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13 Players to Sell Week 12 (Fantasy Football)

We’ll help you navigate the trade waters of your fantasy football leagues all season. Not only is there the ‘Who Should I Trade?’ tool where you can get instant feedback, but you can also sync your league for free using My Playbook in order to get trade advice specific to your team through our Trade Analyzer and Trade Finder tools. Let’s take a look at players to buy and sell this week.

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Players to Sell

Davante Adams (WR – LAR)

Davante Adams only caught one pass despite 8 targets—and of course, it was a touchdown. Adams is now 9th in points scored below expectation this season. The TDs have helped him dramatically, but there’s reason to believe he wasn’t at 100% after getting dinged up last week. His 51% catch rate is the worst of his NFL career, and his YAC per reception ranks bottom-10. At nearly 33 years old, Adams is starting to show signs of decline. If you can sell high—emphasis on high—after another inefficient score, that’s the move. But if there are no takers, it’s fine to hold. The touchdowns aren’t going to vanish overnight.

Nico Collins (WR – HOU)

Nico Collins caught 9 of 10 targets for 92 yards and a touchdown in Week 11, including 5 catches on 6 targets over 10 air yards for 63 yards and the score. But Houston’s rest-of-season schedule is brutal: bottom-3 for QBs and bottom-5 for WRs in the fantasy playoffs. And that was before the Colts acquired Sauce Gardner. The SOS tool gives Houston zero stars for QB matchups from Weeks 15-17. Even with C.J. Stroud potentially returning, Collins ranks 7th-worst in expected points scored under expectation this season. He’s been better with Davis Mills, averaging over 18 PPG the last two weeks. Sell high while the narrative is still glowing.

Breece Hall (RB – NYJ)

Aaron Glenn noted that Breece Hall (72% snap share) wasn’t seeing enough targets, which should change soon. Hall had 16 touches in Week 11, but the lack of touchdowns limits his ceiling unless he breaks a big play. The schedule is rough: Weeks 15-16 are road games, and Week 17 is against the Patriots. Hall is a high-floor, low-ceiling back in a struggling offense. If you can move him to a RB-needy team, now’s the time to sell.

Michael Pittman Jr. (WR – IND)

Michael Pittman Jr. had just 2 catches for 19 yards on 2 official targets, losing another to a penalty. The Colts leaned on the ground game and shifted passing volume toward Warren and Pierce. Pittman also drew A.J. Terrell in coverage. The rest-of-season schedule is bottom-10 for WRs, with tough matchups against the Chiefs, Texans, and Seahawks. While Pittman is WR11 in actual PPG, he’s just WR33 in expected PPG. His usage is nearly identical to Alec Pierce, who has more yards thanks to big plays. Pittman remains the WR1, but in a run-heavy offense with four viable pass catchers, he’s a weekly volatility risk. If someone values him as a true alpha, sell.

A.J. Brown (WR – PHI)

This is your last chance to sell A.J. Brown. He had 13 targets (39% share, 3 RZ looks) and still didn’t top 50 yards. If this was the “squeaky wheel” game, it didn’t squeak loud enough. The loss of Lane Johnson will hurt the offense, and DeVonta Smith has been better this season. Smith is WR23 in XPPG (Brown is 26th), and he’s more efficient—2.06 yards per route vs. Brown’s career-low 1.59. Their target shares are nearly identical, but Smith has more yards and catches. The Eagles’ passing game is inconsistent, and these dud games will continue. Sell high if you can.

D’Andre Swift (RB – CHI)

Kyle Monangai scored the goal-line TD, but D’Andre Swift dominated touches. Still, he didn’t convert any of his 3 red-zone attempts. Monangai remains the preferred short-yardage back. This is a split backfield, even if Swift is the 1A. The rookie ranks 6th in success rate; Swift is 9th. The Bears face CLE, GB, and SF in the playoffs—tough sledding for RBs. After a solid Week 11, now’s the time to get off the ride.

Troy Franklin (WR – DEN)

Bo Nix threw for 295 yards in Week 11, including 171 on passes over 10 air yards. Troy Franklin caught a 32-yard pass to set up the game-winning field goal. The second-year WR had 124 incomplete air yards (58% share) and has posted a 20%+ target share in seven straight games. He’s WR12 in XPPG but ranks third in fantasy points under expectation—regression looms. Denver’s playoff schedule (GB, JAX, KC) is tough, and Courtland Sutton is still involved. Franklin has 4 TDs in his last five games, but this could be a prime sell-high window.

Deebo Samuel Sr. (WR – WAS)

Deebo Samuel caught 7 of 8 targets for 74 yards and a touchdown in Week 11. Six of those catches came against zone coverage, including a 22-yard screen TD. But this might be your last chance to sell high. Samuel has finished outside the top-45 WRs in three of his last five games. Without a late 28-yard catch, he would’ve been under 50 yards for the fourth time in five weeks. He’s averaging just 5.6 YAC/reception—well below his career average of 9.0. With Washington’s season spiraling and Terry McLaurin returning soon, Deebo’s outlook is shaky.

Caleb Williams (QB – CHI)

Caleb Williams has looked strong recently, but the late-season schedule could be a problem. If you can sell high after boosted performances against the Bengals and Giants, now’s the time.

Woody Marks (RB – HOU)

Woody Marks had 18 carries for 44 yards in Week 11—brutally inefficient at 2.4 YPC. He added just one catch despite red-zone work. The Texans’ offensive line is a problem, and Marks hasn’t shown much as a rusher. He ranks dead last in rushing success rate (27%) and third-to-last in EPA per rush. Meanwhile, Chubb has been efficient for two straight weeks and is closing the snap gap (Marks 66%, Chubb 26%). Week 11 was a great matchup, and Marks flopped. Unless you can sell high, you may have to hold. But this could turn into a Commanders-style RB committee if Chubb keeps producing.

Tyrone Tracy Jr. (RB – NYG)

Tyrone Tracy Jr. and Devin Singletary combined for 132 rushing yards and two touchdowns, running inside the tackles on 68.6% of attempts. Tracy played 52% of the snaps to Singletary’s 48%. The duo averaged 2.4 yards before contact on inside runs and were hit behind the line of scrimmage on just 4.2% of those attempts—a massive improvement over the Giants’ previous average of 0.7 yards before contact and 47.9% of runs stuffed behind the line (Weeks 1-10, per Next Gen Stats).

Despite the improved efficiency, Singletary maintained his red-zone role, scoring twice and nearly a third time on six goal-line carries and nine red-zone attempts. Winston added a rushing TD on a sneak. Tracy didn’t see a bump in usage. If you can sell high to an RB-needy team, now’s the time. The schedule is brutal—ranked toughest by the FantasyPros SOS tool over the next two weeks before a Week 14 bye. Ship him off if you can.

Alvin Kamara (RB – NO)

Alvin Kamara totaled 25 touches for 115 scrimmage yards (64% snap share) in Week 10—22 carries for 83 yards (3.8 YPC) and 3 catches for 32 yards. Still, he couldn’t crack fantasy RB1 status. Rookie Devin Neal flashed with 4 carries for 22 yards (5.5 YPC) and 3 catches for 9 yards, showing burst and balance. Neal tied Kamara in targets despite running half the routes. Taysom Hill also remained involved with 7 carries on a 37% snap rate.

This is a three-headed backfield, and Kamara continues to rank among PFF’s lowest-graded RBs. Sell if you can. That said, the rest-of-season schedule is decent, and Weeks 16-17 (Jets, Titans) are top-10 matchups for RBs. Stash Neal in case Kamara fades down the stretch.

Tony Pollard (RB – TEN)

Tyjae Spears led the Titans backfield in Week 11 with 53% of the snaps and paced the team in receptions (5). It’s still a split backfield in a struggling offense, but Spears looks like the preferred option rest of season. Tony Pollard, meanwhile, continues to disappoint and is now PFF’s third-lowest graded RB. In shallower formats, he can be dropped.

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