus for a team that desperately needed a second viable target. New head coach Brian Schottenheimer didn't wow anyone, but having served as the Cowboys OC for two years, he knows Prescott. If Schotty doesn't already know, he'll quickly figure out that his running game will provide very few successes. His playmakers are in the passing game, and he'll lean into it. Last year, the Cowboys had the third-most passing plays, 37 per game, despite starting Cooper Rush for half the year.
J.J. McCarthy - Vikings
- 16 spots over consensus
Normally, I'd urge guillotine players to avoid first-year starting quarterbacks, even non-rookies, who had the opportunity to learn from the bench. But in the entire history of the league, has any first-year starting quarterback dropped into a better spot than J.J. McCarthy? He'll be throwing passes to Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, T.J. Hockenson, and Aaron Jones. His head coach has produced career-best results from Kirk Cousins, Nick Mullens, Josh Dobbs, and Sam Darnold. As a first-year starter, McCarthy will almost certainly see less volume than Darnold, who finished last year as QB11. But McCarthy can make up for that with his legs—a dramatically under-discussed aspect of his game. In his last two years at Michigan, he ran 134 times for 500 yards and 8 touchdowns. In the past, Kevin O'Connell hasn't asked his quarterbacks to run. But other than Dobbs, they couldn't run.
Matthew Stafford - Rams
- 18 spots over consensus
With a significant talent upgrade from Cooper Kupp to Davante Adams, Stafford should be guillotine viable for the early part of the season, allowing you to save some draft capital (and FAAB for a few weeks). If you're dismissing Stafford's meager 2024 fantasy finish, QB19 across the full season, remember he was missing Kupp and Puka Nacua for the first third of the season. Once those guys returned healthy, from Week 8 forward, including the playoffs, Stafford averaged 242 passing yards (QB13 per game) and 1.8 touchdowns (QB6) across a full season.
Players Mentioned in this Article
DakPrescottQBDAL- PPG
- 12.50
