Unless you are specifically planning for Weeks 14-16, it’s all about finding what you need to survive and advance. For example, if you’re a team that needed RBs a few weeks ago but you’ve suddenly gotten an influx of healthy backs, don’t be afraid to ship one or two out if you’re going to be struggling at WR or TE in Week 10 or 11. Circumstances change, and using the trade market as an “enhanced waiver wire” is a better way of ensuring you get worthwhile players into your starting spots. It’s much more difficult and time-consuming way, of course, but nobody said winning a fantasy championship was going to be easy.

MORE FROM FANTASY PROS: Trade analyzer

Remember, values can change quickly in fantasy football, so don’t get too locked in on a certain trade target. Change your thinking as the trends change, but don’t be afraid to strike if you have a good offer on the table. –  Matt Lutovsky

MORE WEEK 10: Full waiver list

Week 10 Fantasy Football Stock Watch: Buy-low candidates

Nick Chubb (RB – CLE)

Tyler Lockett (WR – SEA)

It’s been boom-or-bust for Lockett over the past six weeks, as he’s either finished as the No. 1 wide receiver or outside the top-50 wide receivers. The upcoming schedule should allow for some of those big performances, as next week the Rams could have Jalen Ramsey shadow DK Metcalf while Lockett reaps the benefits. The following week Seattle will play the Cardinals, the team Lockett crushed for 200 yards a few weeks back. Buy while you can at discounted prices.

Jonathan Taylor (RB – IND)

Dallas Goedert (TE – PHI)

He returned before their bye week, which tells you he was healthy, as they wouldn’t have pushed him into that game with two weeks of rest coming. The trade deadline is nearing in fantasy leagues, so you need to look forward to playoff schedules, and there aren’t many tight ends with better schedules than Goedert in Weeks 14-16, as he’ll play against the Saints, Cardinals, and Cowboys during that time. He’s a borderline top-five tight end the rest of the way, depending on the health of Zack Ertz (ankle).

For more buy-low targets from Fantasy Pros, click here.

WEEK 10 PPR RANKINGS:Quarterback | Running back | Wide receiver | Tight end | D/ST | Kicker

Week 10 Fantasy Football Stock Watch: Sell-high candidates

Zack Moss (RB – BUF)

Some will see the trending usage and think Moss is going to be an every-week RB2, and while he seems to have passed Devin Singletary as the Bills top back, he’s still going to be sharing goal-line duties with Josh Allen on a team that doesn’t run the ball very much. Singletary won’t go away, either, making Moss more of a touchdown-dependent RB3-type option with a limited ceiling.

WEEK 10 STANDARD RANKINGS:Quarterback | Running back | Wide receiver | Tight end | D/ST | Kicker

Todd Gurley (RB – ATL)

He keeps falling into the end zone, which is what’s holding up his fantasy stock, but his inefficiency cannot be ignored. Neither can his schedule, which ranks as the third toughest in the NFL over the remainder of the season, including two games against the Saints and one against the Bucs, two teams you really don’t want to start running backs against.

For more sell-high targets from Fantasy Pros, click here.