Some thoughts on the first three tiers.
EBF said:
Tier One
1. Jonathan Stewart, RB, Oregon
2. Rashard Mendenhall, RB, Illinois
3. Darren McFadden, RB, Arkansas
These three have been discussed at length and we continue to have them reversed in what is now a little boring for me. The rest of this class has become more interesting. Three top shelf prospects in my mind. I would likely trade LJ for any of them after the draft, if that explains how much I like them. So think about that with pick #3, my friend. I mean, ya know, just in case by some oddity you get stuck with that bambi legged guy.

Stewart had surpassed Mendenhall, with me, mostly based on listening to others around here. When he came out of high school I pimped him heavily at another site, and he let me down for two and a half of the three years he played. So familiarity breeding a little negativity is strong here. Mostly it was the constant injury trouble. Broke an ankle in high school. Sprained one early as a freshman. Sprained both as a sophomore. Hurt his shoulder early last season then fought through turf toe all year. And I know I'm missing at least one other aggravating little ding. In struggling to pick favorites here, this weighs heavily on me. I'll make my case best as I can sometime before the draft, for posterity if nothing else.
EBF said:
Tier Two
4. Devin Thomas, WR, Michigan State
5. Ray Rice, RB, Rutgers
6. Malcolm Kelly, WR, Oklahoma
7. James Hardy, WR, Indiana
This made me wish for the non-ppr rankings. My mind doesn't do ppr very well. So, I have to separate them by position here. Clearly you like Rice a lot. PPR actually downgrades his FF scoring prospects among some of these other backs, yet he holds steady here, I'm guessing based on him being a tier of his own at RB4. I can't argue with that, but I thought it really stood out in this format with these tiers. Any prospect can flame out in the NFL, but with Rice it is a little harder to imagine than with the others. Solid ceiling, maybe not the highest, but solid. Higher floor. coolnerd, the Spartans thought for sure they found their route running, good hands and possession talent in snatching Devin from Juco ranks. They were pleasantly surprised by the power, agility, long speed, yac ability and return skills. He does stand out a little in an unclear crop. I originally placed him where EBF has him among WRs, but slowly I'm picking up a Chad Jackson thing with him and a Marshall, Colston, Burress thing with the others. I'm nearly consigned to saying just pick your favorite and hope for the best, because no amount of detailed analysis seems to separate these kids to me. I would put Manningham in this tier considering I think he has as good a shot at WR1 production. Desean may nudge his way into this tier for me.
I've defended Sweed a little more than most and persistently ranked him above Kelly. That's just because I'm impressed with Sweed's intangibles (very very) very much, and not so impressed with Kelly's. Kelly is a little mysterious this off-season and that bugs me especially with squirrelly WRs, but on the drop of a good 40 and some positive buzz about work ethic or personality stuff from the scouts, he quickly shoots up my board. I'm partially hoping all the news is good and he falls to me with a near elite grade at pick 10. I say partially because I still anticipate taking an RB at 1.10 in non ppr. This Thomas, Kelly, Hardy tier is probably right on the money. I just have issues with two of them (Devin and Malcolm) where I don't with some others. Those issues can and probably will be cleared up in the next few weeks.
EBF said:
Tier Three
8. Felix Jones, RB, Arkansas
9. Andre Caldwell, WR, Florida
10. Mario Manningham, WR, Michigan
11. Eddie Royal, WR, Virginia Tech
12. Desean Jackson, WR, California
Again, I see an RB in a tier of his own. I think that's a significant statement for Felix. I wish I was so sold. Here's a little secret that flies in the face of prevailing opinion. Felix is not a great receiver. A Tatum Bell comp may be the best one. He has a hard time adjusting to balls with any arch on them, he's a little wood-handed, and he was pulled from punt return duty over these issues (in practice). He played with an awful QB, and the assumption that he's a great receiver has no substance behind it. There's no evidence in his 16 receptions. I have a laundry list of items that have him at RB10 on my list, and he'd drop another notch in PPR with me. I know a lot of typing has been invested in claiming Felix is a great 3rd down receiving back (by other posters, not EBF) and I expect some to want to roll the eyes and be upset with my comments. Just know you're not necessarily arguing with me, but with the Arkansas coaching staff. That's where I picked up these comments after some serious digging and seeing him drop a few catchable balls while looking very stiff in the process. I like these backs more than most, and I love the Portis compare here for the upper limit of his ceiling. But that's a longshot, and I see a lower floor with Felix than others. If you like the risk reward ratio of boom or bust drafting, than shoot for this kid at 1.04 like so many already are. Tatum Bell is not as bad as many think. I'm not feeling the Eddie Royal love. He was the 3rd leading receiver at VT. Now he's sixth in this class? I know he too played with a struggling QB, but he should have been better than 3rd on the team if he was up to this ranking. His Senior Bowl certainly turned some heads and the workout warrior triangle numbers are reminiscent of Galloway, but in the end I see a kick returner, very raw, who's had an impressive post season run to the draft. While a great athlete who can go the distance with any touch, I just don't see a serious football talent. I expect him to get lost on special teams. Desean has better hands, routes, and speed.
Other than that these WRs are too difficult to separate to complain much about rankings.