What should I do about Christian McCaffrey?
Whether you have him or don’t, you’ve probably pondered this at some point over the past four weeks.
The 49ers star has yet to play this season – in case you hadn’t noticed – and we’ve still got no clear word on when (if?) we should expect to see him on the field.
For most players, the answer would just be to stay away … especially given how well his replacement is performing.
But this is Christian Freakin’ McCaffrey. So let’s break it down …
This is the easiest scenario to figure out. This duo sets you up to keep absorbing 49ers RB points all year, no matter what happens with McCaffrey’s squawking calves.
Hold.
This one depends a lot on what else you have going …
If your team’s in good shape still (at least top half of the league in scoring) and you have enough RBs to fill out your weekly lineup without playing a Cowboy, then try to hold on.
The best indication we’ve gotten so far is Week 10 for McCaffrey’s likeliest return date.
If you need a boost, then it’s certainly OK to shop McCaffrey.
None of us really knows whether we’ll get a healthy McCaffrey at any point this season. So there’s nothing wrong with moving McCaffrey for a good starting player.
Our PPR Trade Value Chart has McCaffrey behind RBs such as: Tony Pollard and Brian Robinson Jr. And he’s near in value to WRs such as Jayden Reed, Diontae Johnson, George Pickens, and Jameson Williams.
This situation obviously carries the most incentive to try to acquire McCaffrey. Your CMC-holding league mate surely knows this.
In many leagues, that means you’ll have no chance at getting a fair price. But if your league mate’s reasonable, then you should be able to secure your team’s outlook while also providing the other team some immediate help.
Just keep in mind that you’ve already gotten way more value out of the 49ers backfield than you imagined heading into the season, if you have Mason and no McCaffrey. So don’t pay too much for CMC.
If you’re not invested in the 49ers backfield at all right now, then your plan should depend heavily on your team and your comfort with risk.
The worse off your team is right now, the less you should be considering McCaffrey. It’s always good to play for upside, but you can’t afford to wait for a “maybe” five weeks from now.
If you’re in decent-to-good shape, though, and have a CMC manager in your league who doesn’t have Mason rostered, then why not take a shot?
Start low to see how frustrated that person is.
(Or feel free to continue avoiding the situation.)
Now let’s get to some other players …
These WRs give us reason to believe their numbers can rebound.
Wilson is no lock to rebound far enough to match his draft status.
Currently, he ranks just:
But his actual numbers have been even worse. Here’s where Wilson has finished among PPR WRs by week:
That puts him 42nd in points per game for the year. And coming off his worst performance yet should have his managers especially frustrated.
Wilson is the Jets’ best WR. That’s why – as Aaron Rodgers said after the Week 3 win over the Patriots – defenses have been focused on taking him away.
Two of those three defenses lost to the Jets. And then in the Denver loss, Wilson faced probably the toughest CB he’ll face all year (Pat Surtain II).
Rodgers has been around a long time. He’s not going to force it to even his best wideout if the defense is surrounding him and some other teammate’s open.
Add that Rodgers has still been acclimating after missing nearly all of last year, and the slow start here makes sense.
But the Jets have also fallen short of 200 passing yards in three of four games and now sit 2-2.
This offense has some other talented pieces, but the group ranks just 24th in yards per play and 22nd in offensive DVOA through four games.
It needs Wilson to get going. And that’s surely part of the plan.
Wilson tied for seventh among WRs in expected points per game last year, the first with Nathaniel Hackett as OC. Wilson tied for 17th the year before as a rookie.
The next three weeks will be interesting.
The Jets get the Vikings, Bills, and Steelers. They rank first, 10th, and seventh in total defensive DVOA so far (respectively) – and first, sixth and 14th against the pass.
Not a great stretch for an offensive breakout. But might that span of difficult defenses further motivate the Jets to gameplan opportunities for their best wideout?
The point here is not to target Wilson ahead of a Week 5 explosion or particularly attractive stretch. It’s to see just how cheaply you can acquire a good young WR before he starts to bounce back.
Just like Wilson, this is a bet on talent rather than some underlying usage metrics.
Aiyuk sits just 41st among WRs in target share and 31st in expected PPR points per game. That’s more understandable in San Francisco – where every offensive player appears to just be a stud-in-waiting – than with the Jets.
But it was just Aug. 29 when the team extended the 26-year-old for $30 million a year. You think they did so to get those sweet 41.8 yards per game?
Aiyuk saw his Week 1 playing time limited a bit coming off a mostly inactive summer. But since Week 2, he ranks sixth among all WRs in route participation.
Last season, Aiyuk ranked 21st among WRs in target share at slightly lower route participation (81% vs. 86%). Jauan Jennings played for that team, too.
And Brock Purdy is averaging about three more pass attempts so far than he did last year.
The San Francisco offense remains loaded, so treat Aiyuk as a low-to-mid-level WR2.
Denver’s been pretty terrible on offense so far, and it’s damaging Sutton’s production. But any improvement in the passing game could propel him to fantasy usefulness.
Sutton ranks just 47th among WRs in PPR points per game through four weeks. But he ranks seventh in targets and fifth in expected PPR points per game.
That expected points formula probably doesn’t realize that Bo Nix is Sutton’s QB … but even the Denver rookie should be able to support WR3+ production at that level of usage.
It didn’t help Sutton – or Nix – that Denver already faced the Seahawks, Steelers, and Jets, all top-14 defenses in pass DVOA.
Next up: Raiders.
Let’s look back at our Trade Target recommendations from the past two weeks and how we’d treat those players now …
Josh Jacobs | 4 | Buy |
Mike Evans | 4 | Window closed |
Brian Robinson Jr. | 4 | Hold |
Chris Olave | 3 | Buy/Hold |
Sam LaPorta | 3 | Buy/Hold |
Zack Moss | 3 | Hold |
Let’s kick off this section with a vet we’re always buying … until now.
This one hurts. We’re Conner fans around here. But we can’t ignore trends.
Let’s start with Conner’s passing game usage. He ranks just 29th among RBs in route participation and 54th in target share.
The first category finds him actually slightly ahead of last year (32nd). But the targets are down, and Conner’s working on a career low 1.5 receptions per game – down from last year’s career low.
Maybe it’s going to rebound. Or maybe a healthier Kyler Murray is just scrambling instead of dumping the ball off.
Murray’s averaging a scramble every 12.9 dropbacks this year vs. one every 19 last year. And Conner’s down from 2.4 receptions per game in Murray weeks last year to 1.5.
That slight decline from already lower-level receiving usage just adds weekly risk to Conner, who has inflated his numbers in two good matchups.
Conner delivered 122 yards and a TD against the Rams in Week 2, and then 104 and a TD against the Commanders in Week 4. Those defenses rank 31st and 28th in rush DVOA, respectively.
The next three weeks hold the 49ers (fifth), Packers (ninth), and Chargers (12th).
We all know that drafting Conner in the first place means absorbing the injury risk. He hasn’t gotten hurt yet this year. And he has missed at least two games every season.
Conner entered the year with the fourth-highest injury risk at the position, according to our Injury Predictor algorithm.
Getting out before he goes down next wouldn’t be a bad thing.
Ford hasn’t been a big producer so far and sits just 22nd among RBs in PPR points. But that’s a useful level of production, and his most recent outing included 7 receptions, his second game of 6+ receptions through four weeks.
Ford figures to remain the lead receiving RB in Cleveland. But he’s sure to lose work overall.
The Browns have designated Nick Chubb to return to practice this week. That doesn’t mean he’ll play Week 5, but it means they need to activate him within 21 days.
So Chubb’s returning soon – and we don’t yet know how soon – to an offense that provided Ford just 12, 7, 10, and 10 rushing attempts through four games.
Cleveland also designated Nyheim Hines to return. Perhaps he’s just a kick returner … or maybe he’ll siphon some touches.
Either way, try shopping Ford before this backfield gets overcrowded.
Shakir sits 21st among PPR scorers at WR and looks like Josh Allen’s lead wideout. But is he really a No. 1?
Shakir ranks just 69th among WRs in route participation. He sits 49th in target share, 95th in air yards share, and 69th in expected fantasy points per game.
He has also caught 94.7% of his targets through four games. That’s awesome … and it absolutely won’t last.
Selling Shakir, of course, will depend on finding someone who believes he’s Allen’s “No. 1 WR.” It’s possible you don’t find that manager. And in that case, feel free to hold.
Even if Shakir’s in for some regression, there are worse assets than the Bills’ target leader.
Let’s look back at our Sell recommendations from last two weeks and how we’d treat those players now …
D.K. Metcalf | 4 | Sell at WR1 price |
Travis Etienne | 4 | Might need to hold |
Kyren Williams | 3-4 | Hold |
J.K. Dobbins | 3 | Sell |
Stefon Diggs | 3 | Milder Sell |
Here we have a couple of frustrating starts: One that rebounded in Week 4 … after a guy we’re all still waiting on.
What choice do you have, really?
Andrews has caught six passes through four weeks. He sits 39th among TEs in total PPR points and 50th in points per game.
He just went two straight weeks without a catch for the first time in his career. It was also the first time since his rookie year (2018) that Andrews went two straight weeks with fewer than 2 receptions.
There’s a problem.
So why not just give up? Well, we really haven’t gotten any indication from the team that the 29-year-old is washed.
His usage the past two games is undeniably worrisome:
But here’s what HC John Harbaugh said this week:
“Mark Andrews is going to definitely have big games here catching the ball. We’re going to have a big passing game coming up here at some point in time soon. It’s hard to predict when it’s going to be because the games go where they go, and the ball goes where it goes and it’s just a competitive deal. … Mark Andrews is a great player … Mark is a star. I mean there’s no doubt about it. The fact that we were doing well on offense and as a team and that part hasn’t been expressing itself in the last two weeks gets me kind of excited because that’s another weapon that we have that’s going to happen.”
I certainly don’t know whether Andrews will rebound to TE1 territory, which is why he’s not a “buy.” But I feel pretty sure the Ravens won’t keep passing just 15 or 18 times a game as they did the past two weeks. And I don’t believe Andrews is done.
He finished last season fourth in yards per route among 36 TEs who saw 40+ targets, according to Pro Football Focus.
Brown suddenly exploded for a pair of TDs and top-6 fantasy finishes across formats in Week 4.
That might seem to position him as a sell-high – and you could let him go if a truly good opportunity arises.
But Brown also saw his usage rebound. He played a season-high 40% of snaps against the Panthers, matching Zack Moss’ 15 carries and trailing him by just 1 target.
That marked a stark contrast vs. the previous two weeks, when Moss worked well ahead of Brown. And the latter’s work included two rushing scores from inside the 5-yard line.
Two games of near-even splits and two games of lopsided shares mean we can’t tell how this backfield will go. But the high upside of the Bengals offense makes it easier to want to wait and see.
Let’s see where Holds from the past two weeks stand.
James Cook | 4 | Hold/Sell |
Rashid Shaheed | 4 | Hold |
Tee Higgins | 3 | Buy |
Evan Engram | 3 | Is he still in the league? |
The Trade Navigator will help you find what you want … and the league mates who need what you got. And then it’ll help you build that season-changing trade package.
Check out this short video to learn more …
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