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Drake London vs Omarion Hampton

2026 draft comparison · half-PPR

Updated Jul 10, 2026

WR · ATL
ADP 16.8
Questionable
Drake London
RB · LAC
ADP 16.5
Omarion Hampton
VS
The crowd's leanALL-TIME
57.7% would rather draft London over Hampton
57.7%London
42.3%Hampton
Based on 26 duels

Should you draft Drake London or Omarion Hampton?

The matchup

London caught 68 of 112 targets for 919 yards and 7 touchdowns in 12 games last season, missing five to a knee injury, then got a four-year extension from Atlanta anyway. The Falcons rebuilt around him this offseason: new head coach Kevin Stefanski, a new offensive coordinator, and an open competition between Tua Tagovailoa and an ACL-rehabbing Michael Penix Jr. for the starting job. London himself is now listed questionable with a separate, undisclosed issue that Stefanski has called minor. Hampton put up 545 rushing yards and 32 catches over just 9 games as a rookie, and with Najee Harris's ACL tear ending that timeshare — and the Chargers passing on adding a back in this year's draft or free agency — the touches are his by default. New OC Mike McDaniel used running backs heavily in the passing game in Miami, which fits the pass-catching role Hampton already showed as a rookie.

AI-written, fact-checked summary. Neutral — no pick implied.

Last season — 2025, per game

LondonWR17 finish
2025
HamptonRB35 finish
14.0Fantasy pts13.3
12Games9
0.0Carries13.8
0Rush yds61
0.0Yds/carry4.4
9.3Targets3.9
5.7Rec3.6
77Rec yds21
0.6TD0.6
Full game log & past seasons
Drake London
2025 game log
WKOPPFPTSRANKTGTRECYDTD
1
TB
9.5
WR29
15
8
55
0
2
MIN
4.4
WR76
4
3
49
0
3
CAR
8.0
WR38
8
5
55
0
4
WAS
21.0
WR6
10
8
110
1
5
BYE
6
BUF
26.8
WR2
16
10
158
1
7
SF
6.2
WR46
10
4
42
0
8
9
NE
34.3
WR1
14
9
118
3
10
IND
21.4
WR1
8
6
104
1
11
CAR
15.4
WR12
9
7
119
0
12
13
14
15
16
ARI
4.2
WR70
8
3
27
0
17
LAR
0.9
WR115
2
1
4
0
18
NO
15.8
WR8
8
4
78
1
Omarion Hampton
2025 game log
WKOPPFPTSRANKATTYDTDTGTRECRYDRTD
1
KC
7.1
RB33
15
48
0
2
2
13
0
2
LV
3.0
RB52
8
24
0
2
1
1
0
3
DEN
21.9
RB5
19
70
1
7
6
59
0
4
NYG
25.0
RB7
12
128
1
5
5
37
0
5
WAS
10.0
RB24
12
44
0
6
6
26
0
6
7
BYE
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
PHI
13.7
RB18
13
56
0
2
2
11
1
15
KC
7.0
RB36
15
61
0
1
1
4
0
16
DAL
16.0
RB16
16
85
1
2
1
10
0
17
HOU
16.0
RB12
14
29
1
8
8
31
0

Latest takes

Drake London
  • If London had a legitimate quarterback, we could draft him higher, but instead, he'll once again have to deal with mediocrity in the form of Tua Tagovailoa or Penix. London is a fine selection in round two, but look elsewhere here.

    Tom Strachan· Jun 29
  • Over the first 10 weeks of 2025, London was the fantasy WR6, but with the Falcons stuttering and Michael Penix Jr. injured, he dropped to WR25 for the rest of the season. London has topped a 28% target share in three of his four NFL seasons. We know he'll draw targets, but it's their value that matters here.

    Tom Strachan· Jun 29
  • London will now be under contract through the 2030 season. He's topped 100 catches and 1000 yards once (2024) in his four-year career. He finished as the WR7 and WR14 the last two seasons in fantasy points per game (half-ppr).

    FFToday· Jun 2
See 5 more
  • Branch's ability with the ball in his hands should guarantee him at least some role right away in an Atlanta offense without much talent at wideout outside of Drake London.

    Ted Chmyz· May 5
  • Top cap hit: Drake London, $7,996,200 (2.65 percent)

    Logan Ulrich· Jul 5
  • Atlanta now employs the NFL's third-highest-paid players at tight end and wide receiver, with London scoring a four-year, $141.1MM extension earlier this month.

    Sam Robinson· Jun 24
  • Drake London is set to anchor the Falcons' receiver room once again in 2026 and well into the future.

    Adam La Rose· Jun 23
  • The Falcons signed WR Drake London to a long-term extension with a new-money average of $35.26 million per year and a total five-year base value of $157.88 million, including a $33.656 million signing bonus and fully guaranteed compensation through the first two years of the deal.

Omarion Hampton
  • In 2025, in Weeks 1-4, Hampton averaged 17 touches and 95 total yards as the RB13 in fantasy points per game. In that small sample of games, he posted a 7.4% explosive run rate, a 19% missed tackle rate, and 2.54 yards after contact per attempt. If he had kept up that pace the entire year in those three categories, he would have ranked fourth, tenth, and eighth in those categories (minimum 100 carries).

  • Last year, Omarion Hampton's rookie season was derailed by an ankle injury in Week 5. When he came back, he wasn't close to 100% healthy and had only one game with over a 55% snap rate.

  • Hampton should be the biggest benefactor of the hire, as De'Von Achane was a fantasy superstar with McDaniel in Miami. More importantly, the second-year pro was outstanding as a rookie despite missing half the season with an injury, averaging 15.1 PPR fantasy points per game despite playing behind arguably the most injury-plagued offensive line.

    Mike Fanelli· Jul 8
See 12 more
  • In Year 2, Hampton will surely benefit from the arrival of offensive coordinator Mike McDaniel, a wizard at designing a run game. He'll get the bruising back into space, where Hampton can employ that 4.46 speed to zoom past defenders.

  • Omarion Hampton played only nine games as a rookie, but we got a glimpse of how good he can be. In those contests, he averaged 15.1 fantasy points per game (FPPG), good for RB12. He rushed for 545 yards and added another 192 through the air on 32 receptions.

  • Andrew Erickson expects a healthy Chargers offense and Mike McDaniel's arrival as offensive coordinator to unlock Hampton's ceiling. He highlighted McDaniel's history of involving running backs heavily in the passing game while also pointing to Justin Herbert's previous success targeting backs. Combined with Hampton's projected workload and favorable early schedule, Erickson believes he offers legitimate RB1 upside despite being drafted outside the first round.

  • A healthier offensive line could help the team score touchdowns at a higher rate in the red zone, but so could better health from Omarion Hampton, who played in only nine games as a rookie.

  • Omarion Hampton and the Chargers are very much the target of offseason hype, and it's worth remembering there have been plenty of times in the past that the Chargers haven't paid off that hype.

    Tom Strachan· Jun 30
  • Omarion Hampton and the Chargers are very much the target of offseason hype, and it's worth remembering there have been plenty of times in the past that the Chargers haven't paid off that hype. The Chargers saw Keaton Mitchell as a priority for new offensive coordinator Mike McDaniel, with him printing off wanted posters and putting them up around the facility.

    Tom Strachan· Jun 29
  • Omarion Hampton generated some of the strongest support of any running back discussed. The analysts pointed to a combination of talent, opportunity, and offensive environment, with the receiving component being particularly important and the possibility that he becomes a true three-down back.

  • Omarion Hampton was the RB13 on a points-per-game basis.

    Mike Fanelli· Jun 5
  • If you had a tier of running backs with Jonathan Taylor and Omarion Hampton, but you can get Hampton cheaper, you'll then need to determine whether the difference moves you more toward targeting someone like Hampton or if the cost justifies taking Taylor.

  • The addition of Mike McDaniel as offensive coordinator was viewed as another major boost, particularly because of McDaniel's history of heavily involving running backs in the passing game. Hampton's target upside and expanded workload projection led the analysts to view him as a player worth drafting aggressively near the end of Round 1.

  • The hosts praised Hampton's rookie-year flashes despite difficult circumstances that included offensive line injuries and inconsistent quarterback health. They highlighted his three-down skill set, pass-catching ability, and efficiency metrics as signs of a major second-year breakout.

  • Fitzmaurice highlighted Hampton's upside in a run-heavy offense built around strong offensive line play. The belief is that Hampton could emerge as a true centerpiece back if the Chargers fully commit to him in Year 2.

So who do you have — London or Hampton?

Make the call yourself. Build your own draft board free — quick A-vs-B picks, no spreadsheet — and let the season grade it.

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