If you’re in the fantasy football championship in a Superflex league, you should be starting two QBs. There’s almost no reason not to. With injuries thinning out the RB position and WRs being one of the least consistent positions in fantasy, any potential lineup decision involving a QB should be titled in favor of the QB. Sure, if you ended up having Carson Wentz on your team and little other depth, then you may have to roll with another position, but odds are if you arere in that situation, you aren’t in the championship game.

WEEK 16 STANDARD RANKINGS:Quarterback | Running back | Wide receiver | Tight end | D/ST | Kicker

It’s never fun to start guys like C.J. Beathard or Mike Glennon, but the fact of the matter is that their ceilings are still high. And if they’re in good matchups, like Finley is with the Bengals against the Texans, their ceiling can be higher than many anticipate. Even if not, their floors are high, and all you need is one TD pass and triple-digit passing yards to outperform some of the other flex options you might have at your disposal.

WEEK 16 FANTASY: Sleepers | Busts | Start ’em, sit ’em

You can be skeptical of Beathard, Glennon, and Daniel Jones this week, as they have all proven to be marginal starters in both fantasy and reality this year, but they are still better than boom-or-bust flex options. If you have a lot of high-volume players in front of them on your depth chart, then sure, feel free to bench them, but if you’re thinking about using players like D’Andre Swift, James Conner, and D.J. Moore over them despite tough matchups, that’s not the best idea. Their floors are simply much lower than even the lowest-ranked QBs.

WEEK 16 PPR RANKINGS:Quarterback | Running back | Wide receiver | Tight end | D/ST | Kicker

Week 16 Fantasy Football Rankings: Superflex

These rankings are for standard, non-PPR leagues with 4-point passing TDs.