Fantasy Football Trades: Travis Etienne, Kenneth Walker, AJ Brown

Fantasy Football Trades: Travis Etienne, Kenneth Walker, AJ Brown

Acting in Fantasy Football is an important way to make your team better. However, it is also the only controllable way to make other teams worse. In theory, Great Fantasy Football Trades optimize the schedules of both teams involved, leaving non-handy teams behind. This series will help to give some useful tips about players to ‘buy’ and ‘sell’ in transactions. It will also offer the right context to determine when acting before or exchanging a specific player is logical for your team. For a player to be involved in a trade, there must be a market for that player. In contrast to your typical “trade for” and “exchange away” articles that are aimed at taking advantage of less informed competitions, this series will consider the team context to determine whether you should buy or sell a popular player on the trade market.

With week 1 in the books we finally have a few tangible data to help project the rest of the fantasy season. Finding out who you should target and who you should exchange is a question which stat lines are for week 1 for real and which variance is for small sample.

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Week 2 Fantasy Football Trade Advice

On The Block: RB Travis Etienne, Jacksonville Jaguars

Reason to buy: immediately declining needs

Travis Etienne was the clear RB1 for the Jaguars in week 1. He saw a share of 63% from the rear field and capitalized, and collected 156 Yards in infringement. His chances of opportunities should only increase with Tank Bigsby to the Eagles after week 1. With competitions against the Bengal, Texans and 49ers, Etienne has a number of favorable matchups ahead of the bow. If you are a team that immediately needs help, you must look to acquire the former pick of the first round. I would like to say goodbye to a big player who may not have a major production, such as Tyreek Hill or DK Metcalf.

Reason to sell: SET on the RB position, looking for depth adding elsewhere

While Etienne looks like the clear RB1 for the time being, the ghost of Bhaysshul Tuten looms. The Bigsby Trade Tank offers an opportunity for the fleet -footed tuts to secure more touches from the Achterveld. Much of the production of week 1 of Etienne was stimulated by a 71-Yard Run. Unlike Etienne, Tuten has the speed to score on that game. A team that wants to sell Etienne is active in the starting point that they ‘sell high’. Moving Etienne for a player like DJ Moore, or Tyler Warren, if he needs a wide receiver or tight help, it can look like stems when tuten pulls a bucky irving and takes over the rear field.

On the block: RB Kenneth Walker, Seattle Seahawks

Reason to sell: it is better to respond exaggerated than under -reimbursement

Kenneth Walker was in a complete Timeshare with teammate Zach Charbonnet in week 1. Walker saw a total of 13 touches compared to Charbonnet’s 12. Charbonnet with the hand of Walker, and collected 23 more total yards and scored a touchdown. The question is, is this the new normal? Walker missed most of the training camp with a foot injury – maybe the Seahawks took action. On the other hand, Walker can still be a few inefficient trips from ceding, even more work to CharbonNet. Sometimes if the price is good, it is better to respond exaggerated. If you can get a wide receiver who struggled in week 1, such as Calvin Ridley or Terry McLaurin, it might be best to give up Walker to do it.

Reason to buy: Week 1 is crazy

Zach CharbonNet and Kenneth Walker shared a Backfield for two years before this season. Walker has started CharbonNet for the past two years. Week 1 can produce a number of crazy results, and falling victim to a small sample size is a way to lose your competition. If you can obtain Walker for another player who was produced by his teammate in week 1 in Jerry Jeudy, you can eventually win that deal when/or the usual order of things returns to week 2.

On The Block: WR AJ Brown, Philadelphia Eagles

Reason to buy: Talent wins

AJ Brown saw one target in week 1. It is difficult to score fantasy points if you don’t get any opportunities, and the successful nature of the hasty attack of the Eagles looks like it will again limit the top of the browns this year. AJ Brown, however, is no stranger to this mystery, because last season he saw only 97 goals and still ended WR20 in total fantasy points. He will probably not pay off where he was set up, but he is still a top 24 WR. If you can “buy low” from a panicky competition size, do so. The actions of Garrett Wilson, who came from a WR7 version, because Brown was able to fruit in the long term.

Reason to sell: the Eagles may never have to succeed

Ok … maybe never a little hyperbool is; However, these eagles that rush an attack is good. AJ Dillon looked like a competent running behind this attacking line last week. Unless something gives, Brown de WR1A becomes a run-heavy attack, which is not a twenty-four type of pick in Fantasy Football. If you are looking for a Splash movement in your selection, the exchange of Brown offers a great opportunity for a player such as Emeka Egbuka to cash in the name value of Brown and to protect a consistent upward game on your grid.

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