Drafted 55th overall last year, Harris spent most of his rookie season as the No. 4 WR in Los Angeles, holding his own in a larger role on the few occasions when teammate Quentin Johnston was unavailable. Harris finished the regular season with a 30-324-1 receiving line and solid per-target numbers (69.8 percent catch rate, 7.5 YPT), but he was targeted on just 15.7 percent of his routes and thus ranked 76th in yards per route run (out of 109 WRs with 200-plus routes). With Keenan Allen seemingly moving on, Harris is the new favorite for the No. 3 WR role, albeit in a Mike McDaniel offense where block-first players like FB Alec Ingold and TE Charlie Kolar will often play ahead of the third receiver. Harris' upside scenario for fantasy thus entails stealing a starting job from Johnston or Ladd McConkey (or else replacing one of them when injured).