DYNASTY REBUILD STRATEGY
A rebuild is not about getting younger at every spot. It is about making value grow on the same timeline.
Dynalyze's rebuild rule is to convert short-window production into picks, youth, and flexible assets that can gain value before your next push.
What to sell
- Aging running backs with weekly starter value.
- Veteran receivers who help contenders more than rebuilders.
- Non-elite tight ends whose value depends on current production.
- Depth players who can fill a contender's injury need.
What to keep
Young quarterbacks, young wide receivers, and premium picks are usually rebuild foundations because they hold value and remain liquid. Rebuilders should be careful storing value in running backs because the position can lose market value before the roster is ready.
What to avoid
The worst rebuild moves make the roster look competitive without changing its real ceiling: buying short-term RB points, trading firsts for older starters, chasing low-upside veterans, or holding aging production until the market disappears.
When to stop rebuilding
- You have reliable quarterback coverage in superflex.
- Your WR core can support multiple seasons.
- You have enough picks or prospects to buy missing starters.
- Your weekly lineup can compete after one or two targeted moves.
A rebuild is successful when your assets become more liquid, more durable, and better aligned.