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Offensive Rookie of the Year odds, best bets: Who can top the top pick?

Handout / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Professional player evaluators spend months assessing each year's class of future NFL players, and the rest of the football world spends every spring scrutinizing which teams should select which player at which point in the NFL draft.

Oddsmakers reshuffle those players a few months later, considering factors like position, opportunity, and team support to determine the odds for Offensive Rookie of the Year.

Here's how the oddsboard for the 2021 rookie crop breaks down, along with a few names that deserve a closer look:

PLAYER ODDS DRAFTED
Trevor Lawrence +285 1
Justin Fields +475 11
Zach Wilson +575 2
Trey Lance +575 3
Najee Harris +645 24
Mac Jones +800 15
Kyle Pitts +900 4
Ja'marr Chase +1300 5
Devonta Smith +1500 10
Jaylen Waddle +1900 6
Javonte Williams +1900 35  
Elijah Moore +2100 34
Trey Sermon +2300 88
Michael Carter +2900 154
Kadarius Toney +3800 20
Terrace Marshall Jr. +4700 59
Rondale Moore +5900 49
Rashod Bateman +6900 27

Trevor Lawrence is this season's favorite and has been labeled as such since his freshman year at Clemson. With the Jaguars boasting more talent, opportunity, and weapons than one would expect from a 1-15 team, Jacksonville's new signal-caller is fairly priced as the most likely winner of the award. Let's examine the list of past winners to see just how likely.

PLAYER POSITION YEAR DRAFTED
Anquan Boldin WR 2003 54
Ben Roethlisberger QB 2004 11
Cadillac Williams RB 2005 5
Vince Young QB 2006 3
Adrian Peterson RB 2007 7
Matt Ryan QB 2008 3
Percy Harvin WR 2009 22
Sam Bradford QB 2010 1
Cam Newton QB 2011 1
Robert Griffin III QB 2012 2
Eddie Lacy RB 2013 61
Odell Beckham Jr. WR 2014 12
Todd Gurley RB 2015 10
Dak Prescott QB 2016 135
Alvin Kamara RB 2017 67
Saquon Barkley RB 2018 2
Kyler Murray QB 2019 1
Justin Herbert QB 2020 6

Only two non-running backs won Offensive Rookie of the Year from 1986-2002. But the positional split opened up as the NFL became a pass-first league, with quarterbacks taking home the award half the time from 2003-20. Three wide receivers have won over that span, with Vikings wideout Justin Jefferson nearly making it four last year.

A rookie's draft position doesn't guarantee anything, either, with just eight top-five picks among the last 18 winners. Unlike the MVP award, most anyone can win Offensive Rookie of the Year - as long as they've got the ball in their hands.

Trey Lance (+575)

Andrew Luck, Michael Vick, Peyton Manning, Eli Manning, Matthew Stafford, and John Elway were all highly touted top picks who didn't win this award, so we'll bet against Lawrence here. That means backing another quarterback to make a more significant impact or a non-QB to put up some truly impressive stats. A rookie who can do either for a playoff contender is even better.

If the 49ers' last preseason game revealed anything, it's that Trey Lance will likely open the season getting 5-10 reps per half in red-zone and short-yardage packages. Eventually, though, Jimmy Garoppolo will have that bad "Jimmy G" game, opening the door for a takeover. Lance will become a difference-maker as San Francisco wins the NFC West, giving him the edge over Lawrence, who will post better numbers volume-wise for a 6-11 Jaguars team.

Kyle Pitts (+900)

A tight end has never won this award. But, as the kids say, "Kyle Pitts just different." He'll surely throw a block or two here and there, but the Falcons made him this year's first non-QB selection to catch passes from Matt Ryan, not to set the edge in the run game. His new head coach, Arthur Smith, was a TE coach for years, so he'll know how to use Pitts. The athletic freak will have ample opportunity with Atlanta, a team that should constantly find itself in shootouts due to its suspect defense. Pitts finally played a preseason snap this past Sunday and took a pass behind the line of scrimmage for 30 yards. If he'd played at all in the Falcons' first two games, his odds might have shortened right up. Fortunately, out of sight equals out of mind for bettors.

Terrace Marshall Jr. (+5000)

For those who want to wager on some extreme off-the-board long shots, Vikings rookie Kellen Mond fits the Dak Prescott profile as a non-first-rounder needing an injury to take over a potential playoff team. Rhamondre Stevenson's arrival appears to have influenced the Patriots' decision to trade Sony Michel to the Rams, so perhaps the fourth-round running back winds up bowling over opposing defenses for a ton of TDs.

Instead, though, let's hop out on the ... terrace, backing Marshall to join the "former LSU wideouts who become awesome" club. PFF graded the Panthers rookie as the best first-year wide receiver this preseason. Logging 20.4 yards per reception, he's shown some deep-ball capability and will be facing opponents' second- or third-best cornerbacks.

Matt Russell is a betting writer for theScore. If there's a bad beat to be had, Matt will find it. Find him on Twitter @mrussauthentic.

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