This article is part of our In-Season Strategy series.
Although the season started less than a week ago, it's always worth monitoring trends and pondering action. Opportunities to improve a fantasy roster never cease. Follow the below advice on buying low, selling high, and everything in between to capitalize on bettering your squad.
Disclaimer -- I'm not doing much selling high right now. At this early junction of the season, I'll look to convert my trade chips into assets, but parting with players I value is only preferred if I'm confident I'm the recipient of the best player.
Buy Low: Chris Paul, Suns
Paul has his doubters. The 37-year-old is not the offensive force he once was. But I'm bullish on Paul to capitalize on good matchups throughout the season. His assist production remains elite. He'll also be a quality source of steals, setting up a floor of hard-to-find stats.
Yet, his stock is near rock bottom right now. Sunday marked one of the worst three-point shooting performances of Paul's career (1-8 3Pt). His three-point efficiency might never be revived, but it's not imperative. Chasing threes isn't as valuable as chasing assists or steals.
Many invested a fourth or fifth-round draft pick on him. Some fantasy managers might be in panic mode on Paul, rationalizing his age and poor shooting as the beginning of the end. Swoop in.
Buy Low: Domantas Sabonis, Pacers
Sabonis hasn't pieced together a signature game yet this season. The repertoire is impressive. Sabonis averaged a career-high 12.3 rebounds per game after being
Although the season started less than a week ago, it's always worth monitoring trends and pondering action. Opportunities to improve a fantasy roster never cease. Follow the below advice on buying low, selling high, and everything in between to capitalize on bettering your squad.
Disclaimer -- I'm not doing much selling high right now. At this early junction of the season, I'll look to convert my trade chips into assets, but parting with players I value is only preferred if I'm confident I'm the recipient of the best player.
Buy Low: Chris Paul, Suns
Paul has his doubters. The 37-year-old is not the offensive force he once was. But I'm bullish on Paul to capitalize on good matchups throughout the season. His assist production remains elite. He'll also be a quality source of steals, setting up a floor of hard-to-find stats.
Yet, his stock is near rock bottom right now. Sunday marked one of the worst three-point shooting performances of Paul's career (1-8 3Pt). His three-point efficiency might never be revived, but it's not imperative. Chasing threes isn't as valuable as chasing assists or steals.
Many invested a fourth or fifth-round draft pick on him. Some fantasy managers might be in panic mode on Paul, rationalizing his age and poor shooting as the beginning of the end. Swoop in.
Buy Low: Domantas Sabonis, Pacers
Sabonis hasn't pieced together a signature game yet this season. The repertoire is impressive. Sabonis averaged a career-high 12.3 rebounds per game after being acquired by Sacramento last season. He paired that with 18.9 points, 5.8 assists and 1.2 steals-plus-blocks per game. He and Nikola Jokic are the only active players to hit those thresholds in point, rebound and assist production.
Sabonis is 26 years old, surrounded by shooting and slated to play more center than ever. His assist and rebounding production will thrive. Sunday's double-double featuring 19 points and 14 rebounds marked his first game that met expectations, but the first boom has yet to arrive. He could be attainable for the right price.
Buy Low: Collin Sexton, Jazz
Poaching Sexton from an impatient fantasy manager would be a coup for the acquirer of Young Bull. Sexton has been quiet since his 20-point debut with Utah, shooting just 34.8 percent in 17.7 minutes per contest over his last three games.
In total, Sexton is averaging an unremarkable 12.3 points, 4.5 rebounds and 2.0 assists. Mike Conley has the reigns (8.5 assists per game) on facilitating duties, with Jordan Clarkson second at 5.3 dimes a night. There remains a decent chance that both could be jettisoned elsewhere by the trade deadline. Big-picture, optimistic thinking yields potential for Sexton to be a league-winning player.
Sexton averaged 24.1 points and 4.4 assists during the 2020-2021 campaign in Cleveland. With an upstart collection of shooters surrounding him in Utah, the 23-year-old returning to that level is possible.
Coming off a torn meniscus, Sexton will continue ramping up. He's the owner of a career 45.7/37.7/82.8 percent shooting slash. Don't lose track, or hope, of how good Sexton can be.
Buy Low: Norman Powell, Clippers
Powell is worth gambling on in deeper leagues. If your team could benefit from a scoring punch, he's a cost-effective solution.
Powell's first three games have been ugly, resulting in a combined 21 points (7-27 FG, 1-7 3Pt, 6-9 FT), nine turnovers, and unimpactful peripheral stats. I expect positive regression.
Powell has connected on 41.0 percent of his triples over the last three seasons, averaging 17.9 points per game. The Clippers' depth complicates his outlook, but it's a lock that Paul George and Kawhi Leonard will have rest days. Once Powell finds his rhythm, his shareholders will benefit from those boosts.
Sell High: Bennedict Mathurin, Pacers
Shareholders of Mathurin in keeper leagues should have a death grip on him. Mathurin's scoring talent is legit, and the volume is fantastic. The energy and confidence he plays with should fuel growth as well.
That said, his value may never be higher this season. Mathurin is shooting an unsustainable 42.9 percent from beyond the arc, and now he's emerged from the shadows. Defenses are on notice. It began Monday night, as Mathurin (17 points, 6-16 FG, 1-7 3Pt, 4-4 FT) put forth the type of realistic efficiency I expect to see semi-often.
Additionally, I expect Indiana to tank, which can create an unpredictable fantasy environment. Even with his outstanding start, I'm unsure if I buy him as a league-winning steal. Hype him as a top young player in the league (he is one), and he could yield a proven fantasy asset (or two).
Sell High: Brook Lopez, Bucks
Lopez has showcased the epitome of his revolutionized game, canning seven threes and blocking seven shots in two games. That combination has fueled gaudy numbers -- potentially gaudy enough to entice others. Lopez will never be the center of a trade, but now is a suitable window to gauge interest.
The motivation to sell high stems from an unsustainable block rate and his tendency to lull in production at times. Lopez has never averaged more than 5.0 rebounds per game in a season with Milwaukee. That puts pressure on the soon-to-be-35-year-old to score. Even in 2020-21, Lopez had 25 games with less than 10 points. Throughout the absence of Khris Middleton (wrist), Lopez could maintain inflated value on the trade block. Lopez fits in the "don't get too attached to your role players" category.