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Updated May 14, 2026 from live stats

Jaxon Smith-Njigba vs Michael Wilson

Fantasy Football Comparison for the 2026 NFL Season

The Bottom Line

Jaxon Smith-Njigba is the better fantasy play this season.

Jaxon Smith-Njigba is clearly the better fantasy option heading into 2026. With 17.7 PPG and 1,829 total yards in 2025, the production separation is too wide to overcome on matchup alone. Michael Wilson (10.7 PPG) is a hold, not a sell, but roster Jaxon Smith-Njigba as the starter and Michael Wilson as depth.

High confidence: stats strongly favor the leader, and the gap is unlikely to close on matchup alone.

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WRSeattle Seahawks#2PPG LEADER
Jaxon Smith-Njigba
PPG
17.7
Games
17
Rec
119
Rec Yds
1,793
Rec TDs
10
Targets
163
Bye
Week 8
WRArizona Cardinals#24
Michael Wilson
PPG
10.7
Games
17
Rec
78
Rec Yds
1,006
Rec TDs
7
Targets
126
Bye
Week 8

The Edge Chart

VolumeEfficiencyTD UpsideFloorCeilingDurability
Jaxon Smith-Njigba
Michael Wilson

Head to Head

17.7 PPG10.7 PPG
17 GP17 GP
Bye: Week 8Bye: Week 8

Fantasy Tiers

Jaxon Smith-Njigba: Tier 1 (Elite) WR (ranked #2 at the position). Michael Wilson: Tier 3 (Flex/Starter) WR (ranked #24 at the position). Among the top 50 wide receivers this season, Jaxon Smith-Njigba is producing at 80% of elite pace and Michael Wilson at 49%. That ranking gap means Jaxon Smith-Njigba carries more trade value and a higher draft cost in 2026.

Jaxon Smith-Njigba vs Michael Wilson: Who Should You Start?

Jaxon Smith-Njigba and Michael Wilson are at different tiers heading into 2026. The Seattle Seahawks wide receiver averaged 17.7 PPG in 2025, a full 7.0 points per game ahead of Michael Wilson's 10.7 with the Arizona Cardinals. That kind of gap doesn't close on matchup alone.

A 7.0-PPG gap gives Jaxon Smith-Njigba the edge on paper, but paper does not account for Thursday night matchups, weather games, or a star defender returning from injury. The real question is not who was better in 2025, but who is the better start this specific week.

Target volume is the story here. Jaxon Smith-Njigba saw 163 targets in 2025, while Michael Wilson drew 126. That workload gap usually translates into a higher weekly floor for Jaxon Smith-Njigba, even in weeks where Michael Wilson posts the bigger ceiling game. Consistency-minded managers lean toward target share; boom-bust managers chase the upside.

One thing to note: both players share a Week 8 bye. That means you need a backup plan at wide receiver for that week, especially if one of these two is your starter.

Trade Value + Dynasty Outlook

If you can acquire Jaxon Smith-Njigba at a discount because your league-mates undervalue wide receiver production, do it. Michael Wilson is a reasonable sell-high candidate if his recent games have spiked above his season average. Dynasty outlook: Jaxon Smith-Njigba (age 24) has years of prime production ahead. Buy-and-hold dynasty asset. Michael Wilson (age 26) is in the middle of his productive window. Stable dynasty value.

Did You Know?

  • Jaxon Smith-Njigba outscored Michael Wilson by a projected 119 total fantasy points over a full 17-game season.
  • Jaxon Smith-Njigba scored 10 total touchdowns in 2025 (0.6 per game), making him one of the more reliable scoring options at wide receiver.
  • Jaxon Smith-Njigba saw 163 targets in 2025. Target volume is the single strongest predictor of weekly PPR production at the wide receiver position.
  • Both players share a Week 8 bye. If you roster both, you will need a replacement at the position that week.
Detailed Stat Breakdown
StatSmith-NjigbaWilson
PPG (Half-PPR)17.710.7
Games Played1717
Total Fantasy Pts (est.)301182
Receptions11978
Rec/Game7.04.6
Receiving Yards1,7931,006
Rec Yds/Game105.559.2
Receiving TDs107
Targets163126
Target Share/Game9.67.4
Age2426
Experience2 yrs2 yrs
Bye WeekWeek 8Week 8

Summary

Jaxon Smith-Njigba outscored Michael Wilson by 7.0 PPG in 2025 (17.7 to 10.7). That production gap is the baseline, but weekly context shifts the answer. DraftCall analyzes matchup difficulty, scoring trends, and health data to deliver a clear start or sit recommendation backed by real reasoning.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Should I start Jaxon Smith-Njigba or Michael Wilson in fantasy football?

Based on 2025 season averages, Jaxon Smith-Njigba has the edge at 17.7 PPG compared to Michael Wilson's 10.7 PPG. However, the best start depends on weekly matchup, recent form, and injury status. DraftCall's app provides real-time AI-powered verdicts that factor in all of these variables.

How many fantasy points did Jaxon Smith-Njigba and Michael Wilson average in 2025?

Jaxon Smith-Njigba averaged 17.7 fantasy points per game (half-PPR) across 17 games in 2025. Michael Wilson averaged 10.7 PPG over 17 games. That is a difference of 7.0 points per game.

Do Jaxon Smith-Njigba and Michael Wilson share a bye week?

Yes, both Jaxon Smith-Njigba and Michael Wilson share a Week 8 bye in 2026. If you roster both, you will need a fill-in at wide receiver for that week.

Is Jaxon Smith-Njigba or Michael Wilson a better fantasy wide receiver in 2026?

Jaxon Smith-Njigba outscored Michael Wilson by 7.0 PPG in 2025, which gives him the edge heading into 2026. For a week-by-week verdict, DraftCall's AI analyzes matchup quality and recent trends in real time.