
Jake Trowbridge breaks down the latest pressing questions around the dynasty fantasy football circles.

This week, I asked our Fantasy Life Community Discord and the Bluesky fantasy football community for their most pressing questions about dynasty fantasy football.
Here's what they want to know ...
RELATED: Dynasty Fantasy Football Rankings
Although you can’t really lump all young players into the same bucket, for me it comes down to one big question: Have they at least shown glimpses that they can hang with other NFL talent?
If so, what's stopping them from doing it consistently? If not, do they have a valid excuse (injuries/abysmal QB play/etc)?
I'd personally give Worthy one more year to take the next step. If returning offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy can't get it out of him, no one can. Speaking of young players that folks might be giving up on…
As a huge believer in Pearsall, this one stings. But while his situation up to this point has been a bummer, you just have to hold. There has never been a wider-open opportunity for a former first-round pick to elevate out of stagnation.
George Kittle is coming off a serious injury and is unlikely to play in Week 1. Mike Evans is old and may not hold up for the entire season. Jauan Jennings is gone. Brandon Aiyuk is all but officially gone. Recent reports suggest they don’t want to rely on CMC quite as much. Frankly, if it doesn’t happen this year for Pearsall, it probably ain’t happening period.
I’ve talked a lot about how Jeremiyah Love is in his own tier in this rookie class. In fact, he’s my choice at 1.01 even in Superflex formats.
So I can’t imagine you’re getting that pick without giving up at least a De’Von Achane type. Someone with a proven track record as a stud who suddenly has at least one significant question mark hovering over him. You MIGHT also get it done by pairing a respectable name like Kyren Williams with a random 2027 first-rounder, since people in the dynasty community love the ‘27 rookie class with a burning hot intensity usually found in Nicolas Cage movies.
I’m more zen about this than I used to be. After all, I remember Jaxon Smith-Njigba and Emeka Egbuka both falling down rookie draft boards because they stumbled into crowded depth charts. Look how that’s worked out.
Granted, I don’t think any of the receivers in this class have quite that level of talent, but I won’t ding the top guys for a rough landing spot. Things are simply too fluid in today’s NFL to worry about anything other than pure talent at that position.
I’m a big Parker Washington guy and think we saw a legitimate third-year breakout last year. I’m still not convinced Brian Thomas remains with the Jaguars through the trade deadline. Plus, Washington has turned into 80% of what we wanted Travis Hunter to be as a receiver, which makes the coaching staff more comfortable keeping Hunter primarily on defense.
Michael Wilson is my vote to turn into a pumpkin. The situation in Arizona was set up perfectly for him last year with the Marvin Harrison Jr. injury, decimated backfield and a QB forced to throw the ball a thousand times a game. Literally. Brissett threw ONE THOUSAND times per game. Don’t look it up. That’s simply unsustainable.
Allen is still THE premier piece in Superflex, though I know some folks have started to move younger with Drake Maye, Jayden Daniels, etc. Regardless, the return for Allen would need to be massive.
Either an unquestioned stud at another position plus a little sweetener (ie, Bijan Robinson + Daniel Jones) or an absolute barrage of first-round rookie picks if the Allen manager is shifting into rebuild mode.
The Browns have never met a bad decision they couldn’t make worse. I’m team #StayAwayFromClevelandQBs. That way lies nothing but pain, my friends.
For all his faults, Kyler Murray gets the ball to his team’s best pass catcher. It just so happens that the last few years that’s been a tight end.
Here are the stat lines for Murray’s top target going all the way back to his rookie year (Asterisks denote a season where Murray missed substantial time, and I’m extrapolating the stats to a full-season pace).
The touchdowns might not be there, but things would look much better for Jefferson with Murray under center.
When it comes to dynasty, I’m firmly in the camp of Best Player Available, no matter what. We can always trade for needs throughout the offseason, but drafting based on current/temporary team needs is a fast way to get stuck in the middle.
Wait a minute, is that … our very own CooterDoodle?? What a wonderful surprise!
To answer your question, I almost ALWAYS feel like I’m winging it. Dynasty is more art than science. It’s painting a picture more than calculating a formula. We are crafting our own little world of values and strategies and friendships and enemy-ships. Every league is unique! Every manager is irrationally attached! And none of us really knows what the hell’s going to happen five years from now.
So I say send that questionable trade offer with pride. And if you could do so in the Fantasy Life league we’re in together, that’d be great …
