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NFL DFS GPP

To quote the great Michael Rasile, “It’s a great day to be alive!” and it’s a great day to get ready for the Week 14 NFL DFS GPP slate! What a week last week for those who rode the Justin Herbert train with us! For those who haven’t read it yet, please check out the Week 14 Cash Game Checkdown for your bankroll sustaining, cash game build advice before building your NFL DFS GPP lineups.

*PLEASE note, the players in the Cash Game Checkdown are in play for GPP’s as well. They are high-floor and usually, high-ceiling players we always want to play. This article is simply to provide a different perspective on some ways you can make your GPP lineup different.

In addition, I would strongly advise giving my NFL DFS Strategy article I published this offseason before diving into the 2021 NFL DFS season. If you have any questions or would like some further help when building your lineups, please do not hesitate to reach out to me directly on Twitter.

For those looking to get different and make a splash in some GPPs, the time is now. We’ll usually be taking some heavy stances on lower-ownership players, but at times, there is certainly good “chalk” to eat.

It’s a rather condensed player pool for me this week. There are a lot of low-total games and then a couple higher-total games with great fantasy players all around. I’ll be focusing most of my energy there. Games I’m most interested in getting exposure to:

LVR/KC
BUF/TB
DAL/WAS

NFL DFS GPP Quarterbacks

Patrick Mahomes ($8,000 DK / $8,500 FD)

This article will be quite similar to the cash game article in terms of quarterbacks I’m interested in rostering. As mentioned, I want to invest heavily in Patrick Mahomes and this Chiefs’ offense as a whole against the Raiders’ and their dead-last blitz rate. Mahomes has certainly struggled this year but his splits against the Raiders are ridiculous (400+ yards and 5 touchdowns last meeting) and he’ll likely carve them up again at home this weekend. If you’re going to give Mahomes a clean pocket, he’s going to make plays with both his arm and legs. Now, all of that and a 5% ownership projection… let’s roll.

Key Pairing(s): Travis Kelce, Tyreek Hill, Clyde Edwards-Helaire
Key Run-back(s): Josh Jacobs, Hunter Renfrow, Foster Moreau, Zay Jones (0% owned punt)

Josh Allen ($7,800 DK / $8,800 FD)

We’re not getting the ownership reduction in Josh Allen like we are with Patrick Mahomes, but he’s still likely to finish outside of the top-three in NFL DFS GPP QB ownership (Taysom Hill, Cam Newton, and Tom Brady leading the pack). There’s not a game on this slate with a game total higher than 48.5 points besides this shootout in Tampa Bay, where the total sits at 54 points. Five and a half points higher than the next closest total, lol.

To no surprise, the AETY Model projects Tom Brady and Josh Allen to lead this slate in passing attempts (by a wide margin). You can’t really run on Tampa and Buffalo can’t really run on anybody so I expect Josh Allen to have to win this game with his arm and his rushing upside. If Buffalo can keep this competitive, this is a ceiling game in the making for Allen. Tom Brady on the other side is always in play, but will likely be one of the more popular options on this slate.

Key Pairing(s): Stefon Diggs, Cole Beasley, Dawson Knox
Key Run-back(s): Mike Evans, Chris Godwin, Leonard Fournette, Rob Gronkowski

Dak Prescott ($6,700 DK / $8,100 FD)

Incredible savings for the Cowboys’ signal caller who faces the 30th ranked pass defense (DVOA) in what is projected to be a close game. With Tony Pollard likely to miss this game and Ezekiel Elliott not looking like himself since re-injuring his knee, the Cowboys offense in theory will need to run through Dak Prescott. Another stud quarterback with rushing touchdown equity at 5% ownership.

Key Pairing(s): CeeDee Lamb
Key Run-back(s): Terry McLaurin, Antonio Gibson

I absolutely love this slate at the surface. Everything aligns rather well with my mental bias and the AETY Model, cash game builds and GPP builds. Usually, when this happens, it’s a dangerous week for the Win Daily Team. Just look at the Adjusted Expected Team Totals Tool below… we are locked in on the Model’s top offenses.

Week 14 Adjusted Expected Team Totals from Win Daily Sports

Honorable Mention: Joe Burrow, Russell Wilson, Cam Newton

NFL DFS GPP Running Backs

Josh Jacobs ($6,200 DK / $7,100 FD)

It really blows my mind Jacobs is coming in 50% less in projected ownership than Antonio Gibson. How many times do we need to see this Kansas City defense struggle to stop the run? There’s no Kenyan Drake. There’s no Jalen Richard. Sure, we may see a little Peyton Barber to spell Josh Jacobs, but Jacobs is not going to leave the field in any gamescript on Sunday. As mentioned in the cash article, Jacobs is an elite core play for me on Sunday in what should be a high scoring affair.

Saquon Barkley ($6,000 DK / $7,300 FD)

Barkley up against the 32nd run defense (DVOA) at 8-10% ownership while Antonio Gibson at that same price and in a tougher matchup will likely be closer to 30% in ownership. I do like Gibson, don’t get me wrong, but the 5-catch floor and ultimate upside of Saquon Barkley at the same price makes this an easy decision for me in NFL DFS GPP lineups where I have to choose one or the other.

JaMychal Hasty ($4,000 DK / $4,700 FD)

While everyone and their brother goes to play a chalky Jeff Wilson, I’m going to be interested in a San Francisco running back that can actually run through a gap in Shanahan’s outside zone running scheme. Jeff Wilson is trash and has not been the same since his numerous knee injuries (he’s averaging 2.7 yards per carry while all other SF backs are averaging 4.5 yards per carry)… this is an easy fade for me. Can he score two TD’s and help the chalk donkeys find a way to the pay-line? Yes, but I’ll play the fade here and just pray he doesn’t get in the box while he rushes 16-18 times for 45-55 yards.

Honorable Mention: Leonard Fournette, Alvin Kamara, Clyde Edwards-Helaire, D’Onta Foreman

NFL DFS Wide Receivers

Again, I’m rather locked into my same player pool as mentioned in the cash article. Here are my main focus wide receivers:

  • CeeDee Lamb – 4-5% ownership projection in the nut-best matchup for opposing slot wideouts.
  • Tyreek Hill – top wide receiver for my Mahomes love.
  • Stefon Diggs – volume, volume, volume. Top wide receiver for my Josh Allen love.
  • Terry McLaurin – 4-5% owned run-back in a matchup against a corner who has a big name, Trevon Diggs, but simply is not good in coverage. Sexy run-back to my Dallas exposure.
  • Ja’Maar Chase – starting to become the forgotten man in CIN as Tee Higgins has been riding the hot hand. A sub-10% owned Ja’Maar chase with a price discount… Yes.
  • Mike Evans – Dane Jackson and Levi Wallace are the best people to pick-on in this Buffalo secondary.
  • Cole Beasley – cheap exposure to BUF/TB and an excellent matchup on the inside of the Bucs’ secondary.
  • Laviska Shenault – Yes, I’m going back to Laviska Shenault. The AETY Model absolutely loves to target slot wide receivers against Tennessee. Shenault has seen a MASSIVE uptick in slot snaps and Marvin Jones may be benched as he got into verbal altercations with that moron of a head coach. At 2-4% ownership, I’ll trust the model and ride a salary-relief slot wideout in Shenault.
  • Josh Palmer – as everyone goes to play Jalen Guyton (I don’t mind his big play upside at all), I’ll pivot to the man taking the routes Keenan Allen runs.

Honorable Mention: Brandon Aiyuk (if Deebo is OUT), DK Metcalf, Jamison Crowder

NFL DFS Tight-Ends

Please see the Week 14 Cash Game Checkdown for my thoughts on the Tight-End player pool.

Thank you all for the support and good luck this week! Make sure you follow me on Twitter at @stixpicks and be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Model powered by AETY and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport.

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NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 14

Things in the NFL are heating up as many teams remain alive to make the postseason and the main slate this week brings us 11 games again. It features not one running back over $8,300 on DraftKings and that’s going to make the builds extremely interesting this week. Let’s talk about that and everything else in this slate in the NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 14 to find paths to green!

Seahawks at Texans, O/U of 41 (Seahawks -8.5)

Seahawks

QB – Russell Wilson may be the most frustrating mix of talent and mediocre fantasy production at the position. He has two great receivers but he’s not even averaging 17.5 DraftKings points per game. I know he’s had the finger injury but the Seattle offense is just not that great only ranking 22nd in points scored per game. Houston is a surprise sixth in DVOA against the pass and has an 18:14 TD: INT ratio. Russ is 10th in points per dropback but just 16th in points per game. I never want to completely ignore him but he’s not going to be a priority for me. 

RB – This article is long but it’s fun to write about some of the players. It’s cool to see the metrics that lie underneath and why they’re performing well. The Seattle backfield does not fall into that category as they had Rashaad Penny and Adrian Peterson split carries last week 10-11 and they managed to generate 51 rushing yards. Let’s face it, when you can average 2.4 yards per carry when you have Wilson and talented receivers, you have to go for it. We’re going to have to wait to see if Alex Collins gets back in the mix for this one because it is a good spot and the Seahawks continue to run the ball when they can. Houston is dead last in rushing yards allowed and while Seattle is 29th in attempts per game, that has been game script related. They won’t hesitate but I think we can do better. 

Update – Collins is active with Peterson and Travis Homer out, so it’s down to Collins and Penny but I remain uninterested. It’s the lowest total on the slate.

WR – Both Tyler Lockett and D.K. Metcalf saw eight targets each last week and they were both into double-digit DraftKings points. Lockett continued his streak of outscoring Metcalf and it’s been four of the past five weeks. They are dead even in targets at 84 apiece and Lockett has the slight lead in air yards but Metcalf has a monster 13-5 lead in red-zone targets. The matchup individually for each is great as Metcalf is against Terrance Mitchell while Lockett sees more of Desmond King. Mitchell has allowed a 115.4 passer rating and 13.5 yards per reception this year. Meanwhile, King has allowed 1.77 points per target and a 107 passer rating himself, so the only issues could be the Seahawks offense that generally underperforms. 

TE – I just refuse to play Gerald Everett because he’s just not that talented of a player and the role seems unstable. He does have three games with at least six targets in the past four but the floor is so low. There aren’t many tight ends that can turn four receptions into seven yards. Houston can’t defend the position well with six touchdowns allowed and 645 yards but Everett is very much a punt-style player with low upside. 

D/ST – I’m not here to tell you that the Seahawks are a good defense. They rank just 21st in total DVOA, they only have 13 turnovers forced and just 19 sacks. However, they do keep teams off the scoreboard at sixth in points allowed per game and they average over five DraftKings points. Given the matchup against Houston and potentially a backup quarterback, I can live with the salary and you could do way worse this week. 

Update – Safety Jamal Adams is out for the season so that is a blow for the Seattle defense. He may not be strong in coverage but he did bring some strong elements to the defense. 

Cash – None 

GPP – Russ, Lockett, Metcalf, D/ST, Collins, Penny

Texans 

QB – It’s unclear if Tyrod Taylor can play this week and if he can’t, Davis Mills has been an odd mix when he’s been the starter. He’s had upside games against the Rams and Patriots of all teams, but he’s scored under 11 DraftKings points in four starts. That leads me to not want to tangle with him even though Seattle is 26th in DVOA against the pass, 22nd in yards per attempt allowed, and they’ve allowed the third-most yards in football. The matchup is there but the range of outcomes is wild. 

RB – Even when David Johnson was inactive, Rex Burkhead mustered up a total of nine touches and under six DraftKings points. That just isn’t going to get it done and you can argue this is the least talented backfield in football, maybe rivaled by only their opponent this week. Seattle is third in yards per attempt allowed and their yardage given up (bottom 10 in the league) has come from facing the most rushing attempts in football. I’ll have no interest here. 

WR – I’ll continue to just go after Brandin Cooks in the Houston offense and even then, it’s getting tough to back him with Mills potentially under center. The metrics are everything we chase as he’s 13th in receptions and third in air yards share at 41.6% but he’s 92nd in catchable pass rate and that’s a huge issue. The individual matchup is solid against Ugo Amadi who’s allowed a passer rating over 92 and a completion rate over 67%. Everything looks great for him except the quarterback play. 

TE – It’s hard to really get behind anyone here. Nobody has a target share over 10% and the team is splitting snaps with Pharaoh Brown and Brevin Jordan. Even when Jordan Akins has not been active the past few weeks, it hasn’t resulted in anything tangible for fantasy. 

D/ST – These teams are somewhat mirrors of each other in certain spots because the Houston defense isn’t good in the traditional sense. They are 30th in points per game allowed but they are 10th in total DVOA. They also have forced the seventh-most turnovers and gotten to the quarterback 26 times with a 21.2% pressure rate. Seattle gives up a pressure rate of 25.7% which is the seventh-highest and that can lead to some mistakes from the Seahawks offense. 

Cash – None 

GPP – Cooks, D/ST

Cowboys at Washington, O/U of 48 (Cowboys -4.5)

Cowboys

QB – One of the reasons I wouldn’t be running to Russ is Dak Prescott is just $100 more and has shown far more upside. He has all of his weapons back in the offense and even after a poor game, his upside is among the highest on the slate. Dak is eighth in yards, seventh in air yards, sixth in true completion, eighth in red zone attempts, and fourth in deep attempts. He may only be 15th in points per dropback but he’s seventh in touchdowns and Washington’s pass defense has not been strong all year. They’re 30th in DVOA against the pass, they’ve allowed the fifth-most yards, and are tied for the most touchdowns allowed at 26. Dak is a very strong option in all formats this week. 

RB – After hearing so much about how the workload wasn’t going to change for Ezekiel Elliott, Tony Pollard had nine touches to 15 last game and there’s no question about who was more productive. You can play the game of “well if you take away the big run from Pollard he didn’t do much either” but that is kind of the point. Zeke is not capable of breaking off a 58-yard touchdown run. Maybe it’s injury and maybe it’s not, but the fact remains he hasn’t exceeded 51 rushing yards since Week 6. It’s getting difficult to justify the salary at this point because if he’s not falling into the end zone twice, the points aren’t coming. If Dallas decides to sit Zeke, Pollard is a smash play but if they insist on letting Zeke play, this situation will likely be a fade for me with Pollard priced up. I’m not interested in paying $6,400 for a backup with under 10 touches. 

Update – Pollard has no status on the injury report but Dallas elevated a running back from the practice squad. That seems ominous so Zeke will have a workload, regardless of him being able to handle it.

WR – Let’s kick things off with CeeDee Lamb and why he could be good leverage off a (potentially) chalky Amari Cooper – 

https://twitter.com/Ihartitz/status/1468623180986298381?s=20

Lamb is one of the better receivers in football and putting him in the slot just makes him near a cheat code. You’re not going to be able to cover him and Washington hasn’t been able to cover anyone in that alignment. He has a 22.1% target share and is the target leader of the Cowboys. Michael Gallup is likely going to see William Jackson and I’m not sure if we should continue to expect nine targets like the last game. Cooper only saw two and played just 34% of the snaps so we have to weigh that in. The Washington secondary doesn’t have a corner to worry about as William Jackson is their best one (and should face Gallup). Even then, he’s giving up a 1.90 fantasy point per target. Kendall Fuller has been playing more in the slot lately but he’s also allowing a 103.5 passer rating. I’m fine eating Cooper if he’s chalk in cash but I very much want to play Lamb this week. 

TE – The style of targets and the amount for Dalton Schultz could be changing as the Cowboys now have all three receivers are back. On the season, he’s sixth in receptions, ninth in yards, seventh in targets and ninth in deep targets among tight ends. I have a little more trouble trusting that now and the salary is still a little high. Washington is just average throughout the stats against the tight end so Schultz is fine, but not a primary target. 

D/ST – The Cowboys have seen their price rise after scoring 17 DraftKings points but they don’t get to face Taysom Hill this week. Washington allows a 23% pressure rate and the Cowboys pass rush is getting healthier, which is notable. The play of rookie Micah Parsons is also notable and they are fourth in total DVOA. Dallas does tend to give up some yards but they’re 12th in points per game allowed and boast the fourth-highest pressure rate in football with the fifth-most turnovers forced. They’re in play every week with their upside. 

Cash – Lamb, Cooper, Dak

GPP – Zeke, Gallup, Schultz

Washington 

QB – Last week, we liked Taylor Heinicke as a GPP option and it’s the same story this week. The Raiders may not have been able to force a ceiling game from him but Dallas can and Heinicke should have to pass a bunch to keep up this week. Looking a the metrics would show you that Heinicke is average throughout his game as he ranks 18th in points per dropback, 14th in attempts, 19th in yards per attempt, and 15th in yards. You need the volume to counteract everything else and if Washington can’t stop Dallas, he should attempt close to 40 passes. The salary is extremely low if that turns out to be the case. 

RB – Antonio Gibson is still not priced correctly, especially if J.D. McKissic were to be out again. Since the bye week, only Jonathan Taylor has more carries than the 95 that Gibson has and Taylor only has him bet by six. The red-zone work is the same with Gibson being second at 21 and Taylor leading at 27. This shouldn’t be a running back that is priced at $6,000. Dallas is 24th in yards per attempt allowed and has faced the eighth-fewest attempts on the season. Gibson is suddenly fifth in the league in rushing yards and the salary is phenomenal once again. 

WR – It’s all about Terry McLaurin his week again and the Washington offense is running out of playmakers. No receiver has a higher air yards share at 44.4% and McLaurin is second in unrealized air yards. His issues lie similar to Cooks as he’s just 83rd in catchable pass rate. It’s a testament to how good he is that he’s 23rd in points per game and the second-most deep targets really interest me. Trevon Diggs has racked up interceptions this year but he also has one of the highest burn rates in football and allows a massive 17.9 yards per reception and 2.06 points per target. McLaurin is an elite GPP target this week and I have my eyes on a McLaurin and Lamb stack.

Update – McKissic is questionable so we’ll see Sunday morning at 11:30 a.m. 

TE – Logan Thomas is going to be out for the next couple of weeks at least and that could mean it’s time for Ricky Seals-Jones. He’s dealing with an injury of his own so we’ll see if he can make it back or not. If he doesn’t it could be time for John Bates again. He saw four targets on Sunday and scored 7.2 DraftKings points and that was with Thomas in for much of the game. The Cowboys have allowed the Ninh-most yards to the position so there is production to be had from someone. Thomas and Seals-Jones have had a 16.6% and 11.2% target share each on the season. 

Update – Seals-Jones is back and I have some interest in GPP for sure

D/ST – They rank 30th in DVOA and 24th in points per game so it’s hard to advocate for them here. Dallas is a multi-faceted attack that can beat you in any given way and Washington only has 12 turnovers forced to go along with 24 sacks. Only Matthew Stafford and Tom Brady have been sacked fewer times than Dak, so the sack upside doesn’t appear to be high for Washington. I’d rather play Houston at this price point. 

Cash – Possibly Gibson 

GPP – McLaurin, Heinicke, Seals-Jones

Jaguars at Titans, O/U of 43.5 (Titans -8.5)

Jaguars

QB – There is no debate that coaching in Jacksonville is a massive issue. Having said that, Trevor Lawrence isn’t exactly playing some of the best football in the league and that is being kind. He’s 36th in yards per attempt, 35th in true completion, 21st in yards, still is in the single digits for touchdowns thrown, he’s 30th in points per game, and he’s 33rd in points per dropback. That is not entirely on the coaches nor the system, even though they for sure play a huge part. Tennessee is 19th in DVOA against the pass and they’ve allowed the seventh-most passing yards. I would rather find the money for Heinicke but would understand the appeal of a 1% rostered Lawerence in a great matchup. 

RB – I want to be interested in James Robinson but this Jaguars coaching staff is making that wildly difficult. If coach Urban Meyer is to be believed, Robinson wasn’t 100% healthy and split snaps last week with Carlos Hyde. That would make sense except Hyde came in after Robinson lost a fumble and Robinson was getting carries in the fourth quarter when the game was a 30-point spread. Meyer is totally clueless if benching Robinson is the way he thinks things should be done, especially for Hyde. Robinson gets an average spot as Tennessee is 12th in yards allowed per attempt and they’ve allowed the seventh-fewest rushing yards to backs. However, they’ve faced the sixth-fewest carries as well. The salary is great but the situation is not on paper. 

WR – Is it finally Laviska Shenault week? It seems kind of doubtful given the track record and but the targets have at least been a little more consistent. He’s seen 27 in the past four games and he got three carries in this past game. Shenault has been splitting time in the slot about half of his snaps ad that would put him on, Elijah Molden. Through his 36 targets faced, he’s given up a 123.5 passer rating and 69.4% completion rate. If there’s ever a week for Shenault to do something, this week checks the boxes. Marvin Jones continues to be mostly an afterthought in the offense and he draws the one half-decent corner of Tennessee. Kristian Fulton has let up just a 51.6% completion rate and a 94.3 passer rating. 

TE – We got the targets from James O’Shaughnessy I was hoping for last week with six and he even led the team in air yards (36 but still counts). It’s a bad offense but the role isn’t changing and O’Shaugnessy has a 13.2% target share on the season. As long as Dan Arnold is on IR, he’s in play under $3,000. 

D/ST – Bad defenses can have their usefulness for DFS but the Jaguars can’t do much for fantasy. They only have 20 sacks, they have just six turnovers forced (dead last), and they rank 29th in points allowed and 31st in total DVOA. There’s no reason to play them even against the Titans who are missing pieces. 

Cash – None 

GPP – Robinson, Shenault, Lawrence, O’Shaughnessy 

Titans 

QB – Much like every Titans offensive player not named Derrick Henry, Ryan Tannehill has had a truly awful season. He only has 14 touchdowns on the season compared to 13 interceptions and isn’t at 18 DraftKings points per game. While it’s fair to point out his main receivers have been in and out of the lineup with injuries, this is not what anyone expected from Tannehill this year. He is 23rd in true completion rate and 35th in deep completion rate, a big crimp on his production. The points per dropback are just 20th in the league and he’s also 18th in points per game. The good news is Jacksonville is a very beatable defense through the air as they rank 31st in DVOA and 29th in yards per attempt allowed. I really struggle with the salary because it doesn’t reflect how poorly Tannehill has played, but if he gets one of his receivers back this week he could have a 2020-esque performance. 

RB – Dontrell Hilliard has made quite the impression for the Titans in just two games. He’s turned 29 total touches into 216 scrimmage yards and a score so far and he’s splitting time with D’Onta Foreman. With Derrick Henry not expected back for a couple of weeks, we should expect this split to continue but it should be noted that Foreman has more attempts at this point and a 6-1 lead in red zone attempts. With the salaries very similar, Foreman is the slightly better value given what the Titans have shown us. Jacksonville is ninth in yards per attempt allowed but they have faced the seventh-most attempts in the league. This tandem could provide some value to our lineups this week. 

WR – If he’s back, Julio Jones is going to tempt me something fierce. A.J. Brown is still on IR and Julio is down to just $5,400 against the Jaguars defense. Julio has been terrible this year and injured through a lot of it but the number of targets coming his way would be fascinating. He has a 27.7% air yards share on the year and is ninth in yards per route. Nick Westbrook-Ikhine has seen 14 targets over the past two games and with Brown still missing, will be the number two option at worst. He’s been in the slot about 30% of the time but that could change based on who is available for the Titans this week. 

Update – Julio is healthy and back in action, so I will have a lot of interest in GPP. I’m not sure I want to go there for cash given how untrustworthy he has been this year.

TE – There is not a tight end worth chasing for DFS on the Titans. 

D/ST – The leader in snaps last week for Jacksonville was Laquon Treadwell. I feel like that says enough for the Titans being in play but if it isn’t, they do have 29 sacks which are inside the top 10 and 14 turnovers. The salary keeps me away and the fact they rank 23rd in total DVOA and points allowed doesn’t help. However, the Jaguars are a train wreck so it wouldn’t surprise me to see the Titans post a strong game. 

Cash – None

GPP – Julio, Foreman, Westbrook-Ikhine, D/ST

Raiders at Chiefs, O/U of 48.5 (Chiefs -9.5)

Raiders

QB – What a poor effort from Derek Carr and the Raiders last week. They never really pressed the ball downfield at all, which was incredible given the defense they were facing and extra time to prepare. Carr is still second in the league in yards and fifth in yards per attempt, but none of that showed up last week. The loss of Darren Waller was felt and despite ranking second in yards, Carr is just 24th in points per drop back and he’s 13th in passing touchdowns. It’s why his price is always very reasonable for being fourth in attempts this season. KC is 27th in yards per attempt allowed and 20th in DVOA against the pass but that latter number is notable. It used to be dead last and it’s reflecting the Chiefs playing much better defense lately. I’m not likely to go after Carr this week but the projected game script could help him rack up late production. 

RB – We saw Sunday night that the Chiefs are still vulnerable to running backs and Kenyan Drake is now out for the season. That means Josh Jacobs should handle almost every single touch in this backfield and his targets have gone through the roof. He’s third on the team in targets since Henry Ruggs has been off the team with a 16.2% target share. Surely, we can’t expect nine targets again (I don’t think) but the 4-6 he’s seeing per game is a big boost to his floor and ceiling. Kansa City is 29th in yards allowed per attempt and lately, they haven’t exactly been blowing people out of the water. Jacobs could be quite overlooked on the slate, which would make him interesting. 

WR – Depending on Waller, Hunter Renfrow could be still too cheap or he could be too expensive. Without Waller, he’s racked up 19 total targets (Waller only played 24% of Week 12), 236 yards, and 46.8 DraftKings points. The script would make you think he’s going to see a ton of targets once again. That’s translated to a 25.7% target share in that span and he could face some of L’Jarius Sneed. They would generally match up in the slot but Sneed has allowed a 68.1% completion rate and 103.7 passer rating, so there isn’t a need to back off. I’d love to try the DeSean Jackson but he does seem capped at around 45% of the snaps and is coming off just one target. He would be MME only at this point. 

TE – If Darren Waller is back, he’s likely not expensive enough. If he’s not, Foster Moreau is not going to be on my radar at $4,000. Kansas City has allowed the eighth-most yards to the position but Moreau only saw three targets last week without Waller. Let’s see how the week unfolds. 

Update – Waller is out so I’m just more interested in Renfrow.

D/ST – Normally, this is an easy pass and we move on. Don’t get it twisted, I’m not caping up for the Raiders defense against the Chiefs but in MME formats, life could be worse. Nobody will play them and they are 22nd in total DVOA along with 26th in points allowed. The Chiefs just scorched this unit a few weeks back so there is zero safety. However, Kansas City has not been that scary for weeks now. Only the Jets have more turnovers on the season than the 23 the Chiefs have. If they manage to hold KC to 24 points and turn the ball over once or twice with maybe a return, things could work out. Just understand the risk. 

Cash – Jacobs, Renfrow

GPP – Carr, D/ST 

Chiefs 

QB – It’s really kind of crazy looking at the game logs for Patrick Mahomes. Since Week 6, he has not scored more than 15 DraftKings points other than one game. We’re heading into Week 14, guys. That’s an insane stretch for one of the best players in the game and his price is awfully high for someone that hasn’t shown the same upside we’ve been spoiled by. The big caveat to all of this is Mahomes has one game that he scored 39.2 DraftKings points and it came against this Raiders defense. He threw for five scores and 406 yards. Surely, if you think he does that again the price wouldn’t be nearly enough. Vegas is 23rd in DVOA against the pass and I’m not pretending the upside doesn’t exist. It’s just been harder to find this season. 

RB – I can’t feel all that comfortable with Clyde Edwards-Helaire at this salary. He did see 17 touches Sunday night but the snaps were only 50.9% while Darrell Williams was on the field for 46.5% and had eight touches. The good news is CEH had those touches but paying over $6,000 for a back that’s on the field just half the time feels very difficult to do. It also doesn’t help that Willams generated 80 scrimmage yards to 82 for CEH. Vegas is 18th in yards per attempt allowed and they’ve given up almost 1,700 scrimmage yards but the salary is not great, even on a slate where we don’t have a lot of spend-up options for the position. 

WR – With the Chiefs not hitting on all cylinders right now, I’ll be sticking with Tyreek Hill of anyone in the receiving corps. He had a bump in the road last week but that was the first time since Week 3 that he’s been under nine targets. Hill is second in receptions, sixth in yards, seventh in air yards share, first in unrealized air yards, second in targets, and fifth in deep targets. Reek is also still fifth in points per game and faces off against Nate Hobbs for some of his snaps. He moves around a ton and Hobbs has only faced 32 targets. His big issue is the 4.5-second 40-yard dash time and Hill has elite speed even for an NFL receiver. Hill has a major advantage there and always has upside with 10+ targets. 

TE – I’ll never say you can’t play Travis Kelce and the only time he’s been over 20 DraftKings since Week 3 came against Vegas in the first game. Kelce is first among tight ends in yards, receptions, unrealized air yards, routes, and targets. You can’t ask for much more and yet, he’s averaging under 17 DraftKings points per game. It felt like any time you rostered Kelce, it was a cheat code because he was an extra receiver or some weeks running back. He still has that upside, but it hasn’t been all that tangible this year. 

D/ST – The Chiefs defense has really been turning things around lately. Since Week 8, they haven’t allowed more than 17 points, they have 11 takeaways, and they’ve tacked on 12 sacks. The Raiders don’t appear to be the largest threat to change that even if Waller is back and the salary is solid. Carr has been sacked the eighth-most times and they may not be a priority but they are well in play with their newly found competence. 

Cash – Kelce, D/ST 

GPP – Mahomes, Hill, CEH

Saints at Jets, O/U of 42.5 (Saints -5.5)

Saints

QB – All signs point to Taysom Hill starting again and he’s just way, way too cheap, and will almost surely be my cash game quarterback. He’s the perfect intersection of fantasy scoring vs. real life because, in his starts, he’s been a pretty trash real-life quarterback. I mean, the man threw four interceptions last game and he still scored over 27 DraftKings points. Since the beginning of last year, Hill has made five starts. He’s finished as the QB4, QB11, QB8, QB11, and QB4. He’s rushed for at least 33 yards in every single game (and that upside is far higher given the state of the Saints offense) and the Jets defense is among the worst in football. It’s only Wednesday but I love Hill at this salary and the only reason I would jump off is if he’s sub-5% rostered. Even then, I’d have a heavy does in GPP but I suspect he’s everyone’s cash game option this week. 

RB – We’re not sure yet if Alvin Kamara can make it back into the lineup o if it will be Mark Ingram. Either way, I’ll likely be interested. I wouldn’t expect Kamara to handle a full workload but he’s also under $8,000. If it’s Ingram, I won’t have any hesitation to attack this Jets run defense. They’ve allowed the third-most rushing yards to backs, rank 26th in yards per attempt, Ingram did have a very poor game last time but in the previous two without Kamara, he had at least 18 touches. If you’re telling me I can get 18+ touches against the defense at $5,800, I’m all in and there’ not much of a discussion to be had. 

Update – Ingram is in the Covid protocols and is out. The Saints are calming that Kamara is fully healthy and ready to handle his full workload.

WR – Tying yourself to a receiver that’s relying on Hill to get them the ball is highly volatile, but the Saints are short on options. Deonte Harris is out and they cut Kenny Stills. That leaves Tre’Quan Smith, Marquez Callaway, and Lil’Jordan Humphrey as the top guys. Harris saw eight targets last week with Hill so that actually is a big loss. Smith and Callaway played about 68% of the snaps but Smith led in targets at 7-4 while Humphrey only saw two but did score a touchdown. He could fill the role of Harris, who played 40% of the snaps. The largest issue is they saw a combined 13 targets and had four receptions. This is the Jets defense, but the fear is the Saints run a lot with Kamara and Hill and you’re left with scraps. 

Smith has been playing a decent amount in the slot at 43.4% but they all rotate in as Humphrey has a 41.7% share in his much lower amount of snaps. Callaway would draw the “toughest” matchup in Bryce Hall but he’s allowed 1.60 fantasy points per target and a 97.3 passer rating. All the other corners are far worse so the matchups are great. It’s just relying on Hill that is frightening. 

Update – The Saints had to re-sign Stills because Harris is out, Humphrey is questionable, and now Ty Montgomery is in Covid protocols as well.

TE – Nick Vannett could be super sneaky as he played 60% of the snaps and saw four targets last game for the Saints. Hill is not a quality quarterback so using the tight end is a stronger possibility. Juwan Johnson did get hurt but he came back into the game and still saw just one target. The Jets are in the bottom 10 in yards and receptions allowed to the position and Vannett is so cheap that he has my attention as a punt. 

D/ST – Among the defenses that are priced above $3,500, the Saints are my favorite. They are fifth in total DVOA, 19th in points per game allowed, and they have a pressure rate of just under 25%. The Jets still have allowed the highest pressure rate on the season at 30.8% and New York has turned the ball over more than any other team in football. If they can fit, I’m very interested in playing them. 

Cash – Hill, Kamara (can be played together in my eyes)

GPP – Vannett, Humphrey, Smith, Callaway, D/ST 

Jets 

QB – Zach Wilson had what was likely the best game of his career last week but I simply won’t do it with Hill being just $300 more in a much better matchup. Wilson only turned it over once but might be down to Jamison Crowder as his number one receiver, which is sketchy. New Orleans is 12th in DVOA against the pass and he is still just 35th in points per dropback and 34th in clean completion rate. It does help him that Saints defensive lineman Cameron Jordan could miss the game, but it’s not enough to risk the floor here in my eyes. 

RB – The Jets appear to be committed to Tevin Coleman while Michael Carter is sidelined as he’s had 27 carries and seven targets in two games. Now, that really doesn’t matter to me because the Saints have one of the best run defenses in football. They lead in yards per attempt at just 3.6 yards and have allowed the third-fewest rushing yards to backs. Coleman has yet to hit 11 DraftKings points in either game and I think this one is a pretty easy pass. Wilson showed a little bit of upside on Sunday and it still didn’t do much for Coleman. 

Update – The Jets will have to split work between Ty Johnson and Austin Walter as Coleman is out, but I’ll pass against this stout run defense.

WR – Corey Davis is now on the shelf for the season and that opens up Elijah Moore to sand out even further…if he’s active. After the bye week, the rookie receiver has been on a tear and leads the team in target share at 20.2% and air yards share at 33%. He’s also easily pacing the team in yards at 472 and while he would see some Marshon Lattimore, the New Orleans corner is inconsistent. However, Moore has been bothered by an injury this week and needs to be cleared before we jump in. 

That could leave Jamison Crowder to take on more work as well but he likely won’t move from the slot with a 69.7% rate. The Jets would install others on the outside like Keelan Cole but I’m not sure how interested we should be there. Crowder would face P.J. Williams who has faced 21 targets but allowed a 71.4% catch rate. If Moore is out, he would be my primary target. 

Update – Moore is out, so Crowder is in play.

TE – There’s really no reason to play Ryan Griffin even though he scored last week. He only saw two targets and his target share is just 8.2%. 

D/ST – You could twist my arm if Hill is starting again but the nine turnovers forced is tough to get excited about. The Jets are dead last in total DVOA and points allowed but they at least have 27 sacks. The only reason to play them is if you think Hill turns it over multiple times, but even that is thin with the Jets defense. 

Cash – Crowder

GPP –  Wilson in MME 

Falcons at Panthers, O/U of 42 (Panthers -2.5)

Falcons

QB – We talked about this last week and Matt Ryan continued the streak in Week 13. Since Calvin Ridley has left the Falcons, any upside for Ryan has gone as well with just one finish over 12 DraftKings points. I’m not sure there’s any reason to think that changes this week as Carolina is fifth in DVOA against the pass and third in yards allowed per attempt. Ryan is ninth in attempts but it’s only translated to 11th in yards, 24th in yards per attempt, and 29th in points per drop back. I’ll have no real interest here. 

RB – The salary came down slightly for Cordarrelle Patterson but I’m not sure I totally love him. The targets haven’t been there quite as much lately, with just 16 over the past four games. That’s only 12.8% in that span and if he’s not getting a large share, he’s more of just a regular running back. Carolina is 13th in yards per attempt and they are about mid-pack in total rushing yards given up. Additionally, they have surrendered the fewest receiving yards and receptions against the position as well. That’s not ideal for Patterson and there will be backs that I like better along the way. 

WR – Full credit to our guy Sia for walking into the live chat last Sunday and calling the Russel Gage game as he went off for 11/130. The salary didn’t move that much (I would prefer Moore from the Jets if possible) and he’s still under $6,000. He’s now the co-leader in targets with no Ridley at a 20.7% target share and when he’s in the slot he could face A.J. Bouye. The corner for Carolina has allowed a 73.3% catch rate but the loss of Donte Jackson should push Bouye more towards the boundary. Gage is playing 44% in the slot but that means over half of his snaps are not in the slot. He would be the only receiver that I would consider for Atlanta as nobody else has a share over 12.6% since Ridley has been out. 

TE – I know the week I stop playing Kyle Pitts he’s going to go off but it’s hard to keep saying the metrics are there with no return. He’s only scored double-digit DraftKings points in four of 12 games this year and only one 15 twice. That’s not exactly the best odds here at $5,500 even though he is somehow seventh in receptions and third in yards among the position. Pitts only has a 74.4% catchable rate and that’s 24th among the position so I can’t see making him a priority this week at the salary. 

D/ST – I’m not sure even the Panthers offense can tempt me into playing the Falcons defense. I know they have had quarterback issues (to be kind) this season, but the Falcons have had defense issues. They rank 29th in total DVOA, 31st in points allowed, 32nd in sacks with just 15, and have a pressure rate barely over 16%. It’s just hard to see where the points come from unless Carolina just completely goes off the rails again. 

Cash – Gage

GPP – Pitts, Patterson 

Panthers 

QB – Perhaps the biggest leap of faith at the position is Cam Newton. I’ll be frank, I’m not plying him because I like other cheap options far better. Cam reminded everyone why he was on the street for most of this year last week with a 5-21 performance (seriously….5 completions) and he only scored eight DraftKings points because he scored a rushing touchdown. The Atlanta defense theoretically is one to attack as they sit 29th in DVOA against the pass and 27th in yards allowed per attempt. Cam just inspires zero confidence and others can score the same amount of fantasy points as he can. 

RB – With the news that offensive coordinator Joe Brady was fired for not running the ball enough, Chubba Hubbard could turn into a value. It would be a leap of faith because he hasn’t been that great when Christian McCaffrey was out. However, there were two games that he got 20+ carries and hit 15 DraftKings points each time. Atlanta is just 15th in yards per attempt and 16th in rushing yards allowed. The DVOA against the run is just so there is a definite upside to the play but there’s also plenty of risks. I’ll be interested to see what the field does here and I feel like if he gets the touches coach Matt Ruhle wants, he could really hit value. 

WR – While I do wish D.J. Moore could get himself a quarterback, he’s hit at least 16 DraftKings points in each of the past two weeks. Moore also boasts the fourth-highest air yards share at 40.9%, he’s 12th in receptions, 13th in yards, fourth in unrealized air yards, and 19th in points per game. Moore is an elite receiver but he just hasn’t had the player to get him the ball consistently. A.J. Terrell has had a great season overall with just a 42.1% catch rate and 61.8 passer rating allowed but Moore is capable, if very unstable in this spot. Robby Anderson is far beyond the point of tempting me anymore as his 29 receptions on 69 targets are just abysmal. 

TE – There is no tight end of fantasy value for the Panthers. 

D/ST – They are still tied for fourth in sacks on the season with 32 and the pressure rate is also second at 28.7% so they’re in play for me. The takeaways are a little lackluster but Carolina is seventh in total DVOA and the Falcons have allowed 26 sacks on the season. The fact we can get this unit under $3,000 is a nice bonus and they are also seventh in points allowed per game. It’s a good bargain, even though they have lost some important pieces. 

Cash – None, D/ST 

GPP – Moore, Hubbard

Ravens at Browns, O/U of 43 (Browns -3)

Ravens

QB – I was very surprised how poorly Lamar Jackson played last week (and really the week before that) and he might leave some folks a little scared of him. He’s had three straight down games but he should have still hit 20 DraftKings points last week if he and Mark Andrews connect on the two-point conversion. Regardless, I don’t think he plays so poorly against Cleveland again and throws another four picks. He has way more upside than the salary represents and is fifth in points per dropback. Jackson leads all quarterbacks in rushing attempts and yards but somehow has only found the end zone twice with his legs so far. He’s scored seven rushing touchdowns in each of the past two seasons so that seems like it should correct sooner or later and I’ll have GPP interest. 

RB – We just saw this matchup a couple of weeks ago and it was among the uglier games of the season. Devonta Freeman got plenty of touches with 17 in that game and that has been the case in every game since Week 9. He’s taken the reins in this Baltimore backfield and racked up another 20 DraftKings points last week. Cleveland is a much stouter run defense than the Steelers, ranking seventh in yards per attempt and 12th in rushing yards allowed to backs. While Freeman does have games with a bunch of targets, the overall target share since Week 9 is still just 11.8%. It generally won’t be a huge part of his game but we’re talking about the back sitting ninth in carries across the league since Week 9. The volume is there and nobody played him last week, he could be interesting in that aspect alone. 

WR – After seeing Rashod Bateman dip to just 42% of the snaps last week, I wouldn’t be looking at him too heavily this week. He and Sammy Watkins have been rotating a lot since Watkins came back in Week 10, with Watkins having played 49.2% of the snaps and Bateman sitting at 53.7%. Jackson is just 19th in passing attempts so it doesn’t make sense to chase players that have a 50% share of playing time in a lower volume passing offense. 

That leaves us looking at Marquise Brown, who hasn’t had a big day since Week 9 (coincidentally not since Watkins has returned). He always has major potential but the salary is still up there, even for someone who is ninth in air yards and fifth in unrealized air yards. Hollywood is third in deep targets but they haven’t always connected and there is volatility. He should see plenty of Denzel Ward who has been targeted just 38 times. He’s allowed a 101.2 passer rating and he won’t shadow, but I can’t say Brown is a primary target. 

TE – It was a highly disappointing effort from Mark Andrews last week but he racked up another nine targets and is now under $6,000. He is second in both yards and receptions on the season and third in unrealized air yards with the sixth-most touchdowns. No tight end has more deep targets than Andrews and he’s also second in targets. The Browns are tied for the fourth-most touchdowns allowed to the position and Andrews is always an option. 

D/ST – I do get that they only scored two DraftKings points last week, but I’m not sure why Baltimore is so cheap. They can stop the run and get pressure, as they have the seventh-highest pressure rate and rank fifth in DVOA against the run. If you can take that away from Cleveland, they’re in trouble. The only facet holding me back is the Ravens just lost corner Marlon Humphrey to injury and that’s a big blow. Still, the salary is very affordable and the Browns are far from scary at this point. 

Cash – Lamar, Andrews, D/ST 

GPP – Freeman, Brown 

Browns 

QB – Baker Mayfield has likely cost himself a ton of money this year with his play and he’s not been in our lineups at all. That trend should continue this week as Baker is the QB26 on the year and he’s 25th in points per dropback, 23rd in attempts, 24th in yards, and has thrown just 11 touchdowns. It’s almost like Odell Beckham was not the reason this passing game wasn’t doing anything of note. Baker is facing the 27th ranked DVOA against the pass and Baltimore is now down even more corners, but I will not be playing him this week. 

RB – If fading Nick Chubb is what beats me this week, then so be it because I’m not paying the salary for him. I’m not sure exactly what the plan was from Cleveland as they gave him just eight attempts in a game that was never that far out of hand. With his limited passing role (5.6% target share), it can be hard to go after Chubb when he’s pricey against what has statistically been a good run defense. They rank sixth in yards per attempt and the Ravens have only given up the fifth-fewest rushing yards to backs this season. Chubb is not a player that I’m going to be playing much, if at all this week. 

WR – The loss of Humphrey does raise my interest in the Cleveland receivers to some extent. First, Jarvis Landry had a big game the first time around with 6/111 and he’s getting healthier by all appearances. The past two games have seen him be targeted 18 times, which is more in line with what we all thought when Beckham left. He’s very cheap on DraftKings and nine targets per game would be great. He’s likely to face some of Jimmy Smith because Humphrey was still playing in the slot at 31.4%. That’s a big boost for Landry. 

Donovan Peoples-Jones is the GPP target with the field-stretcher role has he ranks second in yards per reception at 18.9 and second in yards per target at 12.1. It, of course, is fair to say that he’s only seen 28 targets so some of that is a big grain of salt, but the role is important and it only takes one. He also benefits from no Humphrey as Tavon Young has allowed a 64.5% catch rate. I wouldn’t play him in SE, but if you need a cheap receiver he’s at least on the board. 

TE – The Browns will need to give us clarity on David Njoku sometime this week as he’s on the Covid list. He’s not been ruled out yet but with Harrison Bryant already doubtful, Austin Hooper could be the last man standing at the position. Njoku has an 11.7% target share on the season while Hooper is at 13.1% so if Njoku can’t go, Hooper should see eight targets or maybe more. That’s not an automatic bet for production but the Browns use the tight end so much it’s hard to leave him behind at this salary. 

Update – Hooper is indeed the lone tight end left but don’t forget, that helps Landry as well.

D/ST – The Browns totally confused Lamar and the Ravens offense a couple of weeks ago but I don’t feel great about it happening again. The good news for them is no quarterback has been sacked more than Jackson this year and Cleveland has 31. They are also 12th in points per game allowed and 16th in DVOA, so they aren’t a poor unit. I would rather play Baltimore but can’t say Cleveland is totally out of line. 

Cash – Landry, Hooper

GPP – Chubb, Peoples-Jones

Giants at Chargers, O/U of 43 (Chargers -9.5)

Giants

QB – Jake Fromm could be the last man standing in the quarterback room for the Giants and I’m not sure that I can build the case for him. He’s yet to take a snap in the NFL and was a fifth-round pick in the 2020 NFL Draft. He is under $4,000 but nothing about this Giants offense would suggest that he’s in a smash spot. They are only 28th in points scored this year and Fromm would really be relying on his teammates for some production. This is a risk not worth taking in my eyes in a very flawed offense. 

Update – Now Mike Glennon is in line to start but that changes nothing. The only difference is we have a track record of Glennon being horrible. 

RB – This is the ultimate test of matchup vs. terrible offense. We have Saquon Barkley at just $6,000 on DraftKings against one of the worst run defenses in the league. Normally this would be a smash spot but all that got smashed last week were my Joe Mixon lineups. The Chargers are still 28th in yards per attempt allowed and 31st in rushing yards allowed to backs. Barkley has yet to really flash since returning from injury and will likely be dealing with the third-string quarterback. Where that may help is the passing game as Barkley saw nine targets last week so I will have interest, we’ll see if it has to be GPP-only. 

Update – I’m even more interested Saquon now that Glennon fed him nine targets last week

WR – The receiver room can’t catch a break as Kadarius Toney left Thursday with another injury. Kenny Golladay and Sterling Shepard are both questionable while Darius Slayton is about the only one left healthy. For me, I’d just be hoping Shepard could make it back and be full-go because if not, I’d likely steer clear. Corners Chris Harris and Asante Samuel Jr. are both questionable for this game and that plays a big part. Really, this situation is the same as it has been for weeks. We need the Friday update (for both sides) before we can do much with it. 

Update – Golladay and Shepard remain questionable but I would steer clear. The Chargers have two of their starting corners active and you absolutely cannot trust Glennon here. If anyone, Slayton could be the man to target as he’s the healthiest but I will get my Giants exposure from Saquon.

TE – I can’t bring myself to play Evan Engram for about any reason at this point. He only has a 15.2% target share and that’s been with receiver missing from the Giants lineup and he’s 17th in receptions and 23rd in yards. Of course, he missed games, and that matters but we’re looking at an average of 3.5 receptions and 33.4 yards per game. That’s not going to cut it for fantasy. 

D/ST – The Giants are 13th in total DVOA and 18th in points per game given up but I’m not convinced this is the spot for them. The Chargers have only allowed the 26th ranked pressure rate and 19 sacks, which doesn’t bode well for a team that has just the fifth-most sacks on the season. New York has forced 19 takeaways so there is some small potential but it’s not a path for me. 

Cash – Saquon

GPP – Shepard, Slayton in MME only

Chargers 

QB – It could be a very interesting spot for Justin Herbert. He deserves to be pricey and I still have no real hesitation in playing him, but he could be down his top two receivers. Both Mike Williams and Keenan Allen are in Covid protocols so they could be inactive this week. The Giants defense is somehow eighth in DVOA but is over 3,000 yards given up and tied for the sixth-most touchdowns allowed. Herbert is fourth in yards, third in attempts, fifth in red-zone attempts, and eighth in points per dropback. I think the missing receivers might take a bit of the ceiling off but he could still very easily hit 3x at the salary. 

RB – We could wind up seeing heavy Austin Ekeler chalk this week simply by default. The field generally likes to pay up for safe running backs and Ekeler is about as safe as they come. He scored 19 DraftKings points last week even with two fumbles and Ekeler is only two receptions behind the league lead. That is on top of ranking 14th in carries and being tied for fourth in red zone attempts on the season. The Giants are bottom 10 in receptions allowed, receiving yards allowed, and rushing yards allowed. Not only is Ekeler probably going to be chalk, but he is also likely strong chalk. 

WR – Talk about needing a Friday update. Both Keenan Allen and Mike Williams are in Covid protocols but they are NOT ruled out as of Thursday. They can both clear protocols with negative tests and be active on Sunday. If they do not, we are looking at very cheap and very popular players in both Jalen Guyton and Josh Palmer. I’ve seen much of the fantasy world flock to Guyton and I don’t think that’s wrong, per se. He’s the more recognized name and leads in snaps and targets by a good distance between the two. However, since the bye week (always a key point for rookies), Palmer has 11 targets and Guyton has 14. The gap has closed. If Williams and Allen are both out, you can stack Guyton and Palmer together for just $7,400 and I would be happy to do so. 

Update – Allen is out but Williams is in, and is very cheap to be the number one option. The expectation is Palmer rolls into the slot since 37.9% of his snaps already came in the slot. At the minimum, that is extremely hard to ignore and the Giants are without Adoree’ Jackson who is one of their starting corners. In years past, James Bradberry was a problem. He should in theory be better suited against the bigger (and slightly slower) Williams but he’s allowed 1.95 fantasy points per target.

TE – The duo of Jared Cook and Donald Parham are still splitting the targets lately and they saw four targets each last week. That also continues to cap the upside and makes it harder to want to play either of them. If anyone, it’s still Cook as he has a small edge in red-zone targets at 7-5. The Giants have only given up four touchdowns on the season and neither one is a priority on this slate. 

D/ST – The Chargers are pretty much out of my pool due to salary and the weirdness of last week’s score. They were gifted a defensive touchdown and an interception that should have been a touchdown for the Bengals. They’re just 27th in points allowed per game and 19th in total DVOA. The matchup is spectacular against whoever the Giants trot out at quarterback but the salary is hard to swallow for a unit that is not elite by any measure. 

Cash – Ekeler, Herbet, Williams

GPP – Palmer, Guyton, Cook, Parham

Lions at Broncos, O/U of 42.5 (Broncos -10)

Lions

Update – The Lions are now without Jamaal Williams, D’Andre Swift, and T.J. Hockenson. Run from this game.

QB – I’ll tip my hat to Jared Goff for hitting 21 DraftKings points last week (I think I may have been able to complete the game-winner but he still did it). That doesn’t mean I want to get too involved this week on the road in Denver. He’s still just 20th in yards, 31st in true completion rate, and 34th in points per dropback. With Denver ranking 16th in DVOA and 15th in yards per attempt, Goff doesn’t look like that strong of a play. It’s just easy to get to some of the higher ceiling players for a few hundred more dollars. 

RB – The Jamaal Williams show did not go well last week, as he generated just nine DraftKings points on 18 touches. It was very surprising to see him only be targeted one time and that hurt the floor. D’Andre Swift could be out again this week but the is up in the air early on. Denver has been strong against the run as they are in the top half of the league in rushing yards allowed to backs but 20th in yards per attempt. We’ll need clarity before we make a move on this backfield this week. 

WR – The Lions claim we’re going to see “more deep passing” in these last few games. Sure, sounds like a plan to hold those plays back until Week 14. Anyways, Amon-Ra St. Brown and Josh Reynolds have seized the passing game as far as receivers go since Reynolds got there in Week 11. In those three games, Reynolds has a 17.4% target share and a whopping 42.2% air yards share, but it’s St. Brown who leads the entire team in targets at 20. 

Now, some of that is skewed by 12 last week but he’s playing more consistent snaps as well. St. Brown has the eighth-highest slot rate in football at 68.6% and would see Kyle Fuller. He’s only allowed a 55.3% catch rate but he’s also let up 14.6 yards per reception, so St. Brown is on the table even though he feels pricey. Reynolds would see more of Patrick Surtain, who continues to be mostly excellent. Teams try to pick on him at 69 targets but his catch rate allowed is just 46.4%. I’d still rather play Reynolds given the salaries involved. 

TE – It’s a weird game for a night end that sees eight targets, finds the paint, and still scores under 15 DraftKings points. That’s been the story with T.J. Hockenson virtually all season as the upside has been very limited with no scores over 18 DraftKings points since Week 2. He still ranks in the top 10 in receptions and yards but there still hasn’t been much luck scoring with just four touchdowns. On the road in Denver isn’t going to be the easiest spot and much like Pitts, I’m not going out of my way to play him. 

D/ST – I’m not that happy to punt with the Lions on the road even though Denver is just average. Detroit is 28th in total DVOA and points per game allowed, not to mention just 19 sacks which are the second-fewest in the league. Denver has allowed the second-highest pressure rate so there is a path to success, but not a strong one. 

Cash – None

GPP – Reynolds, St. Brown 

Broncos

QB – The Lions are pretty much a dream matchup but playing Teddy Bridgewater is so hard to get behind. The talent around him is not an issue and he’s still just 16th in yards, yards per attempt, and just 21st in points per dropback. Teddy Two Gloves is also only 23rd in points per game and just 14th in touchdowns, so past the matchup, it’s difficult to see the tangible upside. We know the Lions can’t defend the pass well with the 12th most yards allowed and sitting 28th in DVOA against the pass. Still, Bridgewater doesn’t scream out to be rostered this week. It could very easily just be a run-heavy attack. 

RB – One player who did take advantage of his chance to shine was Javonte Williams. The entire fantasy community has been clamoring since the preseason and if Melvin Gordon misses again, he will be the most rostered player on the slate. Williams is only $5,900 and would face the Detroit defense that ranks 29th in rushing yards allowed, 14th in yards per attempt, and in DVOA. Much like Detroit, the status of this backfield is a huge piece of the slate. 

Update – The belief is that Gordon will play, which saps all the upside away from this spot.

WR – I simply don’t know what to do with these receivers anymore. Jerry Jeudy and Courtland Sutton are both very talented guys but the production hasn’t been there. We can go round and round about if it’s quarterback-related or whatever but they feel expensive. We say Justin Jefferson scorch this Lions secondary and that would generally lead me to Sutton. He’s still fourth in air yards share at 37.5% and third in unrealized air yards while facing Amani Oruwariye who has allowed a 15.2 YPR. Jeudy faces off against Jerry Jacobs in the slot and he’s allowed 1.67 fantasy points per target to this point. It’s a question of QB play and how much Denver needs to pass here. 

TE – It’s a shame that Noah Fant has been a total non-factor this year and even though he is seventh in receptions, he’s 14th in yards and 12th in points per game. He’s only found the paint three times despite having 13 red-zone targets which really caps any upside. The target share is just 18.5% and he’s not even averaging 10 fantasy points per game. Bridgewater can’t support multiple receivers and a tight end on top of it, so Fant is left wanting more often than not. 

D/ST – Just like the Chargers, Denver is out of play for me mostly due to salary. Only the Patriots and Bills allow fewer points but Denver is just 20th in total DVOA, which is surprising. Goff has been sacked the fifth-most in football with the 10th highest pressure rate. There is potential there to be sure but the salary is high. 

Cash – None  

GPP – Williams, Sutton, Jeudy, D/ST, Fant, Gordon

49ers at Bengals, O/U of 49 (49ers -2)

49ers

QB – The weaker options continue with Jimmy Garoppolo and even last week in a script that should have served him well, he managed 18 DraftKings points. He was lucky to get so many yards because George Kittle was a YAC MONSTER in last week’s game. He’s only 19th in yards and down in the 20’s in both attempts and red zone attempts. The points per dropback show some efficiency a the 11th most but the volume doesn’t follow. Perhaps if they have no running back options I’ll be a little more inclined o go here but I don’t think that’s likely. 

RB – The 49ers could be in a tough spot. Elijah Mitchell is in concussion protocol, as is Trenton Cannon. Jeff Wilson is “banged up” and Trey Sermon is on IR. Kyle Shanahan has said they will be holding tryouts to start the week because as of right now, JaMychal Hasty is the lone man standing if no other back could play. The Bengals are 11th in yards per attempt and in the top-five in rushing yards to backs allowed, but we need to know who’s even going to be active here. 

Update – It’s the Hasty and Wilson show and let me perfectly clear – Jeff Wilson is a cash only option. Read up on why in Stix’s GPP article as to why, but I couldn’t be more in line that IF I play Wilson, it’s simply to match the field in cash and for NO other reason.

WR – The correct answer to which wide receiver to play without Deebo Samuel active was “none” as every receiver disappointed last week. I’m not sure who needs to hear this, but Trent Sherfield does not need five targets while Brandon Aiyuk gets six. If Deebo is out again, this would be mostly an avoid for me. Sherfield is the minimum on DraftKings but man that is dicey. He lead in snaps while Aiyuk played 93% so the playing time was great but Kittle did so much. Even if Deebo is back, Aiyuk should see most of Eli Apple and that is a boost for Apple. He’s been vulnerable to the big play with 13.6 YPR allowed and 1.56 fantasy points per target. We’ll see if Samuel is active before making a move here. 

TE – After George Kittle broke the slate last week, his price is justifiably high. It was nice to see Kittle back to a vintage performance of 9/181/2 and he would have that upside again if Samuel is out. On the season, he has a 25.7% target share which leads the position, and is top 10 in receptions and yards. Kittle also leads in yards run per route and when he’s fully healthy like he is right now, he can break any slate and the matchup doesn’t matter. I’m not sure I’ll pay this if Samuel is active but we’ll see how the week unfolds. Cincinnati is also 18th in DVOA and their offense could force Jimmy G into a big game but things really have to align here. 

D/ST – San Francisco is generally fine and they have a good matchup as far as sack potential. Cincinnati has allowed the second-most sacks in the league and a pressure rate over 25%. The 49ers are 20th in points allowed but ninth in total DVOA. They have 28 sacks on the season and the price is solid, if not anything crazy great. 

Cash – Kittle, Wilson, Aiyuk is Deebo is out

GPP – Hasty, Deebo is still questionable

Bengals 

QB – Joe Burrow says he’s going to play with a finger injury on his throwing hand. It didn’t seem to have any ill effects on him last game so I’m not overly concerned with that aspect. San Francisco isn’t the most intimidating defense either as they rank 17th in DVOA against the pass but ninth in yards per attempt allowed. For Burrow, he’s played well when he’s avoided mistakes. He’s ninth in yards and third in yards per attempt despite big just 17th in attempts. He’s also 12th in both points per game and points per drop back and his salary doesn’t make a ton of sense to me. He’s very affordable and even though he’s just 23rd in red zone attempts, I’m very intrigued. 

RB – Joe Mixon let me down last week but that’s sometimes going to happen in football. The game script got out of hand, then the Bengals came back only to see Mixon commit a backbreaking fumble. He still touched the ball 19 times and with Burrow’s hand issue, he could be in for a heavy workload. Mixon is now second in the NFL in carries and he’s 14 carries behind the lead in one fewer game. San Francisco is only 21st in yards per attempt allowed so this could be a worse spot for Mixon and you know the volume will be there. I wouldn’t be shocked if he’s not that popular this week. 

Update- Mixon has not practiced all week but is expected to be available. If he’s not, Samaje Perine would be in for a lot of touches as Chris Evans is out.

WR – Tee Higgins and Ja’Marr Chase have reversed roles the past couple of weeks as Higgins has been going crazy and Chase has been quiet. He’s had some drop issues the past 2-3 games and one killed the Bengals last week as he batted the ball directly to a Charger instead of scoring a touchdown. 49ers corner Emmanuel Moseley has been ruled out and that’s a big deal. 

Both Josh Norman and Dontae Jackson have allowed at least 1.88 fantasy points per target so the matchups for both players are fantastic. Higgins now has the lead in target share at 25.5% (Chase is at 24.2%) and the air yards share red-zone targets, and the end zone targets are all right about the same for both. Now may be the time to leverage the field chasing the big games from Higgins to play Chase in GPP. Tyler Boyd is a clear third wheel at a 19.4% target share but the salary is affordable. K’Waun Williams mans the slot at 82.7% of the time for the 49ers and he’s only been targeted 35 targets but has allowed a 77.1% catch rate. 

TE – C.J. Uzomah continues to not be DFS relevant in this offense with just a 10.8% target share and only three red-zone targets on the season. 

D/ST – I want to see if Deebo is back before deciding. In fairness, the Bengals do have a top 10 pressure rate and 36 sacks to go along with ranking 15th in total DVOA. They are also 12th in points allowed with 17 turnovers forced, so if Deebo is out there is some big potential. If he plays, I’m likely out. 

Cash – Mixon, Higgins

GPP – Chase, Burrow, Boyd 

Bills at Buccaneers, O/U of 53.5 (Buccaneers -3.5)

Bills

QB – Josh Allen shouldn’t be facing the same elements this week and that should help make a huge difference. He’s sixth in attempts, seventh in yards, third in red zone attempts, and first in air yards on the season. Ranking fourth in points per dropback and points per game is a nice notch in the belt and he’ll likely have to have a big game. Tampa is ninth in DVOA against the pass and is getting healthier but I don’t think Buffalo even pretends to run the ball. Even with some inefficiency, Allen is still going to have a huge amount of volume this week and I’m totally fine playing him anywhere. 

RB – Tampa is still one of the best run defenses in football and Buffalo can’t decide which running back they like on any given week. Devin Singletary and Zack Moss split carries last week with Matt Breida being out of the rotation. This is a game where I would highly doubt the Bills even pretend to run the ball so I’m not interested in any back. Since Breida has been more of a player in the offense, Singletary leads with 35 carries in four games. That is not enough to target and Breida and Moss are tied at 18 carries each. 

WR – We mostly have to throw out the last game for the Buffalo receivers due to the weather conditions. Stefon Diggs is still the main man in the Buffalo passing game and he’s 10th in both receptions and yards while sitting 15th in yard per route and third in red-zone targets. Carlton Davis has been active for just five games (only three with a snap rate over 81%) and he’s been targeted 35 targets. The passer rating allowed is 117.8 and it’s a massive 16.8 YPR so I have zero fear with Diggs and think he could go absolutely nuts. 

Cole Beasley continues to be in the slot about 82% of the time but he may only see 4-5 targets, just like Emmanuel Sanders. Sean Murphy-Bunting mans the slot somewhat for the Bucs and he’s been out for some games as well. Across his 24 targets, he’s only allowed 11.1 YPR and a 58.3% catch rate. Sanders could see Jamel Dean and he’s been tough across the 41 targets with a 43.9% catch rate and 8.7 YPR. All in all, Diggs is of course the best play but I would rather play Beasley over Sanders. I think the matchup is better and if Sanders struggles to get separation, Beasley could be a big factor. 

TE – My goodness did Dawson Knox have a tough game on Monday. He dropped multiple passes that could have altered the outcome of that game and I’m betting he’s coming at the bit to get back at it this week. Tampa has allowed the third-most receptions and 10th most yards to the position and Buffalo can be a tough offense to cover. Knox leads the position in touchdowns and he’s fourth in deep targets so I don’t mind him but he does feel a little pricey. I’d likely reserve him as a stacking option for Allen rather than a one-off. 

D/ST – The Bills defense has been getting smoked lately and just hasn’t been playing well. That’s not what we want to see heading into Tampa. The seasonal stats still look great as they’re first in total DVOA and points given up but the eye test lately says differently. The Bucs don’t give up sacks (31st) and the pressure rate is just 10.6%. I’ll pass even at the depressed salary. 

Cash – Allen, Diggs

GPP – Beasley, Knox, Sanders 

Buccaneers

QB – He’s not facing the Atlanta defense this week but Tom Brady is more than in play. He’s one of the largest exceptions to the rule of wanting some rushing upside with a quarterback this expensive. Brady can throw for four touchdowns in any given game and he leads in attempts, red zone attempts, yards, and touchdowns. Even though Buffalo is first in DVOA against the pass, Brady has shredded just about any defense he’s ever faced. This game has far and away the largest total on the slate and both quarterbacks stand out. 

RB – It’s still unbelievable to see Leonard Fournette leading the league in receptions among running backs. Buffalo still has a strong run defense on the season but they have been gouged lately and Fournette seems almost guaranteed 18+ touches every single week. He’s also second in red zone carries on the season and just has every facet we value with high-priced running backs. Perhaps the seasonal numbers scare people off Fournette but he could be a very contrarian play. 

WR – Antonio Brown isn’t going to be back for another few weeks and that means we can continue to go after Mike Evans and Chris Godwin. For once, I may actually prefer Evans. I know, big difference, right? No Tre White will prove to be a big deal sooner or later and it might be this week. Evans is cheaper and still saw 10 targets last week and he’s seen 26 targets in the past three games with Gronk active. That’s tied for the second-most and he’ll see Levi Wallace for some of the snaps. Wallace has been targeted just 47 times and allows an 84.5 passer rating but he’s considerably smaller. I don’t know if I can see him winning a lot of jump balls, to say the least. It would be a surprise if Tampa didn’t try to align Evans away from Wallace now as well. 

Godwin went full Wolverine Berserker last week for 33.2 DraftKings points and while he’s in the slot 56.8% of the time, he’ll see Taron Johnson. Godwin is first in routes, fifth in receptions, and seventh in yards and Johnson has only allowed a 46.3% catch rate. I still favor Godwin in the matchup but think it’s time to get after Evans in what we hope is a shootout. 

TE – Rob Gronkowski has turned back the clock the past three weeks and with at least four receptions, 58 yards, and/or a touchdown in every game. I’m looking for that streak to continue since AB is still missing from the offense and even though the matchup is tough on paper, that doesn’t exactly matter with the Bucs offense. Gronk has rolled up 25 targets in the past three weeks and he leads the team in receiving yards and touchdowns. That’s about all we need to know with him. 

D/ST – Now that the Bills are out of terrible elements, I’ll pass here as well. Allen has only been sacked 19 times and the Bucs are tied for the fourth-most sacks on the season. Still, this is not a good matchup and there are better paths to take. 

Cash – Brady, Godwin, Gronk

GPP – Evans, Fournette

Cash Core

Saquon Barkley, Austin Ekeler, Josh Jacobs, Taysom Hill

GPP Core

CeeDee Lamb, Josh Palmer, Travis Kelce, Mike Evans

It can be done and I am making an exception. If you’d like to play a second punt-style play with Palmer this week, I would sign off on that.Palmer is not the typical punt with the role open in the Chargers offense.

Stacks

Bills/Bucs – Anyone in these passing games are playable, and Fournette would be the only back that I would play.

Raiders/Chiefs – Mahomes, Kelce, Hill, CEH – Run Backs – Jacobs, Renfrow, Carr

Cowboys/Washington – Dak, Lamb, Cooper, Schultz, Gallup – Run Backs – McLaurin, Gibson, Seals-Jones, Heinicke

Giants/Chargers – Herbert, Ekeler, Palmer, Williams, Guyton – Run Backs – Saquon

Thank you for reading my NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 14 and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life! Be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Models and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport.

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To quote the great Michael Rasile, “It’s a great day to be alive!” and it’s a great day to get ready for the Week 13 NFL DFS GPP slate! For those who haven’t read it yet, please check out the Week 13 Cash Game Checkdown for your bankroll sustaining, cash game build advice before building your NFL DFS GPP lineups.

*PLEASE note, the players in the Cash Game Checkdown are in play for GPP’s as well. They are high-floor and usually, high-ceiling players we always want to play. This article is simply to provide a different perspective on some ways you can make your GPP lineup different.

In addition, I would strongly advise giving my NFL DFS Strategy article I published this offseason before diving into the 2021 NFL DFS season. If you have any questions or would like some further help when building your lineups, please do not hesitate to reach out to me directly on Twitter.

For those looking to get different and make a splash in some GPPs, the time is now. We’ll usually be taking some heavy stances on lower-ownership players, but at times, there is certainly good “chalk” to eat.

Games I’m most interested in getting exposure to:

LAC/CIN
WAS/LV
SF/SEA
IND/HOU

TB/ATL

NFL DFS GPP Quarterbacks

Justin Herbert ($6,700 DK / $8,200 FD) / Joe Burrow ($6,300 DK / $7,400 FD)

Despite any ownership projection, I’ll be heavily interested in both signal callers Justin Herbert and Joe Burrow in a game with a 50.5 point total which is tied for the highest on the slate (TB/ATL). If I had to choose one, it would likely be Herbert as the passing volume for the Chargers is second to only Tom Brady and the Bucs, but the AETY Model loves the expected pace on both sides of this game and the condensed target shares by both teams for stacking purposes.

On DraftKings, these guys are way too cheap for the expected outputs on both sides, but Burrow’s ownership is projected to be under 5% in comparison to Justin Herbert around 12-15%.

LAC Key Pairing(s) / Run-backs: Keenan Allen, Mike Williams, Austin Ekeler
CIN Key Pairing(s)/ Run-backs: Ja’Maar Chase, Joe Mixon, Tee Higgins

Taylor Heinicke ($5,600 DK / $7,100 FD)

The second game of my GPP interest this weekend will be in Las Vegas featuring two of the weaker defenses in the NFL. The Washington Football Team grades 31st in overall defense DVOA while the hosting Las Vegas Raiders grade 24th. Assuming these two teams play to their true colors and bleed offensive production from the jump, this game should offer a ton of condensed, fantasy upside. Heinicke also offers a little upside with his rushing ability, leaving him as one of my favorite NFL DFS GPP quarterbacks at sub-5% ownership and perfect leverage (or additional pairing) to Antonio Gibson chalk.

Key Pairing(s): Terry McLaurin, Antonio Gibson. Logan Thomas
Key Run-back(s): Hunter Renfrow, Foster Moreau

Tyrod Taylor ($5,300 DK / $7,000 FD)

One thing I love the most is praying on the recency bias of DFS players. Last week, everyone wanted to take the savings and eat the Tyrod Taylor chalk in a home game against the Jets. Wouldn’t you know, Tyrod Taylor let them down. This week, Tyrod is my 1% owned NFL DFS GPP punt-play of the week at the quarterback position in a gamescript that actually promotes a healthy passing narrative for Tyrod Taylor as a 10-point underdog to Jonathan Taylor and company. Why people chased the Tyrod love last week against the Jets is beyond me, but if you like Tyrod, this would be the game to play him against a Colts’ pass-funnel defense where he’ll be chasing points early.

He’s still Tyrod Taylor and it’s still the Texans, they can always sh** the bed. Proceed with caution.

Key Pairing(s): Brandin Cooks, Nico Collins
Key Run-back(s): Jonathan Taylor, Michael Pittman Jr.

Honorable Mention: Russell Wilson, Kirk Cousins, Tom Brady, Matthew Stafford

NFL DFS GPP Running Backs

I’m pretty much locked into Jonathan Taylor and the value chalk running backs of Elijah Mitchell and Antonio Gibson. I will have to get different elsewhere in my lineups as you’ll read in this article. Outside of those three, here’s who will be core players in my NFL DFS GPP player pool…

Joe Mixon ($8,100 DK / $9,400 FD)

Joe Mixon around 10% ownership in one of my favorite games on the slate to attack? Yes, please. We don’t need to go into more detail on Chargers’ 32nd ranked run defense (DVOA).

Saquon Barkley ($6,300 DK / $7,200 FD)

Saquon Barkley is still Saquon Barkley but priced like Josh Jacobs and James Robinson, lol. Barkley does not have a ton of “Vegas love” with rushing props in the mid-50’s, but the upside with Barkley is that he can always break one off and fill up the box score with his pass catching abilities, especially against a Miami defense that runs a lot of Cover-Zero.

Honorable Mention: Miles Sanders, Alexander Mattison, Austin Ekeler, James Conner

NFL DFS GPP Wide Receivers

Justin Jefferson ($8,200 DK / $8,000 FD)

Criminal price on FanDuel, but always in play with the volume on DraftKings. The AETY Model has Jefferson as the true WR2 on this slate, right behind Cooper Kupp. This secondary for Detroit is borderline practice-squad and will not be able to contain the pristine route running of Jefferson.

Terry McLaurin ($7,500 DK / $7,200 FD)

The player with the highest upside in one of my favorite games to get exposure to at under 5% ownership. We always pick on the Raiders’ secondary that grades 25th in pass defense DVOA. If this games shoots out like the AETY Model projects it will, Terry McLaurin will be in an excellent spot for a ceiling game of 7+ receptions, 100+ yards and 22+ fantasy points.

Ja’Maar Chase ($7,000 DK / $7,500 FD)

No Asante Samuel Jr. and a relatively banged up Chargers’ secondary as a whole… Ja’Maar is due for another blow-up game and as long as this one goes up-paced, Chase is in line for a monster output in addition to all of the key players on this Bengals’ offense.

Nico Collins ($3,100 DK / $5,200 FD)

Alright, it’s time… the Nico Collins breakout game is upon us! For those of you that have been with Win Daily for a while (we greatly appreciate you), you know how much I love the upside of Nico Collins. I don’t expect 15+ points, but at damn-near site minimums and no Danny Amendola, we should finally see a 70% or greater snap share for Collins in a gamescript that should heavily lean towards Texans’ pass-catchers. We always pick on Rock Ya-Sin and Xavier Rhodes, so let’s give the rookie a shot here in lineups we need salary relief.

Honorable Mention: DK Metcalf, Cooper Kupp, Mike Williams, Keenan Allen, Mike Evans, Tee Higgins, Hunter Renfrow, Brandon Aiyuk, Elijah Moore, Van Jefferson, Josh Reynolds

NFL DFS GPP Tight-Ends

As mentioned in the Cash Game Checkdown,

This week is rather simple for me at tight-end. You’re either punting down to Foster Moreau with Darren Waller out with injury, or riding one of the higher priced tight-ends of:

– Logan Thomas
– Rob Gronkowski
– Mark Andrews

– George Kittle: absolutely love him as a run-back to low-owned Russel Wilson stacks and leverage off of Eli Mitchell chalk. At 5% ownership, no one has the upside George Kittle has at the tight-end position this weekend.

Honorable Mention: Tyler Higbee, Kyle Pitts

Thank you all for the support and good luck this week! Make sure you follow me on Twitter at @stixpicks and be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Model powered by AETY and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport.

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NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 13

The NFL Week 13 has kicked off with a pretty boring Thursday night game (thanks for the garbage 20 fantasy points for the staff league Taysom Hill) but we have 11 games this week. One aspect that stands out is just how many running backs are in unreal spots and I want to play all of them. Let’s talk about everything in the NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 13 and find our paths to green screens!

Colts at Texans, O/U of 45 (Colts -9.5)

Colts 

QB – I have to give Carson Wentz a lot of credit as he played well last week, totaling 26 DraftKings points and throwing for three touchdowns. He’s been a value at points and I’m also surprised to see him throw just five interceptions so far. It feels like a lot more but the ones he has thrown have been pretty rough to some extent. Still, Wentz is 12th in yards, eighth in attempts, 10th in touchdowns, and 15th in points per game. The latter number lines up more with 19th in points per drop back but the matchup is great. Houston is sixth in DVOA against the pass but they are 24thin yards per attempt allowed and the 17:14 TD: INT ratio is saving them. Wentz isn’t a high priority but I wouldn’t fight you over it. You just have to hope they don’t bulldoze the defense with the next player on the list. 

RB – It’s going to be difficult to not just lock in Jonathan Taylor and move on. He’s a phenomenal play and I’m not going to be surprised if he goes for 30 DraftKings points or more. He’s now second in the NFL in carries and has an 11.1% target share, which is more than enough. He produced 19.7 DraftKings points in a terrible spot and generate 97 scrimmage yards on 20 touches with a score. Houston is only 15 yards behind the Chargers for the league lead in rushing yards given up to running backs so far. They also rank 24th in yards per rush allowed and 25th in DVOA against the run. All of that adds up to Taylor having the ability to go Hulk Smash on this entire slate. 

WR – In past years, this was a well-known T.Y. Hilton spot. He used to constantly go scorched Earth on them and in 19 games, he had 101 receptions, 1,798 yards, and 11 touchdowns. Hilton did see five targets last week but he’s had a tough time making an impact this year so I would maybe throw him into a lineup in 20-max but nothing else. 

Michael Pittman is the headliner and he let a lot of the field down last week in cash games. Still, Pittman is 15th in receptions, 13th in yards, seventh in routes, 12th in targets, and 16th in touchdowns. He should face off against Terrance Mitchell for most of the game and Mitchell has allowed a 114.1 passer rating and 13.4-yards per reception. I’m likely to stick to the run game or the next player on the list, but Pittman is always a fine target under $6,000. 

TE – Jack Doyle was a monster for Win Daily (and the Colts but whatever) last week and we can go right back. DraftKings was kind enough to not move his salary more than $200. These past three weeks have seen him targeted a lot more, totaling 19 throughout those three games. That’s second on the team and he’s playing a few more snaps per contest, always a desirable trait. Houston has a tough time defending any position but has allowed over 600 yards and six touchdowns to tight ends. He’s a premier punt option for tight end, just don’t expect 20 DraftKings points again. 

D/ST – With the amount that I want to spend on running backs this week, it’s going to be hard to fit the Colts defense. They do lead the NFL in turnovers forced at 27 and they have 25 sacks, so I will not tell you to not play them as they rank 12th in total DVOA. It just becomes an issue of affordability and we’ll see if I can squeeze them in. 

Cash – Taylor, D/ST, Pittman

GPP – Wentz, Doyle, Hilton 

Texans 

QB – I want to play Tyrod Taylor again based on the matchup but I’m not sure I’m willing to take the plunge again. He remains cheap (as he should be) and only managed a meager 158 yards passing against the Jets. Indy is 20th in DVOA against the pass and they are tied for the most touchdown passes given up, but they also have 14 interceptions. He’s still seventh in points per dropback but it’s a little hard to go back to him. Past a 40-yard touchdown, there was just no production to be had. I think he can be MME formats only this week if spending up on the big-name backs. 

RB – Houston just can’t commit to one guy, as both Rex Burkhead and David Johnson saw double-digit carries last week and they both saw three targets. The only slight difference was that Johnson got the two red-zone carries, but that’s not something to be terribly interested in. The matchup is worse this week although Indy is now hovering between 15-20 for yards per game and yards per attempt allowed. Running back is so loaded this week that I can’t imagine wasting a slot on a Texans back. 

WR – I definitely got very excited last week when Brandin Cooks ripped off a 40-yard score last week but he did virtually nothing after that. The salary continues to be extremely affordable and the matchup makes plenty of sense to attack. He’s going to see either Xavier Rhodes or Rock Ya-Sin, both of whom have allowed a passer rating over 122. Cooks is still seeing a top-five share of air yards on the team and he’s 12th in targets. With Danny Amendola out, Nico Collins could take a small step up in the pecking order, and at near minimum, I’ll be interested. The Texans passing game may not be good but they’re likely going to have to throw in this one. 

TE – In MME formats only, I’m interested in Brevin Jordan. The Texans have nothing to play for and the rookie may as well get some experience, and he’s playing close to 60% of the snaps. He’s only been active for four games but has two touchdowns, 12 targets, and has three red-zone targets. The stone minimum salary helps his appeal but this is a highly volatile play with a zero point floor. The good news is the Colts are 31st in receptions and yards allowed against the position with six scores, so the matchup is very intriguing. 

D/ST – The Texans have served us well as a punt but their run defense is so bad that I’m not sure I can sign off on it this week. Carson Wentz has been pressured on 25.8% of his dropbacks this year and sacked 21 times. The most impressive aspect of the Texans defense has been the 20 turnovers forced so they can pay this off, but it is not as likely as it was last week. 

Cash – None

GPP – Cooks, Tyrod, Collins, Brevin 

Giants at Dolphins, O/U of 41 (Dolphins -2.5)

Giants 

QB – Daniel Jones could miss this week and Mike Glennon would start in that scenario. We saw Glennon play in relief earlier this year and he threw two picks, and the Dolphins will bring the blitz relentlessly. There is the theory that if Glennon can fall into 15 DraftKings points at $4,000, he theoretically hits value. While that would be true, the rest of the lineup cannot miss. 15 points from your quarterback just aren’t going to be that big of a help, even though Miami has allowed the most passing yards on the season. They’re only 15th in yards per attempt allowed so even if Jones is out, this isn’t the play for me. 

Update – Jones is out and Glennon is starting

RB – Saquon Barkley can be frustrating to watch because he’s such a home run hitter. What I mean is he will have 8-10 carries that go for two yards or less and then that one big run changes his day. To wit, he had a 32-yard scamper and finished with eight yards on his other 12 carries. 17 touches from Saquon usually adds up to fantasy glory, but not last week. I’ll take another crack at the workload in GPP format, but I’m not sure past that. Miami has tightened up against the run and only have allowed a little over 1,500 scrimmage yards and are up to 11th in yards per game allowed. They still have the third-best DVOA defense against the run on top of things. Saquon is underpriced but is likely not a priority with the position so chock full of strong plays. 

WR – We’ll have to double back here after the Friday injury reports because we simply don’t know who is active. Sterling Shepard and Kadarius Toney are still questionable and could sit. Those players have ripple effects for Kenny Golladay and Darius Slayton to some extent. I want to play the receiver who’s going to be in the slot, which would be Toney or Shepard but we’re in the dark. Let’s see what Friday brings and talk about the matchups then. 

Update – Both Toney and Shepard are doubtful, so it’s not really a spot that I want to attack. Golladay and Slayton will see the combo of Byron Jones and Xavier Howard on the outside. They have had some bumps in the road this year but are playing better and Glennon is the quarterback here, so they are an easy pass.

TE – Evan Engram could not have asked for a better spot last week with who was inactive and matchup. He generated just 6.7 DraftKings points on six targets and he’s just not that great for fantasy. He’s 21st among tight ends in points per game, 19h in receptions, 24th in yards and the receiving corps could be healthier. It’s just not for me this week and I’ll just play Doyle for $200 less. 

D/ST – There are a great many flaws with the Giants team but the defense has actually not been that bad. They are 11th in total DVOA, allow under 23 points per game, have 21 sacks, and 19 turnovers forced. Those aren’t terrible marks and the Dolphins offensive line is suspect (at best). They haven’t allowed a ton of sacks because the ball comes out fast but there are worse plays on the board. 

Cash – None

GPP – D/ST, Saquon

Dolphins 

QB – s gonna hate but Tua Tagovailoa didn’t play poorly last week against a tough defense. The fantasy production wasn’t crazy with just 13 DraftKings points and the Giants are seventh in DVOA against the pass so this isn’t a cakewalk matchup. They have only given up the eighth-lowest yards per attempt and 18 touchdown passes while Tua is eighth in total QBR, fourth in clean completion rate, eighth in pressured completion rate, and 15th in points per dropback. As I’m looking for players that save me some salary to load up at running back, Tua is on the radar. 

RB – The bad news for Myles Gaskin was that he only generated 51 scrimmage yards on 18 touches last week. The good news was if you played him, he found the end zone twice and he continues to get a boatload of touches. I feel like there will be a $6,000 running back that is chalky, so Gaskin at $5,800 could be a very interesting pivot. The Giants are 26th in rushing yards allowed per game, the seventh-most rushing yards to running backs, and 27th in yards per carry. Miles Sanders disappointed us last week but it was a lack of work, not because he wasn’t ripping off 7.1 yards per carry. There’s a reason the Giants are 31st in DVOA against the run. Gaskin getting all the work for Miami makes this play worthwhile in GPP. 

WR – Jaylen Waddle continues to be a monster this year and the receiver to target on the Dolphins He and Tua found their chemistry last week for 9/137/1 and Waddle is starting to flash bigger play ability. In two of the past three games, he has receptions of at least 35 yards and Waddle is fifth in the league in receptions. He’s also first in routes, seventh in targets, ninth in YAC, and 25th in target share. James Bradberry for the Giants has allowed a 114.8 passer rating and 12.1 yards per reception. The salary may seem high but it’s truly not for what Waddle has produced this season and the matchup. 

Update – DeVante Parker has been activated off the IR but Waddle would still be the main focus here for me. However, the field seems to be ready to play him so he may be the key that unlocks the lineup in cash.

TE – It’s been kind of a tough run for Mike Gesicki and his price is still over $5,000, which is an issue. He has 16 targets over the past three weeks but it’s not resulted in much. The good news is he’s still first in slot snaps, fifth in air yards share, fifth in both receptions and yards, and third in unrealized air yards. Despite the meager returns lately, the metrics tell us he can be a top 3-5 tight end on any given week. The Giants have been average defending the position so he’s not a preferred target, but don’t think he has no upside either. 

D/ST – If I can comfortably afford the salary, this might be my favorite defense of the week. Miami is right there with Tampa for the highest blitz rate in the league, something I don’t expect the Giants to handle very well. They are tied for the sixth-most sacks and have 19 turnovers forced and get a very bad backup quarterback. Sometimes plays aren’t that hard. 

Cash – Waddle, D/ST, Parker

GPP – Gesicki, Tua, Gaskin

Vikings at Lions, O/U of 47 (Vikings -7)

Vikings 

QB – When you’re lining up behind the guard to take a snap, I suppose I can’t complain that you score 16.5 DraftKings points like Kirk Cousins did last week. Detroit is 28th in DVOA against the pass at this point and dead last in yards per attempt allowed. Cousins certainly has the weapons to exploit that and he’s seventh in yards, sixth in air yards, fifth in deep attempts and ninth in deep completion rate. He’s even sixth touchdowns so where there is concern that the Vikings can just ground and pound here, Cousins can easily go for 275/2 and his salary is still affordable. 

RB – I have to give DraftKings credit because they priced up Alexander Mattison so he and Dalvin Cook are virtually the same. I would so much rather see this than him sitting at $5,500 and be the stone chalk of the slate that you absolutely have to play. Now, Mattison is still going to be a very strong play on this slate. Detroit is only mid-pack in yards per carry allowed but they have allowed the fifth-most rushing yards to running backs among teams that have 11 games played. Mattison has already faced the Lions because Cook was out and Mattison hung 30 DraftKings points with 32 touches, 153 scrimmage yards, and a score. As I’ve said more than once, this position is loaded but Mattison is among the elite options since he’s going to soak up just about every touch from the backfield.

WR – I tend to doubt that the Lions can keep up here, so the double-stack is not on my radar. I’ll be picking one of Adam Thielen or Justin Jefferson, with a continuing lean on Jefferson. Thielen is incredible at finding the end zone, there is no denying that. He’s the WR7 on the year despite sitting 22nd in yards and 12th in receptions because he’s tied for the lead with 10 touchdowns. Jefferson has found the paint six times and has the third-most yards and seventh-most receptions in football. He got the Lions for 20+ DraftKings points the first time around and hem giving up so many big plays fits well as he’s leading the league in deep looks at 23. Amani Oruwariye will draw the assignment for the most part but he’s given up 14.5 yards per receptions and a 111.9 passer rating. 

TE – Ty Conklin can get lost in the shuffle and only really hits when he finds the end zone. Somehow, he’s ninth in receptions and he’s 12th in yards but he’s only 15th in points per game. The Lions are in the bottom half of the league in yards given up but this is just an average matchup from that perspective. Conklin is 12th in targets and routes run but he almost never finds his way into my builds. 

D/ST – Minnesota is certainly in the pool as well as they sit atop the league in sacks and have a 28% pressure rate, not to mention adding in 13 turnovers. The total DVOA is only 18th but the opposition helps here, as Detroit has allowed 27 sacks, tied for the fifth-most. Fire them up in any format you choose. 

Cash – Mattison, Jefferson, D/ST 

GPP – Cousins, Thielen 

Lions

QB – Jared Goff facing down one of the better pass rushes in football sounds like a really bad idea. Even when he’s completing nearly every pass like last week, it’s not getting him anything with just 13.8 DraftKings points. He’s 28th in pressured completion rate and 31st in deep completion rate, to go along with the 33rd ranked fantasy points per dropback. Like every other week, he’s a pretty easy name to scroll right by. 

RB – On a regular slate, Jamaal Williams might provide some value since it looks like D’Andre Swift will miss this game. Last Thursday saw Swift leave very early and Williams took up 20 touches, five of which were receptions. He is extremely cheap but the ceiling is debatable. He should be safe for 15 DraftKings but I’m not sure that cuts it on this running back slate. Minnesota is ninth in yards given up to running backs with 11 games played and they are tied for the highest yards per attempt allowed. The DVOA of 29th against the run supports that as well. I don’t hate the play but I’m not sure I can throw a player like Elijah Mitchell (more on him later) overboard for Williams. 

WR – It appears that Josh Reynolds went from Tennessee castoff to WR1 for the Lions, although that wasn’t a hard ladder to climb. He played almost 90% of the snaps last week and saw five targets, good for the top mark in both categories for receivers. That resulted in a long touchdown and his salary barely moved. He’s an interesting punt option but the aDOT over 23 yards does say there is a floor here as well. His alignments early would leave him on Bashaud Breeland, who has given up a 62.7% catch rate and 15.0 yards per reception so the salary is right. I’m not really looking towards Kalif Raymond or Amon-Ra St. Brown if they’re going to be 3-4 in the pecking order of the passing game. 

TE – I don’t think I’ve played T.J. Hockenson more than once or twice on main sites this year and that streak likely continues. He just always feels a hair too pricey for what the median outcome is. You can point to his 11.9 points per game and say that’s sixth among tight ends, but that’s not even 3x for his salary. If we’re not hitting 3x for a tight end that’s costing me more than $5,000, that’s a hard sell. Hockenson is third in receptions but just doesn’t appear to be worth the salary, especially since Minnesota has only allowed 37 receptions (second-fewest) and 474 yards to the position along with just one touchdown. 

D/ST – They only have 16 sacks on the year and Cousins just simply doesn’t turn the ball over all that much. Only the Falcons have fewer sacks and the pressure rate isn’t even over 20% and the 13 turnovers forced don’t save them. Ranking 28th in total DVOA isn’t all that appealing either.

Cash – Williams

GPP – Reynolds, Hock

Eagles at Jets, O/U of 44.5 (Eagles -7)

Eagles 

QB – Jalen Hurts gave his critics all sorts of ammo this past week as he fell flat on his face against the Giants, throwing three picks and just generally struggling. His receivers did squat to help him on multiple throws but still, no excuse for much of his play last week. Having said all of that, this Jets pass defense ranks 31st in DVOA and yards allowed per attempt while Hurts still has the highest points per dropback in the NFL. He’s been a top-10 scoring quarterback for nine weeks already this year and we know he can go 4x on this salary. It won’t get easier for the passing game and his legs can carry him to 15-18 points alone on any given week. 

Update – Gardner Minshew is going to start this game while Hurts is out with his injury. At $4,000 against the Jets, I will have some GPP interest. This is a competent player as far as backup quality quarterbacks go and the Jets are beyond awful.

RB – Well, Miles Sanders Week was fun. Regardless of what you think of him as a back, he was ripping off 7.1 yards per attempt and he played all of 32% of the offensive snaps. He left in the second half but that’s not an excuse for so few touches. The salary barely moved and the matchup is phenomenal again against the Jets. They have allowed the third-most rushing yards against running backs, are 30th in DVOA against the run, and are 26th in yards per attempt allowed. If Sanders isn’t able to go, Boston Scott and Jordan Howard could hold some appeal but it’s sort of the same spot as Jamaal Williams. The value is there and GPP exposure makes sense, but it’s hard to swallow a running back committee when we have so many options. 

Update – Howard is out for this game

WR – As much as we can, I love Devonta Smith this week. He gets a very soft matchup and Hurts can’t play much worse. Smith is eighth in air yards share on the season, seventh in deep targets, and fifth in unrealized air yards. Facing the defense that is 31st in yards per attempt is a big deal, and the individual matchup favors Smith as well. Bryce Hall has allowed 12.5 yards per reception and a 62.5% catch rate on 56 targets. The salary likely keeps the field away from Smith but that leaves him as a very fun GPP option. The rest of the corps proved last week why they shouldn’t be rostered. 

TE – This might well be the week for Dallas Goedert. The Jets have one of the word defenses in football and they have struggled against the position, allowing the seventh-most yards. The offense as a whole was hot garbage last week but before that, he had seven, six, and eight targets in the three games he finished. He’s been the number two option in the passing game since the departure of Zach Ertz and the price has really hit about as low as it can go. The lack of red-zone targets has been frustrating with just three but the matchup helps mitigate that this week. 

D/ST – It’s kind of tough to get to the Eagles, although they possess some serious upside. I do like the Colts better, and it’s easier to just spend down with the Dolphins or Vikings (among others). They’re only 21st in DVOA but no team allows pressure like the Jets at over 30% of the time. Philly is under 24% in pressure rate on the season but any defense has a shot here. This is one of the best matchups on the board as the Jets lead the league in turnovers at 24. 

Cash – D/ST if you can afford them 

GPP – Minshew, Smith, Goedert, Sanders

Jets 

QB – Zach Wilson has given zero indication that he’s ready to be an NFL quarterback in his playing time this year. He’s 36th (yes….36 of 32 NFL teams) in points per dropback and 31st in points per game. The completion rate while pressured is 36th and he’s 31st in catchable pass rate. It should come as little surprise he needs time to develop, but he doesn’t need to do it in your lineup. Philly is just 14th in yards per attempt allowed and 23rd in DVOA but I have no interest in Wilson. 

RB – In the first game without Michael Carter, the Jets went with Ol’ Reliable in Tevin Coleman for 18 touches. That only resulted in 70 scrimmage yards but Ty Johnson finished third in touches because Austin Walter came from nowhere and racked up nine carries. The Eagles defense has not been stout against the run as they have allowed the ninth-most rushing yards against backs so far, along with ranking 16th in DVOA. Philly is just sixth in yards per attempt allowed and this offense is barely functional. I don’t want to mess with a poor offense as far as running backs on this slate, so the Jets are out for me. 

WR – It looks like Corey Davis will sit again as he has not practiced as of Thursday, but he didn’t play last week and the duo of Jamison Crowder and Elijah Moore didn’t produce a whole lot. If the alignments held up, Slay would line up on Moore quite a bit and that’s a lot to ask from the rookie receiver. He’s only allowed 1.34 fantasy points per target and an 83.5 passer rating. Crowder would be in the slot as he has a 71.8% slot rate and that leaves him more on Avonte Maddox. He’s only allowing 8.9 yards per reception and this dup still has to rely on Wilson o get him the ball. I wouldn’t go here in anything but MME formats, and even then it’s less than ideal on paper. 

TE – Even with Davis out last week, Ryan Griffin saw just four targets. He’s only 29th in targets among tight ends on top of that. This isn’t worth a play and I would honestly rather just totally punt with Brevin. 

D/ST – The Philly offense has issues to be sure, but the Jets are 32nd in total DVOA, have forced nine turnovers, and allow over 30 points per game. That’s…tough to overcome, even with how poorly Hurts played last week. They do have 25 sacks which are solid and surprisingly, Hurts has been sacked 21 times but I’m not sure I can buy in here. 

Cash – None 

GPP – Moore, Crowder 

Cardinals at Bear, O/U of 43.5 (Cardinals -7.5)

Cardinals 

QB – One of my main fantasy teams is begging Kyler Murray to get back in action and he practiced Wednesday, a great sign. Kyler has missed three games with an ankle injury and I would suspect it was bothering him for a little while. He’s only 14th in rush yards among the position and for the month before he missed, he totaled just 38 yards through four games. That’s way out of line and if he’s back, we should expect him to be 100%. Chicago is only 17th in DVOA against the pass and 20th in yards per attempt allowed. When he left, Kyler was first in yards per attempt, third in points per dropback, and fifth in points per game. If the field is cautious with him, it could be a dynamite GPP play. 

RB – Chase Edmonds is not eligible to come off the IR yet so this will be the James Conner show and he should be way more than $5,900 on DraftKings. When the Cardinals have been in a positive script, Conner has 26 touches in both of those games, and even when they were losing badly, he still had 13. He’s played 80% of the snaps in the past three games and has 10 red zone attempts, which might come down slightly if Murray comes back as expected. Having said that, this is still his backfield. Chicago is just 15th in yards allowed per attempt, 19th in DVOA, and they’ve allowed the 10th most rushing yards to running backs. Conner is vastly underpriced here and is one of the few guys that I can be happy with coming off some of the other backs we’ll talk about. 

WR – It appears that Deandre Hopkins will join Kyler returning to the lineup this week and he’s just $6,200 on DraftKings. That…is crazy to think about, even though he hasn’t had the best season. Even in a down year, he has a 20% target share, and even with missing games, he’s eighth in touchdowns and 17th in red-zone targets. Hopkins probably faces Jaylon Johnson who has been good this season. He’s allowed just a 56.3% catch rate on 48 targets but Hopkins is hard to overlook at this salary. 

If Hopkins is back and not limited, the secondary group of A.J. Green, Christian Kirk, and even Rondale Moore are tougher to figure out. Moore would be the odd man out with an aDOT of 1.7 yards and under 48% of the snaps. Green and Kirk are virtually tied with a 17% target share but Green has the edge in red-zone targets at 11-5. Both of those players have a better matchup as far as cornerbacks go, facing Artie Burns and Xavier Crawford. Both corners have allowed a passer rating of at least 96.5, although in fairness to Crawford he’s only played a handful of snaps. I’d rather play Green with the red zone targets but Hopkins is the player that has the most attention for me. 

TE – I laughed at Zach Ertz last week and he proceeded to score nearly 30 DraftKings points, so I guess the joke’s on me. Having said that, him scoring twice and seeing nine targets was not in line with anything he’s done with Arizona. He does have an 18.2% target share in his time with them but has played with Colt McCoy more than Kyler at this point. I’m not willing to pay this price as the fourth-highest salaried option at the position. 

D/ST – Matt Nagy is still the coach for the Bears so the answer for an opposing defense is yes. The Cardinals have 29 sacks, have a pressure rate of just under 25%, and 19 turnovers forced. That’s plenty to consider this week. 

Cash – Conner, Hopkins (if healthy), D/ST 

GPP – Kyler, Green, Kirk

Bears 

QB – It really feels like the 19 DraftKings points from Andy Dalton last week was the ceiling, didn’t it? Considering it came against Detroit, it’s hard to see it transferring against the Cardinals. They are third in DVOA against the pass, fourth in yards per attempt allowed, and they are tied for the second-fewest touchdown passes allowed. There is no reason to go with Dalton on a much bigger slate than Thanksgiving and I won’t even entertain it. He’s at 0.41 points per dropback and Goff is at 0.34. 

RB – After seeing David Montgomery flop so badly last week against the Lions, I’d be surprised if he was very popular. Frankly, I’m not sure I can build the case for him. This is a team that saw fit to let Dalton throw 39 times last week while Monty had 17 carries (the three receptions helped a bit). The Cardinals are a much tougher defense having allowed just 1,0008 rushing yards through 11 games even though they are 30th in yards per attempt allowed. The issue would be if Chicago can’t slow down the Arizona offense. That’s the big reason Arizona has only faced the sixth-fewest attempts on the year even though they are just 15th in DVOA. Banking on Chicago to keep up with Arizona feels like a bad bet and Monty is fine, but nothing that’s a priority.

WR – It looks like Darnell Mooney could be the only receiver to consider as Allen Robinson and Marquise Goodwin are both questionable. Mooney has enjoyed two straight strong performances but the matchup is going to be difficult this week. Cardinals corner Byron Murphy has been one of the best statistical corners in football this season with just a 56% catch rate and a 93.7 passer rating. In the past two weeks, Mooney has a 39.7% air yards share and 34.3% of the target share so the metrics are there. The matchup is not but the volume could be really interesting. 

Update – Goodwin is out so Mooney is going to be one of the only games in town. The matchup is still iffy but the volume should be immense.

TE – Arizona has been elite against the position this year, allowing just one score, the fourth-fewest yards, and just 40 receptions. That doesn’t speak well for Cole Kmet but it was very noticeable that he saw 11 targets last game. Aside from Week 11, he’s been seeing more work with 31 targets in those other four games. That’s equated to a 21% target share and he’s playing 86% of the snaps. I’m sort of interested if the Arizona offense is healthy since the volume is there, but that would be about it. 

D/ST – If Kyler and Nuk are both back as expected, not a chance. 

Cash – None

GPP – Mooney, Kmet, Byrd

Chargers at Bengals, O/U of 50.5 (Bengals -3)

Chargers 

QB – The divide between real-life performance and fantasy performance was on display for Justin Herbert last week as he played poorly for the Chargers with a couple of turnovers (including a back-breaking interception) but he still scored 24 DraftKings points. He’s really only had three duds so far this year and the Bengals don’t represent an easy matchup. They are 19th in DVOA against the pass but are 16th in yards per attempt and the key is the 14:10 TD: INT ratio. Herbert is ninth in points per dropback, sixth in red zone attempts, third in points per game, and fifth in touchdowns. Lastly, he ranks fifth in passing yards so he has the tools to walk in and post strong numbers and could turn into an intriguing GPP option. 

RB – Austin Ekeler just continues to prove that he is one of the most game-script-proof backs in the game, scoring 21.9 DraftKings points last week even in a poor offensive effort from the Chargers. Now, 21.9 isn’t great at $8,300 but it’s not going to kill you either. He’s in the top 20 in carries and he’s third in targets among backs, only four away from the lead for the position. The targets are really fascinating because Cincinnati has allowed the most receptions to backs on the season along with the fourth-most yards. The Bengals have only allowed the fifth-fewest rushing yards with the ninth-best DVOA against the run, so it’s a mixed bag. The receptions really keep him on my board. I think he’ll be GPP only but we know the ceiling is wildly high considering Ekeler has the most red-zone targets among backs and is top-five in carries. 

WR – Anytime Keenan Allen checks in under $8,000 on DraftKings, he’s hard to ignore. He runs from the slot 53.6% of the time which is seventh in the league and he’s third in receptions, seventh in yards, sixth in red-zone targets, and third in targets. He should face Mike Hilton out of the slot and Hilton has had a strong year by some metrics but he’s also given up a 75% catch rate across 48 targets. That’s a massive number and with a player like Allen, he can make this salary work without finding the end zone. I am very interested in Allen in any format. 

For Mike Williams, he’s one horrific blow coverage from Pittsburgh away from having six straight games under double-digit DraftKings points. That starts to get hard to justify every week but he has the talent to blow up any slate at the same time. He is still top 20 in receptions, yards, targets, and touchdowns so there’s plenty there to like. The potential matchup against Eli Apple would be super appealing as well since he’s allowed 1.65 points per target. Allen would be the priority but Williams is very much in play for GPP formats. 

TE – This continues to be a pretty gross split between Jared Cook and Donald Parham and is honestly better left alone. They shared six targets this week and Cook had five with a trip to the end zone, but that’s kind of all you can hope for. Parham appeared to be closing the gap in recent weeks but he’s not overtaken the veteran just yet. The Bengals are about average in receptions, yards, and touchdowns allowed so these two are very average targets. 

D/ST – For a defense that has playmakers like Joey Bosa and Derwin James, this defense has been very average. They are 23rd in DVOA, are tied for the fifth-fewest sacks, and have just 12 turnovers forced. The only reason to keep them in mind is the Bengals are bottom-five in sacks allowed, but an East Coast trip is not ideal and I like a lot of defenses better. 

Cash – Ekeler, Herbet, Allen

GPP – Williams, possibly D/ST as we may have some weather issues 

Bengals 

QB – The Chargers might be 11th in DVOA against the pass and yards per attempt allowed, but this is a game environment that could lead Joe Burrow to big numbers. Last week he just never needed to really cut loose and he threw under 30 times. The Chargers can score unlike the Pittsburgh offense so the upside is theoretically higher. He’s third in yards per attempt in the season, seventh in red-zone completion, 11th points per dropback, and 12th in points per game. He just needs the right script to throw the ball 35 times or more and this could be it. 

RB – I want so much Joe Mixon this week and one of my biggest regrets from Week 12 was not having nearly enough of him. It was a great spot last week and it’s just as good for this week. The Chargers are 29th in yards per attempt allowed and no team has allowed more rushing yards to running backs, along with a dead-last ranking in DVOA against the run. Mixon has been a total workhorse this year and is only 11 carries behind Derrick Henry for the league lead. Mixon has an 8.9% target share so it’s not the largest part of his game but he may not need it this week. Mixon is on a four-game streak of scoring 25 DraftKings points or more and he’s in line for another big game on Sunday. 

WR – Maybe Tee Higgins heard me say he hadn’t shown any upside because he went out and scored twice for 26 DraftKings points. What has been notable has been Ja’Marr Chase really slowing down with no games above 13.1 DraftKings points over the past four games. It hasn’t been for lack of targets aside from last week either with 31 in four games. Chase still leads in target share at 26.5% and he’s sixth in yards. Higgins and Chase face the duo of Asante Samuel Jr. and Michael Davis, both of whom have been solid. Davis is only at 1.46 fantasy points per target while Samuel has been worse at 1.97, so if Chase sees fellow rookie Samuel, the big plays could come back. He can’t stay down for too long with the amount of volume he’s getting. Tyler Boyd will face Chris Harris in the slot and Boyd is under 18% for the target share so far. Harris has allowed a 118.6 passer rating and the secondary as a whole has played a little worse lately. If the weather cooperates, the Cincy passing game could be really fascinating. 

Update – Samuel is out and that bumps up the Bengals receiving group

TE – A wild dart throw could be C.J. Uzomah, strictly on the matchup. The Chargers are tied for the most touchdowns allowed to tight ends at 10 this year, along with the 10th most yards. Uzomah only has a 10.3% target share and is 30th in targets, so this is not a safe play by any means. He’s had a couple of weeks where the touchdowns have flowed his way and he has five on the year. Nobody will roster him and if he catches 2-3 passes and scores, you can be fine with the salary. 

D/ST – It may not be super advisable, but the Chargers are such a tough team to peg down that if the bad version shows up the Bengals unit can go off here. They were a buzzsaw last week and have 28 sacks along with ranking 16th in total DVOA. The issues come from Herbert has only been sacked 21 times and this offense is wildly talented, they just lack any kind of consistency. 

Cash – Mixon, Higgins

GPP – Burrow, Chase, Boyd, D/ST 

Buccaneers at Falcons, O/U of 51 (Bucs -10.5)

Buccaneers 

QB – Wow did Tom Brady leave a lot of people who played him in the lurch last week. It’s mildly interesting to note that he’s had drastic home/road splits this year, throwing 20 touchdowns at home compared to 10 on the road and his points per game at home is 30.3. On the road, it drops to 20 but the Falcons defense is not good and it’s hard to see them defending Brady with much success. They are 29th in DVOA against the pass and Brady is still first in attempts, red zone attempts, touchdowns, and he’s fourth in points per game. I’m not sweating the splits or the poor score from last week. 

RB – Leonard Fournette ruined a lot of lineups Sunday because almost everyone played the Bucs passing game and not Fournette. All he did was score four times and go for 47.1 DraftKings points while rolling up 131 scrimmage yards. I’m not exactly thrilled with the salary here because it’s over $7,300 and that’s an awful lot. The matchup is still great though as the Falcons are 16th in yards per attempt, 23rd in DVOA, and they’re 13th in rushing yards surrendered to backs along with the 10th most receptions. Fournette continues to stack up receptions and he has a 13.6% target share and he’s tied for third in receptions among backs. That makes his salary more palatable even if he may not be one of my favorites. 

WR – With the suspension of Antonio Brown, it becomes easier to figure out the receiver plays between Mike Evans and Chris Godwin. Granted, we said that last week but we ran into the Fournette buzzsaw. Since the last game AB has played, Godwin leads in targets at 42 and has a 21.7% target share. Evans leads in air yards share at 27.4% and the red zone work is a virtual tie. Evans draws a statistically difficult matchup with A.J. Terrell but we know what the upside is with Brady throwing him the ball. Terrell is giving up over 30 pounds and four inches which could come in handy in the red zone. Godwin gets a rotation in the slot because they don’t have a set corner. I’ll give Godwin the slight edge but both are strong plays in a game the Bucs should roll. 

TE – Gronk Smash! It was a big game again for Rob Gronkowski and my only hesitation this week would be if Brown makes it back. He hit 22 DraftKings points but that was with both Evans and Godwin doing virtually nothing. Gronk has seen 18 targets in the past two weeks. He takes a serious bump with no Brown and he’s one of my favorite plays of the position. 

D/ST – If we’re spending up, they could be the odd man out. Sure, they scored 19 DraftKings points in the first meeting but they scored twice as well, a feat not likely to happen again. It’s not to say the Bucs aren’t good as they have 27 sacks, the highest blitz rate in the league, and have forced 23 turnovers. They are sixth in total DVOA but the Falcons are only 16th in sacks allowed. The Bucs are always a strong play, I just prefer other options. 

Cash – Brady, Godwin, Gronk, Fournette

GPP – Evans, D/ST

Falcons

QB – I sort of want to talk about Matt Ryan as a cheap option but his scores without his top receiver have been ugly. In five games, he has 8, 31, 2, 4, and 11 DraftKings points. Of course, this is not the only reason and it’s not throwing shade at Calvin Ridley who showed courage by being open with his mental health. It’s just not easy to look past the connection at this point. The other aspect is the Buccaneers secondary is starting to get healthy for the first time all year. Ryan is 29th in points per dropback but that could be mitigated by volume because Atlanta won’t be able to run on them. He’s not particularly on my radar this week.

RB – I can’t do it here with Cordarrelle Patterson because he’s now expensive and Tampa is still one of the best run defenses in football. They’re fourth in yards per attempt allowed and no team has allowed fewer rushing yards than they have. Teams don’t even really try to run on Tampa since they have faced the least amount of attempts so far this year and boast the sixth-best DVOA against the run. Patterson could get some work down in the passing game because the Bucs have allowed the third-most receptions against backs. That’s fine and maybe he can score 12-15 DK on receiving alone but I’m not paying the salary to find out. 

WR – There is nobody here that is interesting. Russell Gage is the closest and he’s seen 15 targets in the past two weeks but he’s facing some of Sean Murphy-Bunting. He’s only played a few games due to injury but the Bucs secondary has played all of a few snaps together. Murphy-Bunting has allowed a 52.6% catch rate across just 19 targets and Gage is a little pricey. Olamide Zaccheaus only has a 12.6% target share since Ridley has been out so there just isn’t much here to hang on to. If you want a run back, it’s the next man for me. 

TE – I keep going to bat for Kyle Pitts and guess what? I’m going to do it again this week. This is the same defense that got burned by Jack Doyle last week and tight ends have been an issue all year. The Bucs have allowed the third-most receptions and the eighth-most yards against the position this season and Pitts has so much potential. He did get them for 12.3 DraftKings points in his second game and still has the third-most yards, seventh-most receptions, the highest air yards share, the third-most deep targets, and he’s ninth in points per game with just one score. The price is under $6,000 and I’m in. 

D/ST – Brady has been a little iffy in some spots lately but the Falcons have the fewest sacks in football. No way am I going against Tampa with that aspect. 

Cash – None

GPP – Pitts, Patterson, Ryan

Washington at Raiders, O/U of 49 (Raiders -1.5)

Washington 

QB – Taylor Heinicke is in the player pool for lineups that I’ll be spending on backs, and he’s average but capable of 18-20 DraftKings points. He’s 16th in attempts, 15th in yards, 13th in touchdowns, and 14th points per game. Vegas helps some of his deficiencies since they are 25th in DVOA against the pass and have given up 20 touchdown passes against four interceptions. I’m not saying Heinicke is dropping 25 DraftKings points but it’s not too hard to see this one shooting out a bit and him falling into 20-22 points with a bit of luck. 

RB – J.D. McKissic was carted off with a neck injury Monday night and his status is up in the air. That opened up Antonio Gibson to have thirty-six touches, which is astronomical. Even if he gets 18-20, the bargain is there to be had. Vegas is only 17th in DVOA against the run and they are 13th in rushing yards allowed to backs. If McKissic is out, Gibson is far too cheap and even if he’s in, Washington has committed to Gibson a bit more out of the bye week. In the past three weeks, Gibson leads the NFL in carries and he’s only $5,700 against an average rush defense. 

Update – McKissic is out for this game and Gibson is just massively too cheap

WR – With Curtis Samuel still not being productive at all, Terry McLaurin is still the only player to target in the corps. He’s had a string of some tougher matchups lately and some shaky quality of passes, but he’s still 14th in yards, second in unrealized air yards, second in deep targets, first in air yards share, and ninth in targets. He’s an elite receiver and when he has a better quarterback, things could get really fun. For this week, Casey Hayward awaits on the other side and he’s been excellent. Hayward has only been targeted 30 times and he’s allowed just a 73.2 passer rating and 1.17 fantasy points per target. Even in a tough matchup, the targets are going to come for McLaurin so the GPP play is on the board. 

TE – The fantasy production may not have been much, but it was a very encouraging return to the lineup for Logan Thomas. He should have scored a touchdown last week but he also played almost 80% of the snaps and was the second-most targeted player in the offense with six. With the Raiders giving up the fourth-most yards and receptions with eight touchdowns, Thomas makes a lot of sense at $4,000 if you’re in that price range. He’s a player that was playing almost every snap when he was healthy and could see even more this week. 

D/ST – They were solid on Monday night but overall it’s still been a rough year for them. They only have 12 turnovers forced and the 22 sacks are fine, but nothing great. Ranking 31st in total DVOA is a concern and their pass defense has been super vulnerable. It’s not likely where I’m headed as the Raiders have only turned the ball over 12 times. Vegas has allowed 25 sacks but that’s not a deal-breaker for me. 

Cash – Gibson, Thomas

GPP – McLaurin, Heinicke

Raiders 

QB – I thought the Washington defense might get exploited last week by Seattle but that didn’t happen. They still have the 30th ranked DVOA against the run, 28th yards per attempt allowed, and are tied for the most touchdown passes allowed at 26. Derek Carr might be missing playmakers around him but he’s still playing well, having the fourth-most attempts, seventh-most red zone attempts, third-most air yards, and leading the league in passing yards. He’s not inside the top 10 in touchdowns (11th) and that’s what is keeping him at 13th in points per game. Carr is still super affordable and I’ll be very interested. 

RB – We talked last week about Josh Jacobs having a bit of a safer floor in the receiving game lately and sure enough, he saw another four targets even in a game that the Raiders led most of the way. He also had a heartbreaking drop that would have gone for a whole bunch of yards and maybe even a long score. He could be a direct pivot of Mitchell, and he has a chance to flat outscore him. Washington has been a strong run defense so far this year with the seventh-ranked DVOA but Vegas will give him carries as long as it’s close and the red zone work is his. In just nine games, he has 21 carries and I’ll be interested in GPP. 

WR – Hunter Renfrow will get some attention this week after he went off on Thanksgiving. He turned nine targets into 8/134 and in PPR, that’s a big day. He should be able to stay in the slot around his normal 64.3% of the time and Renfrow would face off against Kendall Fuller at some points. Fuller is only in the slot about 30% but he’s allowed a 66.1% catch rate wherever he’s been lining up. Renfrow is a fin cash play, but I’m not sure how much ceiling we’ll see two weeks in a row. 

One of my favorite cheap receivers this week is the cagey veteran DeSean Jackson. His snaps are coming up and he’s seeing more targets, including the four official ones last week and the multiple interference calls he drew. Carr has a comfort level developing with Jackson and it’s very clear the role he’s playing. He has an aDOT over 18 yards and he is the deep ball receiver in this offense. His salary demands just one play and the Washington defense has given up plenty of those plays this year. 

TE – Darren Waller is already doubtful for this game so we’re not really looking at him. Foster Moreau played 88% of the snaps last Thursday when Waller was hurt, and that should happen again. He also saw five targets so this could be a source of value, although the trust factor is not really there. When you see five targets, I’m hopeful you can generate more than one catch for three yards but that’s what Moreau did last year. I understand the appeal as a punt but don’t consider him any kind of cheat code for cash or anything like that. However, the field disagrees and I’ll happily play him. I’m just not expecting a whole lot, but would that won’t stop me in cash. 

D/ST – Vegas creates just enough havoc they’re playable. Heinicke has been sacked the 12th most and the team has 16 turnovers on the season, in the bottom half of the league. The Raiders are only 24th in total DVOA but they do have a 25.2% pressure rate and 25 sacks. It’s just enough as a cheap flier, but nothing special. 

Cash – Moreau, Renfrow, Carr

GPP – D-Jax, Jacobs, D/ST 

Jaguars at Rams, O/U of 48 (Rams -12.5)

Jaguars 

QB – Trevor Lawrence got there last week and that’s awesome but on the road against this defense is a bit of a tough sell. He is eighth in attempts and I don’t think the volume will be in question, but he’s also 34th in true completion rate and 22nd in yards. That’s equated to 31st in points per dropback and Lawrence has yet to break into double-digits in touchdowns. I can’t see much of a reason to test that against the defense that ranks 12th in DVOA against the run and yards allowed per attempt. 

RB – James Robinson almost always seems fairly priced, if not a little under but I’ll pass on him this week. The matchup is tough as the Rams have allowed the 11th fewest rushing yards and the third-lowest yards per attempt. They also are backed by the eighth-best DVOA against the run. Robinson has a 9.9% target share which is decent, but not enough to survive on if this game gets out of hand. The Rams have struggled lately but this is a get-right spot against the lowly Jaguars. There are enough alternatives that I’m not really looking at Robinson too much. 

WR – Am I allowed to say gross and move on? Seriously, who do we want to play here? Marvin Jones has hit double-digit DraftKings points once since Week 4 and is 25th in targets with a target share under 20%. The Jaguars said last week that Laviska Shenault might get some touches out of the backfield and he saw exactly zero carries. Rams corner Jalen Ramsey moves around so the matchups won’t be consistent but with a 39.1% slot rate, he can line up on anyone. Knowing that makes it even harder to love these guys and I think we have better routes to take. Even in negative game scripts, the production isn’t following. 

TE – One of the reasons I don’t really want Moreau if he’s chalky is because James O’Shaughnessy is back for the Jaguars and Dan Arnold is expected to be out for multiple weeks. O’Shaughnessy saw five targets and he was being used in this offense in the one full game he saw in Week 1. The Jaguars have proved they will utilize the tight end Arnold had a 15% target share. For near the minimum, I’ll take that chance and the Rams have given up the sixth-most receptions against the position along with over 600 yards. 

D/ST – They are under 20 sacks, 30th in total DVOA, and have a grand total of six turnovers forced. The Jets are the only other team to be in single digits, so there is no appeal even with the issues the Rams have had. 

Cash – None

GPP – None for me, maybe Jones or Shenault 

Rams 

QB – The stats say that Matthew Stafford bounced back a little bit but the completion rate last week was still just 55%. He hasn’t looked like himself for more than a month and is reportedly all sorts of injured, which is a concern. Still, he is third in yards, second in air yards, second in red-zone attempts, and seventh in attempts overall. Jacksonville has fallen to dead last in DVOA against the pass so I have no issues if you play him, but I may just play a receiver and get exposure that way rather than play him ahead of Kyler or another option we’ll get to shortly. 

RB – It looks like Darrell Henderson will be alright for this game but we’ll need to monitor things as he has a quad injury. Jacksonville has faced the 10th most attempts so far but has only allowed the 14th fewest yards, a compliment to their run defense. They rank eighth in yards allowed per attempt and 21st in yards allowed per game, just because of the volume. This could be another spot where the back sees a lot of work and when he’s been healthy, Henderson has been the horse. He had 20 touches this past week and with news that Stafford is basically a walking band-aid, they may lean on the backfield a little heavier this week. 

WR – The Rams played three receivers on almost every snap last week and the trio of Cooper Kupp, Odell Beckham, and Van Jefferson saw 29 targets in total. Jefferson played the deep three with an aDOT of 18.2 while OBJ and Kupp were right about 12 yards. The group of Tyson Campbell, Shaquill Griffin, and slot corner Nevin Lawson don’t scare you at all. Of that trio, Griffin is the best with 1.44 fantasy points per target given up and he should draw Beckham the most. We all know what Kupp is capable of and even though he had a down game last week, he’s $9,000 against one of the worst pass defenses in the league. With how poor the Rams have been playing, I’m not sure they’ll call off the dogs if they get up big. 

Update – Griffin is out which makes this matchup even easier for the receiving corps.

TE – I’m going to be tempted by Tyler Higbee under $4,000 but he really hasn’t been worth playing. He leads the position in the snap rate but things go south after that with ranking 12th in receptions and 20th in yards. The 18th ranked points per game is putrid and the main reason I’m still relatively interested is he leads tight ends in red-zone targets with 16. He’s now at a salary where one score practically gets him there for 3x. Jacksonville certainly doesn’t scare you as a defensive unit but this would be MME only for me. 

D/ST – It would be an upset if the Rams defense didn’t have a strong game here as they are ninth in total DVOA, have 30 sacks, and 15 turnovers. The Jags have only allowed 20 sacks which is a little surprising but it comes down to I can’t prioritize spending $4,000 just on defense. 

Cash – Kupp, Henderson

GPP – Stafford, Jefferson, Beckham, D/ST 

Ravens at Steelers, O/U of 44 (Ravens -4)

Ravens 

QB – Lamar Jackson was awful for most of Sunday’s game against the Browns but even at his worst, he made some throws that most humans simply can’t replicate. Pittsburgh is down to 26th in DVOA against the pass and is likely going to miss their best defensive player on top of it, only adding to the ceiling for Jackson. He’s fifth in points per dropback, second in points per game, sixth in deep attempts, and leads the league in rushing yards among the position. Jackson always has one of the highest ceilings on the sales and he’s drawing the Steelers at about the best possible time for him and the Ravens. 

RB – It’s a bit too bold to say that Latavius Murray has been replaced, but he’s certainly in the passenger seat as Devonta Freeman has taken the reins in the Baltimore backfield. He’s played 53% of the snaps but has the lead in attempts at 32-18, red zone attempts at 3-2, and targets at 7-2. That’s a sizable lead and we’ve seen the Steelers defense gets destroyed by the opponent’s run games lately. One as accomplished as Baltimore is going to shred them even further and they’re tied for the most yards per attempt given up and are sitting at 5.7 yards per rush over the past three weeks along with 24th in DVOA against the run. Freeman at $5,500 definitely has my attention and I’ll be very interested to see how the field treats him. 

WR – I’m not sure how much the Ravens will need to throw, but playing Marquise Brown is awfully attractive. This defense has been gashed by everything lately and is still without important pieces on the defense. Brown is 15th in yards, eighth in air yards, second in deep targets, and fourth in unrealized air yards. Even if Joe Haden winds up on him, that’s not something that totally worries me. Haden has allowed a 106.4 passer rating and can be had with speed receivers. That’s if Haden can even play. Rashod Bateman is third on the team in targets since his debut and he’ll certainly get a cake matchup against literally any other corner because this secondary consists of Cameron Sutton, James Pierre, and possibly Justin Layne. Yikes. We’ll see what the injury report looks like but it’s not going to be pretty for Pittsburgh. 

TE – With Waller not looking likely to play, Mark Andrews is going to be the highest salaried tight end and he could smash this salary. The Steelers defense has only given up two scores and 533 yards against the position, but they’ve faced only two good ones and Hockenson saw one target in an ugly game. Andrews is fifth in aDOT, first in deep targets, first in air yards share, and second in yards and receptions. He’s scored five times and he’s second in points per game. The Pittsburgh linebackers have a major weakness in any kind of coverage and Andrews could have a monster game here. 

D/ST – Baltimore is right there among the elite options this week for me. They are third in blitz rate and have a pressure rate over 27% with 25 sacks on the year. What is crazy is they have only forced 10 turnovers but that could all change this week. Pittsburgh only seems to be going backward on offense and this matchup should have the Ravens licking their chops. I don’t believe their metrics do them justice in this spot. 

Cash – Lamar, Andrews, D/ST 

GPP – Freeman, Bateman

Steelers 

QB – Ben Roethlisberger is $5,000 flat on DraftKings and I’m not interested at all. He’s just not played well this year and the blitz-happy Baltimore defense could really derail this Pittsburgh offense. He’s 17th in yards, 29th in yards per attempt, 27th in clean completion rate, 32nd in points per dropback, and 26th in points per game. The Ravens are just 18th in DVOA against the pass but their injuries have been numerous and there is still floor involved in Big Ben’s salary even at $5,000. 

RB – After seeing that Baltimore defense wreck the Cleveland offense on Sunday night, I have to admit to some reservations with Najee Harris. I don’t see how the Pittsburgh offensive line is going to get anything going against the Ravens and this game might get out of hand quickly. We saw last week that Harris does have a floor with just 6.7 DraftKings points and I wouldn’t be terribly surprised to see that again. They’ve given up the fourth-fewest rushing yards to backs and are ninth in yards per attempt allowed with the fifth-best DVOA against the run on top of it. I firmly believe the Ravens totally sell out against the run and force Big Ben to beat their corners, which is likely not going to happen. Harris is one of the rare backs I’m not looking at this week. 

WR – If you want to play Diontae Johnson, be my guest. His volume is absurd and he has the sixth-most targets, fourth-highest target share, and the sixth-most receptions. He is safe but the salary demands some sort of ceiling and I’m not sure he has it. Well, this offense doesn’t have it. Facing Marlon Humphrey isn’t going to help either. He’s been targeted 72 times and the catch rate allowed is just 45.8% with 1.55 fantasy points per target. Having said that, he should still see 10+ targets yet again. I’ll continue to leave Chase Claypool alone as I doubt the offensive line leaves the offense enough time to get anything accomplished with his deep threat ability. He needs to be under $6,000 to consider heavily right now with the limitations around him and his own. Corner Anthony Averett has only allowed a 53.4% catch rate on top of everything else.

TE – DraftKings has not adjusted the salary on Pat Freiermuth yet at just $4,200. He continues to be a major part of the Pittsburgh passing game and they’re going to have to pass a lot this week. Since Week 6, Johnson is the only player that has more targets than the 40 Freiermuth has, and in that span, he has 13 red-zone targets. Cooper Kupp has 13 of those targets, and that’s it. That’s the list of players that have that amount of red-zone targets that the rookie tight end has for the Steelers. I’m not really looking at the production Baltimore has given up because they have faced so many good ones, but the salary is incredible value again. 

D/ST – They can’t stop anything right now, especially the run game. They’re down to 27th in total DVOA and likely could be without T.J. Watt who is on the Covid list. Even if he’s active, this is a serious mismatch. 

Update – Watt is active but Haden is not and Cam Heyward missed Friday with an illness. He’s expected to play but may not be full go.

Cash – Johnson, Freiermuth

GPP – Harris, Claypool

49ers at Seahawks, O/U of 46.5 (49ers -3.5)

49ers 

QB – I’m not likely to get on board with Jimmy Garoppolo since he’s down his best receiving option on the season. Seattle is 22nd in DVOA against the pass and 19th in yards allowed per attempt. It’s a solid matchup and Jimmy G is just 23rd in touchdowns and 23rd in pass yards. The volume isn’t always there for him at 25th in attempts and there’s a big split in yards per attempt and air yards per attempt. Garoppolo is second in yards per attempt but just 24th in air yards per attempt, which speaks to his weapons doing a lot of work for him. That’s fine, but he’s missing the best one and San Francisco could easily ground and pound in this game. 

RB – Oh boy does Elijah Mitchell seem way too good to be true this week. His last four healthy games have included 18, 18, 27, and 27 carries. Make no mistake, he is the man when he’s active, and now with Deebo Samuel out for a game or two, he’s likely going to be targeted a bit more consistently too. The past two games have been zero and six, so hopefully, San Fran leans towards the six mark. The Seahawks are in an utter tailspin right now and their run defense was shaky as it was. They are 11th in DVOA against the run so far but this team has given up over 1,800 scrimmage yards against the position thus far. 

WR – One of the largest building blocks in cash games this week is Brandon AiyukDeebo Samuel is out (almost surely) and Aiyuk has been playing so much lately that this is the easiest play on the slate. He’s seen 32 targets over the past five games and is playing over 85% of the snaps, and that’s been with Samuel. Considering Samuel is at the top of multiple categories for receivers, there’s a large amount to fill. Aiyuk should be extremely popular and Samuel’s target share is 31.3%. Aiyuk should square off against Sidney Jones who’s given up 1.54 fantasy points per target. Don’t overthink this one and I’m more than fine playing Aiyuk and Mitchell in the same cash game lineup. 

Where things get interesting is Jauan Jennings, who is the de-facto WR2 in the offense now. He only saw three targets last week but almost hauled in two touchdowns and the snaps are certainly there for him, as he’s been playing around 40-45% lately. That has to increase with no Samuel and he’s easily in play for GPP formats. DraftKings barely has him above minimum salary so it would take very little to push a lineup along. 

TE – Is George Kittle a great tight end that likely has more upside now that Samuel is out? Absolutely. Am I more interested in Andrews if paying up? Absolutely, because I think there’s a script where the 49ers just run it down Seattle’s throat. That same script does exist for Baltimore but I feel like Kittle has a lower floor, just like last week. Both offenses have a bunch of different options in the passing game even without Samuel. As it stands, Kittle has the seventh-highest air yards share and he is fourth in yards run per route along with seventh in points per game. All of that should bump up with Samuel out but I just have more belief in a ceiling for Andrews. 

D/ST – The way the Seahawks have been playing lately, San Francisco is in my sights. They are 10th in total DVOA, have 24 sacks and 11 turnovers forced. They haven’t been great but Seattle has been a total train wreck so the salary is totally fine here. 

Cash – Aiyuk, Mitchell, Kittle

GPP – Jennings, D/ST

Seahawks 

QB – I’m not sure what’s going on with Russell Wilson but I’m not sure I want to find out at $6,400. He only passed 200 yards last week on a last-second desperation drive and he’s been mostly putrid in the past three weeks after his return. Perhaps his finger is still bothering him but regardless, the last three have been a total of about 35 DraftKings points. He’s also only thrown two touchdowns compared to two interceptions and the whole offense is wildly off course. The 49ers are 10th in DVOA against the pass and yards per attempt allowed so this isn’t even a great spot for him. 

RB – The 49ers have only allowed the ninth-fewest rush yards and are second in DVOA against the run, which isn’t the best spot for a guy like Alex Collins. Even in a game that saw Seattle down to just Collins and DeeJay Dallas and Collins still couldn’t get much accomplished. Dallas was used in the passing game with five targets (DK Metcalf looked at them and wished he remembered what it was like to get targets) but this situation is a mess. There are zero reasons to go here with the other options we have at hand and I will not be doing it. 

WR – I don’t pretend I’m an NFL coach but someone has to explain to me why a struggling offense targets D.K. Metcalf four times total and zero times in the first half. Metcalf has struggled mightily along with the offense since Wilson came back and has just 70 receiving yards in those three games. I sort of want to keep playing him because nobody will at this point but his salary is still high. Metcalf isn’t even in the top 10 in yards or receptions at this point and Emmanuel Moseley is playing strong at corner for the 49ers. He’s only allowed a 53.5% catch rate but the physical mismatch is immense as Metcalf has him by five inches and 35 pounds. 

Tyler Lockett has been way more productive but he only has 10 targets in the past two weeks combined. Again, Seattle…what is the plan here?? It’s a credit to Lockett he’s turned seven receptions into 211 yards in two weeks but you can’t feel comfortable here. K’Waun Williams should be waiting on the other side for the most part and he’s at least allowed a 76.7% catch rate on 30 targets. Both are in play in GPP because the field should largely ignore them but I’m not sure I’ll go there myself. 

TE – I’m not really buying this little surge from Gerald Everett who has seen 21 targets over the past three games because they have come at the expense of Metcalf. That’s very notable and I may not be a coach in the NFL, but eventually, an offense is going to be better off targeting Metcalf instead of Everett. Before this last trio of games, Everett had not cleared 10 DraftKings points and from Weeks 1-9, he had just an 11.2% target share. 

D/ST – I can’t see any reason to go here. They only have 10 turnovers forced which are tied for the third-fewest and unlike the Ravens, they only have a 21% pressure rate and only 18 sacks. Even with San Fran missing a key offensive player, this is not the path to take. 

Cash – None 

GPP – Lockett, Metcalf, Russ

Cash Core

Antonio Gibson, Sony Michel, Foster Moreau, Cooper Kupp

Sony Michel replaces Jamaal Williams since Darrell Henderson is reportedly out today and I’m siding with Kupp ahead of Taylor and playing Mixon in cash

GPP Core

Joe Mixon, Elijah Mitchell, DeSean Jackson, Miles Sanders/Devonta Freeman

The GPP core group is very, very risky this week so keep that in mind but Jackson is sub-3% and everyone will hate Sanders after last week. Nobody is looking at Freeman but he’s been racking up touches and the Steelers defense is putrid.

Stacks

Washington/Raiders – Carr, D-Jax, Renfrow, Jacobs, Moreau – Run Backs – Gibson, McLaurin, Thomas, Heinicke

Chargers/Bengals – Mixon, Chase, Higgins, Burrow, Boyd – Run Backs – Allen, Ekeler, Herbert, Williams

Bucs/Falcons – Brady, Godwin, Gronk, Evans, Fournette – Run Backs – Pitts, Patterson, Gage

Colts/Texans – Taylor, Pittman, Wentz, Doyle, Hilton – Run Backs – Cooks, Tyrod

Rams – Stafford, Kupp, Jefferson, OBJ, Henderson – Not forcing a run back

49ers/Seahawks – Mitchell, Aiyuk, Kittle, Jennings – Run Backs – Locket, Russ, Metcalf

Thank you for reading my NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 13 and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life! Be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Models and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport.

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To quote the great Michael Rasile, “It’s a great day to be alive!” and it’s a great day to get ready for the Week 11 NFL DFS GPP slate! For those who haven’t read it yet, please check out the Week 12 Cash Game Checkdown for your bankroll sustaining, cash game build advice before building your NFL DFS GPP lineups.

*PLEASE note, the players in the Cash Game Checkdown are in play for GPP’s as well. They are high-floor and usually, high-ceiling players we always want to play. This article is simply to provide a different perspective on some ways you can make your GPP lineup different.

In addition, I would strongly advise giving my NFL DFS Strategy article I published this offseason before diving into the 2021 NFL DFS season. If you have any questions or would like some further help when building your lineups, please do not hesitate to reach out to me directly on Twitter.

For those looking to get different and make a splash in some GPPs, the time is now. We’ll usually be taking some heavy stances on lower-ownership players, but at times, there is certainly good “chalk” to eat.

*We all know where the chalk (Bucs, Chargers, Panthers) is going to be and as stated above, I’m not here to tell you not to play those games in GPP… I love those games as well.

Games I’m most interested in getting exposure to:

TB/IND
MIN/SF
ATL/JAX
GB/LAR
LAC/DEN

NFL DFS GPP Quarterbacks

Trevor Lawrence ($5,400 DK / $6,700 FD)

Alright, we’re on the first damn player in the article and it’s already time to throw-up. There’s multiple paths to failure when rostering a guy like Trevor Lawrence. I know that, you know that, we all know that. My main concern isn’t the Jacksonville offense (which is scary to say), it’s the absolute pathetic effort we’ve seen from Atlanta over the past month. These guys have absolutely no fight in them whatsoever and I’m extremely concerned they do not push the pace and keep Jacksonville’s passing game active. Having said that, this is a matchup of two of the league’s worst defenses, we should see some offense… I hope.

Behind only the New York Jets, Atlanta’s defense gives up the most points to opponent offenses in the NFL and the AETY Model agrees… grading out Jacksonville’s offense as the 5th highest, ceiling-touchdown equity on the slate. It’s gross, but at 1-2% ownership, I’ll take a shot on Trevor Lawrence as big-time leverage off of one of the highest owned running backs on the slate in James Robinson, but mainly for what it allows me to afford with the rest of my build. Let’s get weird!

*At this low of ownership, you do not need to force a pairing or run-back, but with no Jamal Agnew, the target-share is rather condensed (or so I hope) on the Jacksonville side of the ball. With Atlanta as a run-back (again, likely not necessary), you know exactly where the production will likely come from.

Key Pairing(s): Laviska Shenault, Marvin Jones, Dan Arnold, James Robinson
Key Run-back(s): Kyle Pitts

Kirk Cousins ($6,300 DK / $7,500 FD)

Continuing the theme of picking on pass-funnel defenses leads us back to Kirk Cousins, who low-key has been a top-eight fantasy quarterback this year. This Vikings/49ers game has the second highest total on the slate with little-to-no ownership at all and I love the simple “stack-ability” we get with Minnesota. I’ll roll the dice backing Cousins and this Vikings’ offense in NFL DFS GPP builds against the 49ers 22nd ranked pass defense (DVOA).

Key Pairing(s): Justin Jefferson, Adam Thielen, Dalvin Cook, Tyler Conklin
Key Run-back(s): George Kittle, Deebo Samuel, Brandon Aiyuk

Jalen Hurts ($7,300 DK / $8,400 FD)

Jalen Hurts is officially the top-scoring quarterback in fantasy football this season and comes into the week off of a MONSTER fantasy performance in Week 11. His price went significantly up across all NFL DFS outlets, but his ownership did not. I’m seeing Jalen Hurts projected for 5-8% ownership and that is music to my ears as a perfect leverage spot to combat Miles Sanders nut chalk week.

Although the outcome may not be the same, this is the EXACT situation Ghost and I talked about on the livestream last week when we discussed the Packers’ passing attack in NFL DFS GPP builds to leverage ourselves against the AJ Dillon chalk… those lineups absolutely destroyed the DFS community.

Key Pairing(s): Devonta Smith, Dallas Goedert
Key Run-back(s): Evan Engram, Saquon Barkley

Honorable Mention: Matt Stafford, Cam Newton, Tom Brady, Jimmy Garoppolo, Justin Herbert

NFL DFS GPP Running Backs

Dalvin Cook ($8,100 DK / $8,100 FD)

Way too cheap on FanDuel, but still a great, low-owned play on DraftKings. Anytime we can get Dalvin Cook under 8% ownership in a high-total game, we need to seriously consider rostering him. As much as I like Kirk Cousins, I equally like this spot for a dual-threat running back with extreme red-zone equity in Dalvin Cook.

Najee Harris ($8,200 DK / $8,800 FD)

Najee Harris under 10% ownership? What doesn’t this guy do? If the Steelers end up playing from behind, he’s extremely active in the passing game, which bodes well for us on DraftKings. If the Steelers get a lead early and sit on the ball a bit more, Najee Harris will get 20+ carries. If he can get into the box, he can break this slate wide open.

Darrell Henderson Jr. ($5,800 DK / $7,300 FD)

Stupid pricing on DraftKings and likely will not be an under the radar play by any means, but if you need salary relief with 18+ fantasy point upside, look no further than Henderson here against a banged up Packers’ defense that grades 26th against the run (DVOA).

Javonte Williams ($5,200 DK / $5,700 FD)

If you have been with Win Daily for more multiple NFL DFS seasons, you know I always love rookie running backs after a bye-week. Pair that with my love for picking on the NFL’s worst run defense(32nd in run defense DVOA) in the Los Angeles Chargers and you have yourself a 5% owned lottery ticket this weekend… who also is a direct pivot off of Miles Sanders chalk.

Honorable Mention: Christian McCaffrey, Austin Ekeler, James Robinson

NFL DFS GPP Wide Receivers

Justin Jefferson ($8,300 DK / $8,100 FD)

Please see the Week 12 Cash Game Checkdown for more on Justin Jefferson.

DeVonta Smith ($6,400 DK / $6,400 FD)

To add on to the leverage against Miles Sanders, I certainly have to have interest in DeVonta Smith at 3-5% ownership. Incredibly affordable on FanDuel and allows you to get your exposure to TB/IND or whatever game it is you’re interested in the most, but still an excellent NFL DFS GPP play on DraftKings. DeVonta has recorded a ~30% target share over the past few weeks and should have no issue burning James Bradberry on a deep ball or two to smash his value.

Van Jefferson Jr. ($4,900 DK / $5,400 FD)

Van Jefferson is still the big-play, value wide receiver for the Los Angeles Rams, not Odell Beckham Jr. Although we’re very likely to see a much higher snap share for Odell as opposed to what he saw in Week 10 for his debut, Van Jefferson won’t leave the field. If Van Jefferson can get lined up with Green Bay’s Rasul Douglas, Van should be able to put on a show whenever the ball isn’t going to Henderson or Cooper Kupp.

Dez Fitzpatrick ($3,200 DK / $5,000 FD)

The rookie out of Louisville is only in this article as a source of “punt-value” so please temper your expectations and do not pair him with another low-floor, punt play… that is a recipe for disaster. I really love his big body and athleticism, something that Chester Rogers and Nick Westbrook really don’t possess. His route running did get him in a bit of trouble last week causing Tannehill to throw one of his many interceptions but, on the bright side, Fitzpatrick did lead this wide receiver core in snap share. In my opinion, Fitzpatrick is the only thing worth watching on this Tennessee offense right now.

Honorable Mention: Adam Thielen, Michael Pittman Jr., Chris Godwin, Mike Evans, Tee Higgins, Diontae Johnson, Jaylen Waddle, Deebo Samuel

NFL DFS GPP Tight-Ends

This week, I’m just going to list my player pool at the tight-end position with a little summary as to why I’m interested.

  • George Kittle – sub 10% ownership with extreme touchdown equity in a game I think goes well over the total. Also a nice run-back to my Minnesota exposure.
  • Kyle Pitts – arguably the highest upside at the position going up against a horrid Jacksonville defense that grades 30th in DVOA against the tight-ends. Perfect little mini-stack to my Laviska Shenault lineups or Trevor Lawrence builds.
  • Rob Gronkowski – Super popular, but way underpriced. Great way to get cheap exposure to the highest total game on the slate.
  • Evan Engram – Literally everyone is injured for New York’s pass catchers. Easy run-back to Miles Sanders builds or Philly passing game lineups.
  • Jack Doyle – one of my favorite “gross” plays on the slate. Michael Pittman is going to be heavy, heavy chalk and for good reason. A great way to get different is to pivot down to Jack Doyle or add Jack Doyle in with Michael Pittman for a TB/IND game-stack.

Honorable Mention: Dan Arnold, Noah Fant, Mike Gesicki, Tyler Higbee

Thank you all for the support and good luck this week! Make sure you follow me on Twitter at @stixpicks and be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Model powered by AETY and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport.

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NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 12

Hopefully everyone had a great holiday and isn’t too stuffed because we have 10 games coming up on Sunday! There is a lot to get to and it’s a pretty interesting slate with some suspected chalk and some strong pivots away from it. Let’s talk about that and so much more in NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 12 to carve our paths to green screens!

Jets at Texans, O/U of 44.5 (Texans -2.5)

Jets

QB – Zach Wilson is starting and that’s great but it’s not where I’m heading. He has a 4:9 TD:INT ratio on the season and he’s 36th in fantasy points per dropback. He’s also 31st in fantasy points per game and is constantly getting pressured. On top of it, Houston is sixth in DVOA against the pass despite being in the bottom 10 in passing yards given up. Wilson just hasn’t given us much reason to believe in the fantasy production at this juncture and he’s missed a month of action. 

RB – We could theoretically have some value from the Jets backfield because Michael Carter is out for the next couple of weeks. It will be hard to dip this low given some of the other running back plays we have available this week though. Tevin Coleman and Ty Johnson split the snaps at about 33% each last week but Coleman had the advantage in touches at 6-2. That’s the part that’s not super encouraging but the matchup is very strong. Houston has allowed the second-most rushing yards to running backs and they are 23rd in DVOA against the run. We’ll need to monitor the practice reports here to see if there’s someone worth chasing. 

WR – This could be very interesting because Corey Davis could miss this game. That would leave Jamison Crowder and Elijah Moore as the main two targets but I do have to point out that DraftKings was (reasonably) aggressive with Moore’s salary. He’s $5,600 after two massive games in the past three and he’s becoming steadier in his production. Since Week 7 he hasn’t been under 10 DraftKings points and last week finally saw an 80% snap rate and finished ahead of Crowder. Week 7 seems to be a line in the sand after their bye week because since then, Moore leads the team in targets despite playing just 56% of the total snaps. He’s produced with any player at quarterback and we should be interested. Crowder gets a bump with Davis doubtful.

TE – Even after the Jets lost Tyler Kroft to IR, Ryan Griffin managed just four targets. Part of the issue with him is if Mitchell continues to play a full-time role, they have three receivers that are going to demand a ton of targets. You can construct a narrative that says Griffin helps cushion the blow of losing Carter, but he didn’t play much last week. Even at an almost minimum salary, I’m not going here. 

D/ST – The salary isn’t bad but with only eight turnovers forced, it’s a bit of a tough sell. The pressure rate is under 23% so even though they have gotten home 20 times, this isn’t the best spot for them. They’re giving up the most points per game in the league and are dead last in total DVOA. 

Cash – Moore, Crowder

GPP – See Cash

Texans 

QB – Is Tyrod Taylor going to sucker me back in? Perhaps, because the matchup is fantastic again this week. He’s now hit value in three of his four starts this season, including the Cleveland game. Last week saw horrendous weather and he made it work by rushing in two scores and that is always in the back pocket. The Jets have fallen to 32nd in DVOA against the pass and yards allowed per attempt. Taylor is now seventh in fantasy points per dropback, which is definitely a surprise. The efficiency is there for him and the salary is still super low. 

RB – This might officially be the grossest backfield in the league as David Johnson and Rex Burkhead combined for 31 rush attempts last week and they generated 58 yards. FIFTY. EIGHT. YARDS. On 31 attempts. Burkhead took the reigns with 18 carries and it does have to be pointed out that the matchup is great on this side as well. The Jets are 32nd in DVOA against the run and they are just three yards behind Houston for the second-most yards. The biggest difference is they’ve allowed the most rushing touchdowns on the season so this is absolutely a spot to attack. I’m not sure if I can stomach Burkhead in my lineups this week even with the volume more secure after the release of Phillip Lindsay. 

WR – I’m fine giving Brandin Cooks a pass last week in some truly terrible weather and one of the uglier games on that slate. This week is a big bounce-back spot for him though as the Jets get trounced the passing game and his salary came down. He’s still third in air yards share, 10th in receptions, ninth in route percentage, and fifth in target share. Regardless of Bryce Hall, Isaiah Dunn, or Javelin Guidry, there is no corner who we should shy away for Cooks. 

It appears that Hell could draw Nico Collins, the Win Daily darling who is still owed a touchdown after last week. Cooks is trending popular and it could be a big-time pivot, although the ceiling has not flashed quite yet. The target share is just 10.4% but it looks like Hall would see the most of Collins. Hall has allowed 11.8 yards per reception and 1.47 fantasy points per target. 

TE – We’re still seeing too much of a split between Pharaoh Brown and Brevin Jordan to do anything with them. There was some hope that with Jordan Akins inactive, someone would take the lead and Brown did play the most snaps at 84%. That only amounted to four targets so outside of a touchdown, there’s not much to hang on to here with the other passing game options. 

D/ST – We punted a little bit with Houston last week and I’m going right back this week. They are 10th in DVOA and even though they’re 27th in points allowed per game, they create splash plays. The 21 sacks aren’t the best but Wilson has the highest pressure rate in football and they’ve generated 19 turnovers. That’s plenty for this salary and for me, they’re about as easy a play as it gets in this salary range. 

Cash – Cooks, D/ST

GPP – Tyrod (especially with another cheap QB trending towards chalk), Collins, Burkhead, Johnson 

Buccaneers at Colts, O/U of 53.5 (Bucs -3)

Buccaneers

QB – Tom Brady was one play away from throwing for 350 yards and three touchdowns last week, if not for a questionable penalty. Brady is now second in attempts, yards, deep targets, first in red zone attempts, 10th in fantasy points per drop back, and first in touchdowns. You really can’t ask for much else and Indy is 20th in DVOA against the pass and 22nd in yards per attempt given up. Brady is a play in any format imaginable. 

RB – I’m not exactly the largest fan of Leonard Fournette here at the salary. He was under 60% of the snaps on Monday night which is a little surprising to see. He did rack up 16 touches but only 10 rushing attempts and that is notable because he hasn’t been over 11 in the past three weeks. The previous two games were understandable as the Bucs were behind but this past one saw them handle the Giants pretty easily. He is picking up receiving work with 20 targets over these past three games but he’s pushing $7,000. On top of that, Indy has a strong rush defense as the second-ranked DVOA. They have allowed 4.4 yards per carry which is just 18th but it’s not hard to build the script where Brady just throws it another 35+ times. 

WR – Antonio Brown continues to be out so it continues to be easier to stack with Brady through both Mike Evans and Chris Godwin. They are both super appealing and I’ll likely side with Godwin more often than not but I’m not the biggest Evans guy out there, so the bias is noted. Godwin leads the team in targets and red-zone targets, a nice notch in his favor. He also sits fifth in slot rate this year and that puts him on Kenny Moore and that is not someone to worry about with a catch rate over 60% allowed. 

Xavier Rhodes is going to draw the assignment on Evans who has the 10th most deep targets and the seventh-most unrealized air yards in football. Evans also leads in touchdowns so he is never out of play with mutual-score upside and Rhodes is giving up around four inches and 20 pounds. He’s also giving up a 125.3 passer rating and 14.7 yards per reception. We know what to do with this passing attack. 

TE – Rob Gronkowski might be my favorite tight end play on the slate since we are missing some of the elite options this week. He only played 58.9% of the snaps but saw eight targets and appeared to be fully healthy. It was annoying to see Cameron Brate see four red-zone targets but the salary for Gronk does not reflect the floor or the upside. He’s scored four touchdowns in the five games that he’s played and is fourth in yards per route among tight ends. With how much the Bucs are throwing, he’s safe for 6-8 targets every week, even if AB comes back in my opinion. 

D/ST – The Bucs aren’t really going to be in my pool at this salary but that doesn’t mean they aren’t a good defense. They’re top five in pressure rate at 27.4% and Indy has a bottom 10 pressure rate allowed. Tampa is seventh in total DVOA and they have 24 sacks on the year but generally, I won’t pay for defenses. 

Cash – Brady, Godwin, Gronk

GPP – Evans (I can’t blame you for cash), Fournette

Colts 

QB – I’m going to pass on Carson Wentz again, although he could hit 3x. I don’t think he’ll hit a lot more than that so I’ll go elsewhere with Tampa being seventh in DVOA against the pass and yards per attempt allowed. It’s hard to put your finger on what Wentz is doing well on top of that. He’s 10th in attempts but just 13th in yards, 17th in air yards, 19th in fantasy points per drop back, and just 17th in points per game. With the red zone work just sitting at 15th, we have better options on paper. 

RB – We’re sort of at the point where I’m afraid to fade Jonathan Taylor. Surely, he won’t score another five touchdowns but his workload is immense right now and that negates the tougher matchup. He’s second in the league in carries and Taylor is up to an 11.1% target share. The Bucs have allowed the least amount of rushing yards but they’ve also faced the least amount of rushing attempts. They are second in yards per carry allowed and fourth in DVOA but Buffalo was good against the run as well. I’d be surprised if he carries a lot of popularity but I will have exposure in GPP’s without fail this week. 

WR – The presence of T.Y. Hilton has really made it difficult to chase either him or Zach Pascal because the Colts are not a pass-heavy offense. That could change this week since they should need to pass to keep up and Pascal leads the league in slot rate at 64.6%. Ross Cockrell has played slot for the Bucs at an 89.2% rate so far and has allowed a 118 passer rating, but their secondary is getting healthier. It could be more of a mix with Sean Murphy-Bunting back, although he’s only played slot 20% of the time so far. 

The main target here is still Michael Pittman, who should face the most of Jamel Dean. Pittman is 10th in yards despite being just 17th in targets and fifth in routes. Dean missed some time but has only allowed a 43.2% catch rate and 62.9 passer rating. If they elect to move him to Hilton because Dean has 4.3-second 40-yard dash speed, that would be a big boost for Pittman. 

TE – The past couple of weeks would point toward Jack Doyle starting to take the lead in tight end targets with 10 compared to just three for Mo Alie-Cox, although I’m not sure that should mean a whole lot. The Bucs have allowed the fourth-most receptions to tight ends so I guess if you wanted to get gross and punt, you can make the case for Doyle. Still, It’s a very thin play and not one I’m going to actively chase. Indy is still just 22nd in pass attempts per game so his 9.3% target share is less appealing. 

D/ST – This is an easy pass for me despite their strong game in Buffalo last week. The largest weakness is the passing game and that’s the last thing you want when facing Brady and that passing game. They are ninth in DVOA but the 18.4% pressure rate is not ideal even with 23 sacks on the season. 

Cash – Pittman, Taylor (prefer in GPP at this point)

GPP – Pascal, Doyle in MME

Eagles at Giants, O/U of 45 (Eagles -4)

Eagles

QB – Even as they’ve shifted gears to run more, Jalen Hurts is still first in fantasy points per dropback and sixth in points per game. He leads the position in carries, red zone carries, rushing touchdowns, and second in rush yards. That’s more than making up for the fact that he’s 18th in passing yards, 20th in attempts, and just 19th in passing touchdowns. The Giants are 11th in DVOA against the pass but that’s not even much of a concern with hurts because his passing production is almost secondary at this point. He’s always in play when he’s under $8,000 on DraftKings. 

RB – This could be my favorite value play of the position because Miles Sanders came back from IR and handled 16 rushing attempts. Now, you’re not going to love the fact he has very little passing work last week but he does have a 10% target share. That’s passable and his price is just too low. New York is 30th in DVOA against the run, 19th in yards per carry allowed, and seventh-worst rushing yards allowed against running backs. In the last three weeks, no team has had more rush attempts per game than Philly at a massive 42.7 attempts. Sure, Hurts is going to take about 8-10 of those but that’s a lot of meat on the bone for a $5,100 running back. 

WR – With how little the Eagles are passing, Devonta Smith will continue to be the only receiver that is viable for DFS purposes. He is sixth in air yards, 19th in yards, fifth in unrealized air yards, seventh in deep targets, and 14th in snaps. Last season, James Bradberry would have concerned me but he’s fallen off a cliff this year, allowing a 120.6 passer rating, 2.03 fantasy points per target, and 12.3 yards per reception. Smith is a little pricey but does have explosive upside in this game and would check in as a strong GPP candidate if he’s sub-5%. 

TE – He might be the clear number two in the passing game but Dallas Goedert is still just fine at his price. Since Week 7 when Zach Ertz was traded, Goedert has a 25.9% target share to go with just one red-zone target. That has kind of been the story with Goedert so far as he hasn’t scored more than 13.2 DK points. It has to be noted how little Philly is throwing, but I also think it’s a mistake to say there just isn’t upside. It hasn’t happened yet but being such an integral cog in the passing game means it will come at some point. I do prefer Gronk for less money because Tampa gives him a better chance for production, but Goedert could be sneaky in GPP. 

D/ST – If you’re in the mid-range, Philly is definitely appealing. The Giants have allowed 21 sacks and despite sitting 18th in total DVOA, they still have potential. The turnovers and sacks are mediocre but the Giants are going to help those ratios along. That offense is not to be trusted. 

Cash – Sanders, Hurts, D/ST 

GPP – Smith, Goedert

Giants 

QB – For a while at the start of the year, Daniel Jones actually looked like maybe he was turning a corner but alas. That is not remotely the case as he now sits 21st in yards, 21st in red zone attempts, 25th in deep attempts, and 23rd in fantasy points per drop back. His red-zone completion and deep-ball completion rates are both 30th in football to go along with just nine passing touchdowns. With Philly sitting 18th in DVOA against the pass and 14th in yards allowed per carry, it may appear that Jones is in play. I’m not falling for that. 

RB – Saquon Barkley only played 62% of the snaps on Monday night and handled 12 touches, six of which were receptions. We should expect more snaps and touches here and despite it being a disappointing season for Barkley, this is a good spot. Philly is just 21st in DVOA against the run and is bottom five rushing yards allowed. The added bonus for Saquon is Philly has also allowed the second-most receptions, one of from being bottom in the league. We just don’t get Saquon at this price tag very often and in the two games he was full go, he scored over 21 DraftKings points in both. Don’t lose sight of the upside he brings. 

WR – This receiving corps is rough without Sterling Shepard and Kadarius Toney. Those players have been in the slot a lot which means that Kenny Golladay should draw Darius Slay in coverage. Golladay only has a 14.4% target share and Slay has allowed just a 57.4% completion rate and 1.40 fantasy points per target. That’s pretty easy to shy away from but Darius Slayton has some appeal. Well, as much as a receiver can have with Jones throwing him the ball. Slayton should see more targets and Steven Nelson has not played well on the outside, allowing 12.9 yards per reception and a 125.9 passer rating. It would still be only in MME formats. 

TE – Evan Engram is just 21st in points per game through his eight games and that’s tough to get excited about. He has some metrics that are appealing at the ninth-highest slot snaps but he’s 35th in yards per route, 19th in receptions, and has just four red-zone targets. This is a crowded offense and the price just doesn’t do him any favors as they break in a new offensive coordinator. I can see a bit more appeal with the team missing their slot receivers but I’m not in love. 

D/ST – The New York defense is 31st in pressure rate on the season and 17th in total DVOA but I’m not super interested. I can play Houston for a little bit cheaper even though Hurts has been pressured 25% of the time. They are 24th in points allowed and I’ll likely pass here. 

Cash – Saquon 

GPP – Engram, Slayton

Panthers at Dolphins, O/U of 41.5 (Panthers -2)

Panthers

QB – Cam Newton wasn’t exactly Earth-shattering in his return to the field with under 190 passing yards and under 50 rushing yards, but three touchdowns go a long way. I’d be cautious with him but the salary only moved $500 and that leaves him in play for me without a doubt. Miami is only 21st in DVOA against the pass and they have given up the most passing yards in football. Even with Cam’s flaws, we know the touchdown upside is massive and he’s under $6,000. It would be hard for him to totally crush you at this salary and 4-5x is not out of the question. 

RB – Christian McCaffrey is all the way back as he played 90% of the snaps and in the three games since his return, he leads the team in targets with a 26.1% share. He’s also racked up 37 carries and the past two games have seen him score 26 and 24 DraftKings points. The salary has not caught up to his nuclear upside and he’s only scored two touchdowns. Miami is 13th in DVOA against the run and is 17th in yards per carry allowed. The Dolphins only have allowed 56 receptions but we all know that doesn’t matter for CMC. He was typically near $10,000 last season she is far too cheap. 

WR – It looked like Robby Anderson got more involved last week with Cam under center and we could maybe get excited, but he also had an aDOT of 3.3 yards. That is far from exciting and I’m still not terribly interested since he’ll see more of Xavien Howard. He has been burned a little bit with a 15.0 YPR but at the same time, he’s only allowed a 55.8% completion rate. 

Instead, D.J. Moore could be the player to get exposure too as Cam and CMC are both looking very chalky. He’s eighth in air yards share, 11th in yards, and eighth in receptions. Moore is also third in unrealized air yards so there is plenty of production to tap into. Byron Jones has been worse, allowing a 65.6% completion rate and 1.66 fantasy points per target so Moore is still very interesting. 

TE – Don’t be swayed by Tommy Tremble being in the winning Milly lineup last week because he still only saw two targets. This is not a player worth targeting with a 5.2% target share on the season. 

D/ST – Carolina just seems perpetually underpriced. They have the second-highest pressure rate in football and are second in sacks, not to mention the 13 turnovers forced. Only five teams have allowed fewer points and they are able to slide in for just about any build. 

Cash – CMC, Cam, D/ST

GPP – Moore

Dolphins

QB – I’ve been a Tua Tagovailoa “supporter” this year to some extent but there’s no way I’m going there this week. Carolina is top five in DVOA against the pass, second in yards allowed per attempt, and the second-fewest passing yards in total. They have just eight interceptions but Tua is still prone to turnovers and he’s facing a strong defense by the metrics we value. That’s a pretty easy no, thank you here. 

RB – It worked out for Myles Gaskin last week but that was the best possible spot for him. The good news was that he handled 23 carries and three receptions, while was tied for the most touches in a game for him. What is interesting is even though there is a red number in the matchup for Gaskin, it’s not as intimidating as it seems. The Panthers have allowed the second-most rush yards for teams that have played 11 games, they are 16th in yards per carry, and are just 20th in DVOA against the run. He could be a very contrarian option this week because nobody is going to play him but the spot isn’t too shabby for a 20 touch running back. 

Update – The Dolphins did claim Lindsay, ex-Texan. I doubt that he has much of a role this week though as he was claimed on Wednesday. 

WR – Jaylen Waddle continues to be the receiver to target and the only one at that from the Miami side of things. He’s in the slot 48.5% of the time and that is helpful in this spot. He’ll avoid Donte Jackson and Stephon Gilmore in those snaps and face more of A.J. Bouye, who has allowed a catch rate above 65%. Waddle has the fifth-most receptions on the season and he has run the most routes among receivers. Granted, he’s 62nd in yards per route but receptions count too. He’s still under $6,000 and he’s in play, even if it’s just in GPP. 

TE – Mike Gesicki came back to life last week to some extent with a 5/50 line after a goose egg the previous week on seven targets. He also has the most air yards among tight ends, the third-most deep targets, and the fifth-most receptions and yards. Carolina has been strong against the position but Gesicki still has a 21.9% target rate on the season. He’s a major part of the Miami passing attack and he’s on the board, even if he’s not one of my priority plays. 

D/ST – There are worse options on the board. Newton put up a big fantasy day and I’m interested in him, but he still passed for under 200 yards and didn’t look like anything incredible. Miami has forced 16 turnovers, has a pressure rate over 25%, and has 23 sacks. Considering the chalkiness of the Carolina offense, they could be a strong GPP play. 

Cash – Waddle is closest

GPP – Tua, Gaskin, D/ST

Titans at Patriots, O/U of 43.5 (Patriots -7)

Titans

QB – Speaking of quarterbacks that I will have zero interest in, Ryan Tannehill is about at the bottom of the list this week. New England is the second-ranked DVOA against the pass, sixth in yards per attempt allowed, and has 18 interceptions to 13 touchdowns allowed. Tannehill is 21st in fantasy points per drop back and while he is eighth in yards, he’s 19th in passer rating. Heading into New England is not the spot where you want to play a quarterback for an offense that is missing many key players. 

RB – The Titans have realized Adrian Peterson which seemingly clears the way not for D’Onta Foreman like we may have thought but Dontrell Hilliard. Tennessee trailed for a large portion of the game and Hilliard saw 62.9% of the snaps and a massive 10 targets and seven carries. That was likely in part due to the game script and the fact the rest of the passing game was a nightmare. However, it’s not that hard to see the same scenario play out here. With the pressure rate the Patriots can bring and the coverages they can throw at A.J. Brown, Hilliard could see a boatload of targets once again. The price is appealing as well but it honestly feels like we have a ton of backs that are not priced accurately. 

WR – The Titans are scraping the bottom of the barrel for receivers as they are down both Julio Jones and A.J. Brown this week. The savior may well be Dez Fitzpatrick, who played 79% of the snaps last week, saw six targets, and scored a touchdown. Dealing with J.C. Jackson at corner for New England isn’t the most exciting proposition since he’s only allowed a 55.3% completion rate and 1.40 fantasy points per target, but who else is Tennessee going to throw to? He’s $3,200 so he’s on the board, but I will avoid in cash unless he turns to complete chalk. 

TE – I’m going to say something that sounds awful, but I kind of “like” Anthony Firkser. He is just barely over the minimum and you have to expect Brown to be muted in this game. If that happens, Hilliard and Firkser could see a similar workload that they did last week. He saw seven targets which aren’t bad at near minimum, but he also just fell on a fumble in the end zone for a score. If Geoff Swaim makes it back this is not a situation worth considering. 

D/ST – 27 sacks catches your eye at $2,900 even though not much else does. Tennessee has faced 14 turnovers and one of the bigger pieces for their unit is linebacker Bud Dupree. He’s on IR so my interest takes a step back, especially since they are also missing two starting running backs.

Cash – Fitzpatrick if the field goes there

GPP – Firkser, Hillard 

Patriots 

QB – Mac Jones is not in play for me simply because when we spend down, we want the 20+ DraftKings points game and Jones has yet to show that upside aside from two games. I’d rather play Tyrod or Cam since they both have rushing ability and whatever you think of Jones (he’s accurate and looks like he’ll be an above-average player for a while), rushing ability is simply not there. He’s just 28th in points per drop back, he’s 12th in attempts, 18th in yards per attempt, 12th in yards…you get the picture. He’s solid but outside of the fantasy-relevant picture for the most part. 

RB – It looks like BeliTricks could be making a return in this backfield. The Patriots used the trio of Rhamondre Stevenson, Damien Harris, and Brandon Bolden at least 34% of the time but no more than 39%. Stevenson saw the least amount of snaps, but also had the most carries at 12 and added a target. Harris and 10 carries and a target while Bolden only had three touches. While Bolden may not be fantasy-relevant, he saps the value of the other two by being on the field. Tennessee is 18th in DVOA against the run but it’s hard to get too excited if we’re only getting 10-12 touches from a back. 

WR – I tend to focus on just Jakobi Meyers because he leads the Patriots in target share by a lot at 23.4% but Nelson Agholor should be mentioned as well in this spot since he has a 14.7-yard aDOT and the Titans secondary can be had. He should draw Kristian Fulton who has allowed a 15.3 YPR and 1.63 points per target. Meyers is in the slot for the eighth-highest rate in football and that leaves him facing Elijah Molden who’s letting up a 68.6% catch rate and a 122.3 passer rating. They may not need to throw a lot, so it might make more sense to play Agholor or even Kendrick Bourne and hope for the splash play. Bourne only has 47 targets on the year but is 22nd in yards per reception and Jackrabbit Jenkins has allowed 13.8 yards per reception and a 112.8 passer rating. 

TE – Hunter Henry is the TE7 which is more of an indictment on the position more than saying Henry is great. He’s 15th in yards, 16th in receptions, 18th in targets, and 32nd in target rate. So how is he so high? Touchdowns, because Henry has seven of them and that leads the position. That’s how easy it is to climb the ranks and he is fifth in red-zone targets. He’s pretty much always a touchdown or bust kind of player and Tennessee has allowed just three. hey haven’t played many good ones so I’m fine with Henry, but we know what we’re getting into. 

D/ST – Based on how Tennessee’s offense looked last week, New England should be a smash play but you’re paying a hefty price for it. The $1,600 difference between them and Houston is significant, although New England has 21 turnovers generated and 28 sacks. Tannehill is tied for the most sacks in football to this point and if the pressure is in his face all day on the road, mistakes are going to follow.

Cash – D/ST if you can afford it 

GPP – Stevenson, Harris, Agholor, Meyers, Bourne, Henry 

Steelers at Bengals, O/U of 44.5 (Bengals -3.5)

Steelers

QB – I will not be swayed by the 22 DraftKings points Ben Roethlisberger scored last Sunday night and he’s not going to find the end zone three times very often. He is 11th in red zone attempts, 20th in yards, 29th in yards per attempt, and 31st in fantasy points per drop back. Cincinnati has fallen to 19th in DVOA against the pass and 16th in yards per attempt allowed. Last week was the only time Big Ben has cleared 20 DraftKings points and his ceiling does not match players like Tyrod and Cam. 

RB – The last time these two teams tangled, Najee Harris caught approximately 3,592 passes (14 but who’s counting) and posed a massive 31.2 DraftKings points. It’s a little frightening to see Harris at 3.6 yards per carry, 55th in the league. Granted, efficiency doesn’t pay the bills for fantasy when he’s guaranteed a workload like few others but it’s always in the back of your mind. Los Angeles has about the worst run defense in football and Harris couldn’t even get to 4.0 yards per carry. Still, the passing work alleviates most of the concerns as Harris is first in routes run, fourth in target share, second in receptions, and sixth in receiving yards. Since he’s third in carries, he’s also still seventh in rushing yards and Cincy is 13th in yards per carry allowed, as well as dead last in receptions allowed. He may not be my highest priority, but he will be on the board this week at $8,200.

WR – When the Steelers have a quarterback that can make every throw with consistency, Diontae Johnson is going to be a household name. He’s an excellent route runner and any issues with drops vanished. Johnson is 10th in the league in receptions and fourth in target share, so Ben’s limitations are a lot less noticeable with Johnson. Facing Chidobe Awuzie is no walk in the park since he’s only allowing a 50.9% catch rate and 1.46 fantasy points per target. Johnson’s salary is still very acceptable and he’s in play every week for me. 

Chase Claypool is better than his stats reflect but Ben’s ability at this point is not a great mix to accentuate the strengths. Claypool is always a threat to break one big play or get a rushing attempt near the goal line, but consistency is never going to be the name of the game here. He’s facing Eli Apple for a chunk of his snaps and Apple is at 1.65 points per target allowed with a 12.7 YPR, so there is potential. Trusting Ben to hit him deep is tough. We could see James Washington take more snaps with Ray-Ray McCloud out with Covid, but that’s not a route I’m interested in. 

TE – The Muth is all the way Luth and Pat Freiermuth has played extremely well lately. With Big Ben at quarterback and JuJu missing, the Muth has not dipped below 11.1 DK points and we shouldn’t expect this one to be different. He’s actually taken some targets away from Najee since Week 6 as he has 36 for an 18.6% target share to 11.9% for Harris. Freiermuth is second on the team in targets since then and Eric Ebron injured his knee and will be out for a while. This is 100% Freiermuth’s job and the price is appealing in a major way. If Gronk is chalky, the pivot is right here. 

D/ST – I have moderate interest if T.J. Watt is back. If he’s not, we saw Sunday night that Pittsburgh had a tougher time generating a pass rush. It helps that safety Minkah Fitzpatrick is back (heavens was he missed) and on the year, Pittsburgh has 28 sacks and a pressure rate over 25%. They got embarrassed by the Bengals in the first game, this defense will be motivated. They just need their guys to be on the field to make it interesting. 

Update – Watt is playing but Joe Haden is questionable 

Cash – Harris, Johnson, Freiermuth

GPP – D/ST, Claypool 

Bengals 

QB – It’s been a rough two weeks for Joe Burrow before and after the bye week which has dropped the salary. Even with returning members of the defense, Pittsburgh is not the formidable unit they have been. They are 26th in DVOA against the pass and 22nd in yards per attempt allowed. For Burrow, he is ninth in passing yards and second in yards per attempt but the volume remains somewhat in question. He was not forced to throw a lot last week at 29 attempts and that could be the same thing this week. To get the ceiling for Burrow, he either needs efficiency with touchdowns or Pittsburgh needs to score points. 

RB – Oh look, another running back play that I love. Joe Mixon scored 27 DraftKings points last week and that makes four of the last five games that he’s been over 25. For some reason, the salary dropped by $100 for a player that is fourth in carries, fourth in rush yards, and fourth in total touchdowns. The Steelers have historically been a poor matchup but that is not the case this year as they are 16th in DVOA against the run, have allowed the eighth-most rushing yards from teams that have played 10 games, and are tied for dead last in yards per carry. With the workload Mixon is handling, he should rip up Pittsburgh even if the defense gets healthier. Their middle linebacker play is a major weakness right now. 

WR – Fitzpatrick is back for Pittsburgh but if Haden is out, there is serious upside for this receiving group. Ja’Marr Chase has been quiet lately but he is still second in air yards share, sixth in yards, sixth in yards per route run, and third in touchdowns. That would be an elite mix if the Steelers lack one of their best corners. We all saw that secondary get rocked by the Chargers on Sunday night. 

Tee Higgins finally did not score his standard 12-14 DraftKings points last week, burning a good chunk of the field. It’s weird because he’s always highly rostered but he’s the WR47 on the season. That’s not everything but still, it’s just weird to see everyone always go there. He’s second on the Bengals in target share although it’s become a close race between these two and Tyler Boyd. The latter has had a much more volatile floor but running out of the slot is a big help against the Steelers. The inside linebackers are awful at coverage and can be exploited in a big way. Pending Haden’s status, I’d have them Chase, Boyd, Higgins but they’re very close. If Haden is out, Chase is the clear number one. 

TE – C.J. Uzomah is not a player to chase despite his oddball ceiling games with just 31 targets through 10 games. 

D/ST – Cincy is fine but not my absolute favorite. They are 15th in total DVOA, have 25 sacks, a pressure rate of over 26%, but just 11 turnovers forced. Big Ben has been sacked 21 times but the pressure rate is just 19.9% because he gets rid of the ball so quickly. 

Cash – Mixon

GPP – Burrow, Chase, Boyd, Higgins 

Falcons at Jaguars, O/U of 45.5 (Falcons -2)

Falcons

QB – The matchup is way more than appealing as Jacksonville sits 31st in DVOA against the pass and 29th in yards allowed per attempt. Trusting which version of Matt Ryan you get is the largest question. He’s 11th in attempts and red zone attempts to go with just 15th in yards, but he’s been totally boom or bust this season. Of his 10 starts, five have gone over 22 points but four have been below 10 points. There is very little middle ground. What I will say is Cam is very popular, which leaves Ryan as an interesting GPP pivot that has shown the upside is there at this salary. 

RB – If Cordarrelle Patterson is not back for this game, I’ll have less than zero interest in the mix of Mike Davis, Wayne Gallman, and Quadree Ollison. Davis and Ollison split the snaps close to 50/50 and even though Ollison had an advantage in touches, it’s not enough to move the needle given what this slate offers at the running back position. The Jaguars are a surprising fifth in DVOA against the run and that’s enough for lesser talents like Ollison. Now, if Patterson gets back it’s a different situation with a high receiving workload with a 15.8% target share. 

WR – It’s been tough to nail down the receivers for Atlanta since Calvin Ridley has been away from the team. Russell Gage has the lead in target share at 16.5% but that’s nothing special. He’s had two games with zero fantasy points and two over nine points, so the upside is pretty tough to see. He’s been in the slot quite a bit at 46.6% but the price doesn’t do him any favors. Olamide Zaccheaus had one game with two touchdowns and almost nothing else even against suspect corners like Nevin Lawson and Tyson Campbell it’s not that appealing. Jacksonville’s pass defense does suffer without their best corner in Shaquill Griffin but I may wind up playing the next person the most. 

TE – The position as a whole is weaker than normal this week so Kyle Pitts is the second-most expensive player for tight ends. I do understand why but I’m not sure I have the motivation to pay it. Last week was an understandable flop against the Patriots and since Ridley has left, Pitts leads the team in targets with 25 through four games for a 21.7% share. He’s still seventh in receptions, third in yards, fifth in unrealized air yards, third in deep targets, and eighth in fantasy points per game despite just a single touchdown. If you’re spending up, he’s more than in play and the metrics just are so good for him and now the Jags are missing their best corner. 

D/ST – The Falcons are just utterly incapable of getting to the quarterback with the fewest sacks in football and one of the lowest pressure rates. They also only have nine turnovers so, despite the strong matchup, those splash play metrics and ranking 30th in total DVOA mean I’m looking elsewhere. 

Cash – Pitts

GPP – Patterson, Gage, Ryan

Jaguars 

QB -Trevor Lawrence is kind of in that same boat as Mac Jones in that he just hasn’t flashed enough of a ceiling to feel super confident here. Despite being ninth in attempts, he’s just 23rd in yards and 21st in air yards, which aren’t a good mix. Lawrence (not all his fault) sits 32nd in fantasy points per dropback and has only thrown for eight touchdowns. Going against the 30th ranked DVOA defense against the pass is appealing but Lawrence is likely not for me given the lack of weapons and his track record thus far. 

RB – For the first time in a few weeks, I’m interested in James Robinson. Finding room in the running back rotation could be a challenge this week but the spot is undeniable. Atlanta is 24th in DVOA against the run and J-Rob is 12th in rushing yards despite being just 22nd in carries. The Falcons are only 14th in yards per carry but have also given up 11 total touchdowns and even in lopsided game scripts the past two weeks, Robinson has had at least 14 touches. Given this game should remain a little closer, we could get closer to the 18-20 touch threshold and that’s a strong value at just $6,200 on DraftKings. 

WR – I want to be clear that I do not trust Laviska Shenault in cash and won’t play him there unless the field demands I have to. However, the Jaguars have now lost Jamal Agnew from their receiver corps. They are down to Shenault and Marvin Jones unless they play Tavon Austin and Laquon Treadwell, which I wouldn’t put past this coaching staff. Jacksonville is claiming Shenault will see more touches and possibly even some carries out of the backfield, and he gets the better matchup. 

Jones is going to see a good amount of A.J. Terrell on the outside and he’s sixth in passer rating allowed, fantasy points per target, and catch rate. That’s not the player I want to attack with Jones and Shenault has been playing 45% in the slot. The Falcons have had multiple slot corners so far and if Shenualt gets 10-12 touches, he could be a bargain. This is just not a very good offense overall, so we’ll see what projections bring us. 

TE – There is a part of me that just wants to go right back to Dan Arnold after he didn’t record a reception last week. It was so out of line with what he’s done in Jacksonville and he’d racked up 38 targets in the five games before that. That’s major volume and he had double-digit scores in four of those five games. With Agnew done now as well, the options are getting thin for the Jaguars and there’s not much of a reason to think that last week wasn’t just a speed bump. 

D/ST – Much like Atlanta, the matchup is great but Jacksonville seems to not be up to the task of generating the fantasy plays we need. They have just five turnovers forced and 18 sacks, to go along with ranking 29th in total DVOA. 

Cash – Robinson

GPP – Arnold, Shenault, Lawrence 

Chargers at Broncos, O/U of 48 (Chargers -2.5)

Chargers

QB – Denver should be able to muster up more resistance than Justin Herbert faced last week but this kid can flat out play. He’s fifth in yards, third in attempts, sixth in red zone attempts, sixth in air yards, and fourth in touchdowns on the season. Denver is only 17th in DVOA against the pass and 13th in yards per attempt, so they are not the scariest defense on the slate. Where the Broncos have excelled is they’ve only allowed 13 touchdown passes, tied for the third-fewest in football. Herbert and this offense have the volume and the talent to make for a fine GPP target this week. 

RB – I’m not sure I’d ever call for a full fade of Austin Ekeler, but I do feel a little less sure of him at $8,400. He is averaging almost 100 scrimmage yards per game and is third in receptions, so the floor is comforting. Denver is tied for the third-fewest receptions allowed to backs but that is a lesser concern with players of Ekeler’s skill level. They are also 28th in DVOA against the run and 22nd in yards per carry allowed. What is propping them up a little bit is they’ve only given up nine total touchdowns. With Ekeler averaging about 17 touches per game and sitting second in red-zone touches, there’s nothing wrong with him in a vacuum. It’s more slight sticker shock after he scored four times on an island game. 

WR – My initial reaction was just to play Keenan Allen ahead of Mike Williams in part because Allen has the better matchup and the higher target share. He’s in the slot 52% of the time and is third in receptions, seventh in yards, third in targets, and 10th in target share. That’s a great mix for safety and upside and the matchup against Kyle Fuller while on the outside. Fuller has given up a 105.9 passer rating and 1.77 fantasy points per target. 

Having said that, Williams is at an outstanding salary to chase his upside because $5,700 on DraftKings is crazy. Williams is eighth in touchdowns and 16th in points per game and we’ve seen that he possesses a crazy ceiling. It’s feast or famine with five games under 10 points and five over 20. Rookie Patrick Surtain has played well with just a 48.3% catch rate allowed and 1.36 fantasy points per target but he’s been targeted 58 times. Still, Williams could break the slate at this price. 

TE – Over the past three weeks, the targets between Jared Cook and Donald Parham have been far more equal, just like the snaps. Cook has 12 targets and Parham has 10 and the latter has two red-zone targets to one for Cook. The salaries are close and neither is a vital part of the offense but if you’re punting, Parham has the athletic traits to be interesting if he’s getting 4-5 targets. 

D/ST – LA is averaging under four fantasy points, has 11 turnovers and 20 sacks, and is somehow the third-most-expensive unit on the slate. That doesn’t make a ton of sense to me even though Denver has given up 31 sacks in total. If they are cheaper, I’d be more interested. 

Cash – Ekeler, Allen

GPP – Williams, Herbert, Parham 

Broncos 

QB – It’s always tough to get behind Teddy Bridgewater, especially with the amount of cheap QB’s with ceiling this week. He does sit eighth in red zone attempts but he’s only 15th in passing touchdowns with 14, not to mention 22nd in fantasy points per drop back. Teddy B is third in true completion rate but it’s not translating to enough fantasy goodness. The salary is fine but the Chargers are ninth against the pass in DVOA and 12th in yards allowed per attempt. It’s not the direction I’m going this week. 

RB – If you were to play any (and I am not with Sanders sitting cheaper Han both), Melvin Gordon ahead of Javonte Williams has to still be the play. They are tied in targets at 29 each and MG3 has the lead in carries and red zone carries. It doesn’t matter if Williams has been more efficient or has evaded more tackles. The Broncos are set in their ways and that’s that. It is a strong matchup that we’ve attacked all year with LA sitting 32nd in DVOA against the run, they are 29th in yards per carry, and 32nd in rushing yards allowed. Still, Sanders is the more appealing target and Gordon is best left for MME formats. 

WR – I don’t feel like any of Courtland Sutton, Jerry Jeudy, or Tim Patrick are going to be needed this week. The path to success for them could lie in Asante Samuel Jr. being out and he would have seen a lot of Patrick. He is fourth in target share on the team so you need a long play or touchdown but Samuel is a loss. 

Sutton is fifth in air yards and sixth in unrealized air yards so there’s always big play ability, but the matchup against Michael Davis statistically is difficult. He’s only given up a 12.3 YPR and a 61.3% catch rate. That’s far from invincible, but it’s not a glaring weakness. Jeudy is still running from the slot at one of the higher rates in the league and leads in target share while being 14th in target rate. Chris Harris has played a lot of slot corner but has allowed a 118.6 passer rating. 

TE – Noah Fant is always just a guy for me in this offense and his salary isn’t doing him any favors. I’d much rather play Gronk or The Muth even though Fant is eighth in receptions. In Fant’s defense, he’s ninth in routes, third in red-zone targets and seventh in target share. Those are all strong metrics but it’s only amounted to 11th in points per game. Bridgewater is not the type that will generally support multiple receivers, a tight end, and running backs that can produce. It’s not the good of an offense so Fant is fine, but may not have any tangible ceiling based on this season. 

D/ST – I doubt I tangle with the Chargers offense, but Denver does a great job limiting points with the third-fewest allowed. They are also 26th in DVOA with only 11 turnovers forced themselves. The deal-breaker could be Herbert has only been pressured 18.5% of the time and sacked 18 times, 25th in the league. 

Cash – None 

GPP – Jeudy, Patrick, Sutton, Gordon, Williams

Rams at Packers, O/U of 48 (Rams -2)

Rams

QB – Hopefully the bye week did Matthew Stafford some good because he was awful for two weeks directly before it. He totaled just two touchdowns against four picks and just looked off. On the season, he’s fourth in yards, second in air yards, third in yards per attempt, second behind only Brady in red zone attempts, third in touchdowns, and eighth in points per drop back. Green Bay has handled opposing passing games well so far (shockingly because they have been without their best two defensive players). They are fourth in yards allowed per attempt and 12th in DVOA but I believe Stafford and company will be fine here coming out of the bye. 

RB – Eventually we’ll hit some backs that I’m not a fan of (I think) but we’re not there yet. Darrell Henderson is very affordable and he’s 10 in rushing yards, 14th in carries, and 15th in points per game. When he’s been healthy, he’s been the man in this backfield and we shouldn’t expect that to change coming out of a bye week. Green Bay is sort of a mixed bag as far as the matchup. They are only ninth in rushing yards given up but they are 26th in DVOA against the run and 21st in yards per carry allowed. The Rams are only 22nd in attempts per game but with Henderson accounting for 67% of those attempts and 23 red zone carries, he shouldn’t be under $6,000. 

WR – You can certainly take shots at Odell Beckham or Van Jefferson in this game. OBJ should be much more in tune with the offense after the by week but just remember that Robert Woods only had a 21.5% target share in this offense. I’m hard-pressed to think OBJ walks into that right off the bat. Jefferson faces a corner in Eric Stokes that can match his speed as they both have 4.3-second 40-yard dashes. 

I’ll be focused on Cooper Kupp to the surprise of nobody and even when Stafford was struggling, Kupp really didn’t as he cleared 20 DraftKings points in both games. Running out of the slot leaves him on Chandon Sullivan and that’s not going to end well for Green Bay. Surely, they try to roll coverages toward Kupp but he’s first in receptions, yards, touchdowns, and points per game. Kupp has dipped below 20 Dk twice and been over 25 DK seven times. I’ll take my chances with that consistency. 

TE – How Tyler Higbee does this week likely hinges on what OBJ does. If he’s a bigger part of the offense, Higbee could be more on the back burner since we should expect Kupp to continue dominating. So far, Higbee leads the position in snap share and he’s fifth in routes, but he’s just 10th in receptions, 18th in yards, and 22nd in deep targets. He’s only scored three times but his red-zone work is off the charts with 16 targets inside the 20. That also leads the position and if he starts seeing some positive regression in that aspect, this salary could get hammered. 

D/ST – They are eighth in total DVOA but heading into Green Bay isn’t where I typically go for defenses, especially when they are the fourth-most expensive option. 

Cash – Kupp, Henderson

GPP – Stafford, Higbee, OBJ, Jefferson 

Packers 

QB – I was very much off Aaron Rodgers last week because he just hasn’t been great to the extent that we’re used to, not to mention his toe injury. That did keep him off the practice field this week but I’m not really concerned about this. The timing for Rodgers has been built over the seasons and suddenly he’s sixth in points per drop back. Rodgers is also fifth in touchdowns and fifth in red-zone attempts, so the Rams sitting 10th in DVOA against the pass is not a major concern. 

RB – We’ll need to see who’s active for this one but the pricing is a joke. Aaron Jones is only $6,000 and A.J. Dillon is $5,900 after scoring 15.7 DraftKings points last week without a touchdown. The Rams are seventh in DVOA and only allow 4.0 yards per carry for fifth0best but the talent level of either back would demand a higher salary. Let’s see how the injury for Jones plays out during the week and go from there. He did manage some level of practice every day this week so I’m not sure we should expect Dillon to be the man this week. 

WR – The reason Kupp may not be super popular is that Davante Adams is $1,000 cheaper and is coming off a ceiling game of 33.5 DraftKings points. I’ll never tell you not to play him and I’ll be fascinated to see which receiver gets more traction. Jalen Ramsey might scare some here but Adams didn’t have many issues facing him in the playoffs last year as he went 9/66/1. Both teams move these players around so it won’t even be one on one either. 

Marquez Valdes-Scantling leads the league in aDOT at 19.1 yards and for that reason alone he’s a GPP play every week. He’ll line up on Darious Williams on some snaps (and could see a little bit of Ramsey) and Williams has only allowed a 9.0 YPR. It’s still a fine way to get exposure to this side of the game but don’t confuse it with a cash play. 

TE – Josiah Deguara caught a 25-yard touchdown on a broken play but saw one other target besides that to bring his total up to 11 this year. That’s very little to go on, and he only played 45.8% of the snaps on top of that to lead the position. 

D/ST – Green Bay’s defense might be better than it gets credited for but they are just 14th in total DVOA with just a 23% pressure rate. The Rams are coming out of a bye week with extra time to prepare so this isn’t a pick for me. 

Cash – Adams, Rodgers, TBD on the backs

GPP – MVS

Vikings at 49ers, O/U of 49.5 (49ers -3)

Vikings

QB – Kirk Cousins is a different real-life quarterback than fantasy because he’s actually been very productive in fantasy and his salary never really seems to go anywhere. He’s fifth in attempts, seventh in yards, fifth in air yards and fifth in passing touchdowns. That’s pretty solid considering he’s thrown all of two interceptions. San Francisco is just 22nd in DVOA against the pass but they’ve only given up 13 touchdowns on the season. Cousins can change that this week and the vast majority of the field just don’t play him. 

RB – Much like last week, Dalvin Cook is more than fine as he’s fifth in rush yards, seventh in evaded tackles, and fifth in carries. I don’t love the fact that he’s 23rd in targets and 33rd in receptions because that’s just not using his skill set all that well, but there’s not much to do about that at this point of the year. It does help that he’s in the top 10 in red-zone touches but the 49ers are third in DVOA against the run. They have given up the sixth-fewest rushing yards to backs and are 18th in yards per carry allowed, not terrible but not great. If Cook had a safer receiving floor, I’d feel better. In his price range, Harris, Ekeler, and even Mixon might be slightly safer in better spots. 

WR – It’s amazing what happens when you start feeding Justin Jefferson. He’s seen 21 targets the past two weeks and has smashed in both of them with 25 and 40 DraftKings points. This was after he saw nine targets in a two-game span and Minnesota has to get the message now. His salary is up there but it should be as he’s fourth in yards, sixth in receptions, seventh in yards per route, third in deep targets, and fifth in points per game. Matching with Josh Norman is no longer a concern as he’s let up a 67.7% catch rate and 115.4 passer rating across 31 targets. 

I’m likely not paying $6,700 for Adam Thielen so that means he’s almost a lock to hit 3x. He scored so he paid the bills last week and there is a chance he does so again since he’s 12th in red-zone targets and third in touchdowns. His target rate is only 47th so it’s hard to see a ceiling past scoring this week and Emmanuel Moseley has been pretty strong so far. He’s let up a 52.5% catch rate and 1.08 fantasy points per target, which is 13th. That’s not ideal but Thielen has a path to success. 

TE – Without running well on the touchdown luck, Ty Conklin went back to scoring just a handful of points and he’s going to be that every week. He’s third in the pecking order for targets and Cook is getting plenty of work. Conklin is somehow 10th in receptions and 12th in yards (again…tight end is horrid) but he’s only 15th in points per game. The 49ers have allowed the second-fewest receptions, the fewest amount of yards, and four scores. I’d prefer to find the money to come up over $4,000 for someone else. 

D/ST – Minnesota is 27th in DVOA against the run and that’s not what we want facing the 49ers. To their credit, they are third in pressure rate on the year and are tied for the lead in sacks. They’re also cheap enough to consider just from that and they have generated 12 turnovers, but they’ll need to get home a bunch to pay off. 

Cash – Cousins, Jefferson 

GPP – Cook, Thielen, Conklin 

49ers 

QB – This is a spot where we could actually see some style of a ceiling from Jimmy Garoppolo. If Minnesota can score points, it will demand Jimmy G to do more and he has flashed it every now and again. He’s only 24th in yards but he’s also fourth in yards per attempt and 14th in fantasy points per drop back. Minnesota can get bit by the deep ball as they are 23rd in yards allowed per attempt which betrays ranking eighth in DVOA against the pass. I could get on board in MME formats but that would be the extent of it. If San Francisco controls the game, his high end is likely 16 DK or so. 

RB – As of now, Elijah Michell looks unsure if he’s going to play this week and that means I would go right back to Jeff Wilson if he was out. Yes, the box score was paltry but it looks a lot better if the 49ers had a QB capable of throwing a simple five-yard pass at the goal line. Seriously, Trey Lance can do that. Anyway, Wilson handled the snaps when the game was in question and accounted for 20 touches. I’ll play those odds at $5,100 every single week, and he’s only $5,300. Minnesota is 27th in DVOA against the run and is tied for the worst yards per carry in football. We’ll circle back when we have clarity about who’s playing. 

WR – Are we seeing the resurrection of Brandon Aiyuk? He’s hit double-digits in three of the past four games across 26 targets, a stark contrast to the rest of his season. In that time, he actually leads the team in targets while Deebo Samuel is at 25 and the next player is at 19 (through three games to four, to be fair). The point is Aiyuk has seen the most snaps at 91% and we can actually trust him at this point, and he faces Bashaud Breeland. He’s gotten mashed for a 15.2 YPR and 108.4 passer rating. 

That’s not to say that Samuel is a poor play either, as he is in the top 10 in yards, yards run per route, yards per reception, target rate, touchdowns, and points per game. Patrick Peterson has been fine statistically but the 1.50 fantasy points per target aren’t scary, especially for Samuel. He got it done rushing last week with eight attempts and that’s always a bonus with him, more so if the 49ers are short on backs again this week. 

TE – This week’s game should be more competitive so the ceiling for George Kittle should be higher than last week. He took all four targets and turned them into 13.4 DraftKings points and leads the position in target share while being third in yards per route. Even with just seven games played, he’s seventh in deep targets and fifth in points per game. Minnesota looks like they’ve played tight ends well with just one touchdown allowed but the only good tight end they’ve played is Mark Andrews. hat doesn’t dissuade us from playing Kittle. 

D/ST – San Fran is in the bottom 10 in pressure rate to this point but they are top 12 in total DVOA. Only generating nine turnovers doesn’t help and Jimmy G has only been sacked 16 times. 

Cash -Samuel, Aiyuk, Kittle

GPP – Jimmy G, TBD on backs

Cash Core Four

Christian McCaffrey, Michael Pittman, Chris Godwin, Miles Sanders

GPP Core Four

Cooper Kupp, Miles Sanders, Brandin Cooks/Tyrod Taylor mini-stack

Stacks

Bucs/Colts – Brady, Godwin, Gronk, Evans – Run Backs – Pittman, Doyle, Taylor

Vikings/49ers – Cousins, Jefferson, Cook, Thielen – Run Backs – Deebo, Aiyuk, Kittle

Chargers/Broncos – Herbert, Williams, Allen, Ekeler, Parham – Run Backs – Gordon, Sutton, Williams, Patrick, Jeudy

Rams/Packers – Kupp, Henderson, Jefferson, Stafford – Run Backs – Adams, Rodgers, Dillon if Jones is inactive

Texans/Jets – Taylor, Cooks, Collins, Burkhead, Johnson – Run Backs – Moore, Crowder

Mini-Stacks – Kyle Pitts/James Robinson, D.J. Moore/Jaylen Waddle, Devonta Smith/Darius Slayton, Pat Freiermuth/Joe Mixon

Thank you for reading my NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 12 and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life! Be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Models and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport.

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NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Thanksgiving Edition

The NFL is on a bit of a short week with three games featured for the Thanksgiving Day slate. The quality of the games is a bit questionable, and injuries are going to play a major part in this slate. Let’s get into all three games in the NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Thanksgiving Edition and find the paths to green!

Bears at Lions, O/U of 41.5 (Bears -3.5)

Bears 

QB – I’m not exactly sure what we did to deserve this game on Thanksgiving, but there are some important players in the game. One of the situations that could provide some value is the quarterback spot for Chicago since it appears it will be Andy Dalton. Justin Fields is expected to miss this game with a rib injury and Dalton has had a pretty limited track record in the offense on the season. He did throw two touchdowns in relief this past week despite only completing 11 of 23 passes but has the advantage of knowing he’s starting this game. Detroit allows a 65% completion rate and is 31st in yards allowed per attempt, which also helps Dalton a bit. The reason their stats look decent in total is that they have faced the least amount of attempts in the NFL. Don’t mistake, this is a very poor passing defense. The biggest question is playing Dalton and if he can score enough to be worth the savings. It’s an opportunity cost to not play a different quarterback and you’ll have to make up the points difference somewhere else. 

RB – Chicago needs to realize that David Montgomery needs to get more touches than the 15 he did in this past game. They were in a close game the whole time on Sunday but Monty only carried the ball 14 times. Detroit has a very exploitable run defense and is in the bottom half of the league in yards per carry allowed at 22nd. Only three teams have allowed more rushing yards on the season to backs on top of that. Montgomery may carry a ton of popularity on this slate, which would make sense. He could be the cheapest back on DraftKings that you can feel comfortable with and I’ll be happy to ride the chalk wave here. If he doesn’t get 20 touches, the Bears should leave the coaching staff in Detroit. 

WR – Is it Darnell Mooney SZN? Perhaps, although 5/121/1 on 16 targets might be one of the more inefficient 26 DraftKings point games we’ve seen. Efficiency isn’t everything and all that matters is the points scored, but it’s going to be hard to ignore that amount of targets against a sub-par secondary at the salary. If Allen Robinson remains out, Mooney is going to be popular as well and it’s justifiable. He has some serious big-play ability and Detroit is in the bottom-five in yards per attempt allowed. 

That speaks to how fast they can get burned by Mooney and potentially Marquise Goodwin. Assuming Robinson is out for now, Goodwin played 71.2% of the snaps and saw eight targets himself. With the state of the Lions secondary, eight targets are plenty and he’s one of the few punt plays on this slate that would make sense. Corners Bobby Price and Amani Oruwariye are not corners to fear.

TE – Cole Kmet offers some savings but I’m not sure that matters if he’s got virtually no chance at scoring 10+ DraftKings points. If you’re a tight end, you have to either score touchdowns or catch a lot of passes and Kmet does neither. He’s yet to score this season and while the 17.4% target share looks appealing, Chicago is dead last in pass attempts per game. A 17% share of 27.1 attempts is nothing special and that’s exactly what Kmet is at this point. Nothing special and he could drag your lineup down. 

D/ST – The Bears are on the shortlist here to be sure, as they have 31 sacks on the season and 10 turnovers forced. Detroit has allowed a bottom 10 amount of sacks this season and the Bears are doing it without blitzing very much at around 14%. They have lost pass rusher Khalil Mack but there are very few skill positions on Detroit that would scare anyone. It’s also the lowest total on the board which just adds to the appeal, not to mention the fact they are very affordable. 

Targets – Montgomery, Mooney, D/ST, Dalton, Goodwin

Lions 

QB – This is not where we’re going to look for our quarterback. Jared Goff may not play again and Tim Boyle started last game. He had 23 attempts for 77 yards, two interceptions, and 1.1 DraftKings points. Chicago is 19th in yards per attempt per allowed so they’re not a great defense against the pass but I can’t stomach this level of quarterback play on such a short slate. It can kill any lineup and isn’t worth the tradeoff in salary. 

Update – Goff is trending towards playing but my thoughts on the position have not changed at all. 

RB – D’Andre Swift set his personal best in rushing yards again last week with 136 and it’s been comforting to see him producing fantasy-relevant scores without a ton of work in the passing game. The surprising part was his workload because Cleveland never ran away with the game last week. Jamaal Williams came back into the lineup for seven carries which isn’t the worst-case scenario but it doesn’t help either. Chicago is 15th in yards allowed per attempt but their injuries are piling up. They just allowed 132 rushing yards to the Ravens and backup quarterback Tyler Huntley, so they aren’t shutting anyone down at the moment. They are also up to the seventh-most rushing yards allowed and have given up eight total scores. The matchup isn’t that bad and the game should stay relatively close, so Swift should have 20 touches again. He does still lead the league in targets among running backs and is a “safe” investment. 

WR – If you’re playing one, Amon-Ra St. Brown makes for an intriguing target from the Lions receivers. He’s playing over 70% of his snaps in the slot and the Bears lost slot corner, Duke Shelley, to injury. It appears that Xavier Crawford will draw that duty and he only has a 24% snap share on the season. Since Week 4 when Amon-Ra started playing more consistently, he’s third on the team in targets behind Swift and Hockenson with a 20.4% share. Kalif Raymond should draw the tougher assignment in Jaylon Johnson, who has allowed just a 56.3% catch rate and 1.49 fantasy points per target. Detroit is not a passing offense that we want multiple pieces from so don’t go crazy. 

TE – T.J. Hockenson might be a better target than most realize at first glance. The good news is over the past five weeks, he has totaled 40 targets and that includes the game where he put up a goose egg on a meager one target. In that span, he has a 26.8% target rate and is tied for the team lead in red-zone targets with three. What it comes down to is the decision between Hockenson and the Cowboys option. They are basically the same price and we may need to know more about the Cowboys situation before the decision gets made. The targets are likely to favor Hockenson but the efficiency and quarterback play will favor Dallas. 

D/ST – With all the issues the Bears have on offense, the Lions could be mildly interesting. They’ve forced five turnovers in the past two weeks but only one sack, and that is an issue. Chicago has allowed the most sacks on the season and even though some of that is related to the play of Fields, they are the most appealing punt on the board. In a perfect world, I’ll play the Bears but if I need that $600, the Lions fit. 

Targets – Swift, Hockenson, St. Brown, D/ST 

Raiders at Cowboys, O/U of 51 (Cowboys -7)

Raiders 

QB – Derek Carr is kind of hard to get a grip on. On the one hand, he’s cheap and it’s easier to see potential in him than it is for Dalton. The fantasy points per dropback are below average at 0.46 but Carr is making up for it in volume with the fifth-most attempts on the season. He’s also fourth in yards which you don’t exactly think of when you think about Carr. He’s sporting the sixth-most red-zone attempts so far but that’s not translating into a ton of touchdowns with 15. Dallas is a very volatile defense as they’ve allowed the 11th most yards but are also second in interceptions with 15. Carr is interesting as a cheap option in a negative game script, but I’m not in love here either. 

RB – I actually kind of like Josh Jacobs here, especially if Montgomery winds up as chalky. Typically, Jacobs is thought of as totally depending on game script and that has been extremely true in the past. However, he’s been much more involved in the passing game over the past month with 19 targets in the past four games. That is wildly encouraging from a floor perspective and a 13.7% target share. It would appear that Dallas is strong against the backs but they have faced the fifth-fewest rushing attempts in football. They rank 18th in yards per carry allowed and are in the bottom half of receptions allowed as well. The Raiders are +7 in this game but with Dallas missing weapons, it can stay close and Jacobs can see 15+ touches. The fact that Jacobs is more involved has left Kenyan Drake as more of an afterthought as he’s hovering around eight touches per game in that span. The Raiders would need to be trailing big to get Drake more involved. 

WR – We can safely cast aside Bryan Edwards after he led the receiver group in snaps and did not receive a single target. Instead, Hunter Renfrow continues to get the attention. He only saw four targets which are scary at this salary. He should face the better matchup against Jourdan Lewis in the slot as Renfrow is there 63.9% of the time. He is 15th in receptions on the season and Lewis has allowed 1.58 fantasy points per target with a 57.9% catch rate. On a tree game slate, the ceiling is highly questionable for him and I’m not looking to spend that salary in this way. 

TE – Dallas has had their share of issues containing tight ends with the ninth-most yards given up against the position so far. Darren Waller is the most expensive option on the slate but can easily post numbers that rival any receiver or running back. Considering the number of star players that could be out, Waller may wind up being a bargain. Among tight ends, Waller is second in air yards share, fourth in receptions and yards, third in unrealized air yards, ninth in yards per route, and first in deep targets. He may wind up being in the Core Four by the end of the article. Waller has one of the higher ceilings on the slate. 

D/ST – Even if the Cowboys are short players, I’m not sure this play makes sense. The key element is going to be left tackle Tyron Smith for Dallas. If he’s in, this won’t be much of a consideration but if he’s out, that is a difference maker. Vegas has a pressure rate of 24.5% and their 24 sacks are tied for the eighth-most in the league. 

Targets – Waller, Carr, Jacobs, D/ST 

Cowboys 

QB – Dak Prescott will not likely be a high priority for me not because of last week’s results (man was the Dallas offense awful) but for the situation he finds himself in. The Cowboys are will seemingly not have their two top receivers in this game and that’s going to hamper the ceiling for Prescott. We’ve seen earlier in the season when Dallas can control the game script, Prescott can be under 30 passing attempts. In that scenario, he’d need good touchdown luck and throw 2-3 at minimum. Vegas is a surprising fourth in passing yards allowed per attempt and they’ve allowed just the fifth-fewest yards. Dak is sixth in fantasy points per drop back so we know the efficiency is there but it’s not hard to see an average score in this spot. 

RB – This is a very interesting spot for Dallas because we could see both Ezekiel Elliott and Tony Pollard be heavily involved. It looks like Dallas will be without both Amari Cooper and CeeDee Lamb on a short week. This isn’t to say that Dallas just crawls into a shell and never passes but Pollard could see more opportunity in both phases of the game in a run-heavy game plan. Vegas is 24th in yards allowed per carry and are in the bottom-eight in rushing yards allowed to running backs. They are over 1,400 scrimmage yards allowed with 12 scores and are 19th in receptions allowed. Dallas is tied for seventh in rush attempts per game and are the prohibitive favorite. As long as Zeke is healthy, I’m toying with playing both in the same lineups and generally like that idea since both could see 12-15 touches with Zeke more towards 20. If Zeke does miss this game (looks unlikely), Pollard would be the chalk that has to be eaten. 

WR – We know Amari Cooper is out and CeeDee Lamb seems very iffy to play with a concussion. If Lamb is out, Michael Gallup is likely the chalk of the slate because he basically did not leave the field last week at a 94% snap rate and he saw 10 targets. The production wasn’t exactly what you were hoping for but that amount of work is hard to pass on under $6,000. The bigger issue is the potential matchup with Casey Hayward on the other side. The Raiders corner has only allowed a 44% catch rate, a 54.8 passer rating, and 0.80 fantasy points per target. 

That could also open up more work for Cedrick Wilson and Noah Brown, who both played over 60% of the snaps. Wilson had the clear advantage in targets at 7-2 so he’s the preferred option, but the game script could be much different. They trailed instantly on Sunday whereas that scenario isn’t as likely in this game. The other corners for the Raiders are under a 1.75 fantasy point per target, a credit to Nate Hobbs and Brandon Facyson. I’m fine with Wilson if Lamb is out but I’m not overjoyed. 

TE – The Raiders have struggled with tight ends as well and that could leave Dalton Schultz as a prime target if the Cowboys are missing their top two receivers. I could see going double tight end in that scenario because Dallas would have limited options in the passing game and last week saw Schultz rack up eight targets, tied for his season-high. That was with Lamb only missing a half of football and Schultz is in the top 12 in yards per route, air yards, receptions, yards, points per game, and target share among tight ends. Considering the other players on the offense when healthy, that is very impressive. Once we have a better idea of Lamb’s status, we can make the call. 

D/ST – They’re always in play but salaries are tight for the other positions, especially if you spend at quarterback. They are forcing turnovers at a crazy high rate so far with 19 in 10 games to go along with 21 sacks so there’s nothing wrong with playing them. Carr has been sacked the 10th most in the league but I’m not sure they’re going to fit the build even as the fourth-ranked DVOA defense. 

Targets – Elliott, Schultz, Gallup, Dak, Pollard, Wilson

Bills at Saints, O/U of 46.5 (Bills -4.5)

QB – There is an argument to be made that Josh Allen is the only truly appealing player out of this game. Both teams have strong defenses despite this past week’s sample size. He’s still top five in fantasy points per dropback, and he’s still first in fantasy points per game at the position. The Saints had their issues with a mobile quarterback last week and Allen is third in yards and carries. New Orleans is more susceptible to the pass as they sit 25th in yards per attempt allowed despite allowing the seventh-lowest completion rate on the season. They have allowed just a 13:11 TD:INT ratio but even though it’s not the best matchup ever, Allen has the highest ceiling/floor combo on this short slate. Not having him could be costly at the end of the night. 

RB – Perhaps I’m going to regret this but I’m not looking into this backfield in the least. For some reason, it’s become a three-headed monster of Zack Moss, Devin Singletary, and Matt Breida. In the past two games when all three have been active, the snaps have been split so none of the three are over 38.6%, Moss and Singletary are tied for the carries lead at just 10 (Breida has eight), and the targets are 5-5-1 with Moss having the one. There’s ugly and there’s whatever it is the Bills are doing here. Oh, on top of that the Saints still have the best rush defense in football as they lead in rush yards allowed per attempt and are second in rushing yards allowed to running backs. Where they struggled last week was containing Philadelphia quarterback Jalen Hurts so that just helps the Allen appeal and not the backs. 

WR – Marshon Lattimore can be a corner that needs to be avoided in some situations but Stefon Diggs is not going to be one of them. He’s not having the exact season he did last year but he’s still ninth in yards and receptions, he’s fourth in air yards and eighth in targets. Where he’s taken a small sep backward is target share at just 18th. That doesn’t mean he’s not capable of having a monster game. Working him in could be tricky but he’s in the top five players likely to have the highest score on the slate. 

I’m not likely to go after Cole Beasley because, after a couple of weeks with a massive target share with their tight end missing, he’s gone back to just seven total targets in the past two weeks. Emmanuel Sanders would be the second receiver that I look towards and he’s still sitting second in aDOT and eighth in unrealized air yards. Sanders is also eighth in deep targets and we know that the Saints are giving up quite a bit through the air. In lineups I don’t have Diggs, Sanders is likely to be there. Gabriel Davis is a player to have exposure to in MME formats. Despite playing under 38% of the snaps, he has a 13.9-yard aDOT and it only takes a long play or a touchdown to pay off. 

TE – Perhaps the biggest wildcard at the position is Dawson Knox. He’s shown he has nuclear upside at this salary with two games over 20 DraftKings points and two others at 14. Buffalo will almost surely be passing a lot if the New Orleans run defense holds up and Knox has a 13.2% target share on the season. Diggs is the man in the red zone but after that, Knox is tied for second on the team with nine red-zone targets and he’s third in touchdowns. That’s really what it comes down to with Knox is if he finds the end zone. You can’t bank on 10 targets like last week but he feels like the kind of non-household name that pops up on these slates. 

D/ST – One of the reasons I’m not a huge fan of Dallas is because Buffalo is still topping total DVOA, they have more turnovers, and they allow fewer points. I’m not worried about last week as we can cast aside a bump in the road fairly easily and go with the seasonal sample size. They still have the highest pressure rate in football and I’ll side with their metrics for $200 cheaper. The Saints don’t have the scariest cast of offensive players even if they get their star running back returning from injury. 

Targets – Allen, Diggs, Sanders, Knox, D/ST, Beasley, Davis 

Saints 

QB – The Buffalo defense was embarrassed on Sunday and Trevor Siemian is not in for an easy time. He does continue to play about as well as could possibly be expected with an 8:2 TD:INT ratio and he’s averaging over seven red-zone attempts per game. Having said that, this Buffalo defense is still one of the best in football against the pass. They allow the lowest completion rate, the lowest yards per attempt, and the fewest overall passing yards in the league. They’re the only team to not allow at least 12 touchdown passes (just seven allowed) and they have tied for the second-most interceptions at 15. I truly think the quarterback pool is Allen, Carr, Prescott, and Dalton with the other two cast aside fairly easily. 

RB – At this juncture, it looks like Alvin Kamara could miss his third straight game and the Saints could give him the long week to get back to full health. If that’s the case, Mark Ingram could be in line for another big workload but I would not expect a repeat of the Jonathan Taylor performance from Sunday against the Bills. He has handled a monster workload in the past two games with 30 carries, 15 targets, and 10 receptions. That’s equated to a 78% snap rate, a 21.7% target share, and the vast majority of running back carries so he’s playing the Kamara role and there is value to that. Buffalo is still 11th in yards allowed per carry and eighth in rushing yards allowed to running backs. They are also under 1,200 scrimmage yards allowed so for the most part, they have been a sort of matchup. I prefer Montgomery at this stage for $200 less. 

WR – If you’re looking for a good matchup, you’re not going to find it here. Marquez Callaway and Tre’Quan Smith look fairly unappealing here as Callaway will see a combo of Tre White and Levi Wallace while Smith will see Taron Johnson in the slot. The trio of Bills all has a catch rate under 54% and a fantasy points per target under 1.40, with White and Johnson being exceptional. You can construct a game script where the Saints trail most of the way but Callaway did nothing out of one touchdown grab last week in a tough spot. Even Smith barely clipped double-digit DraftKings points so we have some better options on the board. 

TE – I was excited to play Adam Trautman since we’ve been pointing out his involvement and he scored a touchdown last week, but he sprained his MCL and is expected to miss 4-6 weeks. If your build leads you to punt the tight end position, Juwan Johnson is the likeliest to get playing time and targets with Trautman out. However, he’s very similar to Kmet in that he could sink your lineup. He’s found the paint three times but only has nine receptions on the season. It’s a very thin play and you’d have to hope Siemian continues to target the position as he did with Trautman. 

D/ST – New Orleans is fifth in total DVOA but they also are 14th against the pass and that is bad news against the pass-heavy Bills. They are sixth in pass attempts per game on the season and that could be a poor mix. They do rank first in DVOA against the run but Buffalo doesn’t really commit to running the ball. The pressure rate is 24.9% but Allen has only been brought down 15 times on the season. 

Targets – Smith, Johnson, Ingram

Core Four

David Montgomery

Josh Jacobs

Dalton Schultz (especially if Lamb is out)

Stefon Diggs or Manny Sanders

I will have a lot of Diggs but in lineups with Zeke, hes harder to afford and I’ll just pivot to Manny

Thank you for reading my NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Thanksgiving Edition and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life! Be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Models and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport.

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To quote the great Michael Rasile, “It’s a great day to be alive!” and it’s a great day to get ready for the Week 11 NFL DFS GPP slate! For those who haven’t read it yet, please check out the Week 11 Cash Game Checkdown for your bankroll sustaining, cash game build advice before building your NFL DFS GPP lineups.

*PLEASE note, the players in the Cash Game Checkdown are in play for GPP’s as well. They are high-floor and usually, high-ceiling players we always want to play. This article is simply to provide a different perspective on some ways you can make your GPP lineup different.

In addition, I would strongly advise giving my NFL DFS Strategy article I published this offseason before diving into the 2021 NFL DFS season. If you have any questions or would like some further help when building your lineups, please do not hesitate to reach out to me directly on Twitter.

For those looking to get different and make a splash in some GPPs, the time is now. We’ll usually be taking some heavy stances on lower-ownership players, but at times, there is certainly good “chalk” to eat. This is honestly gong to be a very condensed week for me with most of my interest in those two afternoon shootouts. Now, let’s get into it.

Games I’m most interested in getting exposure to:

DAL/KC
CIN/LV
HOU/TEN
(pending weather)

NFL DFS GPP Quarterbacks

Joe Burrow ($6,600 DK / $7,400 FD)

If you read the Cash Game Checkdown, you are aware of my love for this Bengals offense after the bye-week. The Raiders’ secondary is full of second-string talent and with extra days of preparation, I expect both of these offenses to go wild and produce a significant amount of fantasy points and HOPEFULLY, keep up the pace with Dallas and Kansas City. Burrow is my favorite quarterback play on this slate.

Key Pairing(s): Tee Higgins, Ja’Maar Chase, Joe Mixon, C.J. Uzomah
Key Run-back(s): Darren Waller, Bryan Edwards, Hunter Renfrow, Josh Jacobs, Zay Jones

Ryan Tannehill ($6,700 DK / $7,800 FD)

There’s not a whole lot on this slate that I like outside of Dak Prescott, Patrick Mahomes, and Joe Burrow. Having said that, Ryan Tannehill grades out as an excellent 1-3% owned NFL DFS GPP quarterback due to the red-zone rushing upside and the condensed target-share that is easy to stack. I don’t love the play, but will have a bit of Tannehill this weekend if the rain holds off. Be sure to check the weather before moving forward with Tannehill.

Key Pairing(s): A.J. Brown, D’Onta Foreman
Key Run-back(s): Brandin Cooks, Nico Collins

Honorable Mention: Patrick Mahomes, Dak Prescott, Aaron Rodgers, Russell Wilson

NFL DFS GPP Running Backs

Ezekiel Elliott ($7,700 DK / $8,500 FD)

With all of the ownership going down to the value running backs, that leaves Ezekiel Elliott alone on an island with a 5% ownership projection. There is simply way too much touchdown equity in Zeke’s corner this weekend and he will be a core play for me in all formats. The late news of Tyron Smith being out, it gets me a bit less excited, but still in on Elliott.

Joe Mixon ($7,600 DK / $7,600 FD)

Way too cheap on FanDuel but still a very interesting play on DraftKings. FanDuel clearly messed this pricing up because the AETY Model shows that his proper price-tag should be right around $7.5K on DraftKings and in the mid-low $8K range on FanDuel. Similar to Elliott, Joe Mixon has the highest touchdown equity in one of my favorite games to stack.

D’Onta Foreman ($4,900 DK / $6,200 FD)

While everyone flocks to Jeff Wilson and Mark Ingram for their value running backs, D’Onta Foreman is quietly in a great spot with Jeremy McNichols out with a concussion. The sportsbooks seem to agree as they have him close to even money to score a touchdown and a rushing prop of over 55 yards. It’s not sexy, but on DraftKings specifically, that price-tag allows you to do a lot and more importantly, in a different way than those eating all of the chalk value.

Honorable Mention: Dalvin Cook, Nick Chubb, Tony Pollard, Antonio Gibson

NFL DFS GPP Wide Receivers

To no surprise, I’m incredibly heavy on the main pass-catchers for the top two games on my list to start the article. This week, I’m just going to list off my receiver player pool in order of my GPP exposure. Tune into the livestream tomorrow morning at 11AM EST for further updates.

  • Tyreek Hill
  • CeeDee Lamb
  • Tee Higgins
  • Ja’Maar Chase
  • Michael Gallup
  • Bryan Edwards (nice 1-2% owned piece of that game)
  • Adam Thielen (easy run-back to the A.J. Dillon chalk)
  • A.J. Brown
  • Marquez Valdes-Scantling
  • DK Metcalf (no one is playing a Seattle stack this week)
  • Deebo Samuel (best matchup on the slate, just hope JAX can keep it close)
  • Zay Jones (min price 0% owned punt and will see a lot of Eli Apple. Don’t expect much volume but a big play is extremely possible to smash the $3K price-tag)

NFL DFS GPP Tight-Ends

Similar to the above, I’m going to very concentrated at the tight-end position with the likes of Travis Kelce and Darren Waller. Kelce’s ownership sitting around 10% is comical and my main angle of attack is to be incredibly overweight with him or Waller, but if not, I’m very interested in the below…

George Kittle ($6,300 DK / $6,800 FD)

Picking on the Jaguars pass defense is usually a profitable move and the fact that Kittle is likely sub-5% owned is an excellent pivot if you’re not on the Kelce or Waller train. The Jaguars grade 26th in DVOA against the tight-end and 31st overall against the pass in general, yikes! A George Kittle drag-route touchdown will be incoming.

Dalton Schultz ($4,600 DK / $6,000 FD)

As much as Amari Cooper helps out Michael Gallup, the AETY Model expects a significant boost up for Dalton Schultz on the inside of this Kansas City defense. As good of a player people think Tyrann Mathieu is, he really struggles in coverage and will see a fair share of the talented pass-catching, Dalton Schultz. Again, this game is loaded with fantasy appeal and chalk everywhere, but Schultz is going to be sub-5% in ownership and primed up for a higher-output game like he was used to earlier this season.

Honorable Mention: Tyler Conklin, John Bates

Thank you all for the support and good luck this week! Make sure you follow me on Twitter at @stixpicks and be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Model powered by AETY and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport.

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NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 10

We are back in action for a 12 game slate this week and it has one of the most appealing fantasy games we’ve seen all season long. It’s going to be the most popular game on the slate and justifiably so and every lineup needs exposure to Dallas and Kansas City. Let’s talk about the mother of late hammers and every other game in the NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 10 to find some green screens!

Texans at Titans, O/U of 44.5 (Titans -9.5)

Texans 

QB – I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t tempted here with Tyrod Taylor. Yes, last game we saw him he was an abject disaster with three interceptions but his price is still too low for his potential. After all, he flirted with 24 DraftKings points in Week 1 and had 16 against Cleveland in under one-half of football. The 0.53 fantasy points per dropback are more than fine at this salary and he has 5.7 red-zone attempts per game so far. For context, Patrick Mahomes is third and he’s at 6.3 per game. Tennessee is ninth in DVOA against the pass and 12th in yards per attempt allowed. He can’t be trusted in cash but he’s in my player pool for GPP. 

RB – The Houston backfield is still a fantasy nightmare even after the Mark Ingram trade and are splitting the touches between all three of Phillip Lindsay, David Johnson, and Rex Burkhead. None of that trio played more than 44% of the snaps and Lindsay led in touches at eight. That’s nothing we need to chase and Houston has been this way for the entire season. 

WR – On a bigger slate, I’m not going to mess around with the secondary options on Houston and if I play anyone, Brandin Cooks is the guy. If he draws Janoris Jenkins, Cooks may go totally bonkers because Jenkins is the piece of toast that you forget in the toaster and it comes out like a piece of charcoal. Jenkins has allowed a 112.8 passer rating and 1.89 FPPT. Kristian Fulton would at least have a chance as he’s only allowed a 48% catch rate but he’s also allowed 15.3 YPR. Even then, Cooks has a 29.7% target share and 44% air yards share, fourth and first in the league. He’s still top-six in receptions and top 15 in yards even with his bye and he has big potential at the salary. 

Update – Jenkins did not practice all week and is questionable, while pass rusher Bud Dupree is out. I’m growing to like Cooks more and more.

TE – Much like a lot of the Houston team, this situation remains a mess and only Jordan Akins has a target share above 10%. Even then, he has all of four red-zone targets and it’s just not worth the floor to risk such a small reward. 

D/ST – I’m honestly slightly tempted here to just punt with the Texans. It sounds dumb but they do have 14 turnovers and 19 sacks, which could be a lo worse for the minimum salary. The pressure rate is scary at just 20.4% but you need so little that I don’t think it’s the worst play you can make at the position. The Titans are tied for the most sacks allowed and are down their star running back, among others. 

Cash – Cooks, maybe D/ST as a punt but you’d have to love everything else

GPP – Tyrod 

Titans 

QB – I’m not a fan of the salary because, at this point, we have to square ourselves with how Ryan Tannehill has performed this year. He’s 10th in red-zone attempts, 12th in yards per attempt, 16th in fantasy points per drop back but he’s only 25th in deep attempts so far. The 12 passing touchdowns are just 19th in the league so far and even though Houston is 28th in yards allowed per attempt, the salary is a lot to ask. Getting to Mahomes or Dak Prescott in the late game is only $900 or $500 more and that’s too appealing to get 18-20 DraftKings points from a $6,700 Tannehill in my eyes. 

RB – The Titans aren’t in much of a different spot than the Texans without Derrick Henry. Through two weeks, they have split the work between Jeremy McNichols, D’Onta Foreman, and Adrian Peterson. None of those three have played more than 35% of the snaps and Foreman and Peterson have 16 and 18 carries in that amount of time. McNichols has held the advantage in receiving work with four receptions and six targets but it’s very difficult to get behind anyone as a play here. If there is a play, it could be Foreman because he had 13 touches this past week. and generated 78 scrimmage yards. In a matchup against the Texans who have allowed the second-most rushing yards, 13 touches could work out under $5,000. 

Update – McNichols is out which should consolidate the touches between Foreman and Peterson. However, we have other values that leaves Foreman on the back burner in my eyes.

WR – I won’t say A.J. Brown’s poor game was totally predictable because I thought he’d do more than what he did, but I’m happy the salary kept me away from him. The salary didn’t move much and Brown has had a pretty tough season to this point. He’s still under 45 receptions, under 575 yards, and has only scored three times. It could speak to just how well ex-coordinator Arthur Smith had this offense humming. Regardless, Brown continues to be without Julio Jones (woof. That deal looks pretty rough) so Brown has very little competition for targets. He’s sixth in air yards share, ninth in yards per route, and sixth in target rate. There is so much that lines up for him in the metrics that just hasn’t worked out. A matchup against Terrance Mitchell and Desmond King could snap him away as both corners allow a passer rating over 109 and a 1.75 FPPT. Brown moves and plays 23.9% of his snaps in the slot and there is a massive game lurking. 

TE – Much like the Houston side, the Titans have three tight ends splitting targets which is terrible for fantasy. None of Geoff Swaim, Anthony Firkser, and MyCole Pruitt have more than 25 total targets. Swaim does lead the gross bunch but 25 and five red-zone looks in Week 11 is not what we need to chase. 

Update – Swaim is out but I’m still not that interested here.

D/ST – Tennessee has been playing well and they’ve gotten home to the quarterback 27 times, tied for the third-most in the league. They have also forced 14 turnovers but we all know by now my disdain for playing the highest-priced defense on the slate. Tennessee is fine but I won’t play them myself.

Cash – None

GPP – Brown, Tannehill, Foreman (gross)

Colts at Bills, O/U of 50 (Bills -7)

Colts 

QB – We’ve been playing Carson Wentz in the past few weeks but this week is not a good spot to keep it going. Really, it has nothing to do with his score form last week which was awful but more to do with Buffalo ranking first in DVOA against the pass, first in yards per attempt allowed, and they have given up just six passing touchdowns. SIX in nine games. The next lowest team is Jacksonville (funny enough since Wentz played them last week) at 11. Going on the road into the lion’s den is not where I’m looking to play Wentz, even at his salary. 

RB – It looked like Jonathan Taylor was going to totally break the slate in the first quarter last week, but he stalled out after the first and finished with 116 yards rushing. Of course, nobody complained about 27.6 DraftKings points but he was very much held in check for a significant portion of the game. There is some strong potential that could happen this week because Buffalo is one of the better defenses in the league this year. They’ve allowed the third-fewest yards on the ground and are third-bets in terms of yards per carry allowed. Taylor is getting loaded up with touches with at least 19 in each of the past four games but the matchup is not kind. Given the state of the running backs this week, he will not be a priority for me but if he’s under 5% rostered, the GPP appeal is still there. 

WR – There aren’t always a lot of defenses and individual matchups that I avoid, but Buffalo is likely one of them. Michael Pittman has been excellent this season and is in the top 10 in yards, receptions, and routes but Buffalo is number one almost across the boards defensively. The duo of Tre White and Levi Wallace has been outstanding and neither has allowed a passer rating over 81.6 or an FPPT over 1.32. That is not the spot we want to get after, despite liking Pittman. He’s only played 12% of his snaps in the slot as well. Zach Pascal has been the slot receiver but even then, Taron Johnson is under a 46% catch rate allowed in 37 targets. 

TE – There will be some tight ends we can play coming up but Jack Doyle or Mo Alie-Cox is not one of them. The target shares are almost identical at 8.5% and they have split 11 red-zone targets 6-5 with Doyle in the lead. That’s just not enough at this juncture. 

D/ST – If you believe they are just a ball-hawking defense and can force turnovers, the Colts normally aren’t this cheap. They are second in turnovers, have sacked the quarterback 22 times, and are in the top half of the league in points allowed. Buffalo has only allowed 14 sacks so the matchup is obviously very bad but it could be a crazy GPP play with a very low floor. 

Cash – None 

GPP – D/ST, Taylor, Pittman

Bills 

QB – On the flip side of the quarterback matchup, I’ll be fascinated to see how popular Josh Allen is this week. I feel like most of the attention will go to Dallas/KC and I get it. However, the Colts have given up the most touchdown passes, are 23rd in yards per attempt allowed, and are 23rd in DVOA against the pass. Allen is sixth in attempts, fifth in yards, first in air yards, third in deep completion, and sixth in touchdown passes. His ceiling is no different than anyone else’s so if he’s going to be sub-8% or something like that, he would stand out as an elite pivot to chalk. 

RB – Casting aside the Matt Breida weird variant game of two touchdowns on six touches, this is not likely to be the spot that I want to play Zack Moss or Devin Singletary. The running back targets aren’t many to start with and Breida saw three of them last week but Indy has been much better against the run. They have allowed the fourth-fewest yards among teams that have played 10 games and they rank 16th in yards per carry allowed. Moss and Singletary already split work, which caps the ceiling in general. The Colts defense ranks second in DVOA against the run and they can be attacked through the air, so I’m not expecting much from either Moss or Singletary here. 

WR – We finally got the game from Stefon Diggs that we’ve been waiting for as he went off for 30+ DraftKings points. He may well do it again and we’ve talked all year about how he looked great in the metrics. Well, now he’s ninth in receptions, seventh in yards, still 10th in unrealized air yards and eighth in deep targets. Xavier Rhodes has been in and out of the lineup and boasts a 131 passer rating allowed and Rock Ya-Sin doesn’t have the speed to keep up with Diggs. Barring weather issues, he’s an elite play in any format. 

Emmanuel Sanders and Cole Beasley remain a little difficult to project each week. The return of the tight end seemingly had a negative effect on Beasley with just two targets last week, although Diggs did so much it really didn’t leave anything else. Sanders was a little banged up last week and only saw two targets as well, although he continues to be the higher value as the deep threat. The pecking order for DFS remains Diggs, Sanders, and then Beasley. 

Update – Rhodes is out for Indy, and lineman DeForest Buckner is questionable. That’s a big piece of the Colts defense so that needs to be monitored before lock Sunday morning.

TE – Dawson Knox was enjoying a great season but he came back down to Earth last week in his first game back from injury. The hand wasn’t an issue for him because he played 84.5% of the snaps but drew just one target. It’s a stark reminder that he had just an 11.3% target share and the five touchdowns were a big help towards his ranking among tight ends. Indy has struggled to defend the position with the sixth-most yards allowed, tied for the second-most receptions, and six touchdowns. Knox is second in touchdowns but also is 26th in target share and 23rd in air yards share. I would reserve him for Buffalo stacks only. 

D/ST – Buffalo is also a bit cheaper than we’re accustomed to and that has some interest as well. They have the second-highest pressure rate, are at home, and allow the fewest points per game in the league. That’s not even mentioning they lead the league in takeaways so the Colts could run into some issues in this one, even though Wentz has only been sacked 18 times. 

Cash – Allen, Diggs, D/ST 

GPP – Sanders, Knox, Beasley, Moss

Saints at Eagles, O/U of 43 (Eagles -2)

Saints 

QB – Trevor Siemian is …playing well? That may not seem right but he’s thrown at least 34 passes in both of his parts and has thrown two touchdown passes in each as well. He’s been rusted when it’s mattered most as well with 7.3 red-zone attempts and he just missed 20 DraftKings points last week. I’m not sure we should buy into what he’s shown us so far but coach Sean Payton is a great offensive mind. He’s gotten the most out of the veteran and Philly is just 18th in DVOA against the pass while ranking 17th in yards per attempt. It’s probably not a play I’m making but he’s played better than I assumed when he was named the starter. 

RB – We’ll see if Alvin Kamara can make it back for this game but if he can’t Mark Ingram would look fine since he handled 18 touches in the past game. The salary didn’t come up very much and Philly has allowed the most rushing yards to backs among teams that have played 10 games. The yards per carry allowed isn’t terrible at seventh but Ingram getting basically every running back touch at $5,400, it’s hard to ignore that. If Kamara is back, he’s still at a very affordable salary. He’s still fifth in carries on the season and he has a 20% target share on top of that. 

Update – Kamara is out, which puts Ingram squarely in play in every format. The Saints did activate Tony Jones so Ingram may not get as many touches, but the salary still makes too much sense and he’ll still receive the bulk of the work.

WR – Typically unless the receiver is a great-to-elite option, I tend to not mess with facing Eagles corner Darius Slay. I don’t count Marquez Callaway among the elite (I know, really hot take there) and he doesn’t play much in the slot. Staying on the boundary raises the odds he faces some of Slay, who has only allowed 269 yards on 40 targets. Instead, Tre’Quan Smith has my attention. He’s had a 44% slot rate in his four games and is coming off a game where he saw seven targets. With Kamara still looking iffy, Ingram isn’t as big of a threat in the receiving game and that helps boost Smith as well. He co-leads in red-zone targets with five in four weeks and he’s very cheap. 

TE – In the last three games where Siemian has played almost all of the snaps, Adam Trautman has become a much more consistent part of the offense. His 19 targets in that span are tied for the team lead and the red-zone targets are second at four. The DraftKings points haven’t been spectacular but 8.2 and 8.7 isn’t the worst-case scenario at the salary. He’s more interesting because of the matchup because the Eagles have allowed the most yards, receptions, and touchdowns against the position. If he’s the key to unlocking an extra piece to the Chiefs game, I am very on board here. 

D/ST – The Saints are of particular interest because they are under $3,000 and they boast one of the better run defenses in football. That can allow them to force the Eagles to pass, which may not end well for Philly. New Orleans is sixth in total DVOA and has a pressure rate of over 24% on the season, to go along with 13 turnovers forced. They also are one of seven teams to allow fewer than 20 points per game so the price is very appealing. 

Cash – Ingram if Kamara is out, D/ST

GPP – Smith, Trautman

Eagles 

QB – The Saints have given up the fifth-most passing yards among teams that have played nine games and they are 25th in yards per attempt allowed to go with the 13th ranked DVOA against the pass. That’s a mixed bag for Jalen Hurts because they have also forced 11 interceptions, tied for the fourth-most. The version of Hurts from the last game was about the best one he could produce with two scores and 53 rushing yards with just 23 attempts. The Saints are a great run defense this year so Hurts could have more on his right arm. He’s still first in fantasy points per drop back and second in carries and rushing yards so the price doesn’t account for his upside. 

RB – Philly has been running the ball a lot lately but this could be a tough team to do it against. New Orleans is the only team in the league that has not given up 500 yards rushing to running backs yet at just 483 yards. They also lead the league in yards allowed per carry and are first in DVOA against the run so there are not many worst spots a backfield could inherit. To complicate matters, Boston Scott and Jordan Howard are averaging under 14 carries each per game and that’s not awful, but not a great amount of volume in the toughest matchup on the board. This is not where I’m heading on this slate.

Update – Mile Sanders is being activated off the injured reserve and the price is interesting but he doesn’t have a role in the receiving game that we love. The salary is great but the matchup doesn’t change.

WR – We know that Marshon Lattimore has been very feast or famine so far this year and that opens up the door for Devonta Smith. The salary is up there because he’s scored over 22 DK points in the past two weeks. The tough part has been he’s only seen six targets in each game because the Eagles just aren’t passing much but Smith just owns such a monster share of the passing offense. He’s seventh in air yards, fifth in air yards share, eighth in deep targets, and things might be clicking for the rookie. It’s never a big surprise to see high picks start to hit their stride in the second half of the season and he’s still very viable in GPP. 

TE – We’ll need to monitor the status of Dallas Goedert as he left early last week with a concussion and has not practiced as of Wednesday. Jack Stoll took the bulk of the snaps at 65% but he drew three targets for a total of six yards. It’s not ideal and we can feel better about Trautman on the other side for $400 more. 

D/ST – Just like the opposite defense, I do have an interest here. The Saints offense is nothing all that great this season and Philly has gotten home 18 times with a 23% pressure rate. They are only 19th in total DVOA so they’re not the best defense ever but even if Kamara is back, the New Orleans offense has very little to offer past that. 

Cash – Hurts, D/ST 

GPP – Smith, Goedert, Sanders

Dolphins at Jets, O/U of 44.5 (Dolphins -3)

Dolphins 

QB – Regardless of how you feel about Tua Tagovailoa in the real-life football sense, I’m not sure we can trust him in any game moving forward. The Miami situation is one of the weirder ones I can remember, as he was healthy enough to be active last week but didn’t play until Jacoby Brissett got hurt. When you can play Brissett instead of giving Tua reps to figure out if he’s the answer or not, you have to do it. He’s 11th in fantasy points per drop back which would be great against the Jets and their dead last DVOA against the pass. Only Detroit has allowed a higher yard per attempt and they have given up the second-most yards among nine-game teams. Tua has the potential to score 22 DraftKings, be benched in the second half, and just about everything in between. 

RB – The results may not show it, but Myles Gaskin had another strong week of usage with 15 touches and he’s been right around 65% of the snaps. That matchup is pristine as well since the Jets have allowed over 1,700 scrimmage yards and a whopping 20 touchdowns against running backs. Ranking 29th in yards per carry allowed and 31st in DVOA against the run back all of this up and if Gaskin is going to continue to get around 15 touches, he’s a nice salary saver at the position. 

WR – Jaylen Waddle moves around to the point where he’s in the slot about half the time so the matchup is not as important. Frankly, there isn’t a bad one on paper because Waddle is fifth in the NFL in receptions and sixth in targets, both of which make him very viable on DraftKings. The yards are a little lacking at 26th but when he’s on the outside, the matchup of Brandin Echols is not scary as he’s allowed a 61.5% catch rate and 1.58 FPPT. The price makes him very appealing here and he’ll be the only receiver that I look at for Miami since the tight end is such a target monster. 

TE – I’ll be surprised if anyone plays Mike Gesicki this week but it’s likely a good time to go back to the well. It’s not often that a player has a game with seven targets and comes up with a goose egg but that’s exactly what happened. He still leads the position in snaps in the slot and air yards, telling us what a major role he has in the offense. Even with a zero last week, he’s also still fourth in yards and receptions among the position and deserves his salary. 

D/ST – Miami is 16th in total DVOA but they got the Jets price bump and I’m not sure I want to stomach the third-highest salary on the slate for them. They do have a 25.2% pressure rate and that is notable since the Jets are giving up a top-five pressure rate in football and the 21 sacks are appealing. It’s just a question of spending $3,600 so if I’m in love with my lineup and I have that amount, perfect. Generally, I don’t spend that amount on defense because a unit like the Saints can be just as good for an extra $700 elsewhere. 

Cash – Waddle, Gesicki

GPP – Tua, D/ST

Jets 

QB – I have zero clue why the Jets have switched to Joe Flacco as their starting quarterback over Mike White but I would not be interested at all. We have a couple of cheap options to turn to if you wanted to dip low and we know what Flacco is – not good. It could also have a negative effect on the other skill position players because we started to see the tendencies of White and who he liked to target. It’s a crazy move considering how much the Jets need to evaluate this roster. 

RB – I was wrong on Michael Carter last week and he scored over 18 DraftKings points again. Since Week 4, he’s been under 10 DraftKings points just once and he’s playing right about 60% of the snaps. He also has a 14.6% target share which is the third-highest on the team. He’s being used as the RB1 on the team and he’s back under $6,000 and that salary is much more comfortable to pay. Miami is just 16th in yards per carry allowed and they are in the bottom half of the league in receptions allowed to backs. He was being hyper-targeted in the past four weeks as well to the point where he leads the league during that span at 31 targets total. The introduction of Flacco does lead to some concerns there, however. Carter is also seventh in carries so the volume has turned into an incredible amount. 

WR – I’d love to play Elijah Moore but he’s still hovering around 50% of the snaps right now and that’s far from ideal. Instead, it may be better to focus on Jamison Crowder and Corey Davis since they are above 80% in snaps. Crowder is strictly the slot receiver and that leaves him on Nik Needham who has allowed a 71.4% catch rate. Davis is more of the outside guy and draws Xavien Howard for the most part. Howard’s had a down season so far but still has only allowed a 55.6% catch rate. Those catches have produced a lot with a 15.6 YPR but Flacco pulling the trigger isn’t the most ideal circumstance. I’d rather play Crowder, even though neither is a major portion of my lineups. 

TE – Ryan Griffin played 71% of the snaps last week but only drew two targets. I suppose maybe you could argue that Flacco will lean on his tight end more but that is a thin branch to stand on. Miami is in the bottom 10 in yards and receptions given up but it feels like a giant risk that we don’t need to take. 

D/ST – It would be quite the limb to stand on because the Jets have only forced seven turnovers this season but they do have 20 sacks and the Dolphins have had their fair share of offensive woes. The pressure rat is hovering around 25% for what Miami has given up so far and if you get 5-6 points in this range, it’s totally fine. I prefer Houston if punting but the Jets do have *mild* potential. 

Cash – None

GPP – Carter, Crowder, Davis, Moore for MME only 

Washington at Panthers, O/U of 43 (Panthers -3)

Washington 

QB – I don’t think there’s a strong need to go to Taylor Heinicke this week. He played about as well as could be expected last week and that amounted to 15 DraftKings points. After a three-game run as a fantasy stalwart, he’s really had trouble being all that relevant and it’s not a huge surprise given the injuries Washington has dealt with in the receiving options. Carolina is second in DVOA against the pass and yards per attempt allowed, making this a tough spot to find success. He’s only 20th in fantasy points per drop back and that’s not enough in this matchup. 

RB – Wow, I didn’t see Antonio Gibson rolling up 24 carries on the Tampa Bay rush defense. Don’t get it confused with any type of efficiency since he only generated 64 yards but it’s encouraging to see him with a big workload coming out of the bye week. He had fallen back to having a split with Jaret Patterson but 26 total touches for Gibson could be a very strong value. The issue comes from the matchup, as Carolina has been stingy on opposing running backs. They are average in rushing yards allowed and 14th in yards allowed per attempt. They have done a great job limiting the scoring from the backs since they have only allowed six touchdowns on the season. If Gibson is getting that amount of work and the game is completive, J.D. McKissic will be an afterthought. You have to get the script right with him. 

WR – Terry McLaurin is an awesome receiver but I’m not sure I can advocate for him at $7,000 this week. It’s another tough spot against corner Stephon Gilmore for the most part and he’s only been targeted five times in his snaps so far. He’s only allowed two receptions and Donte Jackson is on the other side with a 1.54 FPPT. McLaurin is third in air yards share, fifth in air yards, ninth in targets, and eighth in target share. What hurts is he’s fifth in unrealized air yards and only 70% of his targets have been catchable. The quarterback play has him capped right now and I’ll pass with other options. 

TE – This position could be down to the third-string if Logan Thomas and Ricky Seals-Jones can’t make it back for the game. John Bates (the Sia Special for the week) took over and played 64% of the snaps and caught all three of his targets. Thomas and Seals-Jones have a 16.1% and 11.2% target share respectively and as a stone minimum punt….you could do worse if the injury situation calls for it. 

D/ST – It is somewhat the week of punting defense because Washington isn’t terrible either. Yes, they did just lose Chase Young and that’s not great. However, the Panthers are breaking in another new quarterback and he’s had some ups and downs in his recent play. Washington has a 25% pressure rate and they don’t need much. 

Cash – None 

GPP – Gibson, McLaurin, Bates, D/ST 

Panthers 

QB – Cam Newton only had seven total opportunities last week and turned them into 11.7 DraftKings points. Now, his chances came in the red zone for the most point, and 10 of those points came from touchdowns but it’s a reminder that when Cam is right, he can be a fantasy force. The question still remains if he is indeed right and ready to go because he hasn’t played at all this year and last year he really did not throw the ball well. Last year he was just 24th in passing yards, 25th in air yards, 25th in attempts, and 24th in true completion rate. However, he wound up being a top 15 option on a points per game basis because he was second in carries, yards and scored the most rushing touchdowns. He’s cheap enough to take the risk as the Konami Code of the position with rushing upside. 

Update – Coach Matt Rhule says that P.J. Walker will get some snaps so this is a no-fly zone for me.

RB – Since his return from injury, Christian McCaffrey has only played 54.5% of the snaps but he also has 41 total touches, 267 scrimmage yards, and 14 receptions. In short, the snap count is irrelevant at this point and he’s leading the team in targets. The past two games have proved that he doesn’t need to score a touchdown to be productive at this price. He also just missed multiple scores and almost went nuclear on the last slate. Washington has defended the position well but it’s an interesting note that they’ve given up seven receiving scores to lead the league. They lost defensive end Chase Young for the season and the 983 scrimmage yards they’ve given up so far are about to go up. 

WR – D.J. Moore is going to be so tempting since he’s under $6,000. He’s had a rough patch but is still sixth in receptions, 12th in yards, seventh in air yards, third in routes, and fourth in unrealized air yards. It remains to be seen how much Cam improves the quarterback play this week but the metrics would tell you that Moore shouldn’t be at this salary. If William Jackson sticks on Robby Anderson, Moore could see either some of Kendall Fuller or a backup as Fuller is questionable. Jackson has given up 1.91 FPPT and this secondary has been hammered for the most part by any quarterback not named Tom Brady. 

TE – There is no tight end worth playing here even if Cam starts as expected. The touchdown equity is super low with Cam and CMC at the goal line and the target shares are under 9%. 

D/ST – For a team that is third in total DVOA, Carolina is very cheap. They are tied for the second-most sacks in the league, have the third-highest pressure rate, and have forced 12 turnovers. Additionally, they only allow the sixth-fewest points scored per game. Washington has talent in their skill positions, but Carolina is way too cheap for what they bring to the table and are among my favorite D/ST picks for the week. 

Cash – CMC, D/ST

GPP – Moore, Anderson

Lions at Browns, O/U of 43.5 (Browns -11)

Lions 

QB – In six of the nine games this year, Jared Goff has scored under 14 DraftKings points and has eight touchdown passes. He’s 20th in yards, 33rd in yards per attempt, and 32nd in fantasy points per drop back. Are we good here? Yes? Alright, let’s move on. 

Update – Goff is doubtful which means Tim Boyle is likely to start. Hopefully that just means a whole lot of the new player.

RB – I wouldn’t exactly count on 36 touches for D’Andre Swift again this week but they are feeding him the ball more with at least 17 touches in every game since Week 4. Cleveland is fourth in yards per carry allowed so it’s not the most ideal spot on the slate from that respect. Still, it seems clear that the Lions don’t trust Goff to pass the ball. Swift is getting fed the rock in a way that hasn’t happened much and Cleveland is not invincible against the run. The price tag is more than fair even if he dials back to 25 touches in total. 

WR – We could find some value in Kalif Raymond or maybe Amon-Ra St. Brown but you can’t feel good about it. They only saw six targets each last week and that took their tight end being invisible. They could be playing a different quarterback and it’s tougher to know who the chemistry is with. St. Brown has a higher target share on the season but both are right about 15% and it’s basically a dead heat. St. Brown could see more of Troy Hill in the slot while Raymond is seeing more of Greg Newsome. Hill has beeline of the better slot corners in football so Raymond gets the slight edge but I’m not super interested. 

Update – Hill is out so that helps St. Brown a bit

TE – With how bad Goff is playing right now, you can’t have the slightest confidence in T.J. Hockenson. He went from 11 targets two weeks ago but saw just one last week. You can point to the 31 targets combined in the previous three weeks but it’s not always translating. The salary rose and now you want 18-20 DraftKings points to be happy playing him. Cleveland has only allowed four receptions and 40.5 yards per game to the position. They have given up six touchdowns but Hockenson only has seven red-zone targets on the season. While the metrics like his route percentage, targets, and receptions are in the top five at the position, he felt very pricey for the very real floor. 

D/ST – Unless we get some horrific weather, I’m not planning on going back to the Lions this week. They were a popular option last week in some poor conditions against a backup quarterback, but they remain 29th in total DVOA, 31st in pressure rate, and only have 10 turnovers forced. That’s not where we typically want to be when punting defense. 

Cash – Swift

GPP – Raymond, Hockenson, St. Brown

Browns 

QB – Regardless of who’s starting at quarterback between Baker Mayfield or Case Keenum, I’m not sure that I care. This is a spot where the Browns should be able to load up on the running game and bludgeon the Lions into submission. Mayfield has battled some injuries but has yet to cross into double-digit touchdown passes. Outside of one game against the Chargers, Mayfield has not had even the slightest upside this season. He’s only 21st in fantasy points per dropback and 26th in points per game. 

RB – I’m typically not the biggest Nick Chubb fan because the receiving work is almost non-existent and he doesn’t get all the red-zone work that I would like. However, this spot is different since they are home favorites and he draws one of the softest matchups in the league. The Lions have a putrid run defense and have given up 989 yards rushing to backs so far, fifth-most in the league. They are also 18th in yards per carry and 29th in DVOA against the run so the ceiling is there for Chubb even at this salary. His upside is 150 yards and multiple touchdowns considering D’Ernest Johnson had 19 attempts last week while the Browns were getting blasted. 

Update – Chubb is active and ready to roll, probably salivating at this matchup.

WR – I’m not sure if the knee is still bothering Jarvis Landry but my word has he been awful in his playing time. Six games have not even netted him 35 receptions yet and the price tag is not super appealing. Detroit is still fielding a very rough secondary so the matchup is not that vital and if you’re shooting for GPP upside- you could go back to Donovan Peoples-Jones. He’s third in aDOT and he had two games of boom production before the Patriots bump in the road. I think the Browns get back on track here a bit and run the ball a ton so I’d rather take the shot at DPJ and hope for one or two splash plays since the volume is in question. 

TE – Austin Hooper and David Njoku both have almost the same amount of targets at 35 and 31, which is not ideal. Hooper does have the advantage in red-zone targets at 8-6 and they’re tied with two touchdowns each. Detroit has only given up the eighth-fewest receptions but they’ve only faced the fifth-least targets so that’s not a true measure of how they’re defending the position. My fear would be the eighth-heaviest rush offense won’t need to throw the ball a whole lot as heavy favorites. 

D/ST – They got absolutely rocked last week but I don’t mind the Browns again. They’re at home and the Lions are a shaky offense, allowing 26 sacks and the seventh-highest pressure rate in football. This Browns defense is miles better than they showed last week and is going to be out to prove it against an inferior offense. 

Cash – Chubb, D/ST 

GPP – DPJ, Landry, Baker 

49ers at Jaguars, O/U of 45 (49ers -6.5)

49ers 

QB – Any interest in Jimmy Garoppolo is likely attached to how competitive you think this game is. If the 49ers control this game like last week, Jimmy G has a limited ceiling. He only had to throw the ball 19 times last week with a sizable lead and was efficient with 182 yards and two touchdowns on just 15 completions. He’s actually third in yards per attempt this year despite being just 26th in yards and 21st in fantasy points per game. Jacksonville is 31st in DVOA against the pass and 27th in yards per attempt allowed. I don’t ever have much of a need to play Jimmy G and that likely is the case again. 

RB – Elijah Mitchell has a fractured finger so that has his status in jeopardy. If he can’t go and Trey Sermon being banished to the Upside Down, Jeff Wilson would be the next man up. He’s only had 10 carries in one game so far but there’s little reason to expect Sermon to take playing time here. Jacksonville is seventh in DVOA against the run but the 49ers have a strong run game and that wouldn’t worry me. We’ll see who’s in place to be active closer to Sunday. 

Update – JaMycal Hasty is out and Mitchell is doubtful. We can safely fire up Wilson is all formats and he is one of the best RB values on the entire slate. He’s an easy play here.

WR – Deebo Samuel is still the only receiver that is playable in this corps, especially with their star tight end back. Spending the fifth-highest salary on him is going to be the decision point but he’s been elite so far. Samuel is second in yards, 12th in receptions, first in YAC, fifth in touchdowns, and second in points per game. He could see the majority of his snaps against Shaquill Griffin and he’s played well this year. The 1.40 FPPT is very solid and he’s only allowed 28 receptions on the season. Still, holding Samuel in check is an awful lot to ask. He could be an incredible GPP target just due to the salary this week. 

TE – It’s great to see George Kittle getting targeted at a high clip in his return to the lineup with 15 total in the past two weeks, and last week wasn’t a super competitive game. He’s only played six games and is still 15th in receptions and 11th in yards among tight ends, which is pretty crazy to see. Kittle also has the highest target share in an offense at 25.4% and the price tag is more than fine here. Jacksonville has also allowed the sixth-most yards among nine-game teams to the position, upping the appeal for Kittle. 

D/ST – They are up to 13th in total DVOA and have 20 sacks, but this is a short week with cross-country travel. It’s not a spot where I think the Jaguars win outright exactly, but the salary involved is not that appealing. The Jags have only allowed 16 sacks all year which is way fewer than the perception is and the turnovers are at 15. There is potential for the 49ers but I won’t be there to find out. 

Cash – Wilson, Kittle

GPP – Deebo, Jimmy G

Jaguars 

QB – Last week was the style of matchup that we could target Trevor Lawrence and that blew up pretty quickly. He only completed 45.7% of his passes and couldn’t clear 11 DraftKings points. He is 34th in yards per attempt, 20th in air yards, 25th in red-zone attempts, and 30th in fantasy points per drop back. San Francisco is only 20th in DVOA against the pass but eighth in yards allowed per attempt. They may not be the best pass defense in the league but the Jaguars offense has been putrid and San Francisco is holding teams under 24 points per game. 

RB – It’s always a good sign to see a running back return from injury and going right back into their role and that’s what James Robinson did last week. He handled 16 touches and that was with Jacksonville being down in a hurry. The Jags did wise up and make him their lead back when he’s been healthy and the salary is fine if nothing special. The 49ers are fifth in DVOA against the run and there are much better spots to attack than this one. 

WR – There is really not a receiver that I want to play here. With the tight end being a focal point, Marvin Jones has been left with just a handful of targets every week. Jamal Agnew had been somewhat appealing as a cheap option but he saw five targets last week and caught exactly zero of them. If he didn’t rip off a 66-yard touchdown run, it would have been a disaster game. Jones facing some of Josh Norman and Agnew seeing K’Waun Williams aren’t exactly terrible in and of itself. It’s much more to do with the Jaguars offense featuring a tight end and Turing the other options into complementary parts. 

TE – Another game, another double-digit DraftKings point performance from Dan Arnold. He may not have the ceiling that Kittle, Kelce, and Andrews do any given week but he’s been super consistent in Jacksonville. Only one game has been single digits since he’s been a Jaguar, not counting the Thursday night game when he was in the facility for about 48 hours. He is now the target leader in the offense since Week 5. You can argue about the game plan of that and making him a focal point but it doesn’t matter what we think. All that matters is Arnold is getting fed targets and we need to follow that, even over $4,000. 

D/ST – Jacksonville has lacked the finish on defense because the pressure rate of 27% is top 10 in the league but it’s only resulted in 16 sacks. They also only have five turnovers forced so it’s hard to get really excited here. We want splash plays and the 28th total DVOA defense doesn’t seem capable of giving them to us. 

Cash – Arnold 

GPP – Jones, Agnew, Robinson 

Packers at Vikings, O/U of 47 (Packers -1.5)

Packers 

QB – One of the bigger surprises of last week was Aaron Rodgers not being able to take advantage of a vulnerable Seattle defense. He now has played nine games and only has 17 touchdowns, which is also very unexpected. He’s also only 12th in fantasy points per game and fantasy points per drop back, not to mention only 14th in yards per attempt. It’s not exactly the smash follow-up to his MVP campaign from last year and based on his play, he may not generally be worth the salary. It’s still Rodgers so I can look extremely foolish saying that last sentence. Minnesota is sixth in DVOA against the pass and that’s not the reason to skip Rodgers, but it doesn’t exactly help his cause. The Vikings are also tied for the fourth-fewest touchdown passes allowed. 

RB – Early in the week, I would expect AJ Dillon to be the chalk of the week with Aaron Jones missing. Jones was done early this past game with only seven carries and Dillons handled 21 carries and two receptions. If we’re getting 20 touches in a Green Bay offense for $6,200, the interest has to be there. He also handled nine red-zone touches and four carries inside the five, scoring twice. Minnesota is 30th in yards per carry allowed and allows over 100 yards per game rushing to running backs. We should fully expect a big workload, even if someone like Patrick Taylor snags a handful of touches. 

Update – Jones is out, as is tackle David Bakhtiari. There’s no reason to shy away from Dillon in this spot.

WR – As someone who had a whole lot of Davante Adams last week, I can tell you that it was frustrating and we should be willing to go right back. While he’s not the glaring value he was, all the attention is going to a different game. If he can outscore some of the chalkier receivers (and that is very well possible), Adams could set you up nicely. He’s still top 10 in yards, receptions, air yards share, air yards, yards per route, targets, and target share. He’s actually also 16th in unrealized air yards, which is kind of scary. Adams also has the eighth-most red-zone targets and just three scores. The dam has to break soon. No other receiver has a target share over 12.7% which is Marquez Valdes-Scantling and I’m not looking here. 

TE – No tight end in Green Bay is worth playing. 

D/ST – The fact the Vikings have only given up 12 sacks so far is notable because the Packers have 24 but they are under 23.5% for their pressure rate. It’s also a surprise to see Green Bay sit at 11th in total DVOA and with 16 turnovers forced, fifth in the NFL. I don’t think they’re the best fit on the road but Minnesota has given up a lot of pressure. This could be a spot where the sacks come through. 

Cash – Adams, Dillon 

GPP – Rodgers, D/ST

Vikings 

QB – You have to give the Packers some credit because even without two of their best defensive players for most of the year, they are eighth in DVOA against the pass. Kirk Cousins is always hard to gauge because the eye test is not always very generous to him but his metrics are never that poor. He’s ninth in yards, third in true completion rate, but he’s only 20th in yards per attempt and 13th in red-zone attempts. The volume helps since he has the seventh-most attempts but he’s only 17th in fantasy points per drop back. The price is kind of in no man’s land because most will either punt or go into the $7,000 range so there is some slight GPP appeal. 

RB – It’s really difficult to ever argue that you shouldn’t play Dalvin Cook, who racked up another 27 touches last week. That makes it four straight games that he’s touched the ball at least 18 times and the Dallas game was the lone disappointing fantasy game. Green Bay only has given up 742 rushing yards but they’ve faced the 10th fewest attempts in the league. They are 26th in yards per carry allowed and that’s more important, as is the 24th rank in DVOA against the run. I tend to think he won’t be super popular in cash but that doesn’t mean he’s not a strong play overall. 

WR – There is zero chance I’m playing Adam Thielen this week given who is around him, and he needs at least one score to pay off. The 22.5% target share is nothing terrible, but the 542 yards is just 28th. Thielen is fifth in touchdowns so you know what you need. 

For Justin Jefferson, he can produce without scoring as he has the seventh-highest air yards share, sixth-most yards, and 10th most receptions. Jefferson is fourth in deep targets as well and draws mostly Eric Stokes, who turned around his struggles from early in the season. Stokes is down to a 49.1% catch rate and just 1.30 FPPT. It’s not enough to totally shut down Jefferson, but he is just GPP-only. 

TE – I’m not saying that Ty Conklin isn’t in play, but don’t go crazy about him scoring twice last week. First, that was double his touchdowns on the season so he hasn’t found the paint that often. Secondly, some bad luck for Cook turned into production for Conklin as Cook had 11 red-zone attempts but scored just once. On the season, Conklin only has eight red-zone targets in total. The 15.1% target share isn’t bad I prefer other options in his range like Arnold, Trautman, and perhaps one more we’ll talk about. 

D/ST – Minnesota is eighth in total DVOA but I will not make a habit of going against Rodgers and company, even though it would have worked out last week. 

Cash – None 

GPP – Jefferson, Cook, Cousins, Conklin, Thielen 

Ravens at Bears, O/U of 44.5 (Ravens -5)

Ravens

QB – Will I ever tell you it’s not a good idea to play Lamar Jackson? Not even a bit because he has one of the highest ceilings at his position on any given slate. However, he’s priced competitively this week unlike two weeks ago when he was massive chalk. That won’t be the case this week so in GPP’s he could have a strong case because Chicago is 24th in yards allowed per attempt, 19th in DVOA against the pass, and a 16:4 TD:INT ratio. Jackson is fourth in fantasy points per drop back, third in fantasy points per game, fourth in air yards, and eighth in passing yards. That doesn’t even account for leading the position in carries and yards on the ground. Pending how the field treats him, Jackson could be an elite GPP play. 

RB – Even if Latavius Murray makes it back for this one, the interest is fairly mild. The matchup sees the Bears defense giving up 4.4 yards per carry, 20th in the league so far. They’ve also allowed the seventh-most rushing yards so the matchup isn’t intimidating. The only reason the red number is on the DK screen is they’ve only allowed seven total touchdowns. My issues come from the fact that Devonta Freeman and Le’Veon Bell have been involved to some extent. Sure, Bell only had three touches last week but the game script was poor in the early going and never flipped. The previous week saw him get 11 rush attempts. If it is more of a split, the appeal is simply not there. If Murray is active, it would be an upset getting a full load after missing the past few weeks. 

Update – Bell was released, so we should expect Murray back in action 

WR – If I’m playing anyone, it’s Rashod Bateman just due to the difference in salary. He is third in targets since he has been active with an 18.7% target share but he’s only $4,500 and he’s hit double-digit DK points in three straight. The rookie is 18th in yards per route so far and he avoids Jaylon Johnson. That matchup goes to Marquise Brown and Johnson has only allowed 1.50 FPPT and a 53.5% catch rate. His 15.5 YPR allowed does hint at giving up some big plays so Brown can take advantage of that with the fourth-highest air yards and 11th yards per route. Still, the salary is up there and he’ll likely get lost in the shuffle for me. 

TE – Mark Andrews is not an objectively poor play, but he is in a really weird spot salary-wise that leaves me mostly uninterested. Kittle is only $300 more and is a little bit safer and has a little bit of a higher ceiling, in my eyes. The popular theme is Baltimore is a running team because that’s what they have been for years and Andrews is competing with Brown and Bateman for targets. That second part is true but the Ravens offense is average in pass attempts per game this season at 16th so the pie is getting bigger. Andrews is second in receptions, yards, points per game, and he’s first in deep targets. He can break the position on any given slate, but much like Jackson, he will likely be GPP only for me. 

D/ST – The Ravens defense is not the unit that we’ve seen in recent years as they only have seven turnovers forced on the year and have yet to hit 20 sacks. Injuries have played a big part, to be sure but that doesn’t matter when we’re talking fantasy performance. The wild part is they lead the league in pressure rate and blitz 33.2% of the time, third-most in the league. That can give the Bears fits at times and they have allowed the most sacks in football, but their offense might be improving right before our eyes. 

Cash – Jackson, Bateman

GPP – Hollywood, Andrews, D/ST 

Bears 

QB –The Ravens have been vulnerable to explosive plays this season and Justin Fields arguably played his best game before the bye week in Pittsburgh. He flashed a lot of potential within the passing game (58.6% completion rate duly noted) and the rushing production is becoming steadier. He’s rushed for at least 38 yards and has at least six attempts in the past four games and that’s a huge boost. His air yards per attempt is 10.7 and that is first in the league, which catches your eye a little bit. Baltimore is 29th in yards allowed per attempt and 24th in DVOA against the pass, which are really interesting in this spot. It would be MME-only but he could find himself over 20 DraftKings points on the back of rushing production and possible deep completions. 

RB – I feel like there are about 12 backs that are really interesting this week and David Montgomery is included. He came back from IR and had 15 touches for 80 scrimmage yards and then a bye week to make sure he was totally healed up. Now he’s only $5,500 with one of the more secure workloads in the league and the Ravens are 10th in yards per carry allowed and have allowed over 1,100 scrimmage yards. With the improvements Fields might be starting to show, Montgomery is a strong volume play at a very reasonable salary. 

WR – Darnell Mooney is the preferred target no matter what, but we’ll circle back with an Allen Robinson update. He’s yet to practice this week, which is odd coming out of the bye. There is a legitimate question about A-Rob playing this week so the matchups are not set. Mooney has been the leader in targets with Fields under center and is barely over $5,000. 

Update – Robinson is doubtful so Mooney does look more appealing. He should see mostly Anthony Averett if his alignments stay the same and he’s allowed 1.49 FPPT but also a 14.5 YPR. Mooney could break a bg play or two and the targets should be more concentrated.

TE – Cole Kmet is in play to some extent, along the same lines that Trautman is in play. Fields has involved him more and he’s totaled 20 targets in the past three games. He finally translated it to fantasy production in their last game but I have some reservations simply because Montgomery is back in full force. He could mute some of the target potential here but Kmet still has a 9.8-yard aDOT since Week 5, so the targets wouldn’t be the exact same. This is also an example of tight end production against the Ravens being a bit skewed as they’ve faced Waller, Kelce, Hockenson, and Fant. I’d say Gesicki but we saw how that ended. 

D/ST – Chicago has managed to rack up 25 sacks on the year despite running one of the lowest blitz rates in the league. Last week when the Ravens struggled, it was blitzing almost legitimately non-stop so this will be interesting to see if the Bears change their strategy. I wouldn’t bank on that to play them and think we have better options like the Panthers for $200 more. 

Cash – Monty

GPP – Mooney, Fields, Kmet

Bengals at Raiders, O/U of 50.5 (Bengals -1)

Bengals 

QB – Joe Burrow had a five-game streak of 20 DraftKings points or more before a serious flop against Cleveland before the bye week. Burrow is still second in yards per attempt and seventh in yards even with the bye week and he’s in the top 10 in fantasy points per drop back and 11th in points per game. The red-zone work can cap the upside if the long ball isn’t working because he’s only 21st in attempts so far this year even though Burrow is ninth in true completion rate. Vegas is 22nd in DVOA against the pass and allows the seventh-highest yards per attempt. The price tag is pretty solid as well. 

RB – DraftKings didn’t forget how well Joe Mixon has been playing lately since his price is up there (justifiably). That’s what scoring 25 or more DraftKings points in three of four games does to your salary. Mixon is fourth in the league in attempts and he’s been far more involved in the passing game lately. He has an 11.4% target share in the span of the last four games and that would only help his floor and ceiling combo. The Raiders are in the bottom half of the league in rushing yards allowed, 24th in yards per carry allowed, and 16th in DVOA against the run. I’m not sure Mixon will be a huge priority for me but there is nothing wrong with the salary. 

WR – Statistically, one of the toughest corners you can draw as a receiver is Casey Hayward. He’s not faced a ton of great receivers but across 25 targets, he’s only given up 11/90 on the year. That will be a challenge for Ja’Marr Chase who has been a monster this season although three of the last four games have been sup-par. Chase is fourth in air yards share and fifth in yards while sitting sixth in yards per route. I don’t think he’s going to be a priority for me this year, and Tee Higgins is likely in the same boat. He’s only 35th in receptions, 44th in yards, and 19th in target share. The consistency is nice but an option like Waddle for just slightly more is appealing. It does appear that Higgins is popular, which I should have been expecting since his price just never moves.  

TE – C.J. Uzomah has just 28 targets on the year and two red-zone looks, so I will remain uninterested and understand his two monster games were variance and not a predictable role in the offense. That’s especially true if Mixon remains heavily involved in the passing game. 

D/ST – Cincy is down to 20th in overall DVOA but they have 23 sacks and a pressure rate of about 25%. They do only have nine turnovers forced all year and the Raiders have only given up a 19.3% pressure rate so this isn’t the best mix in my eyes. 

Cash – Mixon, Burrow, Higgins 

GPP – Chase 

Raiders 

QB – This is not my favorite spot of the slate not only because Derek Carr has a limited ceiling but because the Cincy defense has held up well against the pass so far. They are 14th in yards per attempt allowed and 21st in DVOA but are tied for the third-fewest passing touchdowns allowed. That could flip because Carr is sixth in red-zone attempts this season and he’s fourth in yards, but he’s only 22nd in fantasy points per drop back. The 15 touchdowns are just 12th and that doesn’t help his cause but the offense is missing elements and it has been noticeable. 

RB – Josh Jacobs could be a tough sell here because the Raiders are underdogs and he lost his fullback Alec Ingold, which isn’t going to help the run game. Jacobs typically needs a positive script and the Bengals have only allowed 700 yards on the ground while sitting 13th in yards per carry allowed. One of the main weaknesses this year has been receptions allowed to the position but Jacobs has all of a 9.7% target share, lower than Kenyan Drake. During some weeks, I could argue he has some appeal if you think the Bengals control this game but this isn’t the slate. A workhorse back like Montgomery is only $300 more and it’s easy to get away from the Vegas backs this week. 

WR – Hunter Renfrow is about the only player you can feel comfortable within the corps. I know that Bryan Edwards had a longer touchdown last week but four targets a game just aren’t going to cut it. Renfrow sits in the slot and all see Mike Hilton, which has been a spot to exploit. He’s allowed a 75% catch rate across 44 targets and Renfrow has seen 18 targets in the past two weeks. That’s important because Waller missed the previous game so Renfrow is a safe pick once again, with some small upside. 

TE – Of the four tight ends that are $6,000 or more on the main slate, Darren Waller would be last for me. He’s seen 18 targets over the past two weeks, which is great. He’s also generated just 116 yards, under his 61.8 yards average per game. The offense is a little easier to throw defensive coverages at him now and he’s fine in PPR formats, but the upside could be in serious question. Aside from his Week 1 performance, it’s been a fairly pedestrian year for Waller and I’ve not played him very often. His target share is only 20.9% since then, behind Renfrow. Waller has just one touchdown which negates being fourth and fifth in receptions and yards, to some extent. 

D/ST – You always want at least a little upside in cheaper defense and the only way the Raiders present that is if they can get to Burrow, who has been sacked 25 times. That’s the fifth-most in the league and third-most for players that have played nine games, while the Raiders have 21 sacks already. 

Cash – Renfrow, Waller

GPP – Carr, D/ST

Cardinals at Seahawks, O/U of 48 (Cardinals -2)

Cardinals 

QB – Perhaps Kyler Murray comes back this weekend but I’m not ready to bank on that quite yet. Seattle is 25th in DVOA against the pass so far and 19th in yards allowed per attempt, so it’s a spot that can be taken advantage of. Even though he’s only played eight games, he’s still 15th in yards, sixth in air yards, 14th in red-zone attempts, and third in fantasy points per drop back. We can hope the ankle has healed up so he runs a bit more as well because that has not been a big factor. He only passed 20 yards rushing once (and it was 21 yards) in his last four starts. Let’s circle back but if he’s active, he could be a strong GPP play just like Jackson. 

RB – Even in a blowout, James Conner got 13 touches and found the end-zone once again because that’s simply all he does. Seattle has allowed over 1,600 scrimmage yards this year and even though they are eighth in yards per carry allowed and 11th in DVOA against the run, they can certainly be had. Conner’s average fantasy score last week works to our benefit this week because his salary dropped by $100. His 40 DraftKings point game is not likely the true ceiling for him but the salary only demands about 25 for a ceiling. Hopefully, Kyler is back and this offense can get back to running smoothly. 

WR – Just like the past few weeks, so much is depending on the status of DeAndre Hopkins that we’re not diving in here. He’s still not at practice so the lean would be he’s out again, but we don’t know for sure. We also need clarity on Kyler so we’ll have the update here when available. 

Update – Hopkins is out, which leaves A.J. Green and Christian Kirk as the primary targets. Green is still in the top 20 in red-zone targets and faces off against some of Tre Brown. He’s allowed just a 50% catch rate on 14 targets in his playing time.

Kirk has 14 targets across the past two games for the lead on the team but Green only played one because of Covid protocols. His aDOT even with Colt McCoy playing was still 10.1 yards. He moves around a lot because he plays 41% of his snaps in the slot. When he’s not in the slot, D.J. Reed should be in coverage and has allowed a 13.5 YPR. Both are viable but I would feel better if Kyler is playing.

TE – My honest reaction at the Zach Ertz salary on DraftKings was “LOL” because it rose again despite him being in single digits for scoring the past three weeks. Granted, two of those games have come with McCoy as his quarterback but the numbers are still the numbers. He only drew 11 targets while the Cardinals were missing Hopkins for both games and Green for one. I simply can’t and won’t invest that salary in a play that is so thin, and Seattle has actually been strong against the position allowing just three touchdowns and 439 yards.

D/ST – After watching the Seahawks putrid performance last week (seriously…why does D.K. Metcalf hate me so much), I’m not that upset by playing the Cardinals defense here. They are second in total DVOA, tied for fourth in sacks, and have a pressure rate over 25%. lastly, they have forced the third-most turnovers on the year and the price isn’t crazy high. It’s potentially, the highest I would go. 

Cash – Conner

GPP – Kyler, Kirk, Green

Seahawks 

QB – Russell Wilson put forth one of his worst games…well, of his entire career last week with just 161 passing yards and 7.6 DraftKings points. Arizona is fourth in yards per attempt allowed and DVOA against the pass, not exactly a ringing endorsement. Russ is fifth in yards per attempt and second in air yards per attempt so they are attacking deep in the passing game, but the deep completion rate is just 23rd on the season. Wilson is seventh in fantasy points per drop back and I really want to see how the field treats him. If Kyler is back and more points are expected, Wilson could be forced to air it out. 

RB – The Seahawks face a Cardinals unit that is eighth in DVOA against the run and they may be relying on the third-string running back. Chris Carson doesn’t sound close to coming back and Alex Collins was a surprise DNP on Thursday. This could be a really ugly situation that we’ll need to talk more about on Friday. 

Update – Collins is back to not having an injury designation and will split with Travis Homer, who likely plays on he majority of passing downs.

WR – Aside from the fact that D.K. Metcalf doesn’t like me, the status of the running backs could have trickle effects through the offense. If the running game is totally ineffective, Seattle could be very pass-heavy and in theory, that could benefit Metcalf and Tyler Lockett. The application of that theory last week was beyond awful. Metcalf should see Byron Murphy who has been excellent so far. Like most corners, Murphy is giving up size but has a 55.1% catch rate allowed and just a 0.7% burn rate. That’s great but Metcalf is eighth in yards run per route, third in touchdowns, and 13th in points per game. 

Lockett is playing a lot less in the slot and has the 12th air yards share in the league with 14 deep targets, along with the 12th highest target share. Robert Alford has a 64.3 catch rate allowed and 1.53 FPPT. Russell Wilson can’t play worse….right?

TE – Gerald Everett has played seven games this season and has 22 total receptions on a 13.2% target share. Over 35% of those receptions came last week in a game where Seattle failed to generate literally anything through their passing game. It truly seems like a classic case of chasing a game that is way outside normal expectations. To compound matters, Arizona is second among teams that have played 10 games in yards given up to the position. 

D/ST – If Kyler is back, I won’t touch Seattle at the same price as Carolina. If he’s not, we can revisit this play as a GPP option since we saw how bad the Arizona offense can be without their star players last week. 

Cash – None 

GPP – Metcalf, Lockett, Wilson, TBD

Cowboys at Chiefs, O/U of 56.5 (Chiefs -2.5)

Cowboys 

QB – Here. We. Go. If I’ve seemed not that interested in some of the quarterback options, it’s because of this game. It has the highest total on the board by roughly six points, two great offenses, and two very average (at best) defenses. Dak Prescott hammered his salary last week at chalk so he could very well be chalky again. He’s one of the easiest ways to get access to this game and KC is 30th in yards per attempt allowed, 27th in DVOA against the pass, and the fourth-most passing yards allowed. Dak is sixth in yards per attempt, fantasy points per drop back, and points per game. This should be a fun one. 

RB – One of the reasons I would struggle to play Mixon this week is because Ezekiel Elliotis only $100 more and in just a total smash spot. The KC run defense is putrid as they have allowed the fifth-most receptions, the third-highest yards per carry, and over 1,300 scrimmage yards. They also have the 26th ranked DVOA against the run and if the Cowboys can stick with the run game, Zeke should eat in this matchup. He’s sixth in carries on the year and has a 9.9% target share. You can always try Tony Pollard to be different but plenty of games have seen him with just eight touches or so. 

WR – I have to pass along this tweet because it’s really great to explain just how dangerous the passing game is for Dallas this week. 

It will be fascinating to see how the field reacts to the duo of CeeDee Lamb and Amari Cooper. The path of least resistance is Cooper and with so man trying to jam this game in, I’m betting he will be more popular. Lamb is coming off a ceiling game but he’s not cheap and he could wind up not being as popular as he should for no other reason than pricing. The scary part is nobody played over 66% of the snaps last week and Lamb was only at 41.6%. 

Michael Gallup made his return as well and drew five targets and the most air yards. The best course is to mix and match these receivers as they all have some serious potential at the salary. There isn’t any corner in the KC secondary that can hang with any of them and if the Chiefs play man coverage, Dak is going to lay waste to that defense. I will likely try to go against the field on ownership, but I want to pay up for Lamb more than most right now. If he’s going to get open 45% of the time the rest will take care of itself. 

Update – Cooper is out with Covid protocols, so both Lamb and Gallup take a monster bump up. I want one in my cash and GPP lineups this week. It also bumps up the next man.

TE – I’m not letting one poor game shift my view on Dalton Schultz very much here. He’s still playing right about 80% of the snaps and he is top 10 in yards and receptions at the position. Perhaps the largest knock is he only has five red-zone targets on the year which doesn’t do him many favors. However, he’s still 10th in yards per route and the Chiefs will have their hands more than full with the talented receiver trio. I’m not sure I’d be interested in a one-off, but getting different in stacks sure does make sense. 

D/ST – Trevon Diggs may pick off Mahomes once or twice, but the potential downside is not worth it. The Chiefs looked better on Sunday night (although they still had to dodge multiple turnover plays) and put up 40 points. 

Cash – Dak, Zeke, Lamb, Cooper

GPP – Gallup, Schultz, Pollard

Chiefs 

QB – Patrick Mahomes threw for 400+ yards and five touchdowns last week and I feel like this is how he walked into the locker room after three straight very poor games – 

Mahomes had a patch where he scuffled but yet he is still fourth in points per game, first in attempts, third in red-zone attempts, second in yards, and second in touchdowns. He’s under $8,000 on the main slate in the highest total. Do we need to say much more about him?

RB – Playing a Chiefs running back depends on the health of Clyde Edwards-Helaire. If he is active, it’s hard to not imagine he’ll split with Darrell Williams to the point where neither will have much value. Williams was already taking about 30-35% of the role before CEH got hurt and Williams stepped in to handle 72% of the carries for backs while sporting a 7.7% target share. That would be more than enough against the 18th ranked defense in DVOA against the run, but only if CEH remains out. 

Update – CEH will be activated which makes this too messy for my liking. I’ll just stick to the passing game.

WR – Here’s another gem of a tweet that tells us about Tyreek Hill being a smash play – 

We know that corner Trevon Diggs can get scorched in coverage because he does take some chances and if he’s in man, Hill is going to get him at least a couple of times. He’s second in receptions, fourth in yards, first in unrealized air yards, and second in deep targets. He is more expensive than the next player, but he’s going to be my favorite Chief in this game. It’s just a matter of squeezing him in and it likely includes spending down at tight end. Diggs has allowed an 18.3 YPR this year and Hill is my priority. 

TE – Those numbers with Hill give me a slight hesitation with Travis Kelce, but not much. He’s still an elite option that is not priced correctly at $7,100. Kelce leads in receptions, yards, unrealized air yards, YAC, points per game, routes….you get the picture. Dallas is mid-pack defending the position but we know that’s not that important, especially in this game environment. Juggling the skill players in this game is going to be a challenge. 

D/ST – Not even a consideration for me. 

Cash – Mahomes, Hill, Kelce, TBD

GPP – Any cash player  

Cash Core Four

A.J. Dillon, Jeff Wilson (assuming Mitchell is OUT), Tee Higgins, Tyreek Hill

GPP Core Four

One of – CeeDee Lamb, Michael Gallup, or Ezekiel Elliott

One Of – Tyreek Hill or Travis Kelce

Nick Chubb

Jeff Wilson (too good of a spot with no backs behind him and pricing to pass in either format)

Stacks

Chiefs/Cowboys – All the usual suspects, I will have at least 2-3 players from this game in every lineup. With that said, I’m more focused on building mini stacks around them with teams more than game stacks.

Bills – Allen, Diggs, Sanders, Knox, Beasley

Bengals – Burrow, Chase, Higgins, Mixon (Waller preferred Raider for minis)

Packers – Rodgers, Dillon, Adams

Vikings – Cook, Jefferson

One-Offs To Make Things Work – Brandin Cooks, Jaylen Waddle, Mark Ingram, Dan Arnold, Rashod Bateman, James Conner, John Bates

Thank you for reading my NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 11 and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life! Be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Models and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport.

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To quote the great Michael Rasile, “It’s a great day to be alive!” and it’s a great day to get ready for the Week 10 NFL DFS GPP slate! For those who haven’t read it yet, please check out the Week 10 Cash Game Checkdown for your bankroll sustaining, cash game build advice before building your NFL DFS GPP lineups. After a ANOTHER MONSTER Week 9, let’s stay hot rolling into an ugly, Week 10 slate!

*PLEASE note, the players in the Cash Game Checkdown are in play for GPP’s as well. They are high-floor and usually, high-ceiling players we always want to play. This article is simply to provide a different perspective on some ways you can make your GPP lineup different.

In addition, I would strongly advise giving my NFL DFS Strategy article I published this offseason before diving into the 2021 NFL DFS season. If you have any questions or would like some further help when building your lineups, please do not hesitate to reach out to me directly on Twitter.

For those looking to get different and make a splash in some GPPs, the time is now. We’ll usually be taking some heavy stances on lower-ownership players, but at times, there is certainly good “chalk” to eat. Now, let’s get into it.

Games I’m most interested in getting exposure to:

MIN/LAC
ATL/DAL
TB/WAS
JAX/IND

NFL DFS GPP Quarterbacks

Justin Herbert ($7,300 DK / $8,000 FD)

On the weird slate with tons of injuries and condensed chalk, it’s going to be very hard to get different. There are three games with a total over 50 points and then the rest leave little fantasy appeal outside of one-offs. I have really dove into this slate and have attempted to get cute with other quarterbacks and really can’t find much that sits well with me. That said, I’m going right back to Justin Herbert this week against the Minnesota secondary we often pick on in a game with a total at 53.5 points. Sometimes, chalk is good-chalk and we just have to find a way to build a high-upside GPP lineup around it.

At a 10% ownership projection, this isn’t nearly the GPP “sex” spot we had last week, but there are five quarterbacks projected for 10% or higher ownership at the quarterback position (Prescott, Brady, Allen, Herbert, and Ryan) and Herbert’s path a ceiling game seems to make the most sense for me and I’ll try to get different elsewhere in my lineup.

Key Pairing(s): Keenan Allen, Mike Williams, Jared Cook, Austin Ekeler
Key Run-back(s): Dalvin Cook, Justin Jefferson, Adam Thielen, Tyler Conklin

Tom Brady ($7,600 DK / $8,300 FD)

Similar to the above, we are not uncovering anything sneaky here with Tom Brady, but what we can do is get different with our build on using a run-back or two with Tom Brady. We know the Bucs are likely going to lead every slate in pass attempts and that should bode well for this Tampa passing attack against a horrid Washington secondary, grading 31st in pass defense DVOA.

Key Pairing(s): Mike Evans, Leonard Fournette, Tyler Johnson (if Godwin is out)
Key Run-back(s): Terry McLaurin, J.D. McKissic, Ricky Seals-Jones

Trevor Lawrence ($5,300 DK / $6,600 FD)

It wouldn’t be a StixPicks GPP article without a nasty 1% owned, punt-play quarterback, so here it is. We’ve had a ton of success picking on the Indianapolis secondary who currently grades 26th in pass defense DVOA and the Jaguars are one of the more pass-happy teams in the NFL. With the Colts sitting as a 10.5 point favorite, the realistic gamescript here is that the Jaguars are chasing points from the get-go and we watch Jonathan Taylor run wild.

If Lawrence and the Jaguars are somewhat competent on offense this Sunday, Lawrence should offer a lot of savings to build a lineup that helps you avoid the 50% owned punt-running backs of D’Ernest Johnson and Mark Ingram. I’m not saying that is a smart move, but I find it hard to believe D’Ernest Johnson at 50% ownership, running against a stacked-box Bill Belichick is likely to scheme, will be a path to GPP success.

Key Pairing(s): Marvin Jones, Dan Arnold
Key Run-back(s): Jonathan Taylor, Michael Pittman Jr.

Honorable Mention: Kirk Cousins, Josh Allen, Carson Wentz, Ben Roethlisberger

NFL DFS GPP Running Backs

Dalvin Cook ($8,000 DK / $8,500 FD)

This week it looks like the majority of the field is going to pair up D’Ernest Johnson, Mark Ingram, which is fine for cash games, but I don’t see much upside there other than significant touchdown variance breaking your way if you choose to build a lineup with them both. That leaves you room for one stud running back and it looks like the field is choosing Najee Harris at that spot leaving Dalvin Cook projected for 10% ownership.

As I mentioned in the cash article, Dalvin Cook is my lock of the week for all formats in NFL DFS this weekend against a Chargers defense giving up five yards per carry and a nut-worst 32nd ranked run defense (DVOA). I want a piece of both sides of this game in the majority of my lineups and will be using a run-back to fit my narrative of this game shooting-out.

Key Run-backs: Jared Cook (value), Mike Williams (upside), Keenan Allen (safety/upside), Austin Ekeler (safety/upside)

Aaron Jones ($6,900 DK / $8,200 FD)

With Aaron Rodgers back in the lineup, the upside for Aaron Jones is arguably second-to-nobody at the running back position this week. The Seahawks grade 30th in DVOA against pass-catching running backs and with Russel Wilson returning for Seattle, this game definitely has shoot-out potential. These are the games where I really like to use Aaron Jones’ elite pass-catching ability and extremely high touchdown equity.

If you think this game is one with sneaky shootout potential, you run Jones back with Metcalf or Lockett. Simple as that.

Leonard Fournette ($6,100 DK / $7,400 FD)

I really only like Fournette if Chris Godwin is out but with a banged up Washington defensive line, he’s in play regardless. This is likely an excellent gamescript for Leonard Fournette as a two-score favorite as is, but if Godwin is out, the pass-catching upside for Fournette is upgraded significantly. At 7-10% ownership, I love the differentiation Fournette offers to your GPP builds.

J.D. McKissic ($5,200 DK ONLY)

Another gross 1% owned type of play, but McKissic’s gamescript as they likely play catch-up to Tom Brady and the Bucs is a very positive one. By no means do I expect McKissic to have a ceiling game here of 18+ points, but I’m using McKissic with the angle of “just go outscore D’Ernest Johnson chalk”. I’d likely keep McKissic exposure strictly to large-field tournaments.

Honorable Mention: Cordarrelle Patterson, Ezekiel Elliott, Christian McCaffrey, Jonathan Taylor, James Conner

NFL DFS GPP Wide Receivers

Mike Evans ($6,900 DK / $7,400 FD)

With or without Chris Godwin, Mike Evans is going to be a core play for me this weekend. Brandon St. Juste and Kendall Fuller will have their hands full as Mike Evans brings some serious two-plus touchdown upside in this matchup.

Terry McLaurin ($7,600 DK / $7,100 FD)

Crazy cheap on FanDuel, but McLaurin is in play at 5% ownership on both outlets here. As we discussed J.D. McKissic’s upside in the favorable pass-heavy gamescript for the Washington Football Team, Terry McLaurin is the biggest benefactor in a game that Tampa gets an early lead and continues to score. The AETY Model projects Terry McLaurin for a 32% target share this weekend which would lead the slate if all goes to plan.

Mike Williams ($6,600 DK / $6,900 FD)

I mentioned in the cash article how I don’t like to pick on the inside of Minnesota’s secondary, but boy oh boy do I love picking on Cam Dantzler and Bashaud Breeland. Both of these defenses are insanely banged up and again, this is my favorite game to get exposure to. I was all in Keenan Allen last week and we crushed, but this week, I’ll take the savings and roll with the 100+ yards and two-touchdown upside Mike Williams brings to the table in this matchup.

For what it’s worth, I still love Keenan Allen.

Marvin Jones ($5,800 DK / $5,900 FD)

On a slate where I love a lot of higher-priced studs, I’ll need a little bit of savings and Marvin Jones provides me with just that. A true WR1 priced as a mid-tier WR2 is something I always try to find on each slate, especially when they’re going to see Rock Ya-Sin for the majority of the game. When I saw sportsbooks open his prop around 44 receiving yards, I was a bit discouraged in rostering Marvin Jones, but I’m going to hit the over on that prop and double-dip my exposure with Jones in my NFL DFS GPP lineups.

Value “Punt” Plays

  • Tyler Johnson (if Godwin is OUT)
  • James Washington
  • Amon-Ra St. Brown

Honorable Mention: Justin Jefferson, Stefon Diggs, CeeDee Lamb, DK Metcalf, Russell Gage, Diontae Johnson

NFL DFS GPP Tight-Ends

T.J. Hockenson ($5,500 DK / $6,500 FD)

While the whole world rushes to play Diontae Johnson and/or Najee Harris, absolutely no one if interested in Hockenson in a perfect gamescript for a ceiling game. There’s little doubt that the Steelers get ahead early and I always love to take 1% owned-upside on the other side of the DFS chalk heaven. Hockenson has a legit 8+ reception for 100-yards type matchup here. If he can find a way into the end-zone, we’re talking the TE1 on this main slate.

Jared Cook ($3,200 DK / $5,200 FD)

I touched earlier that we need to find a way to get a little different if we’re going to be investing in some of the chalkiest games on this slate and that lead me to Jared Cook. There’s really nothing sexy about Jared Cook but we should always be interested in a pass-catching tight-end against Cover-2 defenses (what Minnesota will run for the majority of Sunday). Cook is projected for 5-8% ownership and the number-one value at tight-end in the AETY Model. I wouldn’t expect much, but if he can get us 10+ fantasy points, we’ll be in a really good spot. If he finds his way into the end-zone, then look out Twitter, because there will be a lot of Win Daily member screenshots going out!

Honorable Mention: Kyle Pitts, Ricky Seals-Jones

Thank you all for the support and good luck this week! Make sure you follow me on Twitter at @stixpicks and be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Model powered by AETY and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport.

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