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 this week.
- Fantasy Football Trade Tools
- Waiver Wire Advice
- Weekly Fantasy Football Expert Rankings
- Fantasy Football Start/Sit Advice
Fantasy Football Trade Advice
Hunter Henry (TE – NE)
“Alec Pierce is the ultimate sell high, but I’m not sure who’s buying. So, instead, I’m selling Hunter Henry. The Patriots have proven to be a run-first attack. And despite the massive target volume Henry saw in Week 2, it was rookie WR Ja’Lynn Polk who found the end zone. The Pats are a ground-and-pound, play-good-defense, and kick-field-goals kinda of club. So while Jacoby Brissett has proven he likes to target tight ends, the reality of the Patriots’ situation, their scheme, ascending rookie, and the fact that Drake Maye could start at any time this season put a damper on Herny’s season-long outlook. I’m looking to get out for an underperforming TE like Dalton Kincaid or Kyle Pitts, or pivoting to the Drake London or Devon Singletary tiers of offensive weapons if managers are already overly concerned and TE needy.”
– Jeremy Shulman (Fantasy Football Universe)
Kyren Williams (RB – LAR)
“Kyren Williams has scored in back-to-back weeks, but the state of this Rams offense is concerning. Poor efficiency (2.5 YPC) should remain a theme, given the injuries at WR/O-line. Another manager might look to buy for the volume alone. Williams’ value is comparable to someone like Brandon Aiyuk or Davante Adams.”
– Kevin English (Draft Sharks)
Justin Jefferson (WR – MIN)
“Justin Jefferson (JJ). This is more about the quarterback attached to him than the wide receiver himself. He’s had a couple of good games which have seen his stock rise, but Sam Darnold has proven year after year that this level of performance is more anomaly than consistently. With other top WRs going down with serious injuries, look at teams that are in dire need of WR and take this opportunity to move JJ for a healthy bundle before the real Sam Darnold stands up.”
– Avery Thrasher (The Branded Sports)
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