
Russell Wilson, Doug Baldwin, Tyler Lockett's Post-Week 14 Fantasy Advice
The Seattle Seahawks have been on a tear over the past month, and their run of excellence continued Sunday with a 35-6 win over the Baltimore Ravens.
And even though rookie running back Thomas Rawls suffered a season-ending broken ankle as the Seahawks ripped off a fourth straight win, per 710 ESPN's Liz Mathews, quarterback Russell Wilson stepped up with an explosive display that heavily featured receivers Doug Baldwin and Tyler Lockett.
As the Seahawks get set to tweak their offense following the loss of Rawls, here's a look at how their biggest fantasy contributors should be used in the weeks ahead.
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Rookie WRs Who Will Outplay Their Draft Value 📈
Russell Wilson
| Attempts | Completions | Pass Yds | Pass TD | INT | Rush Yds |
| 23 | 32 | 292 | 5 | 0 | 6 |
Wilson has been virtually unstoppable during Seattle's winning streak. Following Sunday's five-touchdown effort, Wilson has thrown for 16 touchdowns and no interceptions over his last four games.
That's elite QB1 production, and it can't be ignored.
And here's the thing: Wilson's production only figures to improve now that Rawls is sidelined. While the Seahawks will undoubtedly sacrifice balance in the coming weeks, Wilson has earned the right to shoulder the load for Seattle's offense.
Wilson's only topped 35 passing attempts once all season, but the fact he's totaled 30-plus attempts in four of his last six games indicates Seattle won't hesitate to let him spin it.
Fantasy owners in the title hunt should be drooling as Wilson gets set to face the Cleveland Browns in Week 15 before the St. Louis Rams come to town in Week 16. He's a no-brainer start at quarterback the rest of the season.
Doug Baldwin
| Targets | Receptions | Rec. Yds | TD |
| 9 | 6 | 82 | 3 |
Baldwin is saving fantasy seasons one touchdown at a time. Like Wilson, Baldwin's numbers have spiked in conjunction with the Seahawks' surge up the NFC standings.
And with three touchdowns Sunday, Baldwin has now tallied eight—yes, eight—scores over the past three weeks.
Is that sort of production sustainable? Probably not. But the good news is it doesn't need to be.
So long as Wilson is given free rein to drop back and fling the ball deep downfield, Baldwin should remain a key component of Seattle's attack. And even if Baldwin experiences some regression in the scoring department, he could still crack the end zone once a week and be a must-start option.
Firmly entrenched as Wilson's No. 1 receiver, Baldwin should be considered a WR2 with WR1 ceiling for the rest of the season.
Tyler Lockett
| Targets | Receptions | Rec. Yds | TD |
| 7 | 6 | 104 | 2 |
All of a sudden, Lockett deserves consideration as an every-week starter.
The rookie led all Seahawks receivers with 104 yards, and his two touchdowns were a pleasant surprise for owners who took a flier on the speedster.
Lockett has now scored two touchdowns twice this season, with both multi-score efforts coming in the last four weeks. In other words, the arrow is pointing up.
Although Lockett is a bit big-play dependent, he eased those concerns when he hauled in six passes Sunday. At the very least, the 23-year-old looks like a high-upside flex play with WR2 potential if Seattle continues to air it out sans Rawls.

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