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Weekly Insights: Wk 9
11/2/06

If you’re in a fantasy football league that has owners that live in the past rather than the future, you’re in luck.

You can pull off lopsided trades in your favor without them even knowing it. In fact, they may even think they’re ripping you off.

Last season, trading Buffalo running back Willis McGahee for Miami wide receiver Chris Chambers at midseason would have raised some eyebrows from many fantasy owners. McGahee was rolling with four 100-yard rushing games while Chambers was still searching for his first 100-yard game.

However, after McGahee scored just one second-half touchdown and had no 100-yard games until Week 17 and Chambers posted the best second half of any receiver with eight touchdowns, that fantasy owner would’ve looked like a genius with that trade. A savvy fantasy owner would’ve realized McGahee had a brutal second-half schedule and would’ve got not only Chambers but also another player in the deal.

Here’s a list of second-half studs and duds that can help you pull off your own trading heist.

Studs

Fred Taylor, RB, Jacksonville: If “Fragile Freddy” can stay upright, he’ll have a huge second half. The Jaguars have the easiest schedule through Week 16 (when most fantasy leagues end) against the run. Jacksonville’s remaining opponents are allowing an average of 127.2 yards and almost one touchdown (0.9) per game, both league highs. The Jaguars face Tennessee (31st-ranked run defense) twice and Indianapolis (last-ranked), Houston (26th) and Buffalo (18th) once.

Others: Jon Kitna, QB, Detroit; Drew Brees, QB, New Orleans; Donald Driver, WR, Green Bay; Reggie Brown, WR, Philadelphia; Julius Jones, RB, Dallas; Jamal Lewis, RB, Baltimore; McGahee, RB, Buffalo.

Sleepers: Alex Smith, QB, San Francisco; Wali Lundy, RB, Houston; Michael Jenkins, WR, Atlanta.

Duds

Ben Roethlisberger, QB, Pittsburgh: The Super Bowl quarterback has had plenty of bumps in his road this season. More bumps still are ahead. The Steelers face pass defenses giving up an average of 196.6 yards per game -- fourth toughest in the NFL -- and the 67 passing touchdowns allowed in 57 games by opponents is tied for the fewest of any team. With Pittsburgh 2-5, there also is a possibility that if the Steelers fall out of the playoff picture, Roethlisberger could get benched to prevent any further injuries.

Others: Trent Green, QB, Kansas City; David Carr, QB, Houston; Chambers, WR, Miami; Santana Moss, WR, Washington; Ronnie Brown, RB, Miami; Leon Washington, RB, N.Y. Jets; Edgerrin James, RB, Arizona; Warrick Dunn, RB, Atlanta; Tatum Bell, RB, Denver.

Hot Read

Michael Vick, QB, Atlanta: Three weeks ago the Falcon never had thrown more than two touchdown passes in a game. Fast forward to today and he’s done it the past two weeks, throwing four two weeks ago and three last week. Vick appears finally to be comfortable in the West Coast offense and has found a way to use his sick running abilities to set up the pass. Until he shows signs of slowing down, he’s a must start every week.

Broken Play(er)

Reggie Bush, RB, New Orleans: Owners who drafted the former Heisman Trophy winner early in non-keeper league drafts are wishing they didn’t get caught up in the hype surrounding the rookie. Bush has yet to score a rushing or receiving touchdown and hasn’t recorded more than 86 total yards since Week 1. Bush (42 receptions) has decent value in point-per-reception leagues, but otherwise should only be used as a No. 3 running back at best.

Off The Bench

Patriots’ running backs: New England coach Bill Belichick comes up with a different game plan every week that focuses on attacking his opponents’ weakness. This week, he’ll lean on running backs Corey Dillon and Laurence Maroney against Indianapolis’ last-ranked rushing defense that has allowed 167.9 yards per game this season.

Safe Bet

Lee Evans, WR, Buffalo: Are you licking your chops because the Bill is facing Green Bay’s last-ranked passing defense? Stop licking. Despite the Packers giving up 270.3 yards per game through the air, opposing teams’ top receivers have struggled recently to put up numbers against the Packers. Green Bay shutdown cornerback Al Harris has held Arizona’s Anquan Boldin (four catches, 47 yards), Miami’s Chris Chambers (two, 29) and St. Louis’ Torry Holt (three, 40, one TD) in check. Evans won’t be able to break that trend at home this week.

Extra Point

This week is the last of the bye weeks. That means it’s time to start trading away your depth to improve your starting lineup, especially if you’re not leading your league and are trying to climb up your league’s standings. Trade a quality bench player and a starter for a player that’s better than that starter and, wah-lah, you have improved your starting lineup.