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Keenan Allen’s Redemption Tour with the Chargers (and Why It Matters for Fantasy Football)
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Keenan Allen is back with the Los Angeles Chargers, and honestly, this might be one of the most satisfying football reunion stories we’ve seen in a while. For those of you who’ve been sleeping under a rock, Keenan inked a one-year deal worth $8.52 million. Yeah, we’re talking about a 33-year-old Allen, but before you roll your eyes, allow me to remind you why this is a big deal. 

Spoiler alert for Chicago Bears fans: He’s not “washed.” 

Keenan Allen Is Old… But Does He Care? 

Okay, yes. Keenan Allen is 33. By NFL standards, that’s about as ancient as your dad’s old fantasy football trophy from 2004. But here’s the thing with Allen—we’ve been playing this “he might be slowing down” game for years now, and the man keeps showing up like he didn’t get the memo. 

Last season with the Bears wasn’t groundbreaking, but he still managed to put up a respectable 70 catches, 744 yards, and seven touchdowns. Oh, and that was on a DISMAL offensive squad where “dysfunction” was the nicest term you could use to describe them. Despite the chaos, Allen still snatched up an impressive 27.6% target share. Let’s emphasize this for the folks in the back—that’s dominant. 

And now, he’s returning to LA, to a team and quarterback (Justin Herbert) that actually knows his worth. You might think his career is on the “veteran mentor” trajectory, but don’t be surprised when he’s still out there cooking defenders. 

What Allen’s Return Means for the Chargers 

With Mike Williams shockingly retiring last month, the Chargers needed someone to fill the experience and reliability vacuum for their receiving corps. Enter Allen. 

Now, the Chargers’ receiving room suddenly feels more stable. Ladd McConkey, the exciting second-year wideout, will benefit greatly from Allen’s presence. McConkey already had a decent setup last year, ranking 23rd in targets among wide receivers. But don’t expect Allen’s return to impede McConkey’s growth. If anything, defenses will hesitate to double-team McConkey when they also have to account for Keenan in the slot. 

That said, spare a moment of silence for folks hoping for a Tre Harris breakout year. Allen’s reliable slot routes mean Harris is now relegated to decoy status unless an injury happens. Sorry, Tre, we’re just keeping it real. 

Fantasy Football Outlook for Keenan Allen 

Let’s talk numbers because that’s what you’re here for, right? To be blunt, Allen isn’t going to suddenly reclaim fantasy WR1 status. He’s not that guy anymore. What he is, though, is a sneaky WR3/FLEX option who will give you 4–5 catches per game with a decent chance to score. Trust me, you’ll be glad you took him when your other FLEX option is trending as Questionable five minutes before kickoff. 

Greg Roman might lean toward a run-heavy playbook as the new offensive coordinator, but considering how Herbert and the Chargers still hovered around league-average in pass rates last year (+0.2% in pass rate over expected), Allen can expect a healthy target share. 

Averaging Allen around 8.1 targets per game feels reasonable, translating to something like 80 catches and 843 yards if he stays healthy for 17 games. Just don’t bet your fantasy season on him playing all 17, because Keenan hasn’t done that since Snapchat was cool (2019). 

Big Picture for Fantasy Fans 

Is Keenan risky given his age and injury history? Sure. But he’s also criminally underrated for a player who still outperforms more hyped names on sheer efficiency. His route running hasn’t declined much, his hands are as sticky as ever, and with Herbert slinging him the rock, there’s no reason not to take a shot on him late in your drafts. 

And if you’re a Justin Herbert truther, Allen’s return bumps him slightly up the rankings to a solid QB2 with upside. 

The Legacy Watch 

Oh, one last thing because we love a good under-the-radar story. Keenan Allen is 52 receptions away from breaking Antonio Gates’ franchise record for catches (955). If that’s not motivation to show up every week, I don’t know what is. He’s also technically within shouting distance of Gates’ all-time yardage record for the Chargers, but that one’s a stretch unless Herbert starts averaging Mahomes-like passing numbers. 

Either way, expect Allen to treat this season like his own personal crowning moment. Records or not, he’s still the dude who can turn a five-yard slant into a 25-yard gain. 

Final Thoughts 

Don’t sleep on Keenan Allen this season. He’s not the shiny new thing everyone will be chasing in fantasy drafts, but he’s that battle-tested vet who’ll quietly put up points while everyone else complains about their rookies and “breakout” candidates busting. 

Draft him late, stash him smartly, and enjoy watching him defy expectations (again). 

This article first appeared on Total Apex Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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