My dynasty rookie draft is this Friday, and I'm writing about how I think it might go. On Monday I took a look at the first round; today we'll preview the second. This is how I think it will go -- not necessarily how it should go.

2.01. Philip Dorsett, Colts. As we've noted, we're not overly thrilled with Dorsett's landing spot. Yes he's working with the league's best young quarterback, but he'll start out behind Andre Johnson, T.Y. Hilton, and maybe Donte Moncrief, plus the Colts use plenty of sets with 2 tight ends. Then again, Johnson is old, Hilton could be difficult to sign, Moncrief is unproven. Talent tends to find a way to the top, so maybe Dorsett is starting a year from now and is the next DeSean Jackson.

2.02. David Johnson, Cardinals. Johnson is a bigger back ,which should earn him a complementary, inside running role to Andre Ellington's shifty lead back status. But Johnson isn't really a great inside runner; he's just probably better than Ellington. What's clear is that he can do that AND handle Ellington's role if/when injury sidelines him. Johnson is an excellent receiver who caught more than 140 balls at Northern Iowa.

2.03. Jameis Winston, Buccaneers. Ian asked about quarterbacks the other day. I think it's a supply and demand type of issue. We're in a 12-team league, and everyone has at least 1 really good starting quarterback' many teams have 2. Unless you're sure the rookie is going to be a difference-maker, you opt for running backs and wide receivers first. Usually I'm the first one to draft a quarterback. I took Cam Newton at 1.12, Blake Bortles at 2.08, etc. Andrew Luck and RGIII went early that year; that's it. I think Winston goes around here.

2.04. Marcus Mariota, Titans. Mariota might very well go first. He'll be a much, much more productive runner, better fantasy quarterback if he pans out. We believe Winston is a little more likely to pan out, for various reasons.

2.05. Maxx Williams, Ravens. I should mention that tight ends get 1.5 points per reception in our league. Rob Gronkowski was I believe the top fantasy performer in our scoring last year. If Williams is the next Todd Heap, this won't be too high for him, and tight ends are notoriously difficult to find in this league. Jason Witten has helped me win the league a couple of times; I'm now relying on him and Jared Cook. So I have some interest in Williams.

2.06. Jay Ajayi, Dolphins. Maybe this is too high for a fifth-round running back. We'll see. Ajayi was widely considered the third-best back in the class, but slipped apparently due to long-term concerns about his knee. The dreaded bone on bone report. The injury, though, occurred in 2011 and didn't affect him in college. So his career could be short; that's the rule in the NFL. Somebody will take him in the second round of our draft.

2.07. Duke Johnson, Browns. Thank heavens I traded Terrance West before the draft. The Browns to their credit (or not) seem to ignore the fact that they have plenty of running backs and no wide receivers on draft day, adding Johnson to the West-Crowell combo. They don't seem to love any of their backs, and Johnson could work his way into a leading role.

2.08. Devin Funchess, Panthers. I think people are split on Funchess. I'm a little concerned about his hands, and not sure the Panthers can possibly hit on two similarly huge receivers two years in a row. Opportunity is there for him, so there's that, but I doubt he'll be on my fantasy team.

2.09. Jaelen Strong, Texans. Pre-draft, Strong was pretty highly regarded, discussed as a possible first-round pick. He fell to the Texans in the third, with the possibility of wrist surgery probably a factor. Great speed, but a raw talent. Could definitely emerge as a 1 or at least 1A.

2.10. David Cobb, Titans. Cobb doesn't have great speed, and may be viewed as a complementary, short-yardage back. But the Titans only have Bishop Sankey at the position, and he pretty much flopped last year. If Cobb is a little faster than his 40 times suggest, he could sneak into the feature-back discussion.

2.11. Sammie Coates, Steelers. Pittsburgh does a nice job drafting and developing wideouts. Coates has the athleticism and ability I look for in a rookie wideout -- the potential to be a No. 1 type of guy. But he's very raw and has struggled with drops, so you may need to be patient with him.

2.12. Mike Davis, 49ers. We know San Francisco is going to run the ball, and we don't know if Carlos Hyde will be the guy. Davis is worth a flier if Hyde isn't.