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    Cardinals Start-Sit: Week 17 Fantasy Advice for Kyler Murray, James Conner, Marvin Harrison Jr., and Others

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    Here's all the fantasy football advice you need to determine whether you should start or sit these players on the Arizona Cardinals in Week 17.

    The Arizona Cardinals will face the Los Angeles Rams in Week 17. Here’s fantasy football start-sit advice for every Cardinals skill player who has the potential to make a fantasy impact during the game.

    Looking for more lineup advice? Head over to our Week 17 Fantasy Start-Sit Cheat Sheet, where we cover every fantasy-relevant player in every game.

    Check out the FREE Start/Sit Optimizer from Pro Football Network to ensure you are making the right decisions for your fantasy lineup every week!
    Check out the FREE Start/Sit Optimizer from Pro Football Network to ensure you are making the right decisions for your fantasy lineup every week!

    Kyler Murray, QB

    Kyler Murray simply hasn’t been the fantasy asset we dreamt of this offseason. And while this matchup doesn’t scare me on the surface, the sheer fact that the Rams boast the fifth-best red-zone defense is enough for me to consider benching Murray if I have access to upside elsewhere.

    We’ve seen Arizona’s signal-caller throw at least as many interceptions as touchdown passes in five straight games, and Murray’s TD pass rate over his past seven (2.2%) falls short of what passing savants like Daniel Jones and Deshaun Watson have put on film this season (both at 2.3%).

    It goes without saying that Murray is always one long run away from saving his fantasy day, which is why he’s still hovering around that QB12 mark for me.

    But even the numbers on the ground have been spotty. After reaching 45 rushing yards in five of seven games to open this season, he’s cleared 21 yards in just two of eight.

    James Conner, RB

    Conner has had consecutive games with a 40+ yard carry—he had one such run in his career with the Cardinals prior (794 rush attempts). That has fueled the veteran back being fantasy’s RB1 over the past three weeks (6.5 PPR points ahead of Jahmyr Gibbs).

    I think most of us would have given better odds to Conner losing his role by December than pacing the position in scoring, but he looks great, and maybe we shouldn’t be surprised.

    James Conner, Lord Of The (Fantasy) Rings

    • Week 16, 2024 at Panthers: 26.6 FP (RB6)
    • Week 17, 2023 at Eagles: 26.3 FP (RB4)
    • Week 16, 2023 at Bears: 22.2 FP (RB4)
    • Week 17, 2022 at Falcons: 14.0 FP (RB15)
    • Week 16, 2022 vs. Buccaneers: 25.0 FP (RB4)

    He’s the first RB aged 29 or older to have 100 rush yards, a touchdown, and 25 receiving yards in consecutive games since Latavius Murray (2019). He joined this list in the first half last week against the Panthers.

    I could keep piling up the stats, but I think you get the picture. You’re playing Conner (21-122-1 against the Rams in Week 2) and loving the value he is providing you with at the perfect time.

    Trey Benson, RB

    Trey Benson was a logical pick-and-stash option all season long, but James Conner has stayed as healthy as ever, leaving the rookie on the bench.

    Benson isn’t close to stand-alone value (no more than five carries in a game over the past month) and doesn’t need to be held if you need value out of every player. He sat out last week with an ankle injury, and I’m more than willing to move on from any player like this at less than full strength.

    Marvin Harrison Jr., WR

    There are 119 players who have cleared 60 receiving yards in a game from Weeks 9-16, over 3.5 per team, and yet, Marvin Harrison Jr.’s name is not on that list.

    Yikes.

    We saw him targeted with three of Kyler Murray’s first four passes a week ago, and commitment like that this week should pay off against the seventh-worst yards-per-play defense in the league, if sustained.

    Half of Harrison’s receptions for the entire game last week came in that first wave of passes, and that, too, was in a very favorable spot (at Panthers). The Rams allow deep touchdown passes at the seventh-highest rate, which is another flaw that Harrison has the potential to exploit. If we are being honest, this is the only reason I’m still ranking him as a viable Flex play.

    If you have Harrison on your roster and are still playing impactful games, the odds are good that you’ve settled on a replacement. Whether it is a Jalen McMillan type that has come on lately or a high-floor option like Adam Thielen, you’ve probably moved on, and at large, I think that’s 100% the right play.

    This season, Chris Godwin has more finishes inside the top 20 than Harrison — he dislocated his ankle in Week 7.

    This season, Quentin Johnston has more finishes inside the top 40 than Harrison — we still think that he may have been lying on his NFL résumé with the “can catch” sentence.

    There might be a post-hype price tag that sucks me in next season, but for the remainder of 2024, you’re willfully ignoring all of the data points we have if you’re playing him with confidence.

    Michael Wilson, WR

    Am I ready to get sucked in again?

    The Cardinals have turned back to Michael Wilson as a full-time receiver, but the counting numbers haven’t followed suit. There’s not a world in which you’re going this low in the rankings for your Flex, so if you’re reading this section, it’s because you have some interest either in Dynasty or the 2025 redraft.

    Cautious optimism.

    I continue to believe that the way for Wilson to shift from afterthought to Flex-y is to be used as a vertical threat. His aDOT over his past five games is up 37.4% from where it stood in his previous three games. If we see that stick as 2024 comes to an end, I’ll be investing late-round draft capital in him again next season.

    Trey McBride, TE

    Nobody is perfect. Once a month, we get duds from Trey McBride, and that’s simply the price of doing business.

    There’s nothing in McBride’s profile to sweat, and he remains one of the best in the game. In the Week 2 meeting with the Rams, he hauled in all six of his targets for 67 yards.

    That’s on par with what you should expect, and maybe Regression Claus can come to town with a score. McBride is going to be a lineup staple for years to come and will be on the shortlist for TE1 honors this summer in terms of ADP.

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