Week 4 Waiver Wire Adds Under 50% Owned.
- One Team at a Time

- Sep 24
- 2 min read

1. Tyquan Thornton, WR, Kansas City Chiefs, 8% Owned - Tyquan undoubtedly was on your bench if anything before his pop-off this week. He may not be the standout receiver as we wanted giving his draft capital, but Thornton is worth a stream if injuries linger or he faces a bad defense. The Chiefs with Andy Reid are known to have a balanced attack, but they might be letting Mahomes have free reign, especially with Thornton's deep speed stretching the field and his recent 5-71-1 line on 9 targets against the Giants.

2. Tre Tucker, WR, Las Vegas Raiders, 28% Owned - Tucker posted a spectacular box score, hauling in 8 of 9 targets for 145 yards and three touchdowns in the loss to the Commanders. The Raiders may not always be playing from behind, but their high-octane passing game shows promise. Even with Brock Bowers emerging as the TE1, there’s enough volume for Tucker to be a viable flex option.

3. Elic Ayomanor, WR, Tennessee Titans, 22% Owned - The Titans, with rookie QB Cam Ward, have a shaky defense, forcing them to throw to keep up in games. Ayomanor has shown he can get open and find the end zone at the NFL level, scoring in back-to-back weeks including a 4-38-1 outing against the Colts. He’s a boom/bust flex against high-scoring opponents but worth stashing, especially with Calvin Ridley struggling to connect.

4. Tory Horton, WR, Seattle Seahawks, 3% Owned - Horton had a spectacular box score, catching 3-of-4 targets for 32 yards and a touchdown while adding a 95-yard punt return score in the blowout win over the Saints. The Seattle Seahawks might not need to always fight back being down multiple touchdowns, but the offense is high octane, and even though it appears Jaxon Smith-Njigba has emerged as WR1, there might be enough football to go around for the speedy rookie.

5. Luther Burden III, WR, Chicago Bears, 15% Owned - Burden has emerged as the go-to slot receiver behind Rome Odunze, exploding for 3-101-1 on just three targets in Week 3. Any player with Caleb Williams’ trust, even as a rookie, deserves attention. Williams has also been audibling out of run plays, leaning into his passing game. With Ben Johnson’s balanced offense adapting to Williams’ playstyle, Burden is a sneaky pickup with upside.





Comments