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Waiver Wire Plus: One Fantasy Football Move for Every NFL Team Entering Week 12

The waiver wire looks different for every fantasy league. So, we’re breaking down how to handle every fantasy-relevant player in the NFL as we head into Week 12.

The average fantasy football manager has gotten more sophisticated over the years. And several of them have moved past simply wanting to be told who to pick up each week.

If you are one of those people, this is for you. We still have our most important weekly recommendations (conveniently located at the top of this article), but we’re giving you more.

Want to know the key injuries that happened this week? We’ve got that. What about the depth chart with the players who could benefit from a key injury? We’ve got that too.

There is also a key fantasy move to make for each team so you can see which players’ stocks are on the move. No matter how deep you want to dig to manage your fantasy roster, we’ve got you covered. We have the recommendations you want in addition to the information you need to make informed decisions. And we’ll continue to add recommendations throughout the week as major news breaks.

Week 12 Waiver Wire Moves

Add Bhayshul Tuten: Running back is the hardest position to grab off the waiver wire late in the season. Most teams have settled into predictable usage for their running backs this far into the year, and all the good players are already rostered. That’s what makes the rookie Tuten so intriguing. We’ve recommended him as a stash earlier this year, and he had career highs in both carries (15) and yards (74) while adding a touchdown in Week 11. Travis Etienne Jr. is still the lead back for now and had 19 carries for 73 yards and two touchdowns. But Tuten looked like the more impressive runner and continues to show why the Jaguars need to get him on the field. He did suffer an ankle injury during the game but told reporters he will be fine moving forward.

Add Darnell Mooney: The Falcons were hit with a double dose of bad injury news as Michael Penix Jr. suffered a partial ACL tear and will be moved to IR and Drake London sprained his PCL and will be out at least this week. This opens the door for the Kirk Cousins-Darnell Mooney connection to reemerge. It’s easy to forget, but from the start of last season until Cousins was benched for Penix, Mooney was tied for 17th in the NFL in receiving yards. We might not expect that kind of usage again, but it’s possible with London out. And Mooney needs to be rostered in all leagues now.

Add Chris Rodriguez Jr.: Rodriguez is the name that should be near the top of every fantasy manager’s waiver wire wishlist heading into Week 12. He is only rostered in 12% of leagues, so there should be a dash for him on the wire. Jacory Croskey-Merritt just hasn’t been cutting it as the lead back and the seventh-round rookie was given nine carries to 15 for Rodriguez on Sunday in Madrid. Rodriguez has been on a tear with 4.8 yards per carry compared to Croskey-Merrit’s 3.0 yards per rush over the last three weeks.

Add Michael Wilson: Wilson had 15 receptions for 185 yards on Sunday. He was targeted 18 times and while Jacoby Brissett isn’t going to throw the ball 57 times every week, the change of quarterback has changed the formula for the Cardinals. Wilson didn’t have more than four receptions in any game across the first 10 weeks of the season. He more than tripled that number during the loss to the 49ers. Regardless of the game script or Marvin Harrison Jr.’s impending return, Wilson’s massive day warrants an add in leagues where he is available.

Key Injuries in Week 11

Michael Penix Jr.: Suffered a knee injury and has been placed on IR. Penix could miss the rest of the season. Kirk Cousins is now the starting QB in Atlanta.

Drake London: Sprained his PCL and will miss at least one week. There’s a good possibility London misses additional time.

Josh Jacobs: Suffered a knee injury but avoided surgery and is day-to-day. He could miss Week 12, but seems to have avoided a lengthy absence.

Aaron Rodgers: Fractured his non-throwing wrist and is in jeopardy of missing Week 12. Mason Rudolph will be the starter if Rodgers is unable to play.

Dillon Gabriel: Was placed in concussion protocol and will need to clear the protocol to play in Week 12. Shedeur Sanders will start if he is unable to play.

Calvin Ridley: Broke his fibula and will miss the remainder of the season.

Jump to an AFC Team

Buffalo Bills/Miami Dolphins/New England Patriots/New York Jets/Baltimore Ravens/Pittsburgh Steelers/Cleveland Browns/Cincinnati Bengals/Kansas City Chiefs/Denver Broncos/Las Vegas Raiders/Los Angeles Chargers/Houston Texans/Indianapolis Colts/Jacksonville Jaguars/Tennessee Titans

Jump to an NFC Team

Philadelphia Eagles/New York Giants/Washington Commanders/Dallas Cowboys/Green Bay Packers/Chicago Bears/Detroit Lions/Minnesota Vikings/Tampa Bay Buccaneers/Atlanta Falcons/Carolina Panthers/New Orleans Saints/San Francisco 49ers/Seattle Seahawks/Los Angeles Rams/Arizona Cardinals

Buffalo Bills

Move to Make: Avoid Buffalo Pass Catchers

Josh Allen is pulling off a magic trick in Buffalo, powering a high-octane offense without a single reliable fantasy receiver.

Tyrell Shavers was the leading receiver with 90 yards and touchdown in Week 11, but we’ll need to see more from a player who had eight career catches coming into the game. Dawson Knox had just one catch on three targets with Dalton Kincaid sidelined. Joshua Palmer and Khalil Shakir haven’t had any consistency, and Keon Coleman was benched for disciplinary reasons in Week 11.

It may seem crazy to not roster a pass catcher for Josh Allen, but none can be relied upon at the moment.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Josh Allen, Mitch Trubisky

Running Back: James Cook, Ray Davis, Ty Johnson

Wide Receiver: Keon Coleman, Khalil Shakir, Joshua Palmer, Curtis Samuel, Elijah Moore

Tight End: Dalton Kincaid, Dawson Knox, Jackson Hawes

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Miami Dolphins

Move to Make: Stash Ollie Gordon II

The Dolphins won the first ever NFL game to be played in Spain beating the Commanders 16-13 in overtime. The big fantasy takeaway is that there was no new fantasy takeaway.

This is a highly concentrated offense with no real avenue for production from anyone outside the big three of De’Von Achane, Jaylen Waddle and Malik Washington. Ollie Gordon II is the big running back option, and he carried the ball nine times for 45 yards, his highest run total since Week 8. Achane is still getting most carries in the redzone (24 on the season) but Gordon has 15 with two touchdowns. If you are in need of an RB long-term, stick him on your bench in the hope of future opportunities.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Tua Tagovailoa, Zach Wilson

Running Back: De’Von Achane, Ollie Gordon II, Jaylen Wright

Wide Receiver: Jaylen Waddle, Malik Washington, Nick Westbrook-Ikhine, Dee Eskridge

Tight End: Darren Waller, Julian Hill, Tanner Conner

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New England Patriots

Move to Make: Add Mack Hollins

Drake Maye is doing a good job of spreading the ball around this season and that can lead to some fluctuation on a weekly basis but Mack Hollins has finished as WR15, WR20 and WR26 in three of the last four weeks. He had four catches for 64 yards on Thursday night against the Jets on five targets. Only TreVeyon Henderson and Stefon Diggs had more targets. Kayshon Boutte will likely return soon from a hamstring injury but Hollins is Maye’s WR2 right now and with Maye playing like a potential MVP, that keeps him fantasy relevant.

Patriots Targets Through Week 11

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Drake Maye, Joshua Dobbs

Running Back: Rhamondre Stevenson, TreVeyon Henderson, Terrell Jennings

Wide Receiver: Stefon Diggs, Kayshon Boutte, DeMario Douglas, Mack Hollins, Kyle Williams

Tight End: Hunter Henry, Austin Hooper

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New York Jets

Move to Make: Monitor Adonai Mitchell

We haven’t seen much of Adonai Mitchell since he was traded by the Colts to the Jets on trade deadline day. We can’t make an overly compelling reason to add Mitchell after a one-catch, 10-yard day but his advanced statistics in Week 11 are better than anyone else on the team. He had 5.1 burn yards per route and 17.2 average air yards on six targets.

With Tyrod Taylor taking over at quarterback, it’s possible Mitchell will be a good add moving forward. Keep an eye on his production in Week 12, and feel free to grab him early if you have a roster spot available in a deeper league.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Tyrod Taylor, Justin Fields

Running Back: Breece Hall, Braelon Allen, Isaiah Davis, Kene Nwangwu

**Wide Receiver:**Garrett Wilson, Josh Reynolds, Adonai Mitchell, Allen Lazard, Tyler Johnson, Arian Smith, Isaiah Williams

Tight End: Mason Taylor, Jeremy Ruckert, Stone Smartt

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Baltimore Ravens

Move to Make: Drop Isaiah Likely

There was some hope that Likely would become fantasy relevant again when Lamar Jackson returned, especially after he caught three passes for 60 yards in Jackson’s return against the Dolphins.

That just hasn’t materialized. Likely has a combined four catches for 32 receiving yards in the two games since then. He has 118 yards on the season and has only out-targeted Mark Andrews once the entire year. It’s time to search for tight end production elsewhere.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Lamar Jackson, Cooper Rush, Tyler Huntley

Running Back: Derrick Henry, Justice Hill, Keaton Mitchell

Wide Receiver: Zay Flowers, Rashod Bateman, DeAndre Hopkins, Devontez Walker, Tylan Wallace

Tight End: Mark Andrews, Isaiah Likely, Charlie Kolar

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Cincinnati Bengals

Move to Make: Start Joe Flacco

Flacco finally had an underwhelming fantasy performance this week, throwing for just 199 yards and one touchdown against the Steelers in Week 11.

But, since being traded to the Bengals, Flacco is throwing the most passes per game than any quarterback in the NFL. That will likely continue in Week 12, with the Bengals needing to keep pace with the high-powered Patriots offense.

The Patriots defense has been below average in most passing categories and has given up 19 passing touchdowns this seasons, tied for the sixth most in the NFL. There may be some temptation to bench Flacco after he came back down to Earth, but he’s worth another start this week as long as Joe Burrow remains out, which is likely.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Joe Burrow, Joe Flacco, Jake Browning

Running Back: Chase Brown, Samaje Perine, Tahj Brooks

Wide Receiver: Ja’Marr Chase, Tee Higgins, Andrei Iosivas, Mitchell Tinsley, Charlie Jones

Tight End: Mike Gesicki, Drew Sample, Noah Fant, Tanner Hudson

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Cleveland Browns

Move to Make: Start Quinshon Judkins

This is a bet on Judkins finding his way into the end zone, something he hasn’t done since he had three touchdowns in Week 7.

Although the Raiders defense is stout against the run overall, they’re one of eight teams to allow at least 12 rushing touchdowns so far this season. It looks like Shedeur Sanders might start for the Browns, which is heavy incentive for Kevin Stefanski to lean on his running game in the red zone.

Judkins has had a heavy workload and it might get even heavier in Week 12. Put him in your starting lineup and trust that the touchdown drought will end.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Dillon Gabriel, Shedeur Sanders

Running Back: Quinshon Judkins, Dylan Sampson, Jerome Ford

Wide Receiver: Jerry Jeudy, Cedric Tillman, Isaiah Bond, Jamari Thrash

Tight End: David Njoku, Harold Fannin Jr.

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Pittsburgh Steelers

Move to Make: Start Jaylen Warren

Warren has been a passable RB2 this year, ranking as the RB2 in PPR points per game heading into Monday Night Football.

But there have been several weeks where he’s left fantasy managers wanting more, including Week 11, when he managed just 10 rushes for 62 yards and two catches for five yards.

That might tempt some managers with solid alternative options to leave Warren on the bench, but that would be a mistake. The Steelers play the Bears in Week 12, a team that has allowed the fourth-most yards per carry in the NFL.

It’s more than the ineffectiveness against the run, too. The Bears lead the league in interceptions and overall takeaways, so it stands to reason Mike Tomlin will do everything he can to avoid mistakes, particularly if Mason Rudolph has to start for Aaron Rodgers,

There are weeks to stay away from Warren, but this isn’t one of them.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Aaron Rodgers, Mason Rudolph

Running Back: Jaylen Warren, Kenneth Gainwell, Kaleb Johnson

Wide Receiver: DK Metcalf, Calvin Austin III, Roman Wilson, Ben Skowronek

Tight End: Jonnu Smith, Pat Freiermuth, Connor Heyward, Darnell Washington

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Denver Broncos

Move to Make: Add Jaleel McLaughlin

With J.K. Dobbins on injured reserve, we saw Jaleel McLaughlin step into an expanded role during Sunday’s win over the Kansas City Chiefs. He had only seen one carry and one target before Week 11, which both came during a Week 6 victory over the Jets.

In Week 11, he carried the ball six times for 19 yards and, most importantly, a touchdown. The Broncos had six redzone carries with RJ Harvey (3), McLaughlin (2) and Bo Nix (1) sharing the load inside the opponents’ 20. He’s not going to supplant Harvey but has a very easy schedule (against the Commanders and Raiders) in the next two weeks after their bye in Week 12.

Broncos targets through Week 11

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Bo Nix, Jarrett Stidham

Running Back: J.K. Dobbins, RJ Harvey, Jaleel McLaughlin, Tyler Badie

Wide Receiver: Courtland Sutton, Troy Franklin, Marvin Mims Jr., Pat Bryant, Trent Sherfield Sr.

Tight End: Evan Engram, Adam Trautman, Nate Adkins

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Kansas City Chiefs

Move to Make: Buy Isiah Pacheco

The Kansas City Chiefs were on a three-game winning streak prior to Pacheco’s injury in Week 8. They have since lost two in a row and play a potentially season-defining game against the Colts in Week 12. Kareem Hunt was the only Chiefs running back to log a carry during the loss to the Broncos and the team desperately needs some of Pacheco’s dynamism. Pacheco remains the most valuable long-term back for the Chiefs.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Patrick Mahomes, Gardner Minshew

Running Back: Isiah Pacheco, Kareem Hunt, Brashard Smith

Wide Receiver: Rashee Rice, Xavier Worthy, Hollywood Brown, JuJu Smith-Schuster, Tyquan Thornton

Tight End: Travis Kelce, Noah Gray, Robert Tonyan

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Los Angeles Chargers

Move to Make: Sell Kimani Vidal

If you thought it was chaos trying to figure out who would step into Omarian Hampton’s cleats after the rookie went down, the scramble to understand the Chargers’ backfield if Kimani Vidal is to miss time will be mayhem. The Chargers are on a bye week in Week 12, which will give them time to get healthy, but Najee Harris is done for the season, Hampton and Hassan Haskins remains on IR and now Vidal is dealing with a thigh issue. Trayveon Williams had three carries for a one-yard loss and Amar Johnson had two carries for eight yards.

It’ll be hard to play anyone if Hampton and Vidal are still injured, but if there’s any value to be had from an owner who thinks Vidal is still relevant, he’s worth selling while you still can.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Justin Herbert, Trey Lance

Running Back: Omarion Hampton, Kimani Vidal, Hassan Haskins

Wide Receiver: Ladd McConkey, Quentin Johnston, Keenan Allen, Tre Harris

Tight End: Oronde Gadsden, Will Dissly, Tyler Conklin

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Las Vegas Raiders

Move to Make: Will Be Updated After Monday Night Football

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Geno Smith, Kenny Pickett

Running Back: Ashton Jeanty, Raheem Mostert, Dylan Laube

Wide Receiver: Tre Tucker, Dont’e Thornton, Jack Bech, Tyler Lockett

Tight End: Brock Bowers, Michael Mayer, Ian Thomas

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Houston Texans

Move to Make: Add Jayden Higgins

It’s been difficult to trust any Texans receivers outside of Nico Collins, but Higgins is starting to separate himself.

He had four catches on seven targets for 55 yards in Week 11, following up five catches on seven targets for 42 yards and a touchdown in Week 10. It’s possible he’s just a favorite target for Davis Mills, but he also had eight targets in Week 8 when C.J. Stroud played the whole game.

So, even with a disaster of a game in Week 9 (caught his only target for four yards), Higgins is now tied for 37th in the league in targets over the last four weeks. He’s also a red zone weapon and has three touchdowns already this year. At the very least, he should be rostered in case he continues to get heavy usage down the stretch.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: C.J. Stroud, Davis Mills, Graham Mertz

Running Back: Woody Marks, Nick Chubb, Dare Ogunbowale, Dameon Pierce

Wide Receiver: Nico Collins, Jayden Higgins, Jaylin Noel, Christian Kirk, Xavier Hutchinson,

Tight End: Dalton Schultz, Harrison Bryant, Brenden Bates

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Indianapolis Colts

Move to Make: Start Michael Pittman Jr.

We preached patience last week after a Daniel Jones dud, and we’ll do the same here after a disappointing game from Pittman in Week 10.

Pittman had just two catches for 19 yards in his worst game of the season. But he was facing a Falcons defense that has been tough against pass catchers all year, and has been remarkably consistent up until this latest disappointment.

The Colts No. 1 receiver is one of only two players in the NFL with six games of at least five receptions and a touchdown this season (Trey McBride is the other). Shrug off the bad week and start him with confidence coming out of his Week 11 bye.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Daniel Jones, Anthony Richardson, Riley Leonard

Running Back: Jonathan Taylor, DJ Giddens, Tyler Goodson, Ameer Abdullah

Wide Receiver: Michael Pittman Jr., Josh Downs, Alec Pierce, Ashton Dulin

Tight End: Tyler Warren, Mo Alie-Cox, Drew Olgetree

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Jacksonville Jaguars

Move to Make: Add Bhayshul Tuten

Running back is the hardest position to grab off the waiver wire late in the season.

Most teams have settled into predictable usage for their running backs this far into the year, and all the good players are already rostered.

That’s what makes the rookie Tuten so intriguing. We’ve recommended him as a stash earlier this year and he had career highs in both carries (15) and yards (74) while adding a touchdown in Week 11.

Travis Etienne Jr. is still the lead back for now and had 19 carries for 73 yards and two touchdowns. But Tuten looked like the more impressive runner and continues to show why the Jaguars need to get him on the field. He did suffer an ankle injury during the game, but told reporters he will be fine moving forward.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Trevor Lawrence, Nick Mullens

Running Back: Travis Etienne Jr., Bhayshul Tuten, LeQuint Allen

Wide Receiver: Brian Thomas Jr., Jakobi Meyers, Parker Washington, Dyami Brown

Tight End: Brenton Strange, Hunter Long, Johnny Mundt

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Tennessee Titans

Move to Make: Add Tyjae Spears

There’s an argument to be made that no Titans should be rostered in fantasy after their top three receivers, Calvin Ridley, Elic Ayomanor and Chimere Dike, all left due to injury in Week 11.

Sure, you can hope Van Jefferson now gets enough targets to be relevant, but he had just three catchers for 22 yards against the Texans. Chig Okonkowo led the way with 56 receiving yards, but splits targets with rookie Gunner Helm at tight end. Figuring out the way these targets will work out is tricky, and probably not worth the time anyway as the offense isn’t efficient enough to rely on anyone who isn’t getting an absurd target share.

So, we’ll stick with recommending that Spears is the running back to roster in this backfield. He had just four rushes for three yards in Week 11 but once again managed to put up a modest amount of points due to five catches for 31 yards. He has at least three catches in each of his last five games.

Neither Tony Pollard nor Spears should be used as anything other than an emergency fill-in, but Spears’ receiving talents make him the safer option for a few points.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Cam Ward, Brandon Allen

Running Back: Tony Pollard, Tyjae Spears, Julius Chestnut

Wide Receiver: Calvin Ridley, Elic Ayomanor, Chimere Dike, Tyler Lockett, Van Jefferson,

Tight End: Chig Okonkwo, Gunner Helm

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Dallas Cowboys

Move to Make: Will Be Updated After Monday Night Football

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Dak Prescott, Joe Milton III

Running Back: Javonte Williams, Jaydon Blue

Wide Receiver: CeeDee Lamb, George Pickens, Ryan Flournoy, Jalen Tolbert, KaVontae Turpin

Tight End: Jake Ferguson, Luke Schoonmaker, Brevyn Spann-Ford

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New York Giants

Move to Make: Add Devin Singletary

Last week, we recommended you keep Tyrone Tracy Jr. despite a rough Week 9 outing. He finished Week 11 with 17.9 PPR fantasy points. Out argument was based around the idea that he would beat out Devin Singletary but, as it turns out, it was not an either/or decision. Both Singletary and Tracy Jr. had success in Week 11 against the Green Bay Packers with 35 carries split almost in two – 19 for Tracy, 16 for Singletary. The latter also had two rushing touchdowns.

Singletary only ended up with 44 yards on the ground and the touchdowns saved his day. The Giants are hopeful Jaxson Dart is ready to play in Week 12 but as we said last week, their priority will be to protect their young quarterbacks and that will likely mean more carries for the Giants’ running back committee.

Giants targets through Week 11

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Jaxson Dart, Jameis Winston, Russell Wilson

Running Back: Tyrone Tracy Jr., Devin Singletary

Wide Receiver: Wan’Dale Robinson, Darius Slayton, Jalen Hyatt, Beaux Collins

Tight End: Theo Johnson, Daniel Bellinger, Chris Manhertz

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Philadelphia Eagles

Move to Make: Add Tank Bigsby

The Eagles have been keeping it simple but effective over the last two weeks. They haven’t scored more than 16 points in either game but have come out on top in both against two NFC rivals.

Expect a return of the high-octane offense that saw the Eagles win the Super Bowl last year. The Cowboys are giving up 30.8 points per game, the second highest number in the league. The Eagles could get ahead early and go all in on the rushing game. Add Bigsby now as Saquon Barkley insurance because the Eagles’ next five games are against the Cowboys, Bears, Chargers, Raiders and Commanders. If Barkley misses any time, Bigsby could be an RB1.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Jalen Hurts, Tanner McKee, Sam Howell

Running Back: Saquon Barkley, AJ Dillon, Will Shipley, Tank Bigsby

Wide Receiver: A.J. Brown, DeVonta Smith, Jahan Dotson, Xavier Gipson, Darius Cooper

Tight End: Dallas Goedert, Grant Calcaterra, Cameron Latu

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Washington Commanders

Move to Make: Add Chris Rodriguez Jr.

Rodriguez is the name that should be near the top of every fantasy manager’s waiver wire wish list heading into Week 12. He is only rostered in 12% of leagues so there should be a dash for him on the wire. Jacory Croskey-Merritt just hasn’t been cutting it as the lead back and the seventh-round rookie was given nine carries to 15 for Rodriguez on Sunday in Madrid. Rodriguez has been on a tear with 4.8 yards per carry compared to Croskey-Merrit’s 3.0 yards per rush over the last three weeks.

Chris Rodriguez scrimmage yards

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Jayden Daniels, Marcus Mariota

Running Back: Jacory Croskey-Merritt, Chris Rodriguez Jr., Jeremy McNichols

Wide Receiver: Terry McLaurin, Deebo Samuel, Noah Brown, Luke McCaffrey, Jaylin Lane Chris Moore

Tight End: Zach Ertz, John Bates, Ben Sinnott

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Chicago Bears

Move to Make: Bench DJ Moore

We recommended benching Moore last week as well, and it may have seemed dramatic after one bad game followed two straight efforts of 70 or more receiving yards.

But it proved to be the right call as Moore had just one catch for 18 yards in Week 11, and it’s clear he needs to stay on the bench for the foreseeable future.

Moore is moving like he still has lingering injury issues and had a brutal drop on one of his three targets. Four Bears had more targets than him this week and blocking tight end Durham Smythe matched him. Sit Moore until something changes dramatically in his usage.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Caleb Williams, Tyson Bagent, Case Keenum

Running Back: D’Andre Swift, Kyle Monangai, Roschon Johnson, Brittain Brown, Travis Homer

Wide Receiver: Rome Odunze, DJ Moore, Luther Burden III, Olamide Zaccheaus, Devin Duvernay

Tight End: Colston Loveland, Cole Kmet, Durham Smythe

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Detroit Lions

Move to Make: Buy Jameson Williams

The default trade deadline on most platforms is next week, so this could be the last full week to target players on other managers’ rosters. Williams should be one of those players.

It may seem foolhardy to acquire a player at his peak, but, in some instances, it can be the perfect time to target a player. Every manager wants to make the prudent move of selling high. But if circumstances have tangibly changed for a player, his recent success may be likely to continue.

That’s the case with Williams, who Dan Campbell is clearly trying to get more involved in the offense since taking over as play caller. Williams had four catches on seven targets for 88 yards and a touchdown in Week 11, his third straight week with at least six targets and a TD.

Williams is dynamic but was often used as a decoy and blocker when John Morton was calling plays. Getting the ball to Williams seems to be the biggest point of emphasis for Campbell, so he’ll likely continue to be a player worthy of starting.

Instead of thinking it as buying high, think of trading for Williams as acquiring a player with massive upside at a discount before he has been consistent enough to warrant an exorbitant cost.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Jared Goff, Kyle Allen

Running Back: Jahmyr Gibbs, David Montgomery, Jacob Saylors

Wide Receiver: Amon-Ra St. Brown, Jameson Williams, Isaac TeSlaa, Kalif Raymond, Dominic Lovett

Tight End: Sam LaPorta, Brock Wright, Ross Dwelley

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Green Bay Packers

Move to Make: Add Emanuel Wilson

The Packers gave Josh Jacobs a massive share of the carries when he was healthy and the same was true for Wilson who replaced him after his injury. In Week 11, Wilson got 11 carries, Jacobs had seven and Chris Brooks had just one.

Jacobs avoided serious injury and could be back for this week, but it seems more likely than not that he misses one game. The Vikings have been below average against the run this year and Wilson’s volume should make him at least a worthy Flex play if Jacobs can’t go.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Jordan Love, Malik Willis

Running Back: Josh Jacobs, Emanuel Wilson, Chris Brooks

Wide Receiver: Romeo Doubs, Matthew Golden, Dontayvion Wicks, Savion Williams

Tight End: Luke Musgrave, John FitzPatrick

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Minnesota Vikings

Move to Make: Drop T.J. Hockenson

Hockenson has been one of the most disappointing tight ends in fantasy this season and has been particularly bad with JJ McCarthy.

He’s played five games with McCarthy at quarterback and has 85 receiving yards. Total. An average of just 17 per game.

It’s time to admit that the Hockenson blowup isn’t happening this year and search for tight end help elsewhere.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: J.J. McCarthy, Carson Wentz, Max Brosmer

Running Back: Jordan Mason, Aaron Jones, Zavier Scott

Wide Receiver: Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, Jalen Nailor, Adam Thielen

Tight End: T.J. Hockenson, Josh Oliver

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Atlanta Falcons

Move to Make: Add Darnell Mooney

The Falcons were hit with a double dose of bad injury news as Michael Penix Jr. suffered a partial ACL tear and will be moved to IR and Drake London sprained his PCL and will be out at least this week.

This opens the door for the Kirk Cousins-Darnell Mooney connection to reemerge. It’s easy to forget, but from the start of last season until Cousins was benched for Penix, Mooney was tied for 17th in the NFL in receiving yards.

We might not expect that kind of usage again, but it’s possible with London out. And Mooney needs to be rostered in all leagues now.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Michael Penix Jr., Kirk Cousins

Running Back: Bijan Robinson, Tyler Allgeier, Nathan Carter

Wide Receiver: Drake London, Darnell Mooney, Ray-Ray McCloud, Casey Washington, Khaderal Hodge

Tight End: Kyle Pitts, Charlie Woerner

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Carolina Panthers

Move to Make: Start Xavier Legette

The up-and-down Panthers are at it again.

After a brutal loss at home to the Saints, the Panthers beat the Falcons in overtime and Bryce Young threw for 446 yards and three touchdowns.

Tetairoa McMilan was the star of the receiving group, but Xavier Legette had a strong day with four catches for 83 yards and a touchdown. It might be tempting to go the other way this week given how the Panthers season has gone, but the 49ers defense has been plagued by injuries and just gave up an NFL-record 47 completions to Jacoby Brissett. Legette will always be a risky play given the shape of his production (he relies on big plays), but the risk is worth it in Week 12.

Panthers targets through Week 11

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Bryce Young, Andy Dalton

Running Back: Rico Dowdle, Chuba Hubbard, Trevor Etienne, DeeJay Dallas

Wide Receiver: Tetairoa McMillan, Xavier Legette, Jalen Coker, Hunter Renfrow

Tight End: Ja’Tavion Sanders, Tommy Tremble, Mitchell Evans

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New Orleans Saints

Move to Make: Add Juwan Johnson

Johnson is a top-10 fantasy tight end this year, but you wouldn’t know it as he’s available in 35%-65% of leagues depending on the platform.

That needs to change, as Johnson’s coming off four catches for 92 yards and a touchdown in Week 10. He did the vast majority of his work on two plays: a 52-yard catch and a 30-yard touchdown catch.

That kind of big-play ability is rare for a tight end, and Johnson has now caught a touchdown in consecutive games with Tyler Shough at quarterback. They’re definitely not the same player, but it might be Johnson who grabs all the available targets left by Rashid Shaheed’s departure. And with the Saints coming off bye, it’s possible Johnson was cut loose for the roster space last week. He’s worth a pickup if that was the case in your league.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Spencer Rattler, Tyler Shough

Running Back: Alvin Kamara, Devin Neal

Wide Receiver: Chris Olave, Brandin Cooks, DeVaughn Vele, Mason Tipton

Tight End: Juwan Johnson, Taysom Hill, Foster Moreau

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Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Move to Make: Add Sean Tucker

Tucker is one of the toughest players to value on the waiver wire.

He exploded this week as the lead back in Tampa Bay, with 140 scrimmage yards and three touchdowns. It’s clear he has passed Rachaad White as the lead back when Bucky Irving is out and would be worth starting while this is the case.

But Irving could be back as soon as this week, and Todd Bowles said he will be worked into practice more. If Irving returns, it’s hard to trust Tucker’s value, as Irving will be the clear top guy when fully healthy.

So, definitely put in a claim for Tucker on the waiver wire, but if you’re in a Free Agent Acquisition Budget (FAAB) league, don’t spend all of your money on a player who might not be startable as early as this week.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Baker Mayfield, Teddy Bridgewater

Running Back: Bucky Irving, Rachaad White, Sean Tucker, Josh Williams

Wide Receiver: Mike Evans, Emeka Egbuka, Chris Godwin, Sterling Shepard, Tez Johnson, Kameron Johnson

Tight End: Cade Otton, Payne Durham, Devin Culp

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Arizona Cardinals

Move to Make: Add Michael Wilson

Trey Benson could be activated from injured reserve in Week 11, and he’d be the clear lead back for the Cardinals if healthy.

That won’t be the most valuable role if the Cardinals start all of their games like the fiasco against the Seahawks in Week 10 in which they trailed 38-7 at halftime.

But Benson showed some flashes of great play before his injury. The Cardinals backfield has been in limbo without him, with Bam Knight getting the most touches in Week 10 but not being particularly productive while Emari Demarcado has been more efficient in a more reduced role.

Kyler Murray is on injured reserve, so it’s Jacoby Brissett for the foreseeable future. That meant eight targets for his two running backs in Week 10. If Benson combines some catches and his usual rushing workload, he could be a very valuable player down the stretch.

Michael Wilson Targets

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Kyler Murray, Jacoby Brissett, Kedon Slovis

Running Back: Trey Benson, Michael Carter, Bam Knight, Emari Demercado

Wide Receiver: Marvin Harrison Jr., Michael Wilson, Greg Dortch

Tight End: Trey McBride, Elijah Higgins

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Los Angeles Rams

Move to Make: Stash Blake Corum

We are sticking to our guns on this one. The Seahawks’ run defense is stifling – they’re second in rush yards per play against this season (3.5) – and while Kyren Williams did have success, Corum had an ugly game. It was an ugly day for Corum, but better days are ahead.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Matthew Stafford, Jimmy Garoppolo, Stetson Bennett IV

Running Back: Kyren Williams, Blake Corum, Jarquez Hunter

Wide Receiver: Puka Nacua, Davante Adams, Jordan Whittington, Tutu Atwell, Xavier Smith

Tight End: Tyler Higbee, Davis Allen, Colby Parkinson

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San Francisco 49ers

Move to Make: Add Brock Purdy

Purdy is still only rostered in about two-thirds of fantasy leagues but came back from injury in a big way.

He finished Week 11 as QB5, throwing for 200 yards and three touchdowns. We have often said that Kyle Shanahan is one of the best offensive minds in the game and as the 49ers get healthy, we expect Purdy to consolidate his place among the most efficient quarterbacks in the league. If he’s available, he’s a priority add at QB.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Brock Purdy, Mac Jones, Adrian Martinez

Running Back: Christian McCaffrey, Brian Robinson Jr., Isaac Guerendo, Jordan James

Wide Receiver: Brandon Aiyuk, Ricky Pearsall, Jauan Jennings, Kendrick Bourne, Demarcus Robinson, Skyy Moore, Marquez Valdes-Scantling

Tight End: George Kittle, Jake Tonges, Luke Farrell

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Seattle Seahawks

Move to Make: Hold Rashid Shaheed

We still haven’t seen Rashid Shaheed do much in a Seahawks uniform.

He did have five targets, third behind Smith-Njigba and Kupp as far as Seahawks wide receivers go.

AJ Barner, on the other hand, had himself a day in Week 11. He caught 10 of his 11 targets for 70 yards to earn him a TE4 finish for the week. Smith-Njigba still commands a massive target share, Kupp remains the WR2 and Barner is chipping in with the occasional big day, so it’s tough for Shaheed to carve out enough of a role to be fantasy relevant.

But with Kupp’s injury history and the likelihood that the Seahawks bounce back offensively, Shaheed is worth a stash in most leagues.

Depth Chart

Quarterback: Sam Darnold, Drew Lock, Jalen Milroe

Running Back: Kenneth Walker III, Zach Charbonnet, George Holani

Wide Receiver: Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Cooper Kupp, Tory Horton, Rashid Shaheed, Jake Bobo

Tight End: AJ Barner, Elijah Arroyo, Eruc Saubert

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