
Puka Nacua vs. Jaxon Smith-Njigba: Who's The Better Pick In 2026 Fantasy Football Drafts?
You're on the clock with the 1.04 in your fantasy football draft. Who do you click between Puka Nacua and Jaxon Smith-Njigba? The answer is clear...
Fantasy football draft season is in full swing. Whether you’re playing best ball, dynasty or redraft, you’ll probably be on the clock soon, maybe even while you are reading this. Throughout your drafts, you will face a number of tough decisions where it almost feels like you should flip a coin to make your decision. When you're on the clock you have to make a decision in a short amount of time so we at Fantasy Life are going to help you be prepared to make those decisions by putting those players under a microscope with the goal of arriving at a final verdict for who to take.
For this series, I will be evaluating players on three primary criteria:
- Talent
- Opportunity
- Bust risk
Talent and opportunity combine to create the upside profile, but we must always balance that against the risk of a player letting you down. How you weigh the upside versus downside can be subjective and format-specific, but I will do my best to lay out how I am thinking about those tradeoffs.
To start things off, I am going to look at one of the more difficult spots in the middle of the first round of drafts where you have the choice between two elite, young WRs who are coming off of excellent 2025 campaigns: Puka Nacua and Jaxon Smith-Njigba.
Should You Draft Puka Nacua or Jaxon Smith-Njigba in 2026 Fantasy Football Drafts?
The Case For Puka Nacua
It has been a sensational start to Puka Nacua's career through three seasons. Despite being a fifth-round pick in the NFL Draft, he set the record for receptions and receiving yards by a rookie during the 2023 season and has since gone on to tie the record for the fastest player to 4,000 career receiving yards.
Somehow his efficiency metrics are even more ridiculous than his counting stats as he's posted an absurd 3.16 career yards per route run. Even more impressive, his YPRR has improved each season, going from 2.75, to 3.23, to 3.57. We can't expect that trend to continue forever but it is encouraging that he has managed to improve in each of his first three seasons.
There are very few holes to poke in Nacua's game on the field, especially from a fantasy perspective. The real issues come off the field with a handful of incidents highlighting questionable decision making that increases his risk of missing time.
The only other knock against Puka is that he does have stronger target competition than JSN. Davante Adams proved last year that he can still operate at a high level and remains the most effective goal line WR in the NFL. His presence may cap Puka's TD upside but that is more than offset by the better offensive situation in LA. Puka could easily score more TDs than JSN while having a lower share of his team's receiving TDs.
The Case For Jaxon Smith-Njigba
JSN didn't have as strong of a start to his career as Puka did, but his 2025 regular season was better than anything Puka has done. His 1,793 receiving yards and 3.62 YPRR are the best marks either player has put up in a single season and were truly elite, resulting in JSN winning OPOY.
You can make the case that JSN was not used to the best of his ability in his first two seasons as his breakout campaign coincided with playing under a new offensive coordinator who shifted him from primarily playing in the slot to playing out wide on more than 76% of his snaps. Although he was starting from a lower base, JSN has also improved in every season of his NFL career. The statistical comparison is particularly useful because Puka and JSN both have three NFL seasons under their belt.
From a bust perspective, Smith-Njigba's role is bulletproof. He is the team's clear top option in the passing game and the undisputed engine of the offense now that Kenneth Walker is gone. His downside is mostly tied to potential regression for the Seattle offense. Klint Kubiak left to take the Raiders HC job and was replaced by Brian Fleury. The scheme is supposed to be similar, but turnover at a key coaching spot does introduce risk that the offense fails to recreate the efficiency and success it had in 2025.
The running game in Seattle is also a question mark with KW in KC and Zach Charbonnet slated to miss the first chunk of the season while rehabbing his knee injury. The team drafted Jadarian Price in the first round, but that was considered a reach by many draft analysts. If the rushing attack struggles, that will flow through to the play-action passing game where JSN and Darnold had so much success last year.
Seattle is still a solid offensive situation to draft players from, but I see a lot more risk of things going wrong for the Seahawks than I do for the Rams.
The Final Verdict Between Puka Nacua and Jaxon Smith-Njigba
These were the top two WRs in 2025 Utilization Score and there is no doubt about their talent. Both players are really just entering the prime of their careers and are playing for teams with Super Bowl aspirations.

That being said, I am not willing to call their situations equal. Puka plays with a better QB, in a more talented offense, with a better offensive coordinator. Those are substantial advantages
Thinking back to the three criteria I laid out in the intro to this article, I can't give either player the edge on talent, but Puka is clearly in the better situation, while also having slightly higher bust risk. For me, I care more about the upside created by the better offensive environment so I will ultimately give the edge to Puka as the player I want to draft if I am on the clock in the first round and they are both available to me.
Players Mentioned in this Article
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