Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Logan Henderson is back, Andrew Vaughn is red hot
The premise is pretty straightforward. I'll try to give you some recommended adds each week based on recent production or role changes. When I list a player, I'll list the category where I think he'll be helpful or the quick reason he's listed. I hope it will help you determine if the player is a fit for what your team needs.
For a player to qualify for this list, he needs to be UNDER 40% rostered in Yahoo! formats. I understand you may say, 'These players aren't available in my league,' and I can't help you there. These players are available in over 60% of leagues and some in 98% of leagues, so they're available in many places, and that can hopefully satisfy readers who play in all league types.
2025 Fantasy Baseball Top 300 update: Shohei Ohtani takes over top spot, Michael Harris II returns to top 100
Emmanuel Clase's paid leave and Félix Bautista's injury also wreak havoc with this week's update.
Matthew Pouliot
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Waiver Wire Hitters
Andrew Vaughn - 1B, MIL: 38% rostered(STARTING JOB, APPROACH CHANGE)
With Rhys Hoskins landing on the IL for the next four to six weeks, Andrew Vaughn is emerging as a starting option in Milwaukee, and I'm intrigued by an approach change he made in the minors since being traded. I recorded a video two weeks ago explaining why I think Vaughn might be a decent gamble in deeper formats. He's gone 12-for-37 with three home runs and 13 RBI in his last 12 games, and the Brewers are one of the better teams in baseball, so we want exposure to their lineup.
Ramon Laureano - OF, BAL: 34% rostered(STARTING JOB, BETTER TEAM CONTEXT)
Laureano got traded from the Orioles and still managed to land in a full-time role as the left fielder for the Padres. After hitting .290/.355/.529 with 15 homers, 46 RBI, and four steals in 290 plate appearances with the Orioles, it seemed likely Laureano would be dealt to a contender to be a small-side platoon. We don't know how long he can keep up this production, but he remains an everyday starter, which means he needs to remain in your lineups for now.
Warming Bernabel - 1B/3B, COL: 24 % rostered(STARTING JOB, HOT STREAK)
Bernabel is going to be the regular third baseman in Colorado for a while (or at least until Ryan Ritter comes back). Bernabel is a 23-year-old who was hitting .301/.356/.450 with eight homers and five steals in 75 games at Triple-A this season. However, even with that production, I'm not sure anybody saw him going 14-for-28 in his first seven MLB games with three home runs and eight RBI. Coors Field will obviously help his numbers, and you can add him because of this hot streak, but I would be cautious about putting big bids on a player who is clearly going to regress.
Colson Montgomery - 3B/SS, CWS: 24% rostered(HOT STREAK, PROSPECT GROWTH?)
I'm gonna preface this by saying I don't believe in Montgomery for the remainder of 2025. This is a guy who was hitting so poorly in Triple-A that he got sent back down to the complex to fix his stance and approach. When he came back, he hit marginally better at Triple-A, but nothing like what we're seeing at the MLB level right now. In fact, he hit .215 in 60 games at Triple-A this year and .214 in 130 games at Triple-A last year. I just can't connect that with a hitter who's hitting .276 in 18 MLB games with three home runs and 13 RBI. I can't see it lasting, but it's happening now, so maybe you want to take a gamble. You may also be tempted to add Liover Peguero - 2B/SS, PIT (1% rostered) because of his three home run game on Saturday, but I'd caution against that. He was hitting .251/.312/.373 in 72 games at Triple-A with five home runs and eight steals. His offensive profile is just not an exciting one.
Mickey Moniak - OF, COL: 23% rostered (EVERY DAY JOB, HOT STREAK)
Moniak has been the Rockies' best outfielder for a while now, slashing .349/.393/.699 with seven home runs, 19 RBI, and two steals since he became a regular in the lineup 25 games ago. He's hitting like what we wanted Brenton Doyle to do with admittedly less speed. Still, the former number one overall pick may have found a home and a home environment that suits his skillset and covers up some of his contact issues. Another Rockies hitter who is worth rostering is Jordan Beck - OF, COL (19% rostered), who has come out of the break on fire, hitting .373 with three home runs, nine RBI, and two steals. The Rockies will start off next week with a three-game set at home against the Blue Jays, so we can attack these two of those Coors Field games.
Francisco Alvarez - C, NYM: 16% rostered(CALL UP, POWER POTENTIAL)
The Mets called Alvarez back up after a brief stint in Triple-A, where he hit .299 with 11 HRs and 24 RBI in 19 games at Triple-A. In four games since coming back, he's 4-for-13 with one home run, two RBI, and four runs scored. Who knows if he can carry this over, but he was pulling the ball in the air more in the minors, and he has the power to be a big-time fantasy asset if he can keep that approach. There is also no catcher swinging a hotter bat than Kyle Higashioka - C, TEX (3% rostered). Higgy is 25-for-62 (.387) in his last 17 games with six home runs, 14 RBI, and three steals. He has started in four of the last five games because the Rangers aren't going to bench a hot bat, but just be prepared for this to go back to more of a committee when the production inevitably cools.
Lenyn Sosa- 1B/2B/3B - CWS: 15% rostered(EVERY DAY ROLE, QUALITY UNDERLYING METRICS)
I've had Sosa on here a few times now because he pops on Process+ leaderboards and has been making quality contact. In July, Sosa hit .294 with four home runs, 10 runs scored, and 19 RBI in 23 games. He's playing every day, and the White Sox lineup is starting to wake up a little bit. He's not a bad add in deeper formats. Neither is Luis Rengifo - 2B/3B, LAA (16% rostered), who struggled to start the season while playing through injuries but has settled back into a high batting average asset who will score runs in a decent Angels lineup. The issue is that his earlier injuries have impacted how often he's running, so he won't have the same steals upside he has in the past, but if you need a deep league MIF, he's not a bad option.
Kyle Manzardo - 1B, CLE: 13% rostered(HOT STREAK, POWER UPSIDE)
Kyle Manzardo went through a really cold stretch earlier in the summer, but we now know that his mother was going through a heart transplant. These guys are human beings too, and it's only logical that stress and emotional turmoil off the field would impact their performance and preparation on the field. In July, Manzardo hit .295 with five home runs and 14 RBI in 20 games. I think it's time to buy back in. Another 1B option is Josh Bell - 1B, WAS (6% rostered). Two weeks ago, I recorded a video on his decision to move to a more line-drive swing at the end of May. That decision has led to a .284/.361/.469 slash line in 46 games since making the shift. Yes, that has come with just even home runs and 24 RBI, but the numbers and approach will still work in deeper formats since Bell is striking out just 12% of the time and making a lot of contact. The Nationals could also ship him off at the trade deadline, and being a .280 hitter in a good lineup could help his counting stats too.
Coby Mayo - 1B/3B: 9% rostered(STARTING ROLE, FORMER TOP PROSPECT)
Is it finally time for Mayo? With Ryan O'Hearn out of town, Mayo could get regular starts at first base or DH for the remainder of the season. The 23-year-old has started to come around after the All-Star break, but he has not been playing regularly. We saw what Kyle Stowers was able to do when he was given regular playing time, and Mayo is a better prospect than Stowers. I'd be adding Mayo everywhere, but be careful that Ryan Mountcastle - 1B, BAL (23% rostered) is expected to come off the IL next week, and so the Orioles could go right back to playing Mayo part-time. However, what SHOULD happen is that Mountcastle and Mayo should be the 1B/DH for the rest of the season, and that would make both worth adding.
Jordan Lawlar - SS, ARI: 8% rostered(STASH PLAY, PROSPECT UPSIDE)
This is Lawlar's time, right? I mean, maybe not this very minute because he's on the IL with a hamstring injury, but his time is coming in a few weeks now that Josh Nalor and Eugenio Suarez are out of town. Lawlar has already started taking live at-bats in the Arizona complex and is hitting .319/.410/.583 at Triple-A with 10 home runs and 18 steals in 53 games. He has little left to prove there and should be the starting third baseman in Arizona by the middle of August. Another stash play is Dylan Beavers - OF, BAL (1% rostered). Trading Ramon Laureano also seemed to open up playing time for Dylan Beavers in Baltimore, but they have opted to go with Dylan Carlson there, for now. Beavers is a 2022 first-round pick who has been swinging a hot bat in July and is now hitting .306 on the season with 14 home runs, 21 steals, 42 RBI, and a .924 OPS. He would be an immediate add in most fantasy formats if he gets called up, and I expect that to happen in the middle of the month. I should also point out that Kristian Campbell - 2B/OF, BOS (16% rostered) is heating up in Triple-A and playing a lot of first base. The Red Sox did not trade for a first baseman at the deadline, and I think they plan to use Campbell there if/when he comes back up.
Tyler Locklear - 1B, ARI: 7% rostered(STARTING JOB, POWER UPSIDE)
Locklear came to Arizona as part of the return for Eugenio Suarez and will immediately slot in as the starting first baseman. The 24-year-old is hitting .316/.401/.542 in 98 games at Triple-A Reno with 19 home runs and 18 steals. Yes, some of that is influenced by the offensive-friendly environment of the PCL, but Locklear has a 44% hard hit rate and 90.2 mph average exit velocity while posting a respectable 13% swinging strike rate, so he has cleaned up his approach enough that he's not as big of a swing-and-miss risk as he seemed last year. He has a clear starting role in a ballpark that is the 2nd-best park for right-handed hitters, according to Statcast Park Factors, so Locklear is worth a gamble in 12-team and 15-team fantasy leagues for his potential five-category upside.
Brooks Lee - 2B/3B/SS, MIN: 6% rostered(STARTING JOB, MODEST PRODUCTION)
The Twins traded away everybody at the deadline, or so it seemed. Lineup spots and bullpen spots are open everywhere, but we have a good sense of who will fill them in the infield. It seems like Brooks Lee will emerge as the everyday shortstop for the final two months, and Luke Keaschall - 1B/2B/OF, MIN (24% rostered) will be the primary second baseman when he comes off the IL (maybe next week). That should also open up first base for Kody Clemens - 1B/2B/3B/OF, MIN (2% rostered), who has produced this season when given any everyday job. None of these guys are must-adds in a 12-team format, and both Lee/Keaschall are better real-life players than fantasy players. However, they are talented enough and should get enough playing time to be strong adds in 15-team leagues.
Joey Loperfido - OF, TOR: 5% rostered(STARTING JOB, HOT STREAK)
I assumed that Loperfido would lose his job when Daulton Varsho came off the IL, but then George Springer went on the IL with a concussion, and Loperfido now has a little extra time. Since being recalled in July, he's hitting .373 with three home runs and eight RBI in 21 games. In Triple-A, he was chasing less and being more aggressive in the zone; however, his contact rates were about the same as they were in Triple-A last year for the Astros, so I'm not sure if this is anything other than a hot stretch.
Tommy Pham - OF, PIT: 4% rostered(STARTING JOB, HOT STREAK)
For some reason, Pham was not traded at the deadline. No idea what Pittsburgh is doing here, but we will continue to get regular playing time from Pham. There is a great video from Logan Arblaster that shows Pham discussing a difficult situation with his contact lenses based on a rare eye condition that he has. The video was taken on June 23rd, and Pham mentions in the video that he has made contact lens changes throughout the year, but has "felt better the last week." If we take Pham's stats from June 16th, we see that he's hitting .375/.422/.625 in 25 games with four home runs, 11 runs scored, and 19 RBIs. That will play in any league type. A name to keep an eye on in deeper leagues is Alan Roden - OF, MIN (0% rostered), who was traded to the Twins at the deadline and is now one of FIVE left-handed outfielders on their active roster. Still, Roden has started the first two games after the deadline and figures to start against all right-handed pitchers from here on out. He hit .331/.423/.496 in 32 games at Triple-A this season, and while those numbers haven't carried over, he has tremendous plate discipline and contact ability, so it's a profile I'd bet on in deeper formats.
Wenceel Perez - OF, DET: 2% rostered(STARTING JOB, COUNTING STAT UPSIDE)
With Parker Meadows on the IL, Perez has stepped in as the everyday center fielder in Detroit and has gone 9-for-19 in five games this week with seven runs scored, one home run, and two steals. He was productive in a stretch earlier in the season and should provide enough value across the board to be useful in 15-team leagues. Blake Perkins - OF, MIL (1% rostered) has also found himself in a starting spot with Jackson Chourio on the IL. We've seen that Perkis is more batting average than anything, but he's gone 6-for-14 in his three starts with four runs scored, two home runs, and four RBI. The Brewers are one of the better teams in baseball, and Perkins may have at least two more weeks as a regular starter for them.
Jakob Marsee- OF, MIA: 1% rostered(RECENT CALL-UP, SPEED UPSIDE)
With Jesus Sanchez now in Houston, who is going to play right field in Miami? The easy answer is Heriberto Hernandez - OF, MIA (1% rostered), who has hit .311/.363/.505 in 38 games with five home runs. However, Hernandez is an average defender and also has a 27.4% strikeout rate and a 17.8% swinging strike rate, following a 35% strikeout rate in Triple-A. I think this all comes crashing down at some point, and I think the Marlins believe that too, which is why they called up Marsee, who was hitting .246/.379/.438 at Triple-A with 14 home runs and 47 steals in 98 games. He has a strong eye at the plate and good power/speed, which is what we love for fantasy production.
Robert Hassell III - OF, WAS: 1% rostered(RECENT CALL-UP, PROSPECT GROWTH)
The Nationals traded Alex Call to the Dodgers and called up Hassell already, so now the only question is whether Hassell III can beat out Jacob Young for starts down the stretch. Considering the Nationals are not contending, they should see what the 24-year-old can do. Hassell III is a former first-round pick and top prospect, who is hitting .310/.383/.456 in 76 games at Triple-A with 10 home runs and 16 steals. He struggled in his first 79 MLB plate appearances, so he'd be more of a deeper league play, but he deserves another shot.. If we're just using Process+, we should note that Hassell's teammate, Daylen Lile - OF, WAS (0% rostered), has a Process+ score of 112 since June 15th, which is pretty solid work from a young rookie. He has also started to run it on of late, hitting .271/.317/.407 in July with one home run, six runs scored, seven RBI, and two steals in 17 games. That's more of a deep league play, but he's making great swing decisions, and so the hits should continue to fall.
Waiver Wire Pitchers
Shane Bieber - SP, TOR: 49% rostered Bieber pitched on Sunday afternoon for Triple-A Buffalo, allowing two runs on five hits in five innings, while striking out six and walking one. He threw 62 pitches while posting an 18% whiff rate and 31% CSW. His fastball sat 91.5 mph, which is slightly down from what we'd want, but he's a 30-year-old on a rehab start in Triple-A, so he's not throwing at 100% speed. The Blue Jays could opt to bring him back this upcoming week or give him one more start to stretch out to 70+ pitches, but he's nearing a return, which means Eric Lauer would likely move back to the bullpen.
Spencer Arrighetti - SP, HOU: 34% Arrighetti is set to come off the IL and open his season against the Marlins next week. It's been a really long layoff for Arrighetti, but I prefer him to Luis Gil, who is also set to come off the IL because Arrighetti was dealing with a broken thumb and not an arm/shoulder injury. I was high on Arrighetti coming into the season, and love the team context that he's coming back to, so I'd try to add him everywhere, even if you bench him next week. We should also note that his teammate, Cristian Javier, is making one more rehab start and then also coming off the IL, so he could be a stash play too.
Logan Henderson - SP, MIL: 32% rostered With Jacob Misiorowski landing on the IL, it will be Logan Henderson getting the chance to take his place in the rotation for at least two weeks. Henderson had a 1.71 ERA, 0.95 WHIP, and 29/6 K/BB ratio in 21 innings for the Brewers earlier in the year. Keep in mind that 21 innings is a small sample size, and Henderson has pitched to a 4.34 ERA in 47.2 innings in Triple-A. He will likely be more of a high-3.00 ERA pitcher in the big leagues, but that's still worth rostering in most leagues.
Robert Garcia - RP, TEX: 30% rostered Yes, Garcia has blown his last two saves and was diagnosed with back spasms, but Rangers manager Bruce Bochy has insisted that he remains the closer. Remember that Aroldis Chapman had back spasms last week when his velocity was down 5 mph. He missed two games and then came back fine. We can expect the same outcome for Garcia, who has been solid this season for Texas after settling into the closer's role. Since May 21st (and discounting the last outing with the back spasms) he has a 3.60 ERA and seven saves in 20 innings with a 30% strikeout rate. The issue is that it comes with a 1.55 WHIP because he has some command issues, and that could lead Texas to upgrade at the deadline now that they are firmly in the Wild Card mix.
JP Sears - SP, SD: 19% rostered Sears was part of the Mason Miller trade and is now in a better spot. You may see his 4.97 ERA and 97/29 K/BB ratio in 111 innings and think he has no fantasy value anyway, but that would be a mistake. Yes, Sears is a left-handed pitcher who only throws 92 mph, but he's also an extreme fly ball pitcher with a career 49% flyball rate and a 52.3% rate this season. That has led to a 13% HR/FB rate, which is 1.86 HR/9. As we just discussed with Miller, he's moving out of a minor bandbox where the ball flies and moving to a stadium that suppresses power. He's not going to become a fantasy stud, but it wouldn't surprise me if he becomes more of a 4.20 ERA pitcher on a better team, which has value in deeper formats.
Jack Perkins - SP/RP, ATH: 18% rostered) With JP Sears traded at the deadline, both Perkins and JT Ginn - SP, ATH (16% rostered) are now in the Athletics' rotation. The 25-year-old Perkins has good stats as a starter in Triple-A this season and has also posted a 2.75 ERA, 0.92 WHIP, and 19/7 K/BB ratio in 19.2 MLB innings out of the bullpen. He might have the highest upside of any A's start or the remainder of the season. Meanwhile, Ginn had a great outing before the deadline against the Rangers, allowing just one run on five hits in five innings, but then got hit hard against the Diamondbacks on Saturday. He's rocking a sinker, slider, cutter pitch mix that he can locate well, which leads to lots of weak contact. He also only needed 58 pitches to go five innings against Texas, so he could easily push to six innings or beyond with that kind of efficiency. The strikeouts aren't likely to be there, which limits his overall upside, and that will also lead to some starts where the hits fall in, like against Arizona.
Blake Treinen - RP, LAD: 15% rostered The Dodgers were thought to be seeking a huge upgrade to the back-end of their bullpen. In the end, they wound up only adding Brock Stewart. While Stewart is a solid reliever, I don't think he pushes Treinen out of the primary save share in Los Angeles. This should be a committee with Treinen and Alex Vesia (27% rostered) until Tanner Scott returns, so that's a win for Treinen in fantasy.
Calvin Faucher - RP, MIA: 14% rostered Faucher seems to have settled into the closer role on a feisty Miami team that is winning a lot of games of late. Ronny Henriquez will mix in from time to time as well, but Faucher is scoreless in his last five outings and could pick up a handful of saves the rest of the way. Miami does like to mix and match though, so if he goes cold for a bit, they may try Henriquez or Anthony Bender at the end of games.
Nestor Cortes - SP, SD: 13% rostered Cortes now has a locked-in rotation spot on a playoff contender, so that's a win for him. This past weekend, he struck out nine while allowing one earned run in 5 2/3 innings in what was scheduled to be his final rehab start with the Brewers, so perhaps the Padres will activate him this weekend to take Randy Vasquez's spot in the rotation. PetCo will be a good ballpark upgrade for Cortes, who should be added in all 15-team leagues and treated as a streamer for now in 12-team leagues until we see him back on the mound in a big league game.
Bailey Falter - SP, KC: 11% rostered With Kris Bubic and Michael Lorenzen on the IL, it seems that both Falter and Ryan Bergert (2% rostered) should join the rotation in Kansas City. At least until Cole Ragans comes back; if he comes back. That's a win for both of them, just because Falter gets a team context and park upgrade, and Bergert moves from being a part-time starter to a full-time starter. I would treat them both as streamers in 12-team leagues but solid options in 15-team leagues.
Cade Cavalli - SP, WAS: 1% rostered The Nationals traded Michael Soroka to the Cubs a couple of days before the deadline, and Soroka's next spot in the rotation lines up with when Cavalli would be starting at Triple-A. Even though Cavalli is not a lock for that rotation spot, he's the most intriguing option. The former top prospect is working his way back from Tommy John surgery, and his Triple-A results have been inconsistent, but he has flashed that same upside we saw before the injury, so it would be nice to see what he looks like against MLB arms.
Johan Oviedo - SP, PIT: 0% rostered Oviedo struck out five and didn't walk anybody for Triple-A Indianapolis on Tuesday while throwing 42 of 62 pitches for strikes. The 27-year-old was placed on the 60-day IL back in March after battling both lat and elbow issues in the spring. He has a 3.12 ERA and 1.04 WHIP with a 21/4 K/BB ratio across 17 1/3 innings during his rehab and could be activated this week, possibly for a two-start week. Oviedo is not overly exciting, but a pitcher with a career 4.32 ERA in 320.2 MLB innings is certainly usable in deeper formats.
Kevin Ginkel - RP, ARI: 9% rosteredJJ Romero - RP, STL: 21% rosteredKyle Leahy, RP, STL: 3% rosteredJose A. Ferrer - RP, WAS: 7% rosteredDennis Santana - RP, PIT: 36% rosteredCole Sands - RP, MIN: 7% rostered Keegan Akin - RP, BAL: 3% rosteredYennier Cano - RP, BAL: 3% rostered Michael Kelly - RP, ATH: 1% rostered
All of these guys may now be their team's closer or in part of a closer committee. These situations are all fluid until we see for sure how bullpen usage plays out, but if I was ranking them for waiver adds tonight, I'd rank them as: Santana, Ginkel, Ferrer, Romero, Faucher, Sands, Akin, Cano, Kelly, Leahy (and I'd have Blake Treinen and Randy Rodriguez above all of them).
STREAMING STARTER PITCHERS
MUST BE 40% ROSTERED ON YAHOO OR UNDER (ranked in loose order)
Week of 8/4
Strong Preference
Pitcher
Roster%
Opponent
Emmett Sheehan
14%
vs STL
Joey Cantillo
14%
at CWS
Spencer Arrighetti
34%
at MIA
Justin Verlander
17%
at PIT, vs WAS
Jacob Lopez
16%
at WAS
Jack Perkins
18%
at BAL
Fairly Confident
Nestor Cortes
18%
vs BOS
Jack Leiter
23%
vs NYY
Cade Horton
25%
vs CIN
Logan Henderson
32%
vs NYM
Logan Evans
6%
vs TB
Zebby Matthews
22%
at DET
Jose Soriano
40%
vs TB
Luis Severino
22%
at WAS, at BAL
Charlie Morton
19%
vs LAA
JT Ginn
16%
at BAL
Joey Wentz
2%
vs MIL, vs MIA
Cade Cavalli
1%
vs ATH
Joe Boyle
22%
at SEA
Aaron Civale
13%
vs CLE
Some Hesitation
Cade Povich
2%
at PHI, vs ATH
Frankie Montas
14%
at MIL
Mitchell Parker
7%
vs ATH
Slade Cecconi
27%
at NYM, at CWS
Dustin May
29%
vs KC
Mike Burrows
4%
vs SF, vs CIN
Colin Rea
22%
at STL
Jose Quintana
25%
at ATL
Adrian Houser
34%
at LAA, at SEA
JP Sears
19%
at ARI, vs BOS
Michael Soroka
12%
vs CIN, at STL
Taijuan Walker
4%
vs BAL
Cam Schlittler
18%
vs HOU
Desperate / Uncertain Health or Role
Eric Lauer
31%
at COL
Johan Oviedo
0%
vs SF, vs CIN
Sean Burke
7%
at CLE
Chris Paddack
18%
vs MIN
Tyler Anderson
12%
vs TB
Carson Whisenhunt
1%
vs WAS
Michael McGreevy
10%
vs CHC
Bailey Falter
11%
at BOS
Davis Martin
2%
at SEA, vs CLE
Anthony DeSclafani
1%
vs SD
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Fantasy football 2025 backup running back rankings, from David Montgomery to Nick Chubb
Every fantasy football manager wants a strong bench. That is doubly true at the running back position, due to its susceptibility to injuries. One way to stack depth at this position is by acquiring quality backup running backs (handcuffs). The system I use in my draft guide to assist fantasy managers with this handcuff RB bench building breaks down NFL backfields into four workload categories, which help determine a backup's potential value: No team is currently trending towards using the RBBC approach in the 2025 season, so I'll review running backs in the other three categories. Let's begin by reviewing backup platoon backs. Even though these players are technically considered backups, they often receive workload volumes similar to those of lead platoon backs. Because they are technically backups, their ADP is lower than it should be, which can make backup platoon backs among the best value picks in any fantasy draft. Advertisement 1. David Montgomery, DET Montgomery is easily the most valuable backup platoon back in the NFL. He is one of four players to post 220 or more scrimmage plays in each of the past six seasons. Montgomery gets plenty of goal-line use and is one of only six players with 12+ touchdowns in each of the previous two seasons. Rate him as an RB2 who could generate RB1 value if Detroit leans on the run more to prevent scoreboard shootouts. 2. Cam Skattebo, NYG Last year, he was the first FBS player since Christian McCaffrey to generate 1,500 rushing yards and 500 receiving yards in the same season. Skattebo also set the Arizona State record for rushing touchdowns in a season and could take over the goal-line role for New York. He'll start 2025 sharing work with Tyrone Tracy Jr. and thus is currently a borderline RB3/RB4, but it wouldn't be a surprise if Skattebo outplays his ADP by a notable amount. 3. Jordan Mason, MIN Mason gives Minnesota breakaway ability that Aaron Jones just doesn't have. Last year, Mason ranked second only to Jahmyr Gibbs in 10+ yard rush percentage (minimum 150 carries). Minnesota head coach Kevin O'Connell will want to utilize Mason's skills, which will provide the former Niners' back with enough work to pave a viable path towards outperforming his RB4 ADP. 4. Najee Harris, LAC Harris is a perfect fit in a Jim Harbaugh offense that lives by the 'run the damn ball' mantra. Harris ranks first in the league in scrimmage plays over the past four years. He is also seventh in RB receptions since 2021. His talent may not be fully utilized in Los Angeles, but he will see enough work to stay at the border of the RB2 and RB3 tiers. However, at the moment, there's no timeline for his return after a fireworks-related accident. If we find out Harris will be available in Week 1, he moves up two spots. Advertisement 5. Tank Bigsby, JAX Jaguars head coach Liam Coen did a superb job of managing the workload levels of the Tampa Bay running backs last year. Coen wants Travis Etienne involved in the passing game and will have another opportunity to divide carries and rushes masterfully. Bigsby had two straight seasons with 200+ scrimmage plays at Auburn, so he has the track record to shoulder the extra work and play better than his RB4 ADP indicates. 6. J.K. Dobbins, DEN The Chargers asked Dobbins to be a lead back last year, and he gave them 227 scrimmage plays. Denver brought him in based on what they saw in L.A., but also because Dobbins was ranked tied for third in 10+ yard rush percentage (minimum 175 carries). Additionally, RJ Harvey might be better suited for a lightning back role, so Dobbins could get enough work to move higher than his current RB4 valuation. 7. Rhamondre Stevenson, NE Stevenson's fantasy case may be the toughest among this group of platoon backs. Last year, he was tied for 22nd in PPR points per scrimmage play among the 27 RBs with 200+ plays. He's also one of the least productive pass catchers at this position, ranking next to last in YPT (min. 40 targets), and is fumble-prone. Stevenson's value may end up being linked to how many carries TreVeyon Henderson can handle, which means he's a borderline RB3/RB4 with a potentially low floor. 8. Tyjae Spears, TEN Tony Pollard was the least productive running back on a fantasy points per scrimmage play basis in all three main scoring types (min. 250 touches). Last season was the second consecutive one in which Pollard saw his production fall in the lead back role. Head coach Brian Callahan has indicated that he wants Tennessee to split work between backs, which is more than enough to give Spears lots of upside potential at his RB4 value. The ideal alternate back will have a workload similar to a low-end platoon back. Alternate backs also have a fast path to work, as they are usually the next man up if the lead back is injured. 1. Zach Charbonnet, SEA Charbonnet's path to additional work is clear. Kenneth Walker has missed 10 games in his three pro seasons, which is partially why Charbonnet has 318 scrimmage plays in his two NFL campaigns. Add that to Charbonnet ranking fourth in PPR points per scrimmage play (min 175 plays), and he may be the most valuable alternate back and well worth a RB4 draft-day investment. Advertisement 2. Jaylen Warren, PIT Steelers offensive coordinator Arthur Smith has never met a run-heavy game plan he didn't like, meaning Warren should see enough work to, potentially, lead all alternate backs. The wild card here is if rookie Kaleb Johnson, who had 262 scrimmage plays and 23 touchdowns at Iowa last season, develops into a bell-cow role. If that happens, Warren could falter below his RB3 valuation. 3. Austin Ekeler, WSH Ekeler is still one of the best pass-catching backs in the NFL. He ranked first in yards per target and yards per reception among RBs with 40+ targets last year. Kliff Kingsbury is an expert at utilizing pass-catching backs in his offense, so Ekeler is a very good borderline RB4/RB5 in half- and full-PPR leagues. 4. Rachaad White, TB White was relegated to a lesser role in this offense late last season. He has a path to redemption under new offensive coordinator Josh Grizzard. White was one of only four running backs with six or more games of 5+ receptions last year, and he was only one of six RBs to average 1.0 or more PPR points per scrimmage play (min. 150 plays). If White repeats that production pace, he may end up with a borderline platoon role, making him a fantastic RB4 option. 5. Trey Benson, ARI Benson didn't get many carries last year, but he did a lot with what he was given. His 15.9 percent rate of 10+ yard rushes mimics what he did at Florida State. With James Conner headed into his age-30 season, Benson could see a workload increase that generates much more than his current low-end RB4 value. 6. Rico Dowdle, CAR Dowdle is slated to be a distant backup to Chuba Hubbard, but there are paths to success. He posted RB2 numbers last year and has a 6-foot, 215-pound frame to take on extra work if Hubbard struggles. Dowdle could also see many more targets if Hubbard doesn't quickly improve upon last year's dismal 3.2 YPT, making Dowdle one of the top RB5 candidates. 7. Roschon Johnson, CHI Bears head coach Ben Johnson used a thunder-and-lightning approach with Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery in Detroit. He could do the same in Chicago with Johnson and D'Andre Swift. Johnson had 6 rushing touchdowns inside the 5-yard line last year and thus could retain the goal-line role. There's a viable avenue for him to finish above his current RB5 ADP. 8. Ray Davis, BUF Davis led the SEC in rushing touchdowns two years ago. The Bills basically split their goal-line carries between James Cook and Josh Allen. If Buffalo decides to spare Cook or Allen from some of that goal-line work, Davis could end up as an RB3. He comes with risk but also upside for a player with an RB4 ADP. Advertisement 9. Jaydon Blue, DAL New head coach Brian Schottenheimer will call for as many run plays as possible. With Javonte Williams having the lowest yards per scrimmage play among RBs with 400+ touches the past two years, Schottenheimer may want to give the speedy Blue as much of that work as possible, making Blue a worthy upside RB5 option. 10. Braelon Allen, NYJ Jets head coach Aaron Glenn plans to use the Detroit blueprint in New York. With Breece Hall trending downward, Allen could move into a platoon role, provide ample value behind a strong Jets run-blocking wall and possess upside potential beyond his RB5 ADP. 11. Kareem Hunt, KC Wherever Hunt goes, a larger-than-expected workload volume follows, which could also be the case in Kansas City (again). Isiah Pacheco has posted 200+ scrimmage plays only once in seven college or pro seasons, so Hunt could produce above his borderline RB5/6 valuation. 12. Jerome Ford, CLE Ford played in maybe the worst offense in the NFL last year and missed time due to injury, yet still posted four games with 15 or more PPR points. Quinshon Judkins has been absent from training camp after he was arrested on charges of battery and domestic violence. He is also unsigned as of now, and if Judkins has any additional issues, Ford could get enough work in Kevin Stefanski's offense to outperform his RB5 ADP, even with rookie Dylan Sampson lingering. 13. Jaylen Wright, MIA Wright didn't have many carries last year, but he did have a higher percentage of 10+ yard rushes than De'Von Achane or Raheem Mostert. In a Mike McDaniel offense, Wright's skill set may lead to production above his borderline RB4/RB5 ADP. 14. Nick Chubb, HOU Joe Mixon has started to show signs of wear and tear after six straight years of bell-cow work, and an ankle issue threatens his early-season availability. Chubb could be first in line for carries if he returns close to his 2023 form, when he posted an incredible 21.4 percent rate of 10+ yard carries. The caveat is that Woody Marks could move ahead of Chubb on the Texans' RB depth chart. The backups to bell-cow starters generally have minimal fantasy value outside of an injury to the bell cow, making them low-cost insurance options. Fantasy managers should acquire these players late in drafts, so the cost is minimal, and your squad gets significant protection against the gargantuan scoring drop-off that can happen when a bell-cow back is lost to injury. Advertisement Here are the nine backups to bell-cow starters: 1. Tyler Allgeier, ATL 2. Isaac Guerendo, SF 3. A.J. Dillon, PHI 4. MarShawn Lloyd, GB 5. Justice Hill/Keaton Mitchell, BAL 6. Raheem Mostert, LV 7. DJ Giddens, IND 8. Tahj Brooks, CIN 9. Blake Corum, LAR (Photo of David Montgomery: Stacy Revere / Getty Images)