The fantasy football landscape shifts each week, bringing fresh opportunities and unexpected challenges that separate the prepared from the pretenders. Savvy managers know that last week’s performance tells only part of the story, and diving deeper into the underlying metrics reveals the accurate picture.
This week presents some intriguing decisions. Here’s insight about key New York Jets players heading into their matchup with the Buffalo Bills to help you craft a winning lineup.
Breece Hall, RB
Sometimes, situation trumps talent, and other times, talent trumps situation.
We got the ladder on Sunday after a month straight of the former.
Breece Hall could very well be one of the 10 best running backs in the sport, but a putrid offensive environment has left him as a fantasy bust for much of this season.
As nice as the 59-yard touchdown run to open the fourth quarter last week was, it doesn’t undo the three straight single-digit performances prior, where he failed to gain more than half a yard per carry before contact in all three. It doesn’t undo the fact that he hadn’t had a 20-yard gain in a month or that he was rarely in position to score cheap points in the red zone.
The singular big play was a reminder of what is possible should Hall find himself in even an average offensive environment. The Jets are clearly willing to feature Hall (five touches in an eight-play stretch during their third drive as an example), but if each touch holds only limited upside, Hall can only rise so far up the ranks.
For me, this looks like a bargain waiting to happen if he remains in New York. Any marginal growth could put him back on the RB1 radar, and that won’t be the cost. If he were to be moved, however, the momentum would work with him and make a discount nearly impossible to get.
As things stand right now, I have him labeled as an average RB2, but stay tuned, that’s likely to shift as the 2026 picture comes into focus.
READ MORE: Kyle Soppe’s Fantasy Football Week 18 Start ‘Em Sit ‘Em: Playoff Edition
Mason Taylor, TE
We’ve seen young tight ends provide significant value in recent seasons: Is it possible that Mason Taylor does that in 2026?
I’m not calling it yet because we don’t know what the future holds at quarterback, but all things considered, I liked what I saw this season.
The Jets explored with some slot usage and some vertical usage (a target with 10+ air yards attached to it in four straight games). He averaged north of 27 routes per game, and over a yard per route is a starting point for a first-year player in a trainwreck offense.
A neck injury kept Taylor sidelined last week and very well could keep him out this week as well. In any event, his 2025 stat line isn’t going to require you to spend much (if any) draft capital on him ahead of 2026: just keep his name in the back of your head.
