The NFL draft is done, free agents have (mostly) found their new teams and I lap up every single Robert Griffin III update like a crazed, thirsty dog in the desert. "He did jumping jacks at the team rally! Oooh oooh ooh!" Clearly, time to update the rankings.

There are still some questions, of course. Is Montee Ball going to be "the man" in Denver? (I say yes.) Is Maurice Jones-Drew 100 percent healthy? If so, he'll be higher than he is now. What about Rob Gronkowski? He's either ranked too low or too high, I can tell you that right now, based on whether he starts the season. I split the difference here, putting him one spot ahead of DeMarco Murray. Both guys are injury-prone, but Gronk has a great chance to finish the year at No. 1 at his position. Murray? He has a chance to finish the season.

Much has stayed the same, of course. Quarterback and wide receiver are still very deep positions, and that's reflected in certain players being lower than their talent might otherwise dictate; you start only one quarterback and, at most, three wide receivers in a standard ESPN 10-team league. Which is a nice segue to mention that these ranks are designed specifically for those leagues, which use four points per touchdown pass and one point per 25 passing yards, one point for every 10 yards rushing and receiving, six points for a rushing or receiving touchdown and zero points per reception.

Now, such a league is only 160 players deep, but I ranked 200 because I want extra credit. (There's no extra credit? This is awkward.) This is for multiple-sized leagues, but it follows my draft philosophy, which is to wait until the final two rounds for a defense and kicker. If you decided to use this for a 10-team, 16-round league, you'd move the defenses and kickers up to the 141-160 slots.