Brock Bowers Dynasty Fantasy Football Buy, Sell, Hold: Elite TE Options Are Rare Values

Brock Bowers Dynasty Fantasy Football Buy, Sell, Hold: Elite TE Options Are Rare Values

Tipp Major examines the options to buy, sell or hold Brock Bowers in dynasty fantasy football.

OK, I am really going to take the basis out of this one for the greatest tight end to ever walk the earth, Brock Bowers … just kidding, good you’re paying attention.

Last season, he had to fight through adversity. A balky knee never quite looked right and ultimately cost him five games. Even when he returned, the inconsistency lingered. He delivered a solid performance in Week 16 during the fantasy semifinals, only to be shut down again in championship week, leaving fantasy managers frustrated when it mattered most.

Now the Raiders are searching for a new identity under HC Klint Kubiak. It may feel different, but for fantasy managers, the question is simple: should you buy, hold, or sell Bowers in dynasty?

Brock Bowers Dynasty Fantasy Football Outlook

Sell Brock Bowers: Competition Is Growing for Targets

Then there is Kirk Cousins, whom I presume will be the Week 1 starter. Cousins rarely funnels targets to one player. He prefers to spread the ball, which naturally caps the ceiling of any one pass catcher.

Add in his familiarity with Jalen Nailor from their Minnesota days, plus a Raiders wide receiver room that has been more underdeveloped than untalented. With this coaching staff, that could change quickly.

Then comes the wild card. The Raiders are looking to add more depth to the receiving room on April 23, and that could include a potential move for A.J. Brown.

Now it is getting crowded.

And that matters, because the difference between a good fantasy tight end and a league-winning one comes down to spike weeks. The kind you saw against Jacksonville in Week 9. If the volume tightens, those performances become harder to find.

Here is the part that should at least make you pause. If Bowers had played all 17 games last season, he was pacing toward roughly a 20% drop in targets compared to his 153-target rookie year.

That is not a collapse. But it is a shift.

Truth is, we are all too hesitant to sell on Bowers. You have a premier tight end who has already broken records and feels like a universal piece on your roster.

A Klint Kubiak system with a talent like this is easy to buy into. It is tantalizing. Maybe too tantalizing.

Because there is a real chance Bowers has already peaked from a fantasy standpoint.

Fantasy Call: Bowers is still elite, but elite does not always mean untouchable. If the market views him as a guaranteed positional advantage, this may be your window to sell at peak value.

Hold Brock Bowers: He’s Elite

Tight end is still the thinnest position in fantasy football, which means the edge matters more here than anywhere else. Having a top-tier option is essentially like rolling out a low-end WR1 at a onesie position, and once you get past that elite tier, the drop-off hits hard. So like Simply Red, keep holdin’ on.

Bowers is the type of player you build around.

Injury is the only thing that has slowed him down, and even that feels more like a speed bump than a red flag. If you want a clean read on his value, go back to 2024. As a rookie, he finished as the TE3 and immediately established himself as a focal point.

He led all tight ends with 715 short yards, showing how effective he is when you get him the ball quickly and let him create after the catch. That role is gold in PPR formats.

And he is not limited to underneath work. Bowers also finished just behind Sam LaPorta with 168 deep yards, proving he can stretch the field and deliver chunk plays. That combination of high-percentage usage and explosive upside is what separates him from the pack.

Moving Bowers is not the move. Look elsewhere on your roster if you need to make changes. You are going to get offers that seem reasonable at first glance, but most will be lowball attempts disguised as depth upgrades.

Trading him means giving away a weekly positional advantage, and that is not something you can easily replace.

What happened to his knee could have happened to anyone. Betting against talent at this level usually ends the same way, with regret.

Fantasy Call: Hold Bowers and build around him. Treat him like a cornerstone asset, not a trade chip. Unless someone offers a clear overpay that improves your roster in multiple spots, patience is the winning move.

Buy Brock Bowers

This is for my slick foxes. It is time to take advantage of a manager who may not believe.

We know that when it comes to the pass game, Bowers is the focal point. Maybe a hesitant manager is still uneasy about last year’s injuries and what they mean long term. That is your opening. Mention how PCL injuries can linger and let that doubt do some of the work for you, especially if you are tired of playing TE roulette.

Now look at your roster. Find your deepest position and move a starter who may already be trending downward.

Be smart in negotiations. If the Bowers manager pushes for more, that is your signal they are asking too much. You can float a first-round pick in talks, but your comfort zone is settling around a second. The moment they try to squeeze extra value on top of that, walk away.

The real prize is how Bowers will be used in this offense. Under Kubiak, expect him to be moved all over the formation, creating mismatches and extra opportunities. Do not be surprised if he lines up in the backfield at times. That kind of versatility leads to more touches, and more touches lead to more fantasy points.

Fantasy Call: Go get Brock Bowers now by leveraging injury concerns, dealing from strength, and securing a versatile focal point who can turn volume into a weekly advantage at the thinnest position in fantasy football.


Players Mentioned in this Article

  1. Brock Bowers
    BrockBowersQ
    TELVLV
    PPG
    11.9
    Proj
    184.9
  2. Kirk Cousins
    KirkCousins
    QBLVLV
    PPG
    10.5
    Proj
    56.0
  3. A.J. Brown
    A.J.Brown
    WRPHIPHI
    PPG
    11.6
    Proj
    203.5
  4. Sam LaPorta
    SamLaPortaQ
    TEDETDET
    PPG
    9.7
    Proj
    131.5