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Rotoworld

  • ARI Wide Receiver #14
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    Michael Wilson (hamstring) is questionable for Week 18 against the 49ers.
    Wilson was added to the Friday injury report with a Limited Participant designation, indicating the second-year WR strained his hamstring in practice today. While he technically has a chance to play, given the questionable tag, a soft tissue injury suffered 48 hours before kickoff is a bad sign. Fantasy managers should expect him to miss Week 18.
  • NYJ Quarterback #8
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    Aaron Rodgers completed 23-of-36 passes for 274 yards, four touchdowns, and one interception in the Jets’ 32-20, Week 18 win over the Dolphins.
    Rodgers threw his 500th career touchdown in Sunday’s win over the Dolphins, as he now heads into yet another offseason with his future in question. The 41-year-old signal-caller took another noticeable step back in 2024, looking more and more like a player who was on the verge of being caught by Father Time. In the right situation, Rodgers may still have something to offer a team as its starting quarterback, although, it seems unlikely that team will be the Jets. While he’s still under contract with the team next season, Rodgers hasn’t exactly shied away from the fact that this season will probably be his last in the Big Apple. While it’s possible the Jets opt to retain him as a bridge to whatever quarterback they bring in next season, things have been so tumultuous during Rodgers’ tenure that a split is probably best for both sides. Rodgers said he will think about his playing future early in the offseason, with plans to decide before NFL free agency kicks off in March. Now, we wait.
  • SF Running Back #31
    Beat reporter Matt Barrows reports, “Kyle Shanahan said Isaac Guerendo’s injury is most likely an MCL sprain.”
    Barrows adds that Guerendo will undergo more testing on Monday. Guerendo was dragged down by a defender on his left side, causing Guerendo’s left knee to buckle inward. Tomorrow’s tests should provide clarity as to the full diagnosis, as well as Guerendo’s expected recovery timeline.
  • LV Tight End #87
    Michael Mayer caught all four of his targets for 21 yards in the Raiders’ Week 18 loss to the Chargers.
    Mayer was fated for a quiet season after the Raiders drafted generational tight end Brock Bowers in the first round. Things went from bad to worse when he was placed on the reserve/NFI list early in the year for personal reasons. Mayer missed six games and returned to a backup role later in the season. He strangely erupted for seven catches and 68 yards in Week 14 but did little aside from that game. It was his only contest with more than two catches or 14 yards until Week 18. The Raiders could view Mayer as a strong backup option to Mayer, but the former second-round would still fetch a strong return in a trade. His name will undoubtedly come up in trade talks, giving dynasty managers something to cling to heading into 2025.
  • LV Running Back #23
    Dylan Laube did not record a touch in the Raiders’ Week 18 loss to the Chargers.
    Laube’s first offensive snaps in the NFL came in Week 6. He got two reps on offense, fumbled his first carry, and was never heard from again. The Raiders put him in timeout as a healthy scratch for a few weeks before bringing him back in the fold as a high-volume special teams player. Laube did not log any more snaps on offense after Week 6, let alone touches. Having been exiled from the offense entirely, it’s fair to wonder how Laube fits on the team’s roster in 2025.
  • ARI Tight End #85
    Trey McBride caught 7-of-11 targets for 65 yards and a touchdown in the Cardinals’ Week 18 win over the 49ers.
    After going 14 games without a score, McBride heads into the offseason with a touchdown in back-to-back contests. The lack of scoring was legendary, but so was the compiling. His 111 receptions (in 16 games) finish just seven short of the all time record for a tight end, while his 1,146 yards are a sky-scraping number for a seam stretcher. Still only 25 with increased compiling and efficiency (he entered Week 18 second in yards per route run amongst tight ends) each of the past two seasons, McBride has a claim to TE1 overall status in dynasty leagues even with Brock Bowers in the picture. McBride is eligible for a monster extension this offseason.
  • LV Wide Receiver #11
    Tre Tucker caught 3-of-4 targets for 24 yards in the Raiders’ Week 18 loss to the Chargers.
    Tucker made a name for himself as a rookie with the occasional splash play while averaging 17.4 yards per catch. The Raiders rolled him out as their No. 3 receiver from the jump this year and eventually moved him up the ladder to No. 2 duties after trading Davante Adams. Though his production was highly inconsistent, Tucker managed to up his yardage total from 331 to 539. He caught 47 passes and scored three times through the air plus once more on the ground. Tucker isn’t a target-commander but provides enough value as a deep threat to stay in the mix for opportunities next year. Depending on how Las Vegas approaches their receiving room in the offseason, Tucker could draw some sleeper hype heading into his third season.
  • ARI Wide Receiver #18
    Marvin Harrison Jr. caught 5-of-6 targets for 63 yards and a touchdown in the Cardinals’ Week 18 win over the 49ers.
    Harrison’s eighth touchdown of the season was his first in five weeks. The five-catch outing was his second straight, while he heads into the offseason having cleared 60 yards in back-to-back games for the first time since Weeks 2 and 3. His 12-yard touchdown in the fourth quarter featured one of his crisper routes of the year. MHJ’s lack of a consistent connection with Kyler Murray will go down as the story of his up-and-down rookie campaign, but the 22-year-old was far from a bust. He was also far from a can’t miss star, with his yards per route run entering Week 18 at a less than stellar 1.63. Increased efficiency and target commanding will be a must for 2025, but that has as much to do with Murray as Harrison. MHJ still has extreme youth — he doesn’t turn 23 until August — on his side, but he has lost his claim to being the top wideout in the 2024 draft class. He can still get it back, but that is no longer the most likely outcome. Neither an obvious buy nor sell in dynasty leagues, Harrison is a player where we simply need more data points.
  • LAR Wide Receiver #88
    Jordan Whittington caught 3-of-4 targets for 86 yards in the Rams’ Week 18 loss against the Seahawks, adding two rushes for 12 yards.
    Whittington had a 50-yard catch and run in the fourth quarter — the biggest play of the day for the Rams offense. He played a full time role in Week 18 with Puka Nacua and Cooper Kupp resting in anticipation of the postseason. A preseason stud, Whittington would only see playing time if Kupp or Nacua were to miss time in the playoffs.
  • LAC Wide Receiver #1
    Quentin Johnston caught 13-of-14 targets for 186 yards in the Chargers’ Week 18 win over the Raiders.
    Justin Hebert also tried to find Johnston in the end zone, but the Raiders stopped him from punctuating the day with a touchdown... by committing pass interference. Lack of a touchdown aside, the Chargers and fantasy managers alike couldn’t ask for more from the second-year wideout. He capped a career-save second season with high-water marks in catches and yards. Herbert was forced to lean on him with fellow deep threat Josh Palmer out and he didn’t disappoint. Palmer looks unlikely to play in the Wild Card Round, putting Johnston in line for another high-volume outing to open the playoffs.
  • ARI Quarterback #1
    Kyler Murray completed 25-of-35 passes for 242 yards and four touchdowns in the Cardinals’ 47-24, Week 18 win over the 49ers, adding three rushes for 22 yards.
    The four-score start was Murray’s first of the year, and helped him sneak past 20 through the air on the season. An every-week starter for the first time since 2020, Murray appeared fully healthy after that was not the case during his eight-game post-ACL cameo last season. Unfortunately, the better health was not accompanied by another step forward as a player. It was more of the same for a quarterback who rips chunk gains on the ground, but not as often as fellow dual-threats Lamar Jackson and Josh Allen. Murray also again disappointed as a down-field passer despite the addition of first-round boundary man Marvin Harrison Jr. He entered Week 18 in the bottom half of Pro Football Focus’ deep passing grade, for instance. Bryce Young and dead-armed Kirk Cousins both generated more yardage on attempts of 20-plus yards. On the whole, Murray’s touchdown rate was a new career low, unacceptably so. No longer a spring chicken going on age 28, Murray seems unlikely to find a new career gear absent pairing up with an offensive Svengali. That is not on the horizon in Arizona.