Washed. Fading. The end of an era.
Some believe that is the portion of the career arc that Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Cooper Kupp is on, and they might be right. The 2024 season was an ugly one, and health rarely improves with age, but the asking price on draft day very much reflects that.
Is there a buy-low window to take advantage of here?
Cooper Kupp’s Fantasy Outlook
Kupp turned 32 years of age this summer, and for the first time in his NFL career, he won’t be isolated by the offensive structure of Sean McVay. He’s missed 18 games over the past three seasons (three missed games in the three years prior) and will again be operating as a clear secondary option, as Jaxon Smith-Njigba has established himself as a budding star.
All of that said, it should be noted that, in the three seasons since his historic 2021 campaign, he ranks 12th among 55 qualified receivers in touchdown catches per game (0.52, ahead of Nico Collins and Terry McLaurin, to name a few). He may not be the target vacuum he once was, but as barely a WR4 for your team, does he need to be?
The constant chess match between offense and defense perfectly explained by Cooper Kupp.
At this point if you arent playing some form of match coverage, you will get exposed on D.
Football is simply the greatest game. Constantly shifting and evolving. pic.twitter.com/dcawJUlZqL
— Anthony Amico (@amicsta) June 13, 2025
Jordan Addison was a WR2 last season with Darnold under center, playing alongside a star receiver, relying on touchdowns to drive his upside. Isn’t there at least a path in which Kupp does something similar in 2025 and proves to be a tremendous value based on the diminished expectations?
MORE: Free Fantasy Football Mock Draft Simulator
Not all players age the same way, but we’ve seen a red flag emerge in Kupp’s profile since the record-breaking 2021 campaign. His aDOT has dipped from 5.8 yards that year to 5.5 in 2022 and 5.5 again in 2023 before tanking to 4.0 last year. How alarming was that rate in 2024? Here’s a look at qualified receivers (75+ targets) who had an aDOT no greater than the 8.1 Kupp posted and how they fared after the reception.

All due respect to Wan’Dale Robinson and his family, but if Kupp is moving in that direction, he’s overpriced, even at what feels like a very manageable price tag given his resume.
That’s not to say that he is a lock to fail in a new situation with a quarterback who certainly overachieved based on expectations last season, but it is to say that there is risk that I think most are willing to overlook based on the suppressed price.
This is a parlay, and that’s naturally dangerous. You need a quarterback in a new situation to succeed, a receiver in a new situation to succeed, and both of them to exhibit chemistry. All of that can happen, but are you willing to place that wager over Kahlil Shakir or Jayden Reed types who have a foundation in their respective offenses?
Cameron Sheath‘s Cooper Kupp Fantasy Projection
Cooper Kupp’s days of fantasy dominance are over, but the veteran still has a role to play in Seattle. The former Ram steps into a Seahawks team with 246 vacated targets up for grabs following the departures of WR DK Metcalf, WR Tyler Lockett, and TE Noah Fant. After Jaxon Smith-Njigba claims his share, Kupp is the expected WR2, followed by rookies Tory Horton and Elijah Arroyo.
Kupp is more suited to the Lockett role than he is the Metcalf role, with Horton likely to take on the more aggressive perimeter routes. That makes it difficult to get excited about Kupp, but he should continue to be a safe floor play in PPR when healthy.
Going in the eighth round, Kupp is a far less intriguing option than some of the younger names being drafted around him, which could see him slip further. There should be no doubting the player’s talent, though, and his skill set ages fairly well. Injuries remain a concern; Kupp hasn’t played 17 games since his triple crown-winning 2021 campaign, but the new Seahawk should probably be pushed back to the ninth round of drafts.
