These players are all virtually free in most 12 team leagues. When you're out of ideas, grab one of them.
Mike Wallace, WR, BAL - Steve Smith is 37 and coming off a double Achilles rupture, Breshard Perriman has a partially torn ACL and might not be ready for the start of the year. That leaves Kamar Aiken (a player who got targets mostly because there was no one else left last year) and Wallace who has scored eight or more TDs four times in his career. Wallace is still one of the fastest receivers in the league, and if anyone has the arm to get him the ball down field, it's Joe Flacco.
Andre Williams, RB, NYG - He was arguably the worst player on the team last year, lacking quickness and burst and a liability as a pass catcher out of the backfield. During the offseason, Williams trained with a martial arts teacher, shed 20 pounds and is noticeably more spry in camp. People are drafting rookie Paul Perkins as injury-prone Rashad Jennings' backup, but it might be Williams who gets the first crack.
Sam Bradford, QB, PHI - Bradford's never been able to stay healthy for long, but when he does he hasn't been terrible. Last year he had 19 TDs in 14 games and finished the year with three straight 300-yard games. The Eagles aren't loaded at WR, but they have capable pass catchers in Zach Ertz, Darren Sproles and Ryan Mathews, and Dorial Green-Beckham has massive upside if the light bulb goes on.
C.J. Prosise, RB, SEA - He's been banged up, and the talk of camp has been Christine Michael who looks like the complement to Thomas Rawls. But Michael's never done anything, Rawls is coming in with an injury and neither back is much of a pass catcher. Prosise could be the team's third-down back, and if Rawls isn't healthy, all bets are off.
Austin Seferian-Jenkins, TE, TB - He was a breakout candidate last year and caught two TDs in Week 1 before getting hurt in Week 2. There were disappointing reports about him this spring that suppressed his draft stock, but since the start of camp, he's played better and is earning the team's trust. The Bucs have a rising star quarterback in last year's No. 1 overall pick Jameis Winston and a thin receiving tree, too.
Javorius Allen, RB, BAL - Justin Forsett sits atop the depth chart, but he's inefficient as a pass catcher and at 30 is well past his negligible prime. Rookie Kenneth Dixon and Terrance West are around, but Allen caught 45 balls in part-time duty last year and could be the team's top candidate for third downs.
Marqise Lee, WR, JAC - Jacksonville has two receivers ahead of him, but the explosive and athletic Lee is in Year 3, was a big-time college player and is finally healthy. The Jaguars will throw a good deal, and Lee should be involved as long as he stays healthy.
New York Giants Defense - They were awful last year, and apparently that's suppressing their draft price because they're loaded. Jason Pierre-Paul appears to be healthy again, and he's one of the league's top-10 pass rushers in that case. Olivier Vernon graded out like J.J. Watt in the second half last year, and the team made vast upgrades to the interior defensive line (Damon Harrison) and secondary (Eli Apple, Janoris Jenkins, Leon Hall.)
Karlos Williams, RB, BUF - So he got high and overate this offseason? It'll cost him four games, but he was better than LeSean McCoy last year, and McCoy has lots of mileage at this point. Williams could be a significant part of a time share in Week 5, and if McCoy goes down, has a chance to be a top-10 back in a run-heavy offense.
Robert Turbin, RB IND - Almost everyone's fading 33-year old Frank Gore, but virtually no one is buying Turbin as his backup. Instead, they're drafting undrafted free agent Josh Ferguson, assuming he'll get the passing-down work. That could happen, but Turbin is still just 26 years old, goes 5-10, 225 and runs a 4.42 40.