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Top Football Players to Keep an Eye on: Alvin Kamara, Chris Olave, and Derek Carr

New Orleans Saints quarterback Derek Carr (4) hands off the ball to running back Alvin Kamara (41) during the first quarter against the Houston Texans at NRG Stadium.


New Orleans Saints Fantasy Depth Chart

QB
Derek Carr, Spencer Rattler, Jake Haener

RB
Alvin Kamara, Jamaal Williams, Kendre Miller, James Robinson

WR1
Chris Olave, Cedrick Wilson Jr., Stanley Morgan

WR2
Rashid Shaheed, Equanimeous St. Brown

WR3
A.T. Perry, Bub Means

TE
Juwan Johnson, Taysom Hill, Foster Moreau

Derek Carr’s Fantasy Outlook

It’s kind of impressive how long Carr has been the same quarterback. Now entering his 11th season, it’s highly unlikely anything will change. Carr has never averaged more than 17.8 fantasy points per game in a season. Over the past three seasons, he hasn’t even gotten to 16. He’s never finished as a QB1, and his highest finish in the past seven years is overall QB16. Last year, Carr hit 20 fantasy points just twice, and not until Week 15. Meanwhile, he had five games in the single digits. The Saints’ offense didn’t bring in any new playmakers. They didn’t make any major coaching changes. Carr projects to be the same player he’s been. He’ll go undrafted in every standard 12-team, one-QB league but pop up throughout the year as a streamer in good matchups.

Alvin Kamara’s Fantasy Outlook

Easily one of the toughest players to evaluate this season is Alvin Kamara. Now 29 years old, the end is near for one of the best running backs of the past decade. Last season, Kamara rebounded following a dismal 2022 year to finish as the overall RB3, averaging 17.9 fantasy points per game. On the surface, it may look extremely encouraging. Plus, as we know, receiving ability does not decline at nearly the same rate as rushing ability. If Kamara can remain close to his 19.3% target share from last season, he should be able to sustain RB1 fantasy value. While the targets are the driving force behind evaluating Kamara, we can’t ignore what we saw on the ground. Kamara averaged 3.9 yards per carry. That’s now three straight seasons at 4.0 or worse for a guy who was between 4.6 and 6.1 each of his first four seasons. Kamara was one of the most inefficient runners in 2023. A mere 3.3% of his carries went for 15+ yards. His evaded-tackles-per-touch rate was outside the top 45, and his yards created per touch was outside the top 25.

Chris Olave’s Fantasy Outlook

Last season, Olave established himself as the Saints’ clear WR1, catching 87 passes for 1,123 yards and five touchdowns. He averaged a respectable 14.5 fantasy points per game. While Olave was good, he didn’t have quite the breakout we hoped for. There were a lot of fantasy points left on the field. Olave saw a 25.2% target share. We want to see at least 25% from NFL WR1s. In Olave’s case, it should be even higher this season, as there’s zero target competition. Even with Carr struggling to connect with Olave deep, the wide receiver still averaged 2.08 yards per route run, 21st in the league. His 8.1 yards per target was far worse, but that was largely due to him and Carr being unable to connect frequently on deep throws.

Taysom Hill’s Fantasy Outlook

At this point, we know what Taysom Hill is. He’s averaged between 9.0 and 10.6 fantasy points for four straight seasons. And, as always, that’s never a consistent 9-10 points. Last season, Hill had games of 12.3, 16.8, 22.5, 20.6, and 15.4 fantasy points. He also had seven games with fewer than 4.0 fantasy points. Hill will play the same role this season he’s played his entire career (outside of the spot starts he made at quarterback). You’re just hoping he falls into the end zone. Hill is not a desirable fantasy tight end.

Saints Fantasy Sleepers

After averaging 7.5 fantasy points per game last season, I am not going to consider Juwan Johnson a sleeper. There’s simply no reason to draft him. If he pops up during the season, feel free to pick him up. Much like last year, the only real sleeper on this roster is Rashid Shaheed. The outside burner averaged 10.4 fantasy points per game, which is nothing to scoff at for a double-digit-round pick. Shaheed’s main value stems from his splash-play ability. He’s the ideal second Flex in deeper leagues, as he has the potential to swing matchups with his game-breaking speed.