New York Post

GO YOUR OWN JAY

Ajayi’s ACL blow takes away inconsiste­ncy worries, but pickings are slim

- By DREW LOFTIS dloftis@nypost.com

WHAT is worse than having an earlyround fantasy draft pick perform well below expectatio­ns? When you lose even that underwhelm­ing production to injury. Sort of like having a shoe with a hole in it — it is still better than having no shoe at all.

Eagles running back Jay Ajayi was placed on injured reserve Monday with a season-ending knee injury. Outside of a strong opening week, he had been a huge disappoint­ment — two games with fewer than 30 rushing yards and he missed another. His best fantasy effort the past four weeks was a 70-yard game Week 4 at Tennessee. It is hardly the RB2-type production many anticipate­d when they selected him the third or fourth round.

The good news is you no longer have to sweat out his poor performanc­es. You don’t have to engage in the false hope he will finally become a consistent contributo­r. You don’t have to deal with the weekly crisis of confidence when putting him in your lineup. The bad news is whatever replacemen­t you find is likely to inspire even less confidence.

The search for that replacemen­t will not be easy. Most waiver wires are picked bare of running backs. In shallow or passive leagues, you might be able to find Aaron Jones, who the Madman still believes eventually will assume lead duties for the Packers. But good luck with that because he is long gone in most leagues. Check on Nyheim Hines. He likely is gone in PPR leagues, but he might be available in standard formats. He has a large enough role in the offense to justify such a move in such desperate times.

You could scoop up Mike Davis, hoping he gets a healthy share of the Seattle running game, but we fear Chris Carson will get too large a share to make Davis viable long term. If you have some depth to last a while, you could grab and stash Nick Chubb, expecting him to inherit a larger dose of carries once the Browns fall out of contention — but we’re talking weeks from now, nothing immediatel­y helpful.

On the Eagles roster are Wendell Smallwood, Corey Clement, Darren Sproles and rookie Josh Adams. And remember, coach Doug Pederson loves committees. If Pederson can undermine the fantasy value of good RBs, it doesn’t bode well for less talented, oft-injured options.

Keep an eye on trade talk. There has been scuttlebut­t for weeks about the Eagles possibly having interest in Le’Veon Bell, but such a trade would be complicate­d and seems unlikely. When your ears should perk up is if other, more realistic news surfaces — like, for example, if Ameer Abdullah’s name emerges as a possible trade target or one of the Packers backs.

None of these options is attractive, and a trade likely would yield a better option but at a higher cost. Just be mentally prepared for the fact that when replacing the cruddy Ajayi shoe, you are going to end up with one that has even more holes.

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Jay Ajayi
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