Jaylen Waddle is a DEN WR with a market value of 3,066 and 12.1 fantasy points per game across 16 active games.
Market value
Market value 3,066
depth value with trade liquidity
Production
12.1
12.1 fantasy points per game
Last four active
8.9
Down 3.2 PPG from season pace
30-day value movement
-74
Trade frequency 1.7%
Dynalyze signal stack
Market rank
WR28
Jaylen Waddle prices as a Tier1 WR with a market value near 3,066.
Production rank
WR29
production rank WR29 versus market rank WR28, creating a -1 position-rank market edge.
Tier expectation
-3.9
12.1 PPG against a 16.0 expected baseline for this market tier.
Market activity
1.7%
30-day value move -74 with a recent scoring split of -3.2 PPG.
Jaylen Waddle's rank stack is position-specific inside the current player market: market rank WR28, production rank WR29, positional value gap -1, composite production score 45.4 out of 100, and value opportunity score -19.2.
Market read
Jaylen Waddle profiles as a depth value with trade liquidity in dynasty formats. The market is pricing him at 3,066, which puts his trade conversations in the range where managers should compare immediate lineup impact against long-term liquidity.
The production side is player-specific: Jaylen Waddle has produced 194.1 total fantasy points across 16 active games, with a season pace of 12.1 fantasy points per game and a recent four-game pace of 8.9. That gap is the starting point for evaluating whether the market is reacting fast enough.
The current Dynalyze stance is Hold and compare offers. A positive 30-day trend can signal a rising price that may require paying before the next tier jump, while a negative trend can create a discount only if production and role remain stable.
Jaylen Waddle is a DEN WR with a market value around 3066, 12.1 points per game, and 8.9 points per game over the last four active games. That combination makes the profile a trade-window question more than a simple player take: recent scoring has slipped below the season baseline, while the market has been comparatively steady over the last month.
The useful market read is patience: price and production are close enough that a forced buy or sell is less attractive than waiting for a clearer role, health, or usage signal. A same-position value gap of -1 is meaningful because it compares the scoring profile against where the market is currently ranking him among WRs, not just whether the name feels exciting.
In trade talks, keep him on the board but avoid chasing the latest move; the next decision should come from whether usage confirms the price direction. The counterpoint is recent scoring softness: if the last-four pace reflects a role change rather than schedule noise, the market can stay patient or move lower.
WR market lens
Jaylen Waddle's DEN WR profile is being judged against a Tier1 market-tier baseline of 16.0 expected points per game. Wide receiver value usually holds when production, target stability, and long-term liquidity all point in the same direction. The current -3.9 PPG gap against expectation shows whether the market is buying a real scoring advantage or just a premium-name floor.
Trade context
For contenders, Jaylen Waddle should be valued by weekly lineup contribution first. For rebuilders, the better question is whether a WR with this value profile will stay liquid through the next trade window. Managers should compare offers against position scarcity, roster timeline, and whether the asset can be rerouted later without taking a value loss.
Roster fit is timing-sensitive: contenders should wait for another usage or scoring confirmation before paying up for Jaylen Waddle, while rebuilders should monitor whether the market move creates a better exit than the weekly production alone would justify.
In trade talks, keep him on the board but avoid chasing the latest move; the next decision should come from whether usage confirms the price direction.
The useful market read is patience: price and production are close enough that a forced buy or sell is less attractive than waiting for a clearer role, health, or usage signal.
The counterpoint is recent scoring softness: if the last-four pace reflects a role change rather than schedule noise, the market can stay patient or move lower.
Similar Profiles
These peer checks compare Jaylen Waddle against nearby dynasty assets by position, market price, production rank, and weekly scoring profile.