Winning the trade market is at least as important as nailing the draft. Aside from the waiver wire’s huge impact in the season’s first few weeks, trading is the best way to quickly improve your squad. Great buy-low moves can set you up for victory both in the short term and down the stretch. Solid sell-high deals can get you relatively big hauls for overachieving players who likely won’t sustain their production. Let’s take a look at players to buy this week.
- Fantasy Football Trade Value Chart: Week 5
- Fantasy Football Trade Advice: Risers & Fallers (Week 5)
- 12 Players to Buy Low & Sell High
- Video: 8 Wide Receivers to Buy, Sell, or Hold
Beyond our fantasy football content, be sure to check out our award-winning slate of Fantasy Football Tools as you navigate your season. From our Trade Analyzer – which allows you to instantly find out if a trade offer benefits you or your opponent – to our Trade Finder – which suggests trades that will help you improve your team – we’ve got you covered this fantasy football season.
Check out the rest of our weekly fantasy football advice
Players to Buy Low
Devin Singletary (RB – BUF)
This isn’t buying low, but Singletary looks like he has taken the reigns in the Buffalo backfield. He played 87% of the snaps against Baltimore in Week 4, finishing with 96 total yards on 15 touches. Perhaps most encouraging, however, is that Singletary ranks sixth among running backs with 21 targets and fifth in receptions with 17, making his fantasy viable even without finding the end zone. I think Singletary is due for some positive touchdown regression, however, giving him some serious helium. He is currently the RB23 in PPR, but he should only climb from here. I’d be happy to trade Damien Harris or Rashaad Penny, two backs on bad teams, for him in an attempt to get a piece of the Bills’ offense.
– Jason Kamlowsky (@JasonKamlowsky)
Dalvin Cook (RB – MIN)
Despite averaging only 10.3 half-point PPR fantasy points per game this season, Dalvin Cook has played well, averaging 4.4 yards per rushing attempt. More importantly, the veteran has averaged 0.57 fantasy points per touch this season despite only a 1.4% touchdown rate. Last week he had 22 touches for 86 scrimmage yards despite coming off a dislocated shoulder. While Cook has only one touchdown this season, that will change soon enough. Take advantage of J.K. Dobbins‘ Week 4 performance and flip him for Cook.
– Mike Fanelli (@Mike_NFL2)
Chris Godwin (WR – TB)
Godwin returned from a hamstring injury suffered in Week 1, which came on the heels of his comeback from an ACL tear. As such, he’s been quiet to this point, and fantasy managers may be frustrated with his injuries, as he was banged up again on Sunday night. But he received 10 targets, and despite the additions of Russell Gage and Julio Jones, the passing game looks to be highly concentrated around Godwin and Mike Evans when fully healthy. The running game has been lackluster to this point, and the defense has struggled at times, potentially leading to more pass attempts. Don’t be surprised if Godwin finds his way into the WR1 range before long.
– Chad Workman (@tweetsbychad)
Gabe Davis (WR – BUF)
The preseason buzz for Gabriel Davis was deafening after he exploded in the playoffs last season. Davis looked excellent in Week 1 when he produced four catches on five targets for 88 yards and scored against the Rams. Fantasy managers were thrilled to view the expanded role in the Bills’ offense, but the fantasy dreams have come crashing down with an ankle injury that had Davis miss Week 2 and not be much of a fantasy factor in Weeks 3 and 4. He is still hampered by the lingering effects of the ankle injury and gutting it out to get on the field. Unfortunately, Davis has disappointed fantasy managers, but now is the ideal time to grab him. He will get healthy and return to be another weapon for Josh Allen and the Bills. The fact that the Bills lost Jamison Crowder for the season and Isaiah McKenzie is dealing with concussion issues could open the door for even more opportunities moving forward. The Bills take on the struggling Steelers secondary, who are dealing with injuries across their defensive backfield. Now is the perfect time to slide in and obtain Davis at this lowest value and enjoy the fruits of that trade starting in Week 5.
– Dennis Sosic (@CALL_ME_SOS)
Jared Goff (QB – DET)
I’ve been buying Goff all offseason because I had a feeling that he’d be a sleeper stud in this new offense. This week, without D’Andre Swift and Amon-Ra St. Brown, Goff still put up the best numbers for a QB in fantasy. For the season, he’s QB5. Whether you’re in 1QB or Superflex leagues, go check the price on Goff and see if you can get him for a steal from someone who thinks that this output is a fluke. When Jameson Williams joins the team and St. Brown and Swift are both healthy, this offense could be explosive. I’d be fine sending Russell Wilson for Goff and a piece, or Zach Wilson for Goff and a smaller piece. Whatever you think your trade partner will allow for.
– Andrew Hall (@AndrewHallFF)
Brandin Cooks (WR – HOU)
Cooks has not delivered to expectations yet, especially in his disastrous Week 3. However, the schedule looks great for the wide receiver for most of the rest of the season. Outside of Philadelphia in Week 9 and Dallas in Week 14, the Texans don’t face a tough pass defense and have several cupcakes, including Washington and Tennessee twice. The Texans may want to run, but the schedule will get tough for Dameon Pierce, and they may have to rely on Davis Mills. Scary as that may sound, it should be good for Cooks, who leads the team with a 25% target share. I’d happily trade away an overachieving Corey Davis, Curtis Samuel or even Amari Cooper for him, given Cooks’s opportunity and consistency.
– Scott Youngson (@jscottyoungson)
If you want to dive deeper into fantasy football, be sure to check out our award-winning slate of Fantasy Football Tools as you navigate your season. From our Start/Sit Assistant – which provides your optimal lineup, based on accurate consensus projections – to our Waiver Wire Assistant – that allows you to quickly see which available players will improve your team and by how much – we’ve got you covered this fantasy football season.
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | SoundCloud | iHeartRadio