If you could get Dameon Pierce, that probably makes more sense – Pierce isn't nearly as talented as Taylor and is in a terrible offense of his own, but at least he's healthy right now. His value has never been lower than it is right now, so if you're moving him for someone like D'Onta Foreman, it just isn't worth it. Which is all to say, I don't think it makes much sense to just move Taylor for the sake of moving him. If he's healthy enough to play, I'm going to have a hard time not ranking Taylor as an RB1 – it just might be as a low-end RB1 rather than, you know, the RB1. True, it may be a bad offense, but Taylor is still averaging 88.8 total yards from scrimmage in what has been a pretty bad offense all season long, so I'm not sure that'd be enough to make him a Fantasy non-entity. If Taylor is able to play, I'm going to guess they're going to play him, and I'm going to guess he's going to remain the focal point of the offense. Maybe the Colts will opt to shut Taylor down, but I have a hard time believing interim coach Jeff Saturday, in his first ever high-level coaching opportunity, is going to welcome a tank the way some think he might. ![]() With the Colts looking like a disaster right now and Taylor nursing a lingering ankle injury, it seems entirely possible that's what could happen.īut it isn't a fait accompli. And it's definitely a sentiment I understand: You paid so much for Taylor in drafts, and you'd rather get something for him than watch him turn into a non-entity for Fantasy down the stretch. ![]() ![]() We've probably received more questions about Jonathan Taylor than any other player over the past week, with some variation of, "Should I try to get something for him now while I can?" being the prevailing sentiment.
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