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30 Players to Buy Low & Sell High in Week 12 (Fantasy Football)

The trade deadline is here… as in right now, blinking in red like your fantasy football league’s personal Doomsday Clock… and this is your last Buy Low Sell/High of the season. If your roster still has a few soft spots (or, you know, several fires burning at once), this is the week to make a move before the market slams shut. Fortunately, our Featured Pros have delivered one more batch of players to target and fade before the window closes. Take a deep breath, check your standings, and let’s make something happen before time runs out.

FantasyPros Fantasy Football Trade Analyzer

Players to Buy Low & Sell High in Week 12

Buy

Who is your favorite buy-low trade candidate heading into Week 12 and why? Also, who are you willing to give up for him?

Mack Hollins (WR – NE)

“Buying low on a 32-year-old never-that-productive wide receiver probably isn’t wise, but with the New England Patriots, everything’s coming up roses. From Drake Maye‘s incredible play week-to-week to the booming production of TreVeyon Henderson, buying into this offense should be a priority. Mack Hollins has 10 receptions for 170 yards on 15 targets over the last two weeks. He’s not a league winner, just a glue guy who can fit in nicely at your flex spot as injuries are flaring up across the league.”
Matt De Lima (Athlon Sports)

Jaylen Waddle (WR – MIA)

Jaylen Waddle is a nice buy low right now. Dynasty, redraft… doesn’t matter. 1st, he underperformed against Washington in Week 11. Tua has also been awful. And, of course, they have a bye in Week 12. But consider that Waddle’s remaining schedule is not only phenomenal, but the Steelers, Bengals, and Bucs in Weeks 15-17 should score on this mediocre Dolphins D. And even with a bad Tua, Waddle has finished as the PPR WR5, 25, 13, 38 over the past month. The usage is there, the schedule lines up, and if there is a QB change, it could actually help funnel targets to Waddle. Regardless, he can likely be had for cheap. I’ll happily send an early 2nd in dynasty or an RB like Alvin Kamara or Woody Marks for him in redraft.”
Jeremy Shulman (Fantasy Football Universe)

Keaton Mitchell (RB – BAL)

Keaton Mitchell is probably widely available on the waivers, but if not, I think he’s worth giving up someone for, to take a chance as a flex play if desperate. The Ravens aren’t blowing teams out, but that could change with the Jets, Bengals (twice), and Steelers in the next four weeks. Mitchell has gotten at least four carries (three targets against Cleveland) in each of the last four games. If the Ravens want to rest Derrick Henry at all, there’s a chance for 10-plus touches in upcoming games for Mitchell.”
Adam Zdroik (RotoWire)

Breece Hall (RB – NYJ)

Breece Hall is my buy-low candidate of the week. Get in there now before his stocks rise again. Yes, the Jets offense is embarrassing, but he remains their only consistent weapon, seeing an impressive 60% snap share and totalling 134 rushing yards over the expected for the year through 11 weeks. This elite usage, alongside a favourable playoff schedule, guarantees you volume that will translate into high-end scoring. Lock in and load up Breece Hall! Also, with Tyrod Taylor taking over at QB, this is a massive boost.”
Luke Renton (The Franchise Tag UK)

“Last week, I recommended owners bench Breece Hall and TreVeyon Henderson while also suggesting owners buy them going forward due to friendly matchups in key upcoming weeks. I was mostly right about benching them, and I am mostly right about targeting them now, with one minor technicality. Henderson scored three touchdowns while running the rock relatively poorly. Henderson is closer to a sell high than a buy low after his red zone good fortune in week #11, disqualifying him for this rant. That being said, I’m intrigued, though not giddy, about acquiring him for the stretch run. His matchups ahead are lovely. Hall, however, is an underappreciated gem. The Jets are a disaster. Fantasy owners typically see the ugly while ignoring the opportunity, and that is the diamond in the rough that is Breece Hall. The Jets quarterback position isn’t competent to be kind, Garret Wilson is on IR, and the team is dysfunctional on a good day. I understand the concerns. However, Hall ranks eighth in total scoring over the last four weeks while mired in the mess – 57.50 points (better than Derrick Henry and Jahmyr Gibbs) – and that is after facing a Patriots run defense that stifles everyone as well as a double-digit head scratcher against a stifling Cleveland Browns defense as well. The opportunity Hall presents is this. He is the only talented player the team has with Wilson injured and the entire defense exiled to greener pastures. He’s going to be the focus of the entire offense going forward, while doing it in extremely friendly matchups against Atlanta and Miami – both rated in the top 10 in points allowed to running backs – and the New Orleans Saints in Week #16. If it makes you feel better, Hall has scored double-digit Fantasy points in four of his last seven weeks. Hall owners will be happy to dump him, and you should be happy to have him as you ride a show pony playing with a bunch of nags into the Fantasy championship. You won’t have to pay this much, but I’d trade Kyren Williams, Josh Jacobs, and definitely Ashton Jeanty for Hall straight up. You’ll look foolish until Hall outscores them all and is your MVP on the way to a ching ching, title.”
Chris Mitchell (FantasyData)

Bucky Irving (RB – TB)

Bucky Irving has been on IR since Week 5 and is looking to come back in the next few weeks, just in time for the fantasy playoffs, making him a possible league winner (if he comes back to form). In his last game prior to the injury, he had 102 yards receiving, which would bolster any running back room. Trading at this point in the year is always tricky. In trading for Irving, an owner should trade the position they have the most depth in on their roster that will benefit the other team. Due to the risk of reinjury and possibly being in a committee, and the current owner’s frustration with his long time on the IR, Irving’s value will be lower, and he could be traded for a package with players like Courtland Sutton, A.J. Barner, or a team’s QB2 (if past the QB1’s bye week).”
Adam Dove (The Fantasy Couriers)

Emeka Egbuka (WR – TB)

“The recent struggles are frustrating, but Emeka Egbuka’s past game against Buffalo was played in poor conditions, while other poor performances were due to a hamstring injury. Egbuka is reportedly at full strength and is the de facto WR1 regardless of Chris Godwin‘s eventual return. Baker Mayfield has targeted Egbuka 43 times across the past four games and will likely continue to target him anytime soon. The Buccaneers also have several soft matchups after Week 12’s primetime matchup against the Rams. I would be willing to give up players like Justin Jefferson, Davante Adams, Ashton Jeanty, Javonte Williams, or Saquon Barkley for Egbuka.”
Kev Mahserejian (Razzball)

Trey Benson (RB – ARI)

Trey Benson’s recovery was estimated to be 4-6 weeks, and we are beyond week 6. This offense is great for fantasy football right now, and Emari Emarcado just got banged up. Benson would return as the starter, and if he were to regain the majority share of this backfield, he could have league-winning potential. Hurry up and grab him before any news comes out. Benson managers have to be impatient right now, and those who need a win now to stay in playoff contention may not want to wait. The Cardinals have the 10th-best RB schedule the rest of the season. I am trading away Tyrone Tracy or Devin Singletary, who look at the 32nd best rest of season schedule.”
David Heilman (Sports Gambling Podcast Network)

Omarion Hampton (RB – LAC)

Omarion Hampton shouldn’t be too difficult to acquire at all, as nobody has been thinking about him recently, because he has been on IR for multiple weeks now, and even has a bye week in week 12 on top of that. Reports are indicating that Hampton will be back in Week 13 for the Chargers after their bye week, and he should go right back to being a workhorse on a run-heavy team. I’m not worried about Kimani Vidal; Hampton is the guy here. I’d be willing to give up a WR3 this week for Omarion Hampton, maybe even a low-end WR2, as I am very excited for his return and immense upside down the stretch in this Chargers offense.”
Aidan Weingartner (Fantasy In Frames)

“This is the time to try and target injured players close to returning or players on bye that can’t help struggling teams. Omarion Hampton fits this criteria perfectly. On bye and close to a return from injury, Hampton could be the missing piece for teams to win a championship. A realistic return could come next week after the bye, and one the Chargers will welcome. Hampton should be featured heavily immediately, and would be a top-15 no doubt play upon his return. With matchups against the Raiders, Eagles, Chiefs, Cowboys, and Texans remaining in his 17-week schedule, Hampton is a must-get for the stretch run before his return, even if it is at the cost of a Tee Higgins or a Quinshon Judkins.”
Ed Birdsall (Talking Points Sports)

Mark Andrews (TE – BAL)

“If you’ve got a void at tight end, Mark Andrews could be a nice lowball target before your league’s trade deadline. Since Week 3, Andrews has been TE6 in half-point PPR fantasy scoring, TE10 in fantasy points per game. He hasn’t been a true difference maker, and his value is largely touchdown-dependent, but Andrews closes with a cakewalk schedule that includes games against the can’t-cover-TEs Bengals in Weeks 13 and 15, the Steelers in Week 14, and the Patriots and Packers (who haven’t been great against TEs) in Weeks 16-17. If you need TE help, try to acquire Andrews for a spare part like Parker Washington or Jordan Mason.”
Pat Fitzmaurice (FantasyPros)

RJ Harvey (RB – DEN)

“Heading into Week 12, I’m targeting players who will help me in the playoffs. That’s why I’m trying to acquire Denver RB RJ Harvey. Denver has a bye this week, so if his current manager needs a win to get in and you’re already locked in, send them someone who can help them this week like Woody Marks or Travis Etienne, Jr. I’d rather have Harvey and his volume over either of those two, but you have to be able to take the 0 in Week 12 to make it worth doing.”
Andrew Hall (FantasyPros)

RJ Harvey is my favorite buy-low target for Week 12 because the underlying efficiency is too good to ignore. Even with a down game in Week 11, he still ranks 4th among all RBs in fantasy points per touch and 18th in yards per touch, proving he’s one of the league’s most efficient backs when given opportunities. He also handled a season-high 61% of snaps, and with J.K. Dobbins out, this is undeniably Harvey’s backfield as McLaughlin and Badie combined for just 26% of snaps. Pair that with elite usage in the passing game at 23% TPRR and 1.42 YPRR, and it puts him among the top RBs in football. His upcoming stretch of Washington, Las Vegas, and Green Bay ranks as the 13th easiest among RBs, and a bounce-back is inevitable. I would be willing to part ways with D’Andre Swift or Breece Hall to secure Harvey.”
Ryan Linkletter (Blitz Sports Media)

David Montgomery (RB – DET)

“My favorite buy-low candidate is David Montgomery. He’s had a tough go of it recently, punctuated with a six-carry night against the Philadelphia Eagles this past week. With the schedule easing up over the next few weeks, I’d expect him to get more carries and looks in the red zone as the Detroit Lions get back to moving the ball more efficiently.”
Trevor Land (FlurrySports)

Justin Jefferson (WR – MIN)

Justin Jefferson. The Vikings’ No. 1 WR got his targets last week (9, 28% target share), but the production did not follow. But there’s hope based on the Vikings’ remaining schedule. Schedule is No. 1 for WRs in the fantasy playoffs. Jefferson is WR7 in XPPFG, but WR19 in actual PPFG. Over the last three weeks, he has been underperforming by nearly 7 PPG. The usage between targets, air yards, red zone, etc, is all there. We just need J.J. McCarthy to play better, and the hope is that with more games under his belt and easier matchups…the usage for Jefferson can translate into fantasy WR1 production. McCarthy fueled a WR2 overall weekly finish from Jalen Nailor back in Week 10.”
Andrew Erickson (FantasyPros)

Justin Jefferson, WR, Vikings: Jefferson’s clearly been held back by J.J. McCarthy, who ranks last in on-target rate (59.9%, per Pro Football Reference). At this point, though, I think the sentiment on Jefferson is low enough that he becomes a small value. He’s still seen 9+ targets in seven straight. And the ROS strength of schedule ranks second-best in terms of adjusted fantasy points allowed. See if he can be had for a high-end RB2, or a mid-level RB2 and a WR4.”
Kevin English (Draft Sharks)

Bhayshul Tuten (RB – JAC) | Darnell Washington (TE – PIT)

“A couple ascending players are explosive Jags RB Bhayshul Tuten, now seemingly healthy Packers WR Christian Watson, and the physical, trucking Steelers TE Darnell Washington. None of them will cost you an arm and a leg, either.”
– Justin Jaksa (Dr. Roto)

FantasyPros Fantasy Football Trade Finder

Sell

Who is your favorite sell-high candidate after Week 11 and why? Also, who would you try to get in return?

Sean Tucker (RB – TB)

“The stars aligned for Sean Tucker in Week 11. Bucky Irving missed his sixth straight game, and the fantasy gods chose to ignore Rachaad White. This allowed Tucker, a third-year back, to hit big with 140 total yards and three scores against the Buffalo Bills on Sunday. The L.A. Rams, next week’s opponent for the Bucs, allow the fourth-fewest fantasy points to running backs, so I’m selling Tucker if a solid offer comes my way.”
Matt De Lima (Athlon Sports)

“Bucs RB Sean Tucker and Cards WR Michael Wilson had their legacy games last week, not gonna happen again. Take advantage while you can.”
– Justin Jaksa (Dr. Roto)

Zay Flowers (WR – BAL)

“I implore you to sell Zay Flowers. For some reason, Zay is over-ranked every single week. Every single week, we expect more than 80 yards. Every single week, we think this is the week he scores another touchdown. It never happens. If we exclude Week 1’s outlier performance, Zay is just the PPR WR29. If we add in that week, he’s just WR25. I’m selling on name value and what is perceived to be the best-possible fantasy schedule for WRs down the stretch. Go get a startable RB like Rico Dowdle, who also has a nice schedule ahead, or see if you can trade into a Stefon Diggs or maybe even Michael Pittman off of a poor outing and a bye week.”
Jeremy Shulman (Fantasy Football Universe)

Kimani Vidal (RB – LAC)

“Kimani Vidal. Vidal was ranked as a top-20 RB in Week 11 and sputtered to five carries for 13 yards. While that’s an extreme performance, there’s reason to think more bad games are in his future with the Eagles, Chiefs, and Texans (Week 17). Throw in a Week 12 bye, and there aren’t many times Vidal is going to help your team to the playoffs or in the playoffs behind the Chargers’ offensive line. Get someone else and hope your leaguemate is still impressed by prior performances.”
Adam Zdroik (RotoWire)

Bryce Young (QB – CAR)

“To be honest, unless owners are in dynasty leagues looking toward the future, teams should hold onto any players who are booming at this point in the season. That being said, if owners want to make bank on a player at the moment, that player is Bryce Young. He probably had his career week against the Falcons with 448 yards passing and three touchdowns! That is on the heels of 124 yards and zero touchdowns against the Saints! Find the superflex owner who wants lightning in a bottle and sell Bryce Young now! Sell him for anything, literally any starter that can be obtained to help boost your playoff team! Then, have that owner toss in a QB2 like Joe Flacco or Tyrod Taylor, both of whom will probably be starters for the rest of the year due to fledgling teams and injuries.”
Adam Dove (The Fantasy Couriers)

Rico Dowdle (RB – CAR)

“Despite playing the soft Falcons and Saints defenses since Week 10, Rico Dowdle is averaging 2.6 yards per carry. He has been a huge spark to the Panthers this season. However, he only usurped Chuba Hubbard due to a calf injury. Hubbard is now further removed from the injury and likely fresh down the stretch if the Panthers decide to work him back into the offense. Carolina also has a tough fantasy playoff schedule in Weeks 16 and 17 against the Buccaneers and Seahawks, both of whom rank in the top eight against the run. If you can get the aforementioned Emeka Egbuka for him or even Brock Bowers if TE is a need, do so immediately.”
Kev Mahserejian (Razzball)

Deebo Samuel Sr. (WR – SF)

Deebo Samuel is coming off two great weeks and his second-best performance of the year. Terry McLaurin should be back soon, and there is just not a lot to go around on this offense right now. Deebo just scored a touchdown and looked good in an island game. Use that to your advantage and move him before his schedule toughens up and Terry McLaurin returns. Assuming Deebo is not one of your starting WRs, I would use him to improve a Flex position. If you need a Quarterback, trade for a Joe Burrow for the fantasy football playoffs or buy low on Oronde Gadsden II.”
David Heilman (Sports Gambling Podcast Network)

Tetairoa McMillan (WR – CAR)

Tetairoa McMillan has been great, but this is a sneaky sell window. He’s coming off a monster game and sits as the WR9 in PPR, yet that was only his second 100-yard outing, and he has five games with 60 yards and under. If you’re fighting for a playoff spot, his Week 14 bye could cost you. Flip T-Mac now for a difference-maker like Justin Jefferson, who has a strong fantasy playoff schedule. You could also target RB help by buying low on a frustrated Saquon Barkley manager. If needed, package McMillan with a depth piece to seal the deal.”
Kyle Zeigler (Fantasy In Frames)

“My favorite sell-high candidate after Week 11 is Tetairoa McMillan (WR-CAR). He finished week 11 as the top fantasy points producer at the wide receiver position with 29 fantasy points. This was his first top 10 finish of the season, and the trade value is at an all-time high for Tetairoa. If you look at his upcoming fantasy football playoff schedule, he has two tough matchups. He faces Tampa in Week 16 and at Seattle in Week 17.”
Jeff Boggis (Fantasy Football Empire)

Tee Higgins (WR – CIN)

Tee Higgins. I recognize that this probably isn’t the best time to put this out there, on the heels of the Ja’Marr Chase suspension news, but it’s only one game. So once Chase comes back, Higgins’ targets will almost surely go down. Reports are saying that Joe Burrow should be returning sooner rather than later, but if the Bengals keep losing over the next couple of weeks, will Burrow feel the need to even come back after all? I think you can get a really solid RB2 for Tee Higgins right now, just because of the Chase suspension news and all the hype surrounding Joe Burrow‘s return at the moment.”
Aidan Weingartner (Fantasy In Frames)

Quinshon Judkins (RB – CLE)

“I’ve noticed that a lot of Quinshon Judkins stakeholders have been trying to trade him, and it’s easy to see why. Judkins’ value reached its zenith when he lit up the Dolphins for three touchdowns in Week 5. Since then, he’s averaged 3.2 yards per carry and has been the RB24 in half-point PPR fantasy points per game. Judkins’ playoff schedule (Titans, Bears, Bills) will entice potential buyers, but the Browns’ offense is such a sinkhole that Judkins might have trouble capitalizing on favorable matchups. I’d take Tee Higgins, Chris Olave, or Tyler Warren for Judkins.”
Pat Fitzmaurice (FantasyPros)

TreVeyon Henderson (RB – NE)

TreVeyon Henderson feels like the obvious answer here. His RB3 finish in Week 11 was outstanding, especially following his RB4 finish in Week 10. He faces the terrible Bengals defense in Week 12, which helps you paint a picture that he’s going to go off yet again. The schedule may be favorable, but touchdowns are not predictable, and that’s where the majority of his points have come from recently. I’m selling Henderson’s touchdowns for volume. I would try to package Henderson and a bench player for someone at the top, like Jonathan Taylor or Bijan Robinson, both of whom have had their byes while Henderson has not (Week 14). Maybe they will see the addition of depth as a worthy tradeoff to tier down to Henderson, who has been going off lately.”
Andrew Hall (FantasyPros)

“Maybe this is being naive, but I still don’t believe that the Patriots are willing to hand the keys to the offense to TreVeyon Henderson. Let me be clear, they SHOULD, but that does not mean they will. Rhamondre Stevenson could be close to a return this week against the Bengals, and the fear will be that Mike Vrabel wants to incorporate Stevenson with Henderson. Simply put, Stevenson and Henderson in a committee would cap the upside of Henderson despite the fact that Henderson is by far and away the better back of the two at this stage of their respective careers. If Henderson could be dealt, after his incredible two weeks, in a package to land a stud such as Emeka Egbuka, James Cook, or in a package deal to land a Jahmyr Gibbs or a Ja’Marr Chase, even with the suspension, do it.”
Ed Birdsall (Talking Points Sports)

Christian Watson (WR – GB)

Christian Watson Green Bay Packers and TreVeyon Henderson NE Patriots – I wanted to say Travis Kelce, but I don’t think the “comeback kid” narrative rings true in anyone’s mind, making it difficult to convince anyone to buy-high. Watson, on the other hand, could be sold as a rags-to-riches narrative. He’s an explosive athlete who hasn’t played enough ball in 2025 for people to feel like he’s been a bust, even though he has. Nothing about his season, or his week #11 performance, screams “breakout” down the stretch, but he was a nobody that had a “somebody” day with 18 Fantasy points in Week #11. My problem is that selling high on Watson won’t bring the kind of return worth the carpal tunnel cost to negotiate. That’s why I throw this at you. I love TreyVeyon Henderson. His touches, his targets, and his Fantasy production have been rising, and it’s been HUGE in recent weeks. Add his ascension, his increase in touches and targets, and his explosiveness to the fact that he faces the three worst defenses in football in Points allowed to running backs in the next four weeks, and that makes for a tasty opportunity. Henderson could be a total beast to finish the Fantasy season. I want to acquire AND sell Henderson at the same time. If you have an owner who sees Henderson as a sell-high – BUY IT. Sell anyone who isn’t a Top 15 pick to acquire him. He could be the best player in Fantasy football the next four weeks (he is on bye in week #14). However, if you can acquire Christian McCaffrey or Bijan Robinson or De’Von Achane, even Jaxon Smith-Njigba, then, as painful and as risky as it could be, I’d bite the bullet to add the safe, reliable first-round pick veteran rather than the rookie entering into the longest season of football in his life. One last nugget. While TreyVeyon Henderson has one of the easiest four-week stretches to finish the Fantasy season, Jonathan Taylor has one of the toughest. I’d bet Henderson outscores Taylor in the three weeks they both play. Taylor is the Fantasy League MVP. Henderson is going to be the Fantasy playoffs MVP and win owners’ championships. Got the cojones to sell Taylor for Henderson? Hmmmmm. Happy hunting.”
Chris Mitchell (FantasyData)

Stefon Diggs (WR – NE)

“My favorite sell-high candidate is Stefon Diggs. Coming off a solid performance on Thursday night against the New York Jets, Diggs has improved his output as of late. With that in mind, I don’t know how long that’ll last. Not only does he have a Week 14 bye, which will hurt any fantasy team in the playoff hunt, but his schedule gets much harder once the fantasy playoffs start as well.”
Trevor Land (FlurrySports)

Michael Wilson (WR – ARI)

“You know about Michael Wilson’s 15-185 line against San Francisco. Of course, he was boosted by a few factors, including the absence of Marvin Harrison Jr., a trailing game script, and a record-setting 47 completions from Jacoby Brissett. There’s a chance Harrison will miss another game following an appendectomy, but it’s tough for Wilson’s value to rise any further. Unless you’re in must-win mode, I’d shop him to a WR-needy manager for help elsewhere (perhaps a fringe RB2-level player).”
Kevin English (Draft Sharks)

Javonte Williams (RB – DAL)

“My favorite sell-high candidate after Week 11 is Javonte Williams, who’s producing like an RB1 but showing clear signs of impending regression. Despite averaging 17.3 PPG and ranking top-five in red-zone usage, his underlying efficiency is poor, sitting 133rd in EPA with a 27th-ranked run-blocking rating. His receiving involvement has completely evaporated, with one reception in four straight games, capping his weekly upside. Even more concerning, he hasn’t cleared 10.5 fantasy points in back-to-back weeks despite solid yardage, signaling that touchdowns and volume are propping him up. With a brutal upcoming slate — Eagles, Chiefs, Lions, Vikings, and Chargers — this is the perfect window to cash out before his RB1 production falls off. Players I am trying to get in return for him include Rashee Rice, Derrick Henry, and Emeka Egbuka.”
Ryan Linkletter (Blitz Sports Media)

The Debates

Occasionally, our Featured Pros will disagree about whether a player is a buy low or a sell high. In those cases, we present both arguments and let you decide.

Alec Pierce (WR – IND)

Buy Low

“My favorite buy-low trade candidate heading into Week 12 is Alec Pierce. Over the past four games, Pierce has finished as a WR2 in three of these games. Over this four-game span, Alec Pierce has averaged almost nine targets with four receptions and 91.5 receiving yards. He’s rostered in 34% of fantasy football leagues and is coming off a bye week to face the Kansas City Chiefs in Week 12. The opportunity window to trade for him or pick him up on your waiver wire if he is available is rapidly closing. With the fantasy football playoffs approaching, I’m willing to trade away any wide receivers that have tough matchups over weeks 15-17.”
Jeff Boggis (Fantasy Football Empire)

Sell High

“Trade away Alec Pierce while you can still get a nice cash reward! His WR2 status is a mirage: his high production is fuelled by an impressive 20.9 Yards Per Reception, reliant on deep catches, not reliable volume. With just 28 receptions, that ranks him outside the Top 50 WRs; his volume simply cannot be sustained, and that luck is about to run out. Maximise the profit on this low-volume inflation before it’s too late, You’ve been warned!”
Luke Renton (The Franchise Tag UK)

A.J. Brown (WR – PHI)

Buy Low

A.J. Brown is the perfect buy-low target for anyone making a playoff push. The box score didn’t impress last week, but the underlying usage was elite: 11 targets, a 52.4% first read share, and he led all pass catchers in air yards, the kind of profile that explodes the following week. You couldn’t ask for a better remaining schedule with Dallas, Chicago, and Washington all ranking in the top five in fantasy points allowed to WRs. This is likely your final window before a multi-week breakout stretch. I would offer Deebo Samuel, Courtland Sutton, or Zay Flowers to acquire him.”
Kyle Zeigler (Fantasy In Frames)

Sell High

A.J. Brown. This is your last chance to sell AJB. He had 13 targets (39% target share and 3 RZ targets, including two penalties) on SNF and still failed to go over 50 receiving yards. If this were the “squeaky wheel” game, consider me very unimpressed. Sell high with Dallas up next, as managers are bound to overlook the Lane Johnson OL injury for Philly. You’ll get someone to bite. DeVonta Smith has been better than AJB this season. Smith is averaging 2.06 yards per route. Career high. AJB is averaging a career-low 1.59 yards per route run.”
Andrew Erickson (FantasyPros)

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