2026 Dynasty Fantasy Football Strategy: Trade for Jordan Addison in Your Rebuild?

2026 Dynasty Fantasy Football Strategy: Trade for Jordan Addison in Your Rebuild?

Sam Wallace runs through the Dynasty Fantasy Football strategy of knowing when it's time to rebuild, and how to execute that rebuild.

Last week, I wrote about how you should approach your offseason if your dynasty fantasy football team finished inside the top 3. Today, let's look at the other end of the spectrum. While the ultimate goal is to win, sometimes you need to tear it down before making that happen. Here's how you know when it's finally time to blow it all up.

Dynasty Fantasy Football Rebuilding Strategy

Realities of Dynasty Windows

We hear commentators and podcasters talk about "Super Bowl Windows" all the time, and how important it is for NFL franchises to maximize their window of opportunity. For some, that means making the most of a young, talented QB on his rookie contract or ensuring the offensive line doesn't leave said QB running for his life.

In dynasty leagues, we like to maximize our championship windows as well. However, just like in the NFL, it's hard to make it back to the top of the mountain when so many variables are outside of our collective control.

I hate to break it to you but your win-now window is likely a lot smaller than you think.

Unless you have a true juggernaut where, on paper, it's borderline unfair to the rest of your league, it's never a guarantee that you'll make it to the final week of the fantasy football season.

It's important to be realistic of how truly unpredictable fantasy football is—we're playing a game within a game, after all. Once that reality solidifies in your brain, you can make an honest assessment of the types of moves you need to make this offseason.

Talent vs. Luck

One big way to assess whether or not you need to tear your team down is to look at the underlying metrics of your regular season. If you've been skating by in more than a few of your matchups, catching opposing teams when their stud is on bye, or consistently needing Sunday night/Monday night miracles to save your week, that's pretty telling.

Another variable to keep tabs on is your "Points For." Those are an accumulation of all the points your starting lineup has scored each week. On the other end, "Points Allowed" simply illustrates the total number of points that have been scored against you. Over time, a successful team will have more points scored than points allowed. However, if you have a strong record but your "Points For" is pretty far down the ranking, that could be a case of you being more lucky than talented.

It's always better to be lucky than good, in my opinion, but over the course of a 14-week regular season, you can't keep hoping to just get lucky. You need talent to win out over a longer time period/larger sample size.

When you get to the postseason talent still matters, but as we all know a single breakout performance can sink your title hopes in one afternoon. I always think back to Alvin Kamara and his six-TD performance on Christmas Day back in 2020. It didn't matter how good your team was, you were not beating that.

Talent consistently gets you to the postseason, but luck definitely takes a more prominent role once you get there. Don't overly rely on luck to get you to the promised land.

Trapped in the Middle

Conveniently placed in the middle of this article (like how I did that) is also the worst place to be in your dynasty fantasy football league—trapped in the middle.

It's pretty simple: if you're not regularly making the playoffs, and you're also not picking near the top of your rookie drafts, you're going to be treading water for a long time. Many managers find themselves here because they are too proud to admit that their team really isn't that good, but also don't know how to appropriately blow up their team.

This doesn't mean that you should automatically tear everything down just because you finished sixth or seventh, but if it happens a year or two in a row and you haven't been inordinately unlucky, it's probably time to do a soft reset.

In order to do this, you'll have to appropriately time the market. I'll touch more on draft picks below, but it's important to intentionally tear your team down, not just blow it up for the sake of doing so. Making emotional decisions won't help your team get better any faster.

Injuries & Age

Championship rosters are generally made up of elite players (solid analysis, I know). Some of those players are likely at/near their prime or age cliff. As every experienced dynasty manager knows, once that age cliff hits, it hits fast and it's almost impossible to recoup meaningful value from your players.

In this case, it's better to be a year early than a year late. That means you may have to be OK with trading away an elite player in his prime even though he may have another top-end season (or two) left in him.

Candidly, it's hard to watch a player you traded away keep producing at a high level. Even so, it's important not to fall guilty to sunk-cost fallacy. What's done is done, and all you can do now is make the best moves you can moving forward.

Injuries are a tricky variable to predict because of phrases like "injury prone". Early in his career, Keenan Allen was injury prone until he wasn't. For a more present example, think of someone like Christian McCaffrey. People were all over the place on him during the preseason. Factor them in, but don't overweight them, especially when we have plenty of evidence that shows how productive certain players are.

Future Draft Capital

This one is the most fun to talk about because of the range of options and potential that each draft pick represents. If you are going to tear down your roster, I mentioned how you have to do it intentionally. Acquiring draft assets is a key goal of resetting your roster, but you have to time it correctly.

Draft picks fluctuate in value throughout the calendar year. Generally speaking, future picks are the cheapest to acquire in the middle of the fantasy season, especially leading up to any trade deadline. That's when competing teams are more likely to ship off future picks for win-now pieces.

On the flip side, future picks increase in value up until the NFL Draft. Even if there's a general consensus about who the top players are, there's that element of "what if"—classic Family Guy mystery box GIF. Once players are attached to teams, values become much more concrete.

If you are not looking to trade for draft capital, trading for players is the other option. Someone like Jordan Addison, for example, is only 23 years old and an objectively talented player. The Vikings offense hasn't looked as strong this season as it has in years past, but if you're a believer in the overall offense/coaching staff (which I am), then he becomes a prime trade target for a team looking to blow it up.

Like so many things in dynasty fantasy football, there are many effective ways to manage your team and orchestrate an effective reset. Reach out if there's anything you ever need!

Players Mentioned in this Article

  1. Alvin Kamara
    AlvinKamaraQ
    RBNONO
    PPG
    8.02
  2. Keenan Allen
    KeenanAllen
    WRLACLAC
    PPG
    7.08
  3. Christian McCaffrey
    ChristianMcCaffrey
    RBSFSF
    PPG
    17.24