The Way This Works...
To see this article's purpose, please refer to the intro from Week 2.
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The Running List of Past Recommendations
I'll update this throughout the season so you have a wealth of considerations beyond my weekly recommendations. I change their standing as developments occur.
Scroll past these running lists for new suggestions.
Add Nows
Most of these players will not be available, but you'll get a sense of who has been recommended and who to snap up if they become available.
- Bryce Young
- Alec Pierce
- Jameis Winston
- Kayshon Boutte
- Darius Slayton
- Ricky Pearsall
- Theo Johnson
- Nick Westbrook-Ikhine
- Devaughn Vele
Preemptive
These players may not give you production this weekend, but they are worth considering because there's potential for them to deliver due to injuries or personnel changes.
- Jordan Mason
- Dylan Laube (see below)
- Ray Davis
- Cam Akers
- Alec Pierce
- Sean Tucker
- Jalen Nailor
- Chris Brooks
- Noah Brown
- Demarcus Robinson
- Mike Williams
- Dylan Laube
- Drew Lock
- Audric Estime
Preemptive/Monitor
You can probably wait until a compelling event creates a potential need for these players.
- Andrei Iosivas
- Tyler Goodson
- Xavier Hutchinson
- Cordarrelle Patterson
- Brenton Strange
- Jordan Mims
- Ameer Abdullah
Monitor
These players have the talent to contribute to your lineup immediately if elevated to a starting role. If you can't find any talent with playing opportunities to have at the end of your roster, it's worth adding 1-2 of these options in case injury strikes, and you can beat the demand on the waiver wire.
- Michael Penix Jr.
- Isaac Guerendo
- Sterling Shepard
- Julius Chestnut
- Tre Tucker
- Trey Palmer
- Brenton Strange
- Dawson Knox
- Nelson Agholor
- Adam Trautman
- Dalvin Cook
- Allen Lazard
- Jalin Hyatt
- Rakim Jarrett
Forget (For Now...)
They have too many players ahead of them on their depth charts to earn an impact anytime soon. Or, they suffered an injury.
Add Now: David Moore, Panthers
The Skinny on Moore: A seventh-round selection of the Seattle Seahawks, Moore showed promise as a deep threat working with Russell Wilson. Moore averaged over 17 yards per catch during his first 2 NFL seasons, catching 43 targets for 746 yards and 7 touchdowns.
Seattle didn't renew Moore's rookie deal in 2021 and Moore has been on three other teams during the past four years. Since Week 8, Moore has earned no less than 46 snaps -- a significant bump in playing time that was closer to 9-19 snaps for most of his first seven weeks.
In Week 12, Moore earned 6 catches on 10 targets for 81 yards and a touchdown. This was Moore's fourth-best output during his seven-year career and he looked like a starting receiver.
Bryce Young found Moore repeatedly against the blitz and delivered well-placed targets against tight coverage, which Moore won -- including a slant in the end zone for Moore's touchdown.
Recommendation: Adam Thielen is back, but Moore gives Young the best combination of versatility and veteran knowledge on the receiving corps. With Ja'Tavion Sanders unlikely to play this week after injuring his neck against the Chiefs in Week 12, Moore should be one of the top 2-3 target-getters for the Panthers against a generous Buccaneers defense.
Moore should earn at least 5-7 targets this week against Tampa Bay. With Dallas, Philadelphia, and another contest with the Buccaneers in Week 17, the Panthers have a favorable slate of passing matchups where Moore could benefit.
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