Unlock the Shocking Truth Behind the Untold Story That’s Captivating Everyone

Unlock the Shocking Truth Behind the Untold Story That’s Captivating Everyone

Every fantasy football league crafts its own unique waiver wire drama—think of it as the NFL’s version of a treasure hunt, where seasoned managers no longer settle for simplistic advice but yearn for the deeper narrative behind each roster move. Have you ever wondered which under-the-radar players are quietly ascending, or which injuries might just flip the script on your fantasy fortunes? This isn’t your run-of-the-mill Sunday bulletin; it’s a comprehensive playbook that dives into the key injury updates, reveals who’s poised to capitalize on those absences, and suggests one pivotal move for every NFL team entering Week 11. Whether you’re the casual tinkerer or the stats-obsessed strategist, there’s something here that will sharpen your edge—because in fantasy football, knowledge isn’t just power, it’s points on the board. LEARN MORE

The waiver wire looks different for every league. So, we’re breaking down how to handle every relevant fantasy player in the NFL as we head into Week 11


The average fantasy football manager has gotten more sophisticated over the years. And several of them have moved past simply wanting to be told who to pick up each week.

If you are one of those people, this is for you. We still have our most important weekly recommendations (conveniently located at the top of this article), but we’re giving you more.

Want to know the key injuries to worry about for each team this week? We’ve got that. What about the depth chart with the players who could benefit from a key injury? We’ve got that too, with the injured players in red.

There is also a key fantasy move to make for each team so you can see which players’ stocks are on the move. No matter how deep you want to dig to manage your fantasy roster, we’ve got you covered. We have the recommendations you want in addition to the information you need to make informed decisions. And we’ll continue to add recommendations throughout the week as major news breaks.


Week 11 Waiver Wire Moves

  • Start Aaron Rodgers: This is as simple as following the “blindly start any player on your roster playing the Cincinnati Bengals” rule. Rodgers has struggled the past two games, but he threw four touchdowns the first time he played the Bengals this year. The Steelers defense wobbled again against the Chargers and will likely cede points to the Bengals (like the 33 they gave up in the first match up against the team). Rodgers is a QB1 this week.
  • Add Tre Tucker: It’s been a pretty rough season for the Raiders on the fantasy front, and it got even in the 10-7 loss to the Denver Broncos in Week 10. The good news is the Cowboys (the Raiders’ Week 11 opponent) are not the Broncos. They have one of the worst defenses in the league. That means behind the obvious starts of Ashton Jeanty and Brock Bowers, there may be the opportunity for a big game from another player. Tre Tucker played more snaps and ran more routes than any other Raider in Week 10 even though he was targeted just three times. With Jakobi Meyers now on the Jaguars, and until we see more evidence that the Tyler Lockett-Geno Smith revival is anything of substance, there is no other clear competition for Tucker as the No. 2 pass catcher (after Bowers).
  • Bench DJ Moore: It might seem like an overreaction to bench Moore after one game without a catch. After all, the Bears’ other top receiver, Rome Odunze, was held without a catch against the Bengals and responded with six catchers for 86 yards and a touchdown against the Giants just one week later. But Moore hasn’t offered the upside Odunze has despite having the same low floor. Odunze has six receiving touchdowns this year to Moore’s one and four games with six or more receptions to Moore’s zero. With Colston Loveland and Luther Burden III demanding touches and a gauntlet of a schedule for the Bears the rest of the season, Moore is a desperation play at this point. He’ll likely have a couple of good games the rest of the season, but those won’t justify the low-scoring output that occurs all too frequently.
  • Add Brian Robinson Jr.: Brian Robinson Jr. is always going to be playing second fiddle to Christian McCaffrey. But he’s turned limited rushes into big fantasy days in the last two weeks. Thirty-five running backs have carried the ball more than 80 times this season and McCaffrey has the third-fewest yards per carry (3.5) among that group. Robinson, meanwhile, is averaging 4.1 yards per carry and has looked dynamic. Combine McCaffrey’s health history with Robinson’s potential, and you’ve got the most valuable handcuff in the league.

Buffalo Bills/Miami Dolphins/New England Patriots/New York Jets/Baltimore Ravens/Pittsburgh Steelers/Cleveland Browns/Cincinnati Bengals/Kansas City Chiefs/Denver Broncos/Las Vegas Raiders/Los Angeles Chargers/Houston Texans/Indianapolis Colts/Jacksonville Jaguars/Tennessee Titans

Philadelphia Eagles/New York Giants/Washington Commanders/Dallas Cowboys/Green Bay Packers/Chicago Bears/Detroit Lions/Minnesota Vikings/Tampa Bay Buccaneers/Atlanta Falcons/Carolina Panthers/New Orleans Saints/San Francisco 49ers/Seattle Seahawks/Los Angeles Rams/Arizona Cardinals


Move to Make: Buy Khalil Shakir

Dalton Kincaid was the go-to guy for Josh Allen in the red zone, but he left Week 10 with a hamstring injury and will likely miss additional time. While some of those targets will go to Dawson Knox, Shakir will likely be the biggest beneficiary.

Shakir has already established himself as one of the more consistent options in the Bills’ passing attack. He’s had at least six catches in each of the last three weeks. Without Kincaid, Shakir is likely to get more red zone targets as well. He’s a worthy Flex play in the short term.

Injury Report

  • Dalton Kincaid: Left Week 10 with a hamstring injury and is considered week-to-week
  • Joshua Palmer: Considered week-to-week with an ankle injury.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Josh Allen, Mitch Trubisky
  • Running Back: James Cook, Ray Davis, Ty Johnson
  • Wide Receiver: Keon Coleman, Khalil Shakir, Joshua Palmer, Curtis Samuel, Elijah Moore
  • Tight End: Dalton Kincaid, Dawson Knox, Jackson Hawes

Long-Term Trend: Ride James Cook

Cook has never carried the ball as much in his career. And after some worries about touchdown regression, he continues to be one of the NFL’s best players at getting into the end zone.

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Move to Make: Add Malik Washington

The Miami Dolphins are the ultimate enigma in the NFL this season. From being evaporated by the Browns and the Ravens to dominating the Falcons and the Bills, the last month in Miami has been wild. During those two big wins in Week 8 and 10, Malik Washington caught touchdowns and, while he has been hit and miss, he remains a vital part of the Dolphins gameplan. It’s Achane and Waddle as the team’s two most important chess pieces but Washington has the tools to be regular weekly contributor.

The Commanders have given up 16 passing touchdowns in the redzone; only the Bengals have given up more through 10 weeks. Washington has seven targets and five catches inside the opponents’ 20 this season and has caught five of them. Both are tied for team highs. He’s averaging 10 PPR fantasy points per game over the last three weeks and is worth having on your roster.

Dolphins targets

Injury Report

  • Tyreek Hill: Placed on IR due to a knee injury and will miss the rest of the season.
  • Jason Sanders: Did not come off IR for Week 9 as he recovers from a hip injury
  • Darren Waller: Injured his pectoral muscle in Week 7 and is now week-to-week.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Tua Tagovailoa, Zach Wilson
  • Running Back: De’Von Achane, Ollie Gordon II, Jaylen Wright
  • Wide Receiver: Jaylen Waddle, Malik Washington, Nick Westbrook-Ikhine, Dee Eskridge
  • Tight End: Darren Waller, Julian Hill, Tanner Conner

Long-Term Trend: Darren Waller in the Red Zone

Waller had four touchdowns in his first three games of the season and has emerged as the go-to weapon for Tua Tagovailoa in the red zone. When he’s healthy, he should put up TD-dependent numbers.

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Move to Make: Sell Rhamondre Stevenson

TreVeyon Henderson had a breakout game against the Buccaneers on Sunday night and the 8-2 Patriots might finally hand over the offense to the dynamic rookie. Over the course of the season, Henderson has 81 carries to Stevenson’s 83 but Henderson has been by far the more efficient runner. He leads the team in yards before contact (2.9) and yards after contact (2.4). They might split some carries when Stevenson is back but this is no longer the Stevenson show with Henderson as a backup.

Patriots targets

Injury Report

  • Kayshon Boutte: Missed Week 10 with a hamstring injury and his status for Week 11 is up in the air.
  • Rhamondre Stevenson: Missed Week 10 with a toe injury and his status for Week 11 is unclear. Monitor his practice participation.
  • Antonio Gibson: Torn ACL (out for season).

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Drake Maye, Joshua Dobbs
  • Running Back: Rhamondre Stevenson, TreVeyon Henderson, Terrell Jennings
  • Wide Receiver: Stefon Diggs, Kayshon Boutte, DeMario Douglas, Mack Hollins, Kyle Williams
  • Tight End: Hunter Henry, Austin Hooper

Long-Term Trend: Stash TreVeyon Henderson

The running back room is thin right now and if anything were to happen to Rhamondre Stevenson, Henderson would become an immediate starter.

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Move to Make: Add Tyler Johnson

Six Jets had a one on Sunday against the Browns. But not one of them had more than one. Justin Fields completed six passes on 11 attempts for 54 yards and a touchdown. Breece Hall caught the only touchdown pass in a catastrophic day for the Jets’ receivers. They still managed to win somehow, 27-20.

With that being said, Cleveland’s defense is very good. The Jets play the Patriots in week 11, a team giving up 6.8 yards per pass play, tied for seventh-worst in the league. Johnson ran 10 routes and was on the field for 31 offensive snaps. He was targeted on 10% of the routes he ran. Not numbers to have you salivating but if Garrett Wilson’s injury troubles persist and Fields makes even a slight improvement (or Tyrod Taylor gets the call to start), it might be worth having Johnson on your bench.

Injury Report

  • Tyrod Taylor: Will return to practice this week. The Jets have not announced whether Justin Fields or Taylor will be the starter if Taylor is fully healthy.
  • Braelon Allen: Placed on IR Oct. 3 after injuring his knee and was ruled out for 8-12 weeks.
  • Garrett Wilson: Injured his knee in Week 6 and will have an MRI this week to further evaluate his injury.
  • Josh Reynolds: Placed on IR Oct. 25 due to a hip injury

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Justin Fields, Tyrod Taylor
  • Running Back: Breece Hall, Braelon Allen, Isaiah Davis, Kene Nwangwu
  • Wide Receiver: Garrett Wilson, Josh Reynolds, Adonai Mitchell, Allen Lazard, Tyler Johnson, Arian Smith
  • Tight End: Mason Taylor, Jeremy Ruckert, Stone Smartt

Long-Term Trend: Pass on WRs Not Named Wilson

Justin Fields has never been good at supporting multiple wide receivers’ fantasy football production and this year is no exception. Garrett Wilson is the only Jets receiver worth playing daily, but if his knee injury lingers, Tyler Johnson could benefit.

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Move to Make: Buy Zay Flowers

Expectations may have been too high for Flowers this year, but he’s quietly putting together his best season.

He’s averaging 5.5 catches and 69.4 receiving yards per game, both career highs. The only thing missing is touchdowns. He’s never going to be a player with a lot of touchdowns, but he had five and four receiving touchdowns in his first two years in the league. He has just one through nine games. A few more touchdown grabs, and Flowers will have the best fantasy season of his career.

That might not be as much as some want, seeing as he’s the No. 1 receiver for Lamar Jackson. But it makes Flowers a worthy Flex play most weeks.

Injury Report

  • Rashod Bateman: Sustained an ankle injury in Week 10 and will need to have his practice status monitored heading into Week 11.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Lamar Jackson, Cooper Rush, Tyler Huntley
  • Running Back: Derrick Henry, Justice Hill, Keaton Mitchell
  • Wide Receiver: Zay Flowers, Rashod Bateman, DeAndre Hopkins, Devontez Walker, Tylan Wallace
  • Tight End: Mark Andrews, Isaiah Likely, Charlie Kolar

Long-Term Trend: Don’t Worry About Henry

Derrick Henry’s season has been a disaster so far, but he got on track in Week 6 and kept it going in Week 8. The Ravens play the Bengals twice, the Dolphins and the Jets down the stretch. There are still reasons to be concerned, but some boom weeks are probably on the horizon.

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Move to Make: Buy Anyone Playing the Bengals

It’s not breaking news that the Bengals defense has been atrocious, but it’s worth remembering out of their bye with Trey Hendrickson doubtful to play this week.

The Bengals have given up at least 27 points in eight straight games and probably won’t get much better. Hendrickson, the team’s only real force on defense, is a pending free agent and won’t rush himself back for a team that’s currently 3-6.

Whenever you wrap up a playoff spot, consider grabbing Dolphins or Cardinals players for your last roster spot. The Bengals play them in Weeks 16 and 17, respectively, and any player on those teams will have a chance at putting up great numbers.

Injury Report

  • Joe Burrow: Has been designated to return from IR after a Grade 3 turf toe injury. His practice status will need to be monitored but it’s unlikely he is ready for Week 11.
  • Mike Gesicki: Placed on IR due to a pectoral injury on Oct. 15.
  • Samaje Perine: Suffered a high ankle sprain in Week 9 and will miss multiple weeks.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Joe Burrow, Joe Flacco, Jake Browning
  • Running Back: Chase Brown, Samaje Perine, Tahj Brooks
  • Wide Receiver: Ja’Marr Chase, Tee Higgins, Andrei Iosivas, Mitchell Tinsley, Charlie Jones
  • Tight End: Mike Gesicki, Drew Sample, Noah Fant, Tanner Hudson

Long-Term Trend: Watch Flacco’s Impact

The Bengals needed better quarterback play than they got from Jake Browning, and we’ll see if Joe Flacco can continue to provide a significant upgrade. He flashed enough in his first game with the team that the Bengals’ skill players may yet be salvageable.

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Move to Make: Bench Cedric Tillman

Since taking over at quarterback, Dillon Gabriel has spent most of his time targeting anyone on the team who isn’t a wide receiver. A tight end had led the Browns in receiving in each of Gabriel’s first four starts.

He made a clear effort to get the ball to Jerry Jeudy in Week 10, peppering him with 12 targets. For the rest of the receivers, though, it was more of the same, as they combined for just six targets, two catches and 11 yards.

If you don’t need the roster spot and are holding out hope that Shedeur Sanders gets a shot to play at some point and changes the target share for this team, it’s okay to keep Cedric Tillman on your bench. But don’t be afraid to cut him if needed and certainly don’t start him with Gabriel taking the snaps.

Injury Report

  • Isaiah Bond: Recovering from an undisclosed injury according to Kevin Stefanski. His status for Week 10 is unclear.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Dillon Gabriel, Shedeur Sanders
  • Running Back: Quinshon Judkins, Dylan Sampson, Jerome Ford
  • Wide Receiver: Jerry Jeudy, Cedric Tillman, Isaiah Bond, Jamari Thrash
  • Tight End: David Njoku, Harold Fannin Jr.

Long-Term Trend: Don’t Expect Much

The Browns offense has been stuck in the mud, and it’s hard to see a full turnaround on the horizon. The offensive line is hurt and underperforming, the receiving corps is missing a true No. 1 and Cedric Tillman is injured, and their rookie quarterbacks are talented enough to completely lift the team on their own. Quinshon Judkins is talented enough to start every week, but the floor for every player on this offense is alarmingly low.

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Move to Make: Start Aaron Rodgers

This is as simple as following the “blindly start any player on your roster playing the Bengals” rule.

Rodgers has struggled the past two games, but he threw four touchdowns the first time he played the Bengals this year. The Steelers defense wobbled again against the Chargers and will likely cede points to the Bengals (like the 33 they gave up in the first match up against the team). Rodgers is a QB1 this week.

Injury Report: None of Note

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Aaron Rodgers, Mason Rudolph
  • Running Back: Jaylen Warren, Kenneth Gainwell, Kaleb Johnson
  • Wide Receiver: DK Metcalf, Calvin Austin III, Roman Wilson, Ben Skowronek
  • Tight End: Jonnu Smith, Pat Freiermuth, Connor Heyward, Darnell Washington

Long-Term Trend: Pass on WRs Not Named Metcalf

The Steelers clearly want to utilize at least two tight ends and are rotating four different guys effectively. This means receiver points are hard to come by, and no one other than DK Metcalf has broken through. Calvin Austin (when healthy) will occasionally catch some deep balls, but there isn’t another receiver other than Metcalf that should be played every week.

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Move to Make: Add Troy Franklin

If you’re in a competitive league, there’s a chance Troy Franklin is already taken but he is still only rostered in around 55% of leagues. And yet, he continues to shine as one of Bo Nix’s favorite targets. In the last four weeks, he has 37 targets. During that time, Courtland Sutton has run 132 routes to Franklin’s 125 but Sutton has only been targeted 25 times to Franklin’s 37. Franklin has 3.3 burn yards per route, which leads the team and he is averaging 15.8 PPR fantasy points in that time, which is good enough to make him WR16 in the last month.

He also saw two redzone targets, catching one for a touchdown. The only other Bronco to see a catch inside the opponents’ 20 was Even Engram. Franklin’s role is growing and he needs to be rostered in all leagues.

Broncos targets

Injury Report

  • Marvin Mims Jr.: Missed Week 9 due to a concussion and will need to clear concussion protocol to play in Week 10.
  • J.K. Dobbins: Suffered a foot injury in Week 10 and will need to have his practice status monitored heading into Week 11.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Bo Nix, Jarrett Stidham
  • Running Back: J.K. Dobbins, RJ Harvey, Jaleel McLaughlin, Tyler Badie
  • Wide Receiver: Courtland Sutton, Troy Franklin, Marvin Mims Jr., Pat Bryant, Trent Sherfield Sr.
  • Tight End: Evan Engram, Adam Trautman, Nate Adkins

Long-Term Trend: Fewer TDs for Nix

After they had the sixth-highest pass-to-rush touchdown ratio in 2024, the Broncos have been a more balanced team in the red zone. Bo Nix can still provide fantasy value, but don’t count on him to throw for 29 touchdowns again in 2025.

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Move to Make: Drop Hollywood Brown

Hollywood Brown finished with two receptions for 73 yards. Brown hasn’t had more than four targets since Week 5 and it’s only the second time all season he has finished with more than 50 receiving yards.

It would take a significant injury for Brown to become relevant again in the fantasy world. Rashee Rice, Xavier Worthy and Travis Kelce are all ahead of Brown when it comes to prominence on the depth chart. It’s time to move on.

Injury Report

  • Isiah Pacheco: Missed Week 9 with a knee injury and might miss more time. Monitor his practice status this week.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Patrick Mahomes, Gardner Minshew
  • Running Back: Isiah Pacheco, Kareem Hunt, Brashard Smith
  • Wide Receiver: Rashee Rice, Xavier Worthy, Hollywood Brown, JuJu Smith-Schuster, Tyquan Thornton
  • Tight End: Travis Kelce, Noah Gray, Robert Tonyan

Long-Term Trend: Ride Patrick Mahomes

Patrick Mahomes, the real-life quarterback, never left, but Patrick Mahomes the fantasy quarterback is back. He already has a four-touchdown game to his name in 2025 and the floor has been much higher for him. Pencil in Mahomes as an elite fantasy option once again.

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Move to Make: Hold Oronde Gadsden II

Gadsden went down with what looked like a concerning injury in Week 10, but got good news on Monday.

The Chargers tight end’s MRI revealed his injury was only a bruised quad and the team is listing him as day-to-day. There’s still a chance he might miss some time, but Gadsden should be rolled out with confidence the next time he takes the field.

Injury Report

  • Oronde Gadsden II: Bruised his quad in Week 10 and is day-to-day
  • Omarion Hampton: Placed on IR with an ankle injury on Oct. 12, but should return sometime this season.
  • Najee Harris: Out for the season after an Achilles injury,
  • Hassan Haskins: Placed on IR with a hamstring injury

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Justin Herbert, Trey Lance
  • Running Back: Omarion Hampton, Kimani Vidal, Hassan Haskins
  • Wide Receiver: Ladd McConkey, Quentin Johnston, Keenan Allen, Tre Harris
  • Tight End: Oronde Gadsden, Will Dissly, Tyler Conklin

Long-Term Trend: Stick With the Three WRs

The Chargers have three receivers who are rosterable in fantasy. Through six weeks, Quentin Johnston, Keenan Allen and Ladd McConkey all have over 300 receiving yards and no other WR has cracked 80 yards. It might be hit or miss with these players, but they all have a chance to go off in any game.

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Move to Make: Buy Tre Tucker

It’s been a pretty rough season for the Raiders on the fantasy front and it got even in the 10-7 loss to the Denver Broncos in Week 10.

The good news is the Cowboys (the Raiders’ Week 11 opponent) are not the Broncos. They have one of the worst defenses in the league. That means behind the obvious starts of Ashton Jeanty and Brock Bowers, there may be the opportunity for a big game from another player.

Tre Tucker played more snaps and ran more routes than any other Raider in Week 10 even though he was targeted just three times. With Jakobi Meyers now on the Jaguars, there is no other clear competition for Tucker as the No. 2 pass catcher (after Bowers).

Injury Report

  • Geno Smith: Suffered a quad contusion in Week 10 and will need to have his practice status monitored for Week 11.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Geno Smith, Kenny Pickett
  • Running Back: Ashton Jeanty, Raheem Mostert, Dylan Laube
  • Wide Receiver: Tre Tucker, Dont’e Thornton, Jack Bech, Tyler Lockett
  • Tight End: Brock Bowers, Michael Mayer, Ian Thomas

Long-Term Trend: Ride Ashton Jeanty

It might not be pretty, but the volume Jeanty is receiving is undeniable. The rookie ranks fifth in the NFL with 17.5 attempts per game. He also had the ninth-most carries through Week 6 for any player in the past three seasons. There will be some frustrating weeks due to the Raiders’ inability to block well for him, but Jeanty still has a high fantasy ceiling because they rely on him so much.

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Move to Make: Add Dalton Schultz

Schultz caught a 47-yard pass from C.J. Stroud in Week 9 and continued to receive targets when Davis Mills relieved Stroud. He finished with six catches for 77 yards.

He followed that up with seven catches for 53 yards on a whopping 11 targets in Week 10. Davis Mills clearly trusted him as a safety blanket, and Schultz delivered. He’s a serviceable streaming tight end for Week 11 against the Titans.

Injury Report

  • Tank Dell: Out for the season with a knee injury.
  • C.J. Stroud: Will miss Week 10 as he remains in concussion protocol.
  • Ka’imi Fairbairn: Missed Week 10 with a lower body injury and could miss additional time.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: C.J. Stroud, Davis Mills, Graham Mertz
  • Running Back: Woody Marks, Nick Chubb, Dare Ogunbowale, Dameon Pierce
  • Wide Receiver: Nico Collins, Jayden Higgins, Jaylin Noel, Christian Kirk, Xavier Hutchinson,
  • Tight End: Dalton Schultz, Harrison Bryant, Brenden Bates

Long-Term Trend: A Stroud Rebound

Is C.J. Stroud finding his groove? He averaged 9.04 yards per attempt against the Ravens in Week 5, which surpassed his YPA in any game in 2024. He’s had three games this year in which he averaged over 8.0 yards per attempt; last year, he had two the entire season. There will still be fits and starts with this offense, but Stroud seems to be going in the right direction.

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Move to Make: Hold Michael Pittman Jr.

We preached patience last week after a Daniel Jones dud, and we’ll do the same here after a disappointing game from Pittman.

Pittman had just two catches for 19 yards in his worst game of the season. But he was facing a Falcons defense that has been tough against pass catchers all year, and has been remarkably consistent up until this latest disappointment.

The Colts No. 1 receiver is the only player in the NFL with six games of at least five receptions and a touchdown this season. Shrug off the bad week and start him with confidence coming out of his Week 11 bye.

Injury Report

  • Spencer Shrader: Placed on IR with a knee injury before Week 6.
  • Anthony Richardson: Placed on IR on Oct. 13 due to orbital injury.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Daniel Jones, Anthony Richardson, Riley Leonard
  • Running Back: Jonathan Taylor, DJ Giddens, Tyler Goodson, Ameer Abdullah
  • Wide Receiver: Michael Pittman Jr., Josh Downs, Alec Pierce, Ashton Dulin
  • Tight End: Tyler Warren, Mo Alie-Cox, Drew Olgetree

Long-Term Trend: Ride the Skill Players

The Colts have faced a mixture of good and bad defenses so far in 2025, but they’ve produced every week. If Adonai Mitchell didn’t drop the ball on his way to the end zone in Week 4, Indianapolis would have at least 27 points in every game this season. Jonathan Taylor remains in the conversation for fantasy football’s RB1, Tyler Warren is a must-start and Daniel Jones has viability even in a one-quarterback league right now.

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Move to Make: Add Parker Washington

We suggested adding Washington last week and there might still be time.

Jacksonville has spent a lot of draft capital trying to give Trevor Lawrence as many weapons as possible, but maybe all they had to do was give Washington more of a chance.

He looked dynamic on a punt return touchdown and also had a receiving touchdown in the Jaguars’ loss to the Texans in Week 10. Even when Brian Thomas comes back, Washington should get enough reps in the short-term to make him a viable streaming option.

Injury Report

  • Brenton Strange: Strange will be designated to return from IR this week as he returns from a quad injury. He might miss additional time but should be back in the next couple of weeks.
  • Brian Thomas Jr.: Left Week 9 with an ankle injury and will need to be monitored leading into Week 10.
  • Travis Hunter: Put on IR prior to Week 9 with a knee injury

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Trevor Lawrence, Nick Mullens
  • Running Back: Travis Etienne Jr., Bhayshul Tuten, LeQuint Allen
  • Wide Receiver: Brian Thomas Jr., Travis Hunter, Jakobi Meyers, Parker Washington, Dyami Brown
  • Tight End: Brenton Strange, Hunter Long, Johnny Mundt

Long-Term Trend: Ride Brian Thomas Jr.

Slowly but surely, Brian Thomas Jr. is climbing back to being a top-tier wide receiver. He had by far his best game of the season with 90 receiving yards and a touchdown versus Seattle. He hasn’t gotten over his case of the drops, though, as he had another one at a crucial time. Travis Hunter will become more relevant as the year goes on, but Thomas Jr. is still the No. 1 option.

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Move to Make: Add Tyjae Spears

Tony Pollard was clearly the better running back in Week 9, with 56 yards on 10 carries compared to Tyjae Spears, who had 26 yards on seven carries. But Spears again outperformed Pollard in the passing game, with three catches for 36 yards compared to Pollard’s one catch for 12 yards.

You shouldn’t be starting either Titans running back, but with how often they’re trailing, Spears is the better bet for points, particularly in a PPR league.

Injury Report

Calvin Ridley: Missed Week 10 due to a hamstring injury. His status for next week is in doubt once again.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Cam Ward, Brandon Allen
  • Running Back: Tony Pollard, Tyjae Spears, Julius Chestnut
  • Wide Receiver: Calvin Ridley, Elic Ayomanor, Chimere Dike, Tyler Lockett, Van Jefferson,
  • Tight End: Chig Okonkwo, Gunner Helm

Long-Term Trend: Don’t Expect Much

Some offenses feature several fantasy-worthy players and offenses that don’t. The Titans are the latter. They’ve been shut out as many times as they’ve scored more than 20 points this season (once each). Now they have a time share in the backfield and don’t have a receiver that’s emerged as a go-to guy yet (although Elic Ayomanor has shown potential). Don’t count on any Titans as every-week starters.

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Move to Make: Buy Dallas Pass Catchers

Dallas had a strange game in Week 9 against the Cardinals, and their lone passing touchdown went to Ryan Flournoy.

This may be an opportunity to buy low on an explosive offense that needs to score a lot to win. Javonte Williams and Jake Ferguson won’t fumble every game, and chances are there are better days ahead. See if you can grab CeeDee Lamb, George Pickens or Jake Ferguson for a decent price.

Injury Report

  • Miles Sanders: Placed on IR before Week 6 with knee and ankle injuries.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Dak Prescott, Joe Milton III
  • Running Back: Javonte Williams, Jaydon Blue
  • Wide Receiver: CeeDee Lamb, George Pickens, Ryan Flournoy, Jalen Tolbert, KaVontae Turpin
  • Tight End: Jake Ferguson, Luke Schoonmaker, Brevyn Spann-Ford

Long-Term Trend: Ride the Skill Players

With CeeDee Lamb fully healthy, it’s hard to imagine a better fantasy situation than the one in Dallas. The Cowboys have two incredibly talented receivers, an excellent fantasy tight end, a rejuvenated running back, and a quarterback playing some of his best football. Even the team’s horrible defense should force the offense to score as much as possible. The Cowboys bring the 2024 Bengals to mind and we all know how productive that team was in fantasy.

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Move to Make: Hold Tyrone Tracy

We are two weeks into the post-Cam Skateboo New York Giants’ backfield and while things are still fuzzy, Tyrone Tracy appears to staking his claim as the team’s lead back. Tracy had 14 carries to Singletary’s eight and he also played more snaps (49) than Singletary (24). Brian Daboll has been fired with the team sitting at 2-7. Interim coach Mike Kafka could shake things up but he will likely keep the more dynamic Tracy as the feature back.

Jaxson Dart is once again going through concussion protocol, so the Giants could lean on their running game to protect thier protecting their first-round quarterback. 

Injury Report

  • Jaxson Dart: Left Week 10 with a concussion and will need to clear protocol before returning
  • Malik Nabers: Out for the season with a torn ACL.
  • Cam Skattebo: Out for the season with a dislocated ankle.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Jaxson Dart, Russell Wilson, Jameis Winston
  • Running Back: Tyrone Tracy Jr., Devin Singletary
  • Wide Receiver: Wan’Dale Robinson, Darius Slayton, Jalen Hyatt, Lil’Jordan Humphrey, Beaux Collins
  • Tight End: Theo Johnson, Daniel Bellinger, Chris Manhertz

Long-Term Trend: Don’t Expect Much

Jaxson Dart is a definite upgrade at quarterback, but he hasn’t shown the ability to throw for a ton of yards yet. Of course, a lot of quarterbacks would struggle to throw for a lot of yards with New York’s banged-up receiving corps. But while Dart is certainly viable in the right matchup, he might not be able to lift the receivers to fantasy relevance.

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Will Update After Monday Night Football

Injury Report

  • Saquon Barkley: Suffered a groin injury against the Giants but seems likely to play in Week 10.
  • A.J. Brown: Missed Week 8 with a hamstring injury and will need to have his practice status monitored leading into Week 10.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Jalen Hurts, Tanner McKee, Sam Howell
  • Running Back: Saquon Barkley, AJ Dillon, Will Shipley, Tank Bigsby
  • Wide Receiver: A.J. Brown, DeVonta Smith, Jahan Dotson, Xavier Gipson, Darius Cooper
  • Tight End: Dallas Goedert, Grant Calcaterra, Cameron Latu

Long-Term Trend: Stick With A.J. Brown

The Eagles have underperformed so far, and their receivers are worth an examination. A.J. Brown had less than 30 receiving yards in three of his first four games and has insisted the offense needs to air it out more often. Either he’ll get more touches, or he’ll get even more unhappy as the season progresses.

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Move to Make: Add Treylon Burks

Burks ran 13 routes on Sunday as the Commanders lost to a dominant Seahawks team. He was targeted on 23.1% of those routes and led the team in burn yards per route with 4.5 (among players with more than one target).

The Commanders play the Dolphins on Sunday and it could be an old-fashioned shoot-out. Burks isn’t worth a start unless you’re desperate but it might be worth a speculative add to see if the former first-rounder still has some juice.

Injury Report

  • Jayden Daniels: Left Week 9 with an arm injury and seems likely to miss multiple weeks.
  • Noah Brown: Placed on IR on Oct. 15 due to a groin injury.
  • Terry McLaurin: Has already been ruled out of Week 11 due to a quad injury.
  • Luke McCaffrey: Placed on IR with a fractured collarbone in Week 9.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Jayden Daniels, Marcus Mariota
  • Running Back: Jacory Croskey-Merritt, Chris Rodriguez Jr., Jeremy McNichols
  • Wide Receiver: Terry McLaurin, Deebo Samuel, Noah Brown, Luke McCaffrey, Jaylin Lane Chris Moore
  • Tight End: Zach Ertz, John Bates, Ben Sinnott

Long-Term Trend: Stream Zach Ertz

Ertz continues to be an excellent streaming tight end because of his propensity for finding the end zone. After seven touchdowns last season, he had three in his first six games in 2025.

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Move to Make: Bench DJ Moore

It might seem like an overreaction to bench Moore after one game without a catch. After all, the Bears’ other top receiver, Rome Odunze, was held without a catch against the Bengals and responded with six catchers for 86 yards and a touchdown against the Giants just one week later.

But Moore hasn’t offered the upside Odunze has despite having the same low floor. Odunze has six receiving touchdowns this year to Moore’s one and four games with six or more receptions to Moore’s zero.

With Colston Loveland and Luther Burden III demanding touches and a gauntlet of a schedule for the Bears the rest of the season, Moore is a desperation play at this point. He’ll likely have a couple of good games the rest of the season, but those won’t justify the low scoring output that occurs all too frequently.

Injury Report: None of Note

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Caleb Williams, Tyson Bagent, Case Keenum
  • Running Back: D’Andre Swift, Kyle Monangai, Roschon Johnson, Brittain Brown, Travis Homer
  • Wide Receiver: Rome Odunze, DJ Moore, Luther Burden III, Olamide Zaccheaus, Devin Duvernay
  • Tight End: Colston Loveland, Cole Kmet, Durham Smythe

Long-Term Trend: Stream Caleb Williams

Williams has quietly entered fantasy starter territory. He’s throwing for more yards and touchdowns and getting sacked about half the time compared to his rookie season. It doesn’t hurt that he had a rushing touchdown in the season opener, the first of his career.

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Move to Make: Start Jameson Williams

An under-the-radar fantasy plotline this week was Dan Campbell taking over playcalling duties from John Morton.

It was probably smart of the head coach to take over playcalling duties leading into a game against the reeling Commanders, but the Lions offense looked as explosive as it has all year.

Williams was one of the beneficiaries of all the scoring, pulling in six of his seven targets for a season-high 119 yards and a touchdown. He was coming off six catches for 66 yards and a touchdown the previous week, so it’s possible his great game was just building off of that performance more than Campbell deliberately getting him more involved.

Either way, Williams has been a bigger part of the offense lately and has three touchdowns in his last four games. We mentioned targeting him when his value was at its lowest was a good idea, and now you can reap the reward by utilizing him as a starting wide receiver moving forward.

Injury Report: None of Note

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Jared Goff, Kyle Allen
  • Running Back: Jahmyr Gibbs, David Montgomery, Jacob Saylors
  • Wide Receiver: Amon-Ra St. Brown, Jameson Williams, Isaac TeSlaa, Kalif Raymond, Dominic Lovett
  • Tight End: Sam LaPorta, Brock Wright, Ross Dwelley

Long-Term Trend: Tough Matchups Ahead

The Lions do have some games against poor defenses left, but their fantasy playoff matchups aren’t the best. They face the Rams, Steelers and Vikings from Weeks 15-17.

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Will Be Updated After Monday Night Football

Injury Report

  • Dontayvion Wicks: Missed Week 9 with a calf injury and could miss additional time.
  • Tucker Kraft: Out for season with a torn ACL
  • Matthew Golden: Left Week 9 with a shoulder injury and is day-to-day
  • Jayden Reed: Currently on IR with a collarbone injury but could return as soon as Week 11.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Jordan Love, Malik Willis
  • Running Back: Josh Jacobs, Emanuel Wilson, Chris Brooks
  • Wide Receiver: Romeo Doubs, Matthew Golden, Dontayvion Wicks, Savion Williams
  • Tight End: Luke Musgrave, John FitzPatrick

Long-Term Trend: Wide Receiver Roulette

It’s worth picking up Matthew Golden because of the rookie’s second-half potential, but the most likely scenario when Christian Watson returns is that Green Bay once again has a room of receivers whose production fluctuates wildly week-to-week. Christian Watson and Romeo Doubs are both worth rostering, but neither is likely to be someone you can count on.

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Move to Make: Cut Jordan Mason

Sometimes, players are only useful for a portion of the season. That seems to be the case with Mason, who got just four carries for 25 yards against the Ravens. Aaron Jones looked like the better back since his return, and he seems to be the 1A moving forward with nine carries to Mason’s four in Week 10.  

Over the last three weeks, Mason has a combined 74 rushing yards and just three catches for 10 yards. You can keep Mason around in case Jones gets hurt again, but don’t be afraid to cut him if you need the roster spot.

Injury Report

  • Carson Wentz: Out for season with a shoulder injury.
  • Ty Chandler: Currently on IR with a knee injury.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: J.J. McCarthy, Carson Wentz, Max Brosmer
  • Running Back: Jordan Mason, Aaron Jones, Zavier Scott
  • Wide Receiver: Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, Jalen Nailor, Adam Thielen
  • Tight End: T.J. Hockenson, Josh Oliver

Long-Term Trend: Watch the Backfield Situation

Minnesota’s backfield split will be really interesting when Aaron Jones does eventually return. Jordan Mason will obviously get less work than he is now, but he may be performing well enough to wrestle the 1A role away from Jones.

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Move to Make: Sell the Pass Catchers Other Than Drake London

Over the past two games, Michael Penix Jr. has thrown for 398 yards. A cool 222 of those yards have gone to London.

If you’re a math whiz, you’ll realize that is 55.6% of the receiving yards. If over half of the yards are going to London and the Falcons continue to be inconsistent, there just isn’t enough here to support a second receiving option.

Kyle Pitts Sr. is the second-best option besides London and the two running backs (Bijan Robinson and Tyler Allgeier) and has shown some promise this year, with eight games of at least five targets. But he hasn’t been a threat in the red zone (just one touchdown) and hasn’t eclipsed 70 receiving yards in a game. He’s a fill-in tight end at best.

Darnell Mooney’s season hasn’t gotten off the ground since he started it with an injury. He had eight targets but just one catch for 17 yards against the Colts. He doesn’t need to be rostered in shallower leagues.

The Falcons offense is heavily concentrated on London and the running backs. It’ll take a massive uptick in overall efficiency to make anyone else worth playing in fantasy.

Injury Report: None of Note

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Michael Penix Jr., Kirk Cousins
  • Running Back: Bijan Robinson, Tyler Allgeier, Nathan Carter
  • Wide Receiver: Drake London, Darnell Mooney, Ray-Ray McCloud, Casey Washington, Khaderal Hodge
  • Tight End: Kyle Pitts, Charlie Woerner

Long-Term Trend: Stash Darnell Mooney

Bijan Robinson is the star in the backfield and Drake London has started to break out after a slow start. If Darnell Mooney stays healthy in his return and is productive, this could be a group on the upswing.

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Move to Make: Start Rico Dowdle/Tetairoa McMillan and Bench the Rest

The Panthers have been one of the most inconsistent teams in the NFL, but they’ve also turned into one of the easiest teams to navigate in terms of who to play/roster in fantasy.

You’re starting Rico Dowdle every week as the clear No. 1 running back on a team that needs to run a lot to be successful. He plays a Falcons defense that has given up the third-most rushing yards per game this week.

You’re likely starting Tetairoa McMillan, who has been harmed by Bryce Young’s inconsistency but still looks like an elite talent with a high floor as he’s caught at least three passes in every game.

You’re monitoring Jalen Coker and Ja’Tavion Sanders but certainly not starting either yet, especially against the Falcons. And you’re abandoning ship on any other Panthers, including Young, who has been one of the worst fantasy quarterbacks in the league this year.

Injury Report: None of Note

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Bryce Young, Andy Dalton
  • Running Back: Rico Dowdle, Chuba Hubbard, Trevor Etienne, DeeJay Dallas
  • Wide Receiver: Tetairoa McMillan, Xavier Legette, Jalen Coker, Hunter Renfrow
  • Tight End: Ja’Tavion Sanders, Tommy Tremble, Mitchell Evans

Long-Term Trend: Who’s the No. 2 WR?

Tetairoa McMillan will clearly be the No. 1 receiver in Carolina this year, but the No. 2 is still up for grabs. Will Jalen Coker get enough reps to be viable in fantasy? Can Xavier Legette keep improving? Keep an eye on the target share for the Panthers over the next few weeks to see if anyone else from the receiving corps is worth a long-term roster spot.

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Move to Make: Add Juwan Johnson

Johnson is the top-10 fantasy tight end this year, but you wouldn’t know it as he’s available in 35%-65% of leagues depending on the platform.

That should change this week, as Johnson’s coming off a day of four catches for 92 yards and a touchdown. He did the vast majority of his work on two plays: a 52-yard catch and a 30-yard touchdown catch.

That kind of big play ability is rare for a tight end, and Johnson has now caught a touchdown in consecutive games with Tyler Shough at quarterback. They’re definitely not the same player, but it might be Johnson who grabs all the available targets left by Rashid Shaheed’s departure.

The Saints are on bye this week, so managers looking at projected scoring for this week might miss Johnson available on the waiver wire. Take advantage of that and scoop him up.

Injury Report

  • Kendre Miller: Out for the season with a torn ACL.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Spencer Rattler, Tyler Shough
  • Running Back: Alvin Kamara, Devin Neal
  • Wide Receiver: Chris Olave, Brandin Cooks, DeVaughn Vele, Mason Tipton
  • Tight End: Juwan Johnson, Taysom Hill, Foster Moreau

Long-Term Trend: Better Matchups Ahead

The Saints aren’t the most appealing fantasy team, but they have a great fantasy playoffs schedule. They take on the Carolina Panthers, Jets and Titans in Weeks 15-17.

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Move to Make: Add Cade Otton

Juwan Johnson isn’t a short-term answer with the Saints on bye, but the ultimate streaming tight end is.

Otton is exactly the kind of player whose steady contributions make him worth being a bye week fill-in at tight end while his limited ceiling keeps him from being consistently rostered.

He’s coming off his best game of the season, with nine catches for 82 yards. But he’s had at least four catches and 40 yards in each of his last five weeks. If you have Tyler Warren or Juwan Johnson and just need a replacement to get you a few points in a bye week, Otton is the guy.

Injury Report

  • Bucky Irving: Missed Week 10 with a shoulder injury and is not expected to play in Week 11..
  • Chris Godwin: Missed Week 10 with a leg injury and is not expected to play in Week 11.
  • Mike Evans: Broke his collarbone in Week 7 and will miss most of the regular season.
  • Jalen McMillan: On IR due to neck injury.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Baker Mayfield, Teddy Bridgewater
  • Running Back: Bucky Irving, Rachaad White, Sean Tucker, Josh Williams
  • Wide Receiver: Mike Evans, Emeka Egbuka, Chris Godwin, Sterling Shepard, Tez Johnson, Kameron Johnson
  • Tight End: Cade Otton, Payne Durham, Devin Culp

Long-Term Trend: Ride Baker Mayfield/Hold Bucky Irving

Mayfield is one of the safest quarterbacks in fantasy football. After throwing for just 167 yards in the season opener (but also rushing for 39), Mayfield has thrown for at least 215 yards in every game since, despite facing tough defenses. Expect him to weather any storm thrown his way.

Irving has been out with an injury, and he wasn’t putting up big numbers on the ground before being sidelined. But he has been productive in the passing game with 15 receptions for 185 yards and a touchdown in his last three games. If you have a good record and can wait for a long-term investment, Irving could be a good guy to target.

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Move to Make: Add Trey Benson

Trey Benson could be activated from injured reserve in Week 11, and he’d be the clear lead back for the Cardinals when healthy.

That won’t be the most valuable role if the Cardinals start all of their games like the fiasco against the Seahawks in Week 10 in which they trailed 38-7 at halftime.

But Benson showed some flashes of great play before his injury. The Cardinals backfield has been in limbo without him, with Bam Knight getting the most touches in Week 10 but not being particularly productive while Emari Demarcado has been more efficient in a more reduced role.

Kyler Murray is on injured reserve, so it’s Jacoby Brissett for the foreseeable future. That meant eight targets for his two running backs in Week 10. If Benson combines some catches and his usual rushing workload, he could be a very valuable player down the stretch.

Injury Report

  • Bam Knight: Sustained an ankle injury in Week 10 and will need to have his practice status monitored.
  • Kyler Murray: Placed on IR on Nov. 5 due to a foot injury.
  • Trey Benson: Placed on IR on Oct. 1 due to a knee injury, but could be back as early as Week 11.
  • James Conner: Out for the season due to a foot injury.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Kyler Murray, Jacoby Brissett, Kedon Slovis
  • Running Back: Trey Benson, Michael Carter, Bam Knight, Emari Demercado
  • Wide Receiver: Marvin Harrison Jr., Michael Wilson, Zay Jones, Greg Dortch
  • Tight End: Trey McBride, Elijah Higgins

Long-Term Trend: Backfield (Black and) Blues

After finishing second in yards per carry last season, the Cardinals have been an average team on the ground in 2025. Their offense’s viability depends on their returning to being an elite rushing team. That might be difficult given all the injuries in the backfield.

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Move to Make: Stash Blake Corum

Corum continues to eat into Kyren Williams’ share of carries. They split them almost 50-50 on Sunday with Corum carrying the ball 13 times and Williams with 14 rushes. Stash Corum on your bench if you have room because if something were to happen to Williams, Corum becomes an immediate start. No other running back on the team has a carry this season.

Corum is averaging 3.3 yards before contact over the last three weeks, which leads the team, and 4.3 yards per carry. On Sunday, Williams ended with two touchdowns on three redzone carries while Corum also got a couple redzone carries but couldn’t convert on either. 

Injury Report

  • Davante Adams: Sustained an oblique injury in Week 10 but is likely to play in Week 11.
  • Tutu Atwell: Placed on IR with a hamstring injury following Week 8.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Matthew Stafford, Jimmy Garoppolo, Stetson Bennett IV
  • Running Back: Kyren Williams, Blake Corum, Jarquez Hunter
  • Wide Receiver: Puka Nacua, Davante Adams, Jordan Whittington, Tutu Atwell, Xavier Smith
  • Tight End: Tyler Higbee, Davis Allen, Colby Parkinson

Long-Term Trend: Stick With Nacua and Adams

Matt Stafford continues to be a kingmaker. Puka Nacua and Davante Adams both get a heavy dose of targets when they’re both healthy. Nacua will be in the conversation for WR1 every week he’s on the field (though he’s out for Week 7) and Adams is a no-brainer starter as well.

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Move to Make: Add Brian Robinson Jr.

Brian Robinson Jr. is always going to be playing second fiddle to Christian McCaffrey. But he’s turned limited rushes into big fantasy days in the last two weeks. Thirty-five running backs have carried the ball more than 80 times this season and McCaffrey is has the third-fewest yards per carry (3.5) among that group.

Robinson, meanwhile, is averaging 4.1 yards per carry and has looked dynamic. Combine McCaffrey’s health history with Robinson’s potential, and you’ve got the most valuable handcuff in the league.

Injury Report

  • Brock Purdy: Missed Week 9 with a toe injury, and his practice status will need to be monitored for Week 10.
  • Ricky Pearsall: Missed Week 9 with a knee injury and his practice status will need to be monitored for Week 10.
  • Brandon Aiyuk: Has still not returned to practice while recovering from a knee injury.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Brock Purdy, Mac Jones, Adrian Martinez
  • Running Back: Christian McCaffrey, Brian Robinson Jr., Isaac Guerendo, Jordan James
  • Wide Receiver: Brandon Aiyuk, Ricky Pearsall, Jauan Jennings, Kendrick Bourne, Demarcus Robinson, Skyy Moore, Marquez Valdes-Scantling
  • Tight End: George Kittle, Jake Tonges, Luke Farrell

Long-Term Trend: Run CMC

Even with his struggles in the run game, Christian McCaffrey has maintained his elite status by catching the ball out of the backfield. He gets more targets than several No. 1 wide receivers, which will keep him virtually matchup-proof as long as he’s healthy.

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Move to Make: Hold Rashid Shaheed

The Seahawks made a move for Shaheed at the trade deadline and immediately built him into their gameplan. He had a couple early rushes and while he only finished his debut as a Seahawk with one reception for three yards, he should get more opportunities in the coming weeks. Sam Darnold didn’t have to do much after the Seahawks built an early lead and completed just 10 pass on 12 attempts for 178 yards and a touchdown.

Jaxon Smith-Njigba is the team’s superstar and they’ll do everything they can to make sure he can influence games. That could mean the occasional bomb to Shaheed to lift the cover off the defense. He’s explosive and it’s worth keeping him on your bench to see what the Seahawks have planned for him in the coming weeks.

Injury Report

  • Tory Horton: Missed Week 10 with groin and shin injuries. His status for Week 10 is in doubt as well.
  • Jake Bobo: Missed Week 10 with an Achilles injury and could miss additional time.

Depth Chart

  • Quarterback: Sam Darnold, Drew Lock, Jalen Milroe
  • Running Back: Kenneth Walker III, Zach Charbonnet, George Holani
  • Wide Receiver: Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Cooper Kupp, Tory Horton, Rashid Shaheed, Jake Bobo
  • Tight End: AJ Barner, Elijah Arroyo, Eruc Saubert

Long-Term Trend: Believe in JSN

To say Sam Darnold loves to target Jaxon Smith-Njigba is an understatement. Expect JSN to be a top-five fantasy wide receiver as long as he and Darnold stay healthy.

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The post Waiver Wire Plus: One Fantasy Football Move for Every NFL Team Entering Week 11 appeared first on Opta Analyst.

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