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Brock Bowers dynasty

Brock Bowers Dynasty Outlook for 2026

Brock Bowers dynasty owners are in a pretty good spot these days. The Las Vegas Raiders superstar is coming off a TE2 overall finish in a down year, and he finished as the TE1 overall the year prior as a rookie.

There are worse places to be when assessing a 23-year-old tight end’s dynasty outlook, but Bowers does have a balancing act when looking at his personal talent and surroundings. Is he the type of dynasty asset you should be eager to acquire or hold onto, or is now the time to sell Brock Bowers in dynasty leagues?

Brock Bowers Dynasty Fantasy Outlook for 2026

Brock Bowers’ 2025 Struggles

The only real case for selling Brock Bowers has to be the fact that his 2025 campaign had its fair share of ups and downs. And due to uncertainty within the Raiders franchise, selling high on a guy that still costs a pretty penny may not be the worst idea.

Bowers didn’t have a clean 2025, to be sure. He started off decently enough with 15.3 fantasy points in week one, but injured his knee and struggled to post top-shelf production until week nine.

That rendered Bowers average or completely absent from weeks two through eight, sending many Brock Bowers dynasty owners in a spiral. If you weathered the storm, however, you were gifted with a 43-point fantasy eruption in week nine, while Bowers still managed to work his way to a tie for TE2 when all was said and done.

Positive Changes in Las Vegas

The brunt of Bowers’ issues in 2025 stemmed from two things: shaky health and a poor offense. Bowers was hurt pretty early in the year, and that impacted his mobility and explosiveness, which naturally sapped a high-ceiling player for much of the year.

Geno Smith was also flat out bad behind a shaky offensive line, and the Raiders as a whole just could never get going on offense. That led to Smith being shipped to the New York Jets, while Las Vegas earned the first overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft and spent it on Indiana Hoosiers star passer Fernando Mendoza.

Las Vegas also moved on from aging head coach Pete Carroll, opting to start over with former Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak. Fresh off a Super Bowl win, Kubiak promises to jolt this Raiders offense and offer legitimate upside for all of its weapons – namely Bowers.

Brock Bowers Dynasty Price

The current going rate for Brock Bowers is an early first-round pick, and then some. KeepTradeCut has him valued at the 1.01 in 2026 drafts (and more), or as an early 2027 first, plus more assets.

This is a guy that is destined to reset the real world tight end market, after all.

Needless to say, Bowers is going to cost you a lot. That is probably going to be the case no matter what format your league runs, and if it’s TEP, brace for Brock Bowers dynasty owners to demand the world.

Who could blame them? Bowers wasn’t even great last year, and he still averaged 14.7 fantasy points per game. He also finished the year as TE11 in total fantasy points despite being banged up for half the season and missing five games.

Brock Bowers Dynasty Outlook

Brock Bowers dynasty managers should be pretty pleased with what they’ve seen out of him through his first two NFL seasons. He instantly lived up to lofty expectations with a TE1 finish as a rookie, and he could have matched that again last year if he didn’t hurt his knee.

The beauty here is Bowers showed that he can remain relevant even when nothing is going right. Things are trending up going into 2026, however, as Bowers should be 100% healthy, he’ll get a quarterback upgrade, and Kubiak brings in a system that should prioritize its best offensive weapons.

Seattle did that with JSN last year, and logic suggests Bowers could be Kubiak’s version of him with the Raiders.

If true, Bowers may have the framework in place to not just finish as TE1 again, but potentially deliver one of the top fantasy tight end seasons in history.

So, what should Brock Bowers dynasty managers do with him? Absolutely nothing. He is a potential cheat code for 2026 and beyond, and the only reason to sell him is if you’re extremely far from contending.

For those on the outside looking in, now isn’t the time to splurge. Bowers is absolutely an asset worth paying for, but not at current prices unless he’s the missing link for a title contender. Rather, dynasty owners are better off waiting and hoping his price sulks slightly before going all-in.

Main Image: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

 

About Kevin Roberts

Kevin Roberts recently joined LWOS as a contributor covering fantasy football. He comes to LWOS with 20+ years of experience in the industry, with his work published on numerous sites such as Bleacher Report and Gridiron Experts. He's also a featured expert on FantasyPros.com and is a graduate of Concordia University, where he majored in Communications.

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