Fantasy Football: Players you should be selling off in dynasty leagues right now
Creating realistic trade offers in fantasy football that lead to a deal being accepted is always challenging. That’s where Justin Boone’s dynasty trade value charts come into play, acting as a guide to help make moves and manage your roster.
Dynasty Rankings & Trade Values (PPR)
QB | RB | WR | TE | Rookies | Draft Picks
Below, he highlights some of the players you should be selling in dynasty right now. You can check out his dynasty buys here.
Sells
Jordan Love, WR, Packers
After sitting behind Aaron Rodgers for the first couple of years of his career, Love erupted onto the fantasy scene as the QB6 in per game scoring during his first season as the Packers’ starter.
Unfortunately, while Love has been a solid quarterback in real life, his fantasy contributions have declined in recent seasons.
The 27-year-old (turns 28 in November) fell to the QB13 in fantasy points per game in 2024 and the QB21 last season.
This has occurred due to an overall drop in average yards and touchdowns through the air, but the bigger concern has been his reduced rushing production. Love ran for 247 yards and four TDs during his strong 2023 campaign. Since then, he’s managed just 282 yards and one score over the last two years combined.
While Love is being valued as a top-15 dynasty QB, his redraft ADP has him at QB18, which is closer to the range he should be in both formats.
When you factor in the massive group of startable fantasy QB2s in Superflex, there’s value to be gained by moving off Love, who still has the allure of youth on his side.
If you agree, one way to capitalize would be trading Love for a package that includes an older veteran QB whom the public is less interested in, like Jared Goff, as well as another piece. Goff can give you similar numbers for the foreseeable future and you gain that extra player or pick in the process.
You could also replace Goff in that deal with someone like Kyler Murray, who has plenty of question marks but just as high a ceiling as Love.
Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2026 NFL season
Other QB sells to consider:
Baker Mayfield, Buccaneers
Sam Darnold, Seahawks
RJ Harvey, RB, Broncos
A year ago, Harvey was in an excellent spot behind the always-injured JK Dobbins. While we never want to label players “injury prone,” Dobbins is the closest thing to it, having missed significant time in each one of his NFL campaigns.
When Dobbins was sidelined, Harvey faced little competition for touches and was the RB9 in fppg from Week 11 on, with four top-12 weekly finishes over his last six outings.
Now comes the bad news.
The arrival of Jonah Coleman complicates Harvey’s ascension in Denver. The rookie is well-suited to step into Dobbins' role if the veteran gets hurt, which would keep this a committee and narrow Harvey’s path to difference-making production.
That doesn’t mean Harvey can’t still have value in fantasy. After all, he was the RB33 while serving as a complementary option alongside Dobbins in the first half of last season. That makes the 25-year-old an RB3/flex for fantasy — a range he’s likely to remain in.
Given how much the Broncos talked about adding backfield help in free agency and the draft, before ultimately selecting Coleman, you have to wonder whether they questioned Harvey’s abilities as a long-term lead back.
It’s not impossible for him to emerge as a meaningful fantasy starter, but it will likely require multiple injuries to occur around him if we’re going to unlock that fantasy RB1 upside that was on display down the stretch last season.
Trade him before the dust settles and everyone in your league realizes his potential is limited moving forward.
Other RB sells to consider:
Christian McCaffrey, 49ers
Bucky Irving, Buccaneers
Jaylen Warren, Steelers
Play 2026 Soccer Pick 'Em with FOX One and make your picks for the world's biggest soccer tournament
A.J. Brown, WR, Eagles (for now)
Brown has been generating headlines all offseason, as we wait to find out which team he’ll be traded to after June 1.
Though I want to believe a fresh start is all Brown needs to return to his previously elite production, the reality is that all the hype is creating a window of opportunity to trade him in dynasty.
The veteran wideout went over 1,400 yards in each of his first two seasons in Philadelphia before those numbers began to decline. He hasn’t topped seven touchdowns in three years and has barely reached 1,000 yards the last two campaigns. He’s also not getting any younger.
Brown will turn 29 before the season and regardless of how much reading he does on the sidelines, there’s a strong chance his best fantasy years are behind him.
An uptick in efficiency is likely to come on a new club, following a dismal 2025 season for the Eagles offense under Kevin Patullo. But Brown’s days as a fantasy WR1 are nearing their end.
Take advantage of his name being routinely mentioned in the news cycle and build some trade offers to get him off your roster sooner rather than later.
Other WR sells to consider:
Rome Odunze, Bears
DK Metcalf/Michael Pittman Jr., Steelers
Michael Wilson, Cardinals
Kyle Pitts Sr., TE, Falcons
Pitts is coming off his first notable fantasy production since his 1,000-yard rookie campaign, but we have to remember the context around his 88-catch, 928-yard, five-touchdown stat line in 2025.
In the first 11 weeks, when Drake London was on the field the majority of the time, Pitts was just the TE21 in fppg.
Once London was injured and eventually eased back into the lineup late in the season, that’s when Pitts went off as the third-highest scoring fantasy tight end on average over the final eight weeks.
Pitts only topped 10 fantasy points in six games last year and four of them happened when London was out of the lineup. Another one occurred when London was limited in his first game back.
Needless to say, London is healthy entering this season and the team has also added some new weapons like speedy rookie Zachariah Branch.
We also don’t know how the new coaching staff will impact Pitts’ stats, but I’m hesitant to put my faith in a player who’s been disappointing for fantasy most of his career — then got hot due to some injury luck down the stretch.
If you’re not trying to move Pitts right now, you might be left holding the bag when he turns back into his old self this season.
Other TE sells to consider:
Sam LaPorta, Lions
Jake Ferguson, Cowboys
Brenton Strange, Jaguars