Fantasy Football Week 11 Stock Report: Tetairoa McMillan on the ascent while Saquon Barkley continues free-fall

With all but one Week 11 game in the books (Monday Night Football), we've learned a little bit more than we knew last week. Or, in some cases, thought we knew. Players impressed, players disappointed and there is fantasy football fallout to unpack.

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Once again, I've compiled the full weekly fantasy stock report below. These are the most notable risers and fallers coming out of Week 11. Invest accordingly!

šŸ“ˆ Stock Up at RB

Kenneth Walker III, Seahawks

First, a disclaimer: Zach Charbonnet still played 43% of the snaps and touched the ball 13 times on Sunday. However, he finished with just 47 yards from scrimmage and (for once) no touchdown. Meanwhile, Kenneth Walker III took his 16 carries for 67 rushing yards and a TD and had three catches for 44 receiving yards. He looked so much better in this game that my friend who never watches football and is playing in his first fantasy league texted to ask, ā€œWhy don’t the Seahawks play Walker more?ā€ We’ve all been asking the same question for months (or years) … but it’s possible Seattle is starting to take notice. Walker’s 18.6 fantasy points are even more impressive considering the Rams are the toughest matchup for RBs. You can start Walker with confidence next week against Tennessee.

Chris Rodriguez Jr., Commanders

The end of the Jacory Croskey-Merritt era in fantasy was weeks ago, but the end of the era in Washington was Sunday in Madrid. Last week, the Commanders attempted to make Rodriguez the starter and lead back, but he suffered a shoulder injury that knocked him out of the second half. This week, they did so again, and he led the backfield with 15 carries for 79 yards while playing 45.3% of the snaps (ā€œBillā€ played just 26.6%). While Jeremy McNichols still has his role, and Crosket-Merritt is still involved, it’s clear Washington hopes to move to Rodriguez as the primary, early-down thumper, and short-yardage option. Hopefully Jayden Daniels returns and this offense improves — as that would be a huge boon for Rodriguez’s particular style — but either way, the sleeper running back is now a starter for fantasy (and JCM should be dropped).

Tyrone Tracy Jr., Giants

It’s been a bit up-and-down for this Giants backfield since Cam Skattebo’s injury, but Tyrone Tracy Jr. followed up a 14-carry, 71-yard performance last week against Chicago with a 19-carry, 88-yard performance against the stingy Packers defense on Sunday. He also added four catches for 51 yards, which cannot be overlooked on a team that figures to trail most games down the stretch and has a couple tough matchups on the horizon. It’s worth noting that Devin Singletary still saw significant work in this game (17 touches) and vultured two touchdowns, but Tracy was the better back overall. He’s still just a fringe starter these next two weeks against Detroit and New England, but if you need a flex play in a pinch, this game might give you a boost in confidence.

šŸ“ˆ Stock Up at WR

Tetairoa McMillan, Panthers

Bryce Young played his best and most productive game of NFL football on Sunday against the Falcons, and Tetairoa McMillan was the primary beneficiary (and one of the major causes). The rookie receiver broke out with eight catches for 130 yards and two touchdowns on 12 targets, marking only the second game he’s scored a TD this season (he also scored two in Week 6). McMillan has been seeing the targets, but they’ve been iffy at best from a struggling Young, so this performance against a tough pass defense was extremely encouraging. Rookies get better as the year goes on. It’s well documented. McMillan may have reached a spike on his upward trajectory, and could be a solid WR2 rest of season.

Christian Watson, Packers

While Christian Watson has remained remarkably consistent in his targets (four or five), catches (two to four) and yards (around 50) through his first four weeks back from injury, he finally caught a touchdown on Sunday … and then he caught another one. With Tucker Kraft out for the season and no one else in Green Bay stepping up (looking at you Matthew Golden), Watson might be the de facto WR1 for Jordan Love. At the least, he is the clear deep threat and arguably the best option in the red zone (though Romeo Doubs also tends to thrive there). Watson isn’t a must-start by any means, but he should be added in all leagues and can be played in good matchups. There are several of those lined up on his remaining schedule.

šŸ“ˆ Stock Up Elsewhere

Jacoby Brissett, Cardinals

In one of the more baffling storylines of the year, Jacoby Brissett remained excellent for a fifth straight week for Arizona, capping the run with an NFL-record 47 completions against the 49ers on Sunday. The Cardinals starting QB has now logged 250+ yards, two passing touchdowns and at least 19 fantasy points in all five of his games this season. He threw for 452 and two this weekend without Marvin Harrison Jr. (Trey McBride and Michael Wilson stepped up). Somehow, Brissett has become a bona fide fantasy QB1 and should be streamed for at least three of the next six weeks — his matchups with the Rams, Texans and Falcons might be tougher, but he hasn’t shriveled in tough tests so far.

Trey McBride, Cardinals

Speaking of McBride. It might seem odd to put the No. 1 tight end in a ā€œStock Upā€ column … how much higher can he really go? Well, let me put it this way: since Brissett took over in Arizona, McBride has averaged 20.26 fantasy points per game, making him not just the TE1, but also 12th in points per game at any position, fifth among non-QBs and second among receivers behind only Drake London, over that span. He’s turned into a legitimate league-winner … and he gets the Bengals in Week 17. If your trade deadline hasn’t passed and you can somehow swing a deal for McBride, there may not be a more valuable player in fantasy down the stretch.

šŸ“‰ Stock Down at RB

Saquon Barkley, Eagles

Saquon Barkley has made this section of this column before, but it’s time we revisited his continued descent into mediocrity. Yes, I said it. With just 90 total yards and no touchdowns on a whopping 27 opportunities on Sunday night, Barkley logged his fourth game with fewer than 12 fantasy points over his last five contests. Even with a 31.4-point game in Week 8, Barkley has averaged just 12.98 points per game since Week 6, and he’s only topped 17 once (in that Week 6 game against the Giants). Barkley is the RB13 on the season (in PPG), and he has some nice matchups left on the schedule, but he simply isn’t hitting the big plays or scoring often enough to warrant legitimate RB1 trust week-to-week.

David Montgomery, Lions

For just the second time this season, David Montgomery saw single-digit opportunities on Sunday night, and he finished with just 37 yards and 4.2 fantasy points as a result. He hasn’t scored more than 10 points since Week 5 against the Bengals (the softest matchup in fantasy) and he’s only hit 70+ rushing yards once this year (back in Week 3). Since Week 6, some backs averaging more fantasy PPG than Montgomery include Isiah Pacheco, Kenneth Gainwell, Zach Charbonnet and Tyler Allgeier. Monty can’t be dropped, simply due to the upside he’d have in case of a Jahmyr Gibbs injury, but he also can’t be played with confidence at this point — perhaps outside of next week’s game against the hapless Giants.

šŸ“‰ Stock Down at WR

Ricky Pearsall, 49ers

The long-awaited return of Brock Purdy and Ricky Pearsall went great for the former (and for George Kittle) but horribly for the latter. Purdy threw three touchdown passes, but none of them went to Pearsall, who caught just one of three targets on the day … for zero receiving yards. Ideally, we can chalk this up to rust after Pearsall had missed six weeks of game action, and hope for improvement down the stretch. But until we see that improvement, we’ll likely need to leave the wideout on the bench — goose eggs do not belong in our fantasy lineups.

Xavier Worthy, Chiefs

If you’re one of the culprits rostering Xavier Worthy in 89% of Yahoo leagues … stop it. In Sunday’s loss to Denver, Worthy did exactly what he’s done for five straight weeks now (even before Rashee Rice’s return) and caught three balls for 25 yards. He has not recorded double-digit fantasy points since Week 5 (against a then-abysmal Ravens secondary), and that remains his only such game of the season. He’s often seeing 5-7 targets, which makes him deceptively ā€œintriguingā€ for fantasy, but Patrick Mahomes has been unable to connect with him downfield with any consistency, and he’s become a middling WR5 as a result. Move on to someone with upside (like Christian Watson, Troy Franklin or Alec Pierce).

Quentin Johnston, Chargers

Quentin Johnston has done his very best to remain relevant in fantasy after his hot September cooled into a spotty rest of the calendar. He caught a touchdown in Weeks 7 and 9, and he saw 10 targets last week against Pittsburgh. But he hasn’t hit 60 yards in a game since Week 4 and he’s posted multiple bagels … including this Sunday against Jacksonville, where he caught none of his three targets in an embarrassment of a game for Los Angeles. Since Week 5, Johnston is the WR70 in points per game, behind such stars as Mack Hollins, Andrei Iosivas and Jalen Nailor. You can’t start Johnston, and while you arguably can drop him, his best fit right now is probably your bench.

šŸ“‰ Stock Down Elsewhere

Lamar Jackson, Ravens

There’s no need to panic — yet — but Lamar Jackson just scored 6.72 fantasy points on Sunday against the Browns, and he only had 16.64 against the Vikings last week. Since returning from injury, he’s averaged an extremely discouraging 20 rushing yards per game and has thrown for just 191 passing yards per game. While he threw four TDs against Miami in Week 9, he’s thrown just one over the last two weeks. All of this would be quite concerning … but Jackson’s upcoming schedule counters the concerns with sweet, sweet matchups. The Ravens get the Jets, Bengals, Steelers and Bengals again over the next month. Lamar should get back to normal against those defenses, but keep a wary eye out — if he doesn’t, we may need to consider streaming alternatives.

Justin Herbert, Chargers

Yeesh. A week after scoring just 14.7 fantasy points with 220 yards and one TD, Justin Herbert logged the worst game of his career on Sunday. He completed 10 of 18 passes for just 81 yards and an interception against a typically soft Jaguars defense. It was so bad, he was eventually sent to rest on the bench in a game the Chargers lost 35-6 (Trey Lance was not any better as the backup). Herbert had been on a tear in Weeks 7-9 before this two-game dip, and he has his bye this coming week, so hopefully Los Angeles can right the ship heading into December. But with a patchwork offensive line, there may be more bad days left for Herbert in 2025.

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