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 fantasy football trade advice specific to your team through our Trade Analyzer and Trade Finder tools.
Here is our fantasy football trade advice article, including all the players we’re buying and selling this week. And below let’s take a closer look at a few players to trade Week 4.
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 fantasy football trade advice specific to your team through our Trade Analyzer and Trade Finder tools.
Here is our fantasy football trade advice article, including all the players we’re buying and selling this week. And below let’s take a closer look at a few players to trade Week 4.
Fantasy Football Trade Advice: Week 4
Here are players we’re trading for in fantasy football Week 4.
Devin Singletary (RB – NYG)
Devin Singletary led the rushing attack with 16 carries for 65 yards and a touchdown, including a long run of 43 yards to ice the game. He should have scored, but he stopped just short of the goal line. Singletary showed his versatility, adding 43 receiving yards on 4 catches. 68% snap rate for a low-key bell cow. However, it does seem like Tyrone Tracy could push Singletary in some capacity. But with Dallas, Seattle, Cincinnati and Philadelphia the upcoming stretch, Singletary might be a sharp buy-low without the price tag attached.
Tank Dell (WR – HOU)
Tank Dell had 14% of the targets (six), securing five catches for 62 yards. Dell had a pair of red-zone targets during the game but did not score. He is also dealing with a rib injury. Dell has struggled to emerge from the crowded Texans WR room with just a 16% target rate per route run.
Dell and Nico Collins are a combined 0-for-7 on red-zone TD conversion rate. Diggs has caught two of his three red-zone targets for TDs.
Any chance you can get to buy low on any of these WRs, you take advantage. The Jaguars’ defense is easy to beat through the air rather than on the ground.
Jerome Ford (RB – CLE)
Jerome Ford led the rushing attack, carrying the ball 10 times for 37 yards. Watson also chipped in 26 rushing yards on 4 carries, while D’Onta Foreman added 2 carries for 5 yards. But Foreman’s usage reverted back to Week 1, where he played 16% of the snaps to Ford’s 79%. Ford was also active in the passing game, catching all 3 of his 4 targets (10.8% target share) for 33 yards. Ford has to be the buy here given the upside he has with such a full workload (aside from goal line usage). I do think it’s smart to not just flat-out drop Foreman, given the Browns will hardly be viewed as massive underdogs against either the Raiders or Commanders the next two weeks.
Overall, when the Browns trail, it’s Ford. If they are winning it’s Foreman. Ford has a 70% or higher snap share in two of three games this season. Both losses.