Every dynasty offseason carries the same energy. It starts with optimism, a dash of confusion, and a whole lot of managers convincing themselves that their guys are fine. The NFL Draft has a way of cutting through that noise because it is the only time that team builders cannot lie. It is super important for dynasty managers to listen. These 10 veterans have value in dynasty (maybe not a ton), and it is time for managers to SELL them now before their stock falls to zero.
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Sell! Sell! Sell!
Zay Flowers | Wide Receiver (BAL)
Zay Flowers has been the Ravens’ No. 1 receiver pretty much every year he’s been in the NFL. He’s been targeted 100-plus times every single year, yet he’s 18th in first-read target shares and 47th in unrealized air yards. That can look like the profile of a guy the offense uses, but does not weaponize.
Now comes a new coaching regime that added two wide receivers and two tight ends via the 2026 draft. Will he be the first option? Yes. However, the volume that he has grown accustomed to may diminish. Get a WR1 return for a player that has only a single WR 1 season in his career.
Jerry Jeudy & Cedric Tillman | Wide Receivers (CLE)
This one is obvious. Cleveland was already operating one of the lowest-volume passing offenses in the league before the draft, and then they went ahead and used two of their top picks on wide receivers anyway. Both players need to be on the move before the rookie hype machine drowns out whatever trade value they still carry.
–Jerry Jeudy slowing down causing a fumble
–Cedric Tillman slowing down on a route quitting on a route
Explain to me what #Browns WR coach Chad O’shea does here? pic.twitter.com/cgCMdBk8to
— Mac🦬 (@tha_buffalo) November 23, 2025
J.K. Dobbins & RJ Harvey | Running Backs (DEN)
Denver added Jonah Coleman in the early fourth round, meaning there is already a third body in the room with real developmental upside. At its best, this situation becomes a full-blown committee where no back ever dominates enough to be a weekly starter. At its worst, the guy who “loses” gets squeezed out of a role entirely.
Neither outcome is worth seeing through. Sell the perception of the winner before the actual reality sets in.
Jaylin Noel | Wide Receiver (HOU)
There are rumors circulating that Jaylin Noel is struggling to pick up the Texans’ playbook, which is already a bad sign for a young receiver trying to carve out a role. Tank Dell is working his way back from injury and figures to reclaim his spot in the rotation when healthy. Despite having a logjam at receiver, Houston still went out and drafted Lewis Bond, adding even more bodies to an already crowded depth chart.
Noel’s pathway to targets keeps shrinking with every passing week. This is a name to sell before the preseason volume reports confirm what the situation already suggests.
Daniel Jones | Quarterback (IND)

This one is specifically for superflex managers that can use Daniel Jones to tier down and add assets. Indy just traded away Michael Pittman and didn’t add any significant weapons or O-line help. Why not move off Jones, add a lower-value signal caller, and add another asset? Jones’s floor is lower than the market would suggest.
RELATED: 2026 Dynasty Superflex Rookie Mock | Post NFL Draft
Travis Hunter | Wide Receiver? (JAX)
Remember that the NFL Draft is the one time that NFL team builders cannot lie, and James (aka “Joey”) Gladstone told us that Travis Hunter will not be a primary wideout in 2026. Gladstone didn’t trade Brian Thomas Jr., and he tapped four total pass-catchers in the draft. Hunter’s value can fall below zero with just one report that he won’t play many WR snaps.
ALL Rams Tight Ends | (LAR)
The math isn’t mathin’. Sean McVay loves the tight end position so much that he once again added one in round two. Trying to predict what the production hierarchy will look like is a fool’s errand. Sell ’em all.
De’Von Achane | Running Back (MIA)
Selling De’Von Achane will come with some backlash, but here are the facts. The ‘Fins have a new head coach, a new rushing quarterback, a mediocre offensive line (at best), and Achane is still undersized. Not to mention, opposing defenses will focus on stopping him each and every week. Sell now while the return will still be juicy.
Chris Olave | Wide Receiver (NOS)
Chris Olave with the catch of the year.
HOLY SH*T 🤯
— King Moe (@kingmoenc) November 9, 2025
If someone is offering a king’s ransom for Chris Olave, take it and run. New Orleans added three wide receivers and a tight end through the draft, and signed Travis Etienne Jr. in free agency. Olave hauled in 25 percent of the team’s receptions, and replicating that number will be dang near impossible.
Selling at peak is a good strategy, even when the player is awesome.
Michael Pittman & DK Metcalf | Wide Receivers (PIT)
Pittsburgh drafted Germie Bernard to add to a receiver room that already had questions, and then failed to solve the most important problem on the roster… the quarterback. The options at the moment are looking like 45-year-old Aaron Rodgers or Mason Rudolph, and neither of those names inspires confidence for fantasy managers.
*BONUS
Jacory Croskey-Merritt | Running Back (WAS)
Bill came with too much hype as a Day 3 running back in 2025, and now there is a window to sell before it is too late. Even if Washington decides to run the rock more, the logjam for touches makes things tough to get excited about. The Commanders signed Jerome Ford and Rachaad White, then they drafted Kaytron Allen, whose college production profile is very impressive.
There have to be Bill/JCM fans out there, and it is the fantasy manager’s job to find them and sell them their guy.
“He’s stepping into a situation where it wouldn’t take much for him to carve out a significant early-down role”
Kaytron Allen isn’t as far from seeing the playing field as it seems 👀pic.twitter.com/LGc2HjRrcd
— FantasyPros (@FantasyPros) May 1, 2026
The post-draft period is the most honest stretch of the dynasty calendar. Teams tell you exactly what their plans are for 2026, and it is super important for fantasy managers to not ignore the signs. Some players are obvious sell candidates following the draft, and others are less clear, but that is where fantasy managers can capitalize and add value to their dynasty rosters.
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