Dynasty Trade Targets After Free Agency: Under-the-Radar Risers to Buy Now
It has been a wild week of NFL free agency. Instead of focusing on the obvious winners and losers, Jeff Bell and I wanted to dig deeper into the dynasty landscape to identify players whose values haven’t fully reacted yet. These are the types of targets you can still trade for before the market catches up.
Below are several dynasty buys they're targeting right now after the first wave of free agency. And check out the embedded episode above for deeper thoughts.
Wan'Dale Robinson — A Clear Path to WR1 Volume in Tennessee
Wan'Dale Robinson landing in Tennessee is one of the more interesting moves of the offseason, especially because he reunites with Brian Daboll. When players follow coaches to new teams, it usually signals trust in the system, and that’s exactly what this looks like.
Robinson enters a situation where he could immediately become the primary receiver for Cam Ward, who improved dramatically late last season. Over the final stretch, Ward cleaned up his decision-making and looked far more comfortable, and now he gets an offensive coordinator with a track record of developing quarterbacks.
Robinson also brings versatility. Early in his career, he worked all over the field. After his ACL injury, he was used heavily near the line of scrimmage, and last year, he showed he could win deeper downfield as well. His efficiency stayed nearly identical even as his average depth of target nearly doubled, a strong sign he can handle multiple roles.
You rarely see a 25-year-old wide receiver coming off a WR1-type season hit free agency. That alone makes Robinson a strong dynasty buy, especially when the path to target volume is this clear.
Jaxson Dart — Built for a Run-Heavy Fantasy Friendly Offense
Jaxson Dart quietly produced like a fantasy QB1 after taking over as the starter last season, averaging over 18 fantasy points per start while also adding significant rushing production.
Now the Giants appear to be building an offense that fits his strengths.
They added Isaiah Likely and Patrick Ricard, signs that this could resemble the Baltimore-style offense John Harbaugh ran for years. That means heavy personnel usage, option concepts, and designed quarterback runs, all of which are great for fantasy production.
Even more encouraging, Dart produced last year without Malik Nabers for much of the season. If Nabers returns healthy and the Giants continue to lean into multiple-tight-end sets, Dart has a realistic path from back-end QB1 to elite fantasy quarterback.
Tyler Warren — Opportunity Opens After Pittman Trade
Tyler Warren’s value cooled late in the season, but the Colts’ offseason moves may have set him up for a breakout.
With Michael Pittman Jr. gone, the middle of the field opens up significantly. Alec Pierce stretches the field vertically, Jonathan Taylor draws attention in the run game, and Josh Downs works underneath, leaving Warren as the primary intermediate target.
We also know Daniel Jones has shown chemistry with Warren, and the Colts’ offense naturally funnels targets to the tight end in this structure.
With Brock Bowers and Trey McBride separating at the top of dynasty rankings, Warren looks like the cheapest entry point into the next tier.