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.
Here are all the players we’re buying and selling this week. And below let’s take a closer look at a few players to trade this week.
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Fantasy Football Trade Advice
Marquise Brown and Geoff Swaim also contributed to the receiving efforts, with Brown catching 2 passes for 18 yards (5 targets, 91 air yards) and Swaim adding 15 yards on 2 receptions. Brown only had two targets in the first half.
Still, the downfield looks are there, and the matchups are sublime. Buy Hollywood Brown for dirt cheap ahead of the fantasy playoffs. Ran a route on 100% of the dropbacks.
The Cardinals face the Rams and Steelers over the next 2 games, followed by the bye week. Then it’s SF, CHI and PHI.
James Conner led with 14 carries for 62 yards, averaging 4.4 yards per attempt. His longest run was 14 yards. Conner caught 2 passes for just 1 yard on 3 targets (10.3% Target share). Also played 69% of the snaps as the bell cow. Buy low after he failed to find the end zone.
Drake London was the primary target in the receiving corps, catching 3 of his 4 targets (22.2% Target share) for 36 yards. Kyle Pitts also made a significant contribution with 30 yards on 3 receptions from a team-high 5 targets (28% Target share). Still the clear alpha in the passing game. And better yet, Desmond Ridder is the starting QB moving forward. Heinicke targeted London once in Week 10. Ridder targeted London 5 times (including penalties and 2-point attempts) for a 63% Target share (8 total pass attempts) in his limited playing time in Week 10.
London is Ridder’s binky. Trade for the binky. No Marshon Lattimore this week for the Saints.
Jaylen Warren led the rushing attack with an impressive 129 yards and a touchdown on just nine carries, averaging a remarkable 14.3 yards per carry. His longest run was a notable 74-yarder and he caught all 3 passes for 16 yards on 3 targets (12% Target share). Najee Harris contributed 35 yards on 12 carries. 2 targets. Woof. 5 carries in the first half.
Harris saw his snaps bounce back to 57% versus Warren’s 45%. But I’d pay less attention to the snaps when Warren would have played MORE had he not been ripping off chunk gains left and right.
As always, buy Warren and sell Harris. The Steelers can only keep their best offensive playmaker behind Harris for so long. And the matchups in the next 2 weeks are divine for the ground attack to be productive.
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