Fantasy Football Trade Value Chart (Week 3)

The beginning of the football season presents interesting opportunities for fantasy owners. Never do values swing more than in those first couple of games, where fantasy owners are gauging whether some big performances are flukes or for real.

This is the time you need to explore the market. Even if your fantasy team is in good shape, you never know what another manager who is struggling at quarterback might give up for Patrick Mahomes, or whether you can turn your last-round pick of DeSean Jackson into a decent running back.

A 2-0 start can evaporate pretty quickly. Don’t rest on your laurels. Go out and do your best to improve your team.

And to help you out on that endeavor, we provide our handy trade value chart. If you missed last week’s article, these values are based on 12-team, 0.5 PPR formats, so feel free to adjust accordingly.

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Quarterbacks

Player Current Value Previous Value +/-
Aaron Rodgers 18 20 -2
Cam Newton 18 18
Tom Brady 18 20 -2
Drew Brees 18 18
Patrick Mahomes 18 13 +5
Kirk Cousins 15 13 +2
Russell Wilson 15 20 -5
Deshaun Watson 15 15
Philip Rivers 13 7 +6
Carson Wentz 9 N/A +9
Andrew Luck 9 13 -4
Matthew Stafford 7 7
Ben Roethlisberger 7 7
Jared Goff 7 N/A +7

 
There aren’t too many takeaways from last week, other than I feel confident that Patrick Mahomes’ hot start is not entirely fluky and Carson Wentz is back. Just . . . don’t trade for a quarterback. Seriously. Unless you’re in a league where everyone drafted a backup QB, don’t worry about your situation at the position. There are plenty of options.

Running Backs

Player Current Value Previous Value +/-
Todd Gurley 70 70
Alvin Kamara 68 68
Melvin Gordon 66 61 +5
Christian McCaffrey 55 53 +2
Saquon Barkley 55 55
Ezekiel Elliott 55 62 -7
Kareem Hunt 45 53 -8
Dalvin Cook 45 53 -8
Jordan Howard 45 50 -5
David Johnson 42 63 -21
Chris Thompson 41 23 +18
Leonard Fournette 36 36
Lamar Miller 25 25
Kenyan Drake 25 25
Joe Mixon 23 50 -27
Alex Collins 22 22
Devonta Freeman 22 34 -12
James Conner 22 12 +10
Mark Ingram 21 17 +4
Tevin Coleman 18 17 +1
Dion Lewis 18 19 -1
Phillip Lindsay 17 9 +8
Le’Veon Bell 16 35 -19
LeSean McCoy 14 18 -4
Jay Ajayi 14 22 -8
Carlos Hyde 14 14
Adrian Peterson 14 16 -2
Marshawn Lynch 14 12 +2
Giovani Bernard 12 2 +10
Jamaal Williams 11 14 -3
Rex Burkhead 11 14 -3
Matt Breida 11 9 +2
James White 11 10 +1
Derrick Henry 10 12 -2
Bilal Powell 10 10
Austin Ekeler 10 9 +1
Peyton Barber 9 9
Alfred Morris 9 9
Isaiah Crowell 9 9
Corey Clement 9 3 +6
Javorius Allen 8 N/A +8
Royce Freeman 8 12 -4
Duke Johnson 7 7
Marlon Mack 6 7 -1
Kerryon Johnson 6 8 -2
Sony Michel 6 6
Tarik Cohen 5 5
T.J. Yeldon 5 10 -5
Theo Riddick 5 6 -1
Aaron Jones 4 3 +1
Rashaad Penny 3 4 -1
Chris Carson 3 4 -1
Jordan Wilkins 2 2
Ty Montgomery 2 4 -2
Doug Martin 2 2
Latavius Murray 2 2

 
I am concerned about David Johnson, and if you own him, you probably are, too. In 2016, he averaged about 31 pass routes per game. So far this year, he’s averaging 16. He’s lining up almost exclusively in the backfield after starting out of the slot on a significant number of snaps in 2016. In other words, all the factors that should be in play to make Johnson great simply aren’t there. Steve Wilks says he will get Johnson the ball more, but for now, he drops sharply in value. Don’t go crazy, however. He still needs to be valued as a top-10 running back, particularly in PPR formats. I’d “buy low” to an extent, but only if you are actually buying low.

Conversely, if you have some depth, I’d look to buy high on Chris Thompson in any format that gives out any sort of bonus for a reception. Jay Gruden simply does not like to have a pure bell-cow back and, even if he did, it’s unlikely that Adrian Peterson would be able to hold up under an enormous workload. The only concern with Thompson is health. In his breakout 2017 season, he averaged roughly 11 touches for 86 yards and 1/2 a touchdown per game. This year? He’s averaged 14 touches for 110 yards and half a touchdown per game. This is not a fluke. Again, you need to have depth to make a move for Thompson because of the injury risk. But if you do, don’t shy away.

Other big movers include James Conner (getting tougher to see Le’Veon Bell coming back before Week 10), Phillip Lindsay (getting harder to deny his production), and Giovani Bernard (could be one week, could be several weeks. Win now – worry about the future later). But if you’re in need of a running back, there should be plenty of options available for trade.

Wide Receivers

Player Current Value Previous Value +/-
Michael Thomas 65 58 +7
Antonio Brown 65 65
DeAndre Hopkins 58 58
Julio Jones 58 58
A.J. Green 56 45 +11
Tyreek Hill 56 48 +8
Odell Beckham Jr. 56 58 -2
Keenan Allen 56 56
Adam Thielen 48 39 +9
Stefon Diggs 45 36 +9
Mike Evans 45 45
Davante Adams 41 42 -1
JuJu Smith-Schuster 41 39 +2
T.Y. Hilton 41 42 -1
Jarvis Landry 33 29 +4
Emmanuel Sanders 32 29 +3
Golden Tate 29 28 +1
Larry Fitzgerald 28 39 -11
Brandin Cooks 27 22 +5
Demaryius Thomas 25 25
Allen Robinson 23 22 +1
Amari Cooper 22 19 +3
Chris Hogan 21 25 -4
Nelson Agholor 21 12 +9
Marvin Jones 21 22 -1
Doug Baldwin 20 11 +9
Randall Cobb 19 19
Will Fuller 19 15 +4
Kenny Stills 18 19 -1
Corey Davis 17 17
Marquise Goodwin 17 21 -4
Keelan Cole 17 15 +2
Robert Woods 15 17 -2
Quincy Enunwa 14 9 +5
Tyler Lockett 14 14
Cooper Kupp 12 11 +1
Kenny Golladay 12 9 +3
Julian Edelman 12 10 +2
John Brown 11 7 +4
Devin Funchess 11 10 +1
Chris Godwin 10 11 -1
DeSean Jackson 9 7 +2
Sammy Watkins 9 7 +2
Michael Crabtree 9 18 -9
Jamison Crowder 8 12 -4
Josh Gordon 7 21 -14
Robby Anderson 7 16 -9
Geronimo Allison 7 4 +3
Alshon Jeffery 7 7
Tyler Boyd 6 N/A +6
Pierre Garcon 5 5
Mike Williams 4 3 +1
Ted Ginn 3 2 +1
Sterling Shepard 3 9 -6
Dede Westbrook 3 N/A +3
Brandon Marshall 2 2
Cole Beasley 2 N/A +2
Antonio Callaway 2 N/A +2
Rishard Matthews 2 4 -2

 
There isn’t too much to say about the wide receivers. Yes, as Mike Tagliere and I discussed on the Sunday night podcast, Michael Thomas is my number one wide receiver at this point, though he’s essentially a co-number one with Antonio Brown. A.J. Green, Tyreek Hill, Adam Thielen, and Stefon Diggs all gain in value, simply because their performances have put them firmly in the truly elite class.

If there is one player worth discussing, however, it’s Josh Gordon. Since his move to the Patriots, I’ve seen Gordon traded for anywhere from a top-tier running back to a low-end starting quarterback. But as for me, I’m passing unless you can get him dirt cheap. Gordon hasn’t had a productive fantasy season since 2013 – FIVE SEASONS AGO. I understand that he should, theoretically, be catching passes from one of the all-time great quarterbacks in an outstanding offense. But you, or at least I, cannot just assume that he’s simply going to step in and hit the ground running. He obviously still has his off-field issues that he needs to fight through, he’s battling a hamstring injury, and he doesn’t know the offense. And although I know the Browns are generally incompetent, do we really think that teams were falling over themselves to offer more than the meager price the Patriots paid? Gordon has talent and I really hope he succeeds. But there’s no way I’d be willing to deal anything substantial for him at this point.

To be clear, if I owned Gordon, I would not deal him at that price above. I’d simply hold him for now and hope that everything breaks right. But if I’m looking to deal FOR him, that’s about as high as I’d go at present.

Tight Ends

Player Current Value Previous Value +/-
Rob Gronkowski 41 41
Travis Kelce 35 29 +6
Zach Ertz 35 35
Jimmy Graham 10 10
George Kittle 8 8
Jordan Reed 8 8
Evan Engram 8 8
Kyle Rudolph 8 7 +1
Trey Burton 8 8
O.J. Howard 6 4 +2
Jack Doyle 5 8 -3
Jared Cook 5 7 -2
Eric Ebron 5 5
Austin Seferian-Jenkins 3 N/A +3
David Njoku 3 4 -1

 
If you aren’t trading for one of the top three tight ends, then it really doesn’t matter. Everyone else is pretty much a throw-in to any deal. #analysis.

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Dan Harris is a featured writer for FantasyPros. For more from Dan, check out his archive or follow him on Twitter @danharris80.