2025 Week 16 Fantasy Football Rankings & Analysis: Tight Ends, Kickers, and Defenses for the Semifinals
The fantasy football semifinals are here. Your lineup decisions carry the weight of a season’s worth of waiver wire claims, draft-day steals, and agonizing losses. In Week 16, navigating the tight end landscape and making the right calls on kickers and defenses can be the razor-thin margin between a championship berth and a consolation bracket lament. We dive deep into the rankings, separating the must-starts from the trap plays, and identify the special teams and defensive units poised to deliver championship-caliber points.
Tight End Tiers: Navigating the Minefield of the Semifinals
The tight end position remains a weekly puzzle, but Week 16 offers some fascinating narratives. Breakouts, bounce-backs, and brutal matchups will define your lineup. Here’s the breakdown for the most critical position outside of QB, RB, and WR.
Elite and Must-Start Options
These are your locked-in starters. Do not overthink it.
- Kyle Pitts (ATL): Coming off a historic performance, Pitts is an auto-start. The usage was elite, and he looked like the superstar we’ve been waiting for. The only caution is a historical note: he hasn’t operated alongside a fully healthy Drake London with Kirk Cousins this season. This might cap his ceiling, but his floor is now arguably the highest at the position.
- Dalton Schultz (HOU): The quiet engine of the Texans’ passing game, Schultz is fourth in TE receptions. He’s the definition of a high-PPR floor. While his two touchdowns are frustrating, his volume in a potent offense makes him a safe, if unsexy, cornerstone for your semifinal lineup.
- Darren Waller (MIA): The stars are aligning for Waller. He’s fresh off his best game of 2025 and now gets the Cincinnati Bengals, a tight end ATM for fantasy points all season. With Miami thawing out back home in a projected high-scoring affair, Waller’s touchdown equity has never been higher.
High-Upside Plays with Questions
Talent meets situation here, for better or worse.
- Brock Bowers (LV): The quarterback situation in Las Vegas is a mess. So why start him? Because the realistic output of most mid-tier tight ends is uncomfortably close to Bowers’ worst-case scenario. His elite talent gives him a spike-week potential others simply don’t have. You’re betting on the athlete and praying the ball finds him.
- Colston Loveland (CHI): With Chicago’s receivers banged up, Loveland’s role is secure. He offers a reliable 4-catch, 40-yard floor and, given his red-zone usage, essentially a coin flip’s chance at a touchdown. For the semifinals, he graduates from streamer to low-end TE1.
- Theo Johnson (NYG): Johnson is a big-play threat, boasting a top-7 average depth of target among TEs. His scoring drought is concerning, but it coincided with Jaxson Dart’s absence. With Dart back, Johnson’s matchup-flipping upside is rare for a player on the TE1/2 borderline.
Semifinal Streamers and Deep Leagues
Necessity plays for those in a bind or in larger formats.
- Colby Parkinson (LAR): With Davante Adams out, targets are up for grabs. Parkinson’s recent touchdown binge, however, may be a product of Adams drawing extreme goal-line attention. He’s a volume-based streamer, but temper touchdown expectations.
- Tyler Warren (IND): Philip Rivers will find his safety valve. Warren should see 3-4 catches, but they’ll be short, low-air-yard throws. Touchdowns are a major question for the entire Colts offense. Treat him as a TE2 with limited upside.
- Brenton Strange (JAX): He’s the epitome of a boom-or-bust TE2. His floor is terrifyingly low, but he possesses the athleticism to suddenly post a 5/90/1 line. Only for the bold.
- Mark Andrews / Isaiah Likely (BAL): This is a pure matchup play. New England has been a weakness against tight ends. After vanishing in the first playoff round, this Ravens duo is in a get-right spot, though figuring out which one is a weekly headache.
Kicker Rankings: Seeking Stability in the Chaos
In the playoffs, you want a kicker on a good offense, indoors, or in favorable weather. Here are the top tier options for Week 16.
- 1. Jake Moody (SF): The 49ers’ offense is a point-producing machine. Moody gets ample extra point and field goal opportunities, making him the safest high-floor option.
- 2. Justin Tucker (BAL): Even in a down year by his standards, Tucker is automatic and faces a Patriots team that can stifle touchdowns, leading to more field goal tries.
- 3. Brandon Aubrey (DAL): Playing in a dome at home, Aubrey is a model of consistency on a high-powered offense. Weather is never a factor.
- 4. Tyler Bass (BUF): The Bills’ offense can stall in the red zone, which paradoxically helps Bass. He gets volume in a potentially high-scoring game.
- 5. Jason Sanders (MIA): Returning to the warmth of Miami in a game with a solid over/under, Sanders is a prime candidate for multiple extra points and a field goal or two.
Streaming Special: Look to Greg Joseph (MIN) if indoors, or Chad Ryland (NE) if you believe the Patriots can move the ball enough against Baltimore to set up mid-range kicks.
Defense/Special Teams Rankings: The Championship Catalyst
A defensive touchdown can single-handedly win your week. Target offenses that are mistake-prone or limited.
- 1. San Francisco 49ers (vs. NYJ): The Jets’ offense remains a disaster. The 49ers’ ferocious pass rush will live in the backfield, creating sacks, turnovers, and potentially a defensive score.
- 2. Baltimore Ravens (vs. NE): The Patriots’ offense is arguably the league’s worst. The Ravens’ defense is elite and playing for playoff seeding. This is a smash spot for sacks and turnovers.
- 3. Dallas Cowboys (vs. CAR): At home in Dallas, the Cowboys’ defense feasts on inferior opponents. Carolina’s offensive line is a major weakness, setting up a big sack day.
- 4. Kansas City Chiefs (vs. PIT): The Steelers’ offense is in disarray. The Chiefs’ defense, often overlooked, is playing at an elite level and should capitalize on a one-dimensional attack.
- 5. Miami Dolphins (vs. CIN): Coming home, the Dolphins’ speed defense faces a Bengals offensive line that has struggled. This is a high-upside play for sacks and pick-six potential against a gunslinging QB.
Deep League Target: The Indianapolis Colts face a Philip Rivers-led offense that is ultra-conservative but can be forced into mistakes due to its lack of explosiveness. They are a sneaky play for a low-scoring, turnover-driven outing.
Final Verdict: Trust Your Studs, Play the Matchups
As you set your semifinal lineups, the core principle is simplicity: trust your proven assets. Kyle Pitts, Dalton Schultz, and Darren Waller have earned their spots through production and opportunity. The gamble on Brock Bowers is justified by the barren landscape behind him. At kicker and defense, lean into elite offenses and exploitable matchups—the 49ers and Ravens defenses are in a tier of their own this week.
This is not the week for cute, deep-league stabs. It’s the week for calculated aggression with high-upside talents like Theo Johnson and for embracing the safe, point-generating machines like Jake Moody. Your path to the fantasy championship is clear. Make the rational, matchup-informed start, and let your stars carry you through. Good luck in the semifinals.
Source: Based on news from Yahoo Sports.
