Dynasty Fantasy Football Trade Watch: Buy/Sell/Hold Week 14

by Wolf Trelles-Heard · Featured
Dynasty Fantasy Football Trades Week 14

If you’re looking for an edge or some guidance on the best dynasty fantasy football trade to make before the majority of Week 14 kicks off, I’ve got you covered. I’ve highlighted some players I think you should buy, sell, or hold in Week 14, depending on your roster build. Check them out below — and go make some deals.

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Dynasty Fantasy Football Trade Advice Week 14

Buy: WR Ricky Pearsall, San Francisco 49ers

It’s been a tale of many seasons for Ricky Pearsall — with dramatic highs and crushing lows, and each has evoked different emotions for fantasy managers.

Weeks 1-4: Elation

Pearsall kicked off his sophomore campaign with a bang, catching four passes for 108 yards in the season opener. He also logged a WR1 finish in Week 3 with eight grabs for 117 yards. Through the season’s first quarter, he racked up 20 catches for 327 yards and looked like a locked-in, steady WR2. Life was good. Hope was alive.

Weeks 5-10: Melancholy

Then the injury bug showed up like an unwanted in-law. A PCL injury suffered in Week 4 kept Pearsall out for far longer than anyone expected. Week after week went by without any sign of him practicing, and suddenly the absence turned into nearly two months. Managers did what they had to do: They sacked up and found points elsewhere. Some moved on and told themselves it was to greener pastures.

Week 11-13: Vexation

Finally, the long-awaited return. Pearsall came back in Week 11 and … gave you a donut. Not even a Krispy Kreme one, either. Well, he technically gave you one point in full PPR with a single catch, but you and I had the same yardage (zero). In the two games since, it’s been only marginally better: four total receptions for a whopping 20 scoreless yards. Rough doesn’t begin to cover it.

You should know the drill by now; this is your chance to swoop in and buy a young, former first-round pick on the low.

Ricky Pearsall‘s Advanced Metrics

Pearsall’s underlying usage is quietly encouraging, even though the box scores have been lackluster. He’s been a full-time player, seeing a snap share above 77% and a route share above 81% in all three games since returning. He’s still behind George Kittle, Jauan Jennings, and Christian McCaffrey in the pecking order, but we know Brock Purdy can support multiple pass-catchers in this offense.

The talent we saw in September didn’t just evaporate. Because of that, Pearsall is a classic buy-low for me. For the rest of 2025, he has a favorable schedule for the fantasy playoffs: Titans, Colts, and Bears. If he can knock off the rust and get on the same page with Purdy, Pearsall could provide some WR3 production against that slate.

Beyond 2025, things look good for Pearsall. Things have completely soured between the organization and Brandon Aiyuk. The team voided the guarantees in his contract. We’re nearly done with the season, and Aiyuk hasn’t even started practicing yet. They appear headed for a nasty divorce in the offseason. And it looks like Jennings, who isn’t under contract for 2026, won’t be back either.

That leaves Pearsall with a clear opportunity to take the reins and seize the WR1 role going into his third year. And right now, you can acquire him for like 60 cents on the dollar compared to his September dynasty fantasy football trade value.

Float a single second-rounder out there and see if you can land him. Add a smidge more if needed. Just go for it now before Pearsall has a blowup game and that window slams shut quicker than my three-year-old wielding our screen door.

Sell: TE Mark Andrews, Baltimore Ravens

Sometimes the universe hands you an unexpected gift. In Mark Andrews‘ case, that gift was securing a bag and getting a three-year, $39.3 million extension with the Ravens this week. No one saw that coming.

And in your case, that gift is the perfect excuse to try and sell Andrews in a dynasty fantasy football trade before anyone checks his box scores. I’m imploring you to use this contract as your escape to get out from under Andrews and cash out now. Ejecto seato, cuz!

I don’t know if you have looked at Andrews’ stats this season (or if the Ravens have, for that matter). They’re ugly. He’s topped 34 yards in a game just twice. That’s not a typo. He has fewer yards (332) than Brenton Strange (342), who has played five fewer games than Andrews this season.

Mark Andrews‘ 2025 Game Log

In fantasy terms, Andrews is only giving managers 9.2 PPR PPG (TE20), and he sits as the TE15 in total points scored (110.7). He’s no longer a TE1 in fantasy, and his per-game receiving production has been trending down for quite some time:

  • 2022: 7.5 targets, 56.5 receiving yards, & 73.9 air yards
  • 2023: 6.1 targets, 54.4 receiving yards, & 44.4 air yards
  • 2024: 4.1 targets, 39.6 receiving yards, & 42.8 air yards
  • 2025: 4.3 targets, 27.7 receiving yards, & 31.2 air yards.

His 21.4% target rate this season is the lowest of his career, and he currently ranks 25th among tight ends in target separation (1.83). That’s probably why he has just three plays over 20 yards, one of which came on a tush push trick play.

Mark Andrews‘ 2025 EPX Rating

It won’t be easy, but you’ll have to convince some managers out there that he’s still a foundational asset. Highlight the new extension and mention that he’s tied with George Kittle for the most receiving TDs (36) among TEs since 2021. Make them believe and pay you like it. Perhaps you can send Andrews and a third-rounder to get two second-rounders back in return.

Better yet, use Andrews as part of a deal to tier up to a younger TE with more upside. Or try sending him and your second-rounder to acquire another first-round pick. Either way, get out now while his value is artificially inflated because Andrews is basically nothing more than a glorified goal-line weapon now.

Hold: WR Drake London, Atlanta Falcons

I’m speaking more to contenders here, as rebuilders shouldn’t even entertain trading away a 24-year-old stud like Drake London unless they’re getting a king’s ransom. But if you’re pushing for a championship with London just sitting on the bench, you might feel the pressure to flip him for a player who can help right now. Resist the temptation.

London didn’t practice again this week and has already been ruled out for the third straight game. This is brutal timing for managers fighting for a playoff spot or seeking a first-round bye. You hope you can get fantasy’s WR5 in PPG back next week, but that’s far from guaranteed.

He has a PCL injury, and this is the same injury that caused Pearsall to miss six games and Brock Bowers to miss three games (plus a bye week). Every player responds to injuries differently; Pearsall returned and has struggled (see above), while Bowers delivered one of the best TE performances in history in his first game back (12 catches for 127 yards and three TDs).

Drake London‘s Advanced Metrics

So, what do you do? Do you hold him while you watch your playoff chances potentially go down like the Berlin Wall? Or do you hang on to the uber-talented wide out who’s been shredding defenses when healthy? It’s hard to give away a young asset who’s in the top 10 in several metrics:

  • WR1 in Dominator Rating (53%)
  • WR1 in first-read targets (78)
  • WR3 in target rate (32.1%)
  • WR4 in yards per route run (2.76)
  • WR5 in fantasy points per route run (0.60)
  • WR6 in first downs per route run (0.137)
  • WR6 in Explosive Rating (124.2)

Unless you’re getting a player in return who can put up the nearly 20 fantasy PPG that London provides — like De’Von Achane, Jonathan Taylor, Trey McBride, or Rashee Rice — I’d suggest just riding it out and praying to the fantasy gods for a swift return.

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Wolf Trelles-Heard is a fantasy football contributor for PlayerProfiler. Find him on X at @DynastyFFWolf.