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NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 10

It’s crazy that we are already in Week 10 and we’re here to get an outline, but much of this slate is up in the air as of Thursday. The cores will not be out until Saturday because we’ll want as much time as possible to see how the field reacts to all the injury news on Friday. We’ve got 11 games this week and there is a ton to go over as usual in the NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 10!

Bills at Jets, O/U of 47.5 (Bills -11)

Bills

QB – Josh Allen face-planted last week with the entire Bills offense but that can’t stop us this week. Even with a bye and a poor week, he’s still third in red-zone attempts, fifth in attempts, 10th in deep attempts, and seventh in deep completion rate. Allen is also seventh in fantasy points per drop back and third in rush yards. The Jets are 30th in DVOA against the pass and have given up a 12:1 TD: INT ratio. Allen is an elite fantasy option and he’s under $8,000. 

RB – This situation is likely very important for cash games this week. Everyone saw the Jets get gouged by the Colts on an island game as they rushed for over 200 yards. Zack Moss exited this past week after just 28% of the snaps and the Bills have confirmed that he is in the concussion protocol. If he cannot clear protocol in time, Devin Singletary will almost surely be extremely chalky at just $4,700 on DraftKings. Trying to predict which back has the better game can be difficult with Moss and Singletary, although Moss has an edge. If you remove the variable of both being active, that is a game-changer. The Jets have allowed the second-most rushing yards among teams that have played eight games and are 27th in yards per carry allowed, not to mention ranking 31st in DVOA. Singletary and Moss have also combined for 18% of the target share, ratcheting up the chances for Singletary to smash if Moss is out. 

Update – Moss is in this week after clearing protocols so he and Singletary go into the GPP category.

WR – We need injury news but based on the two-game sample size, Cole Beasley is perhaps the receiver from Buffalo that holds the highest appeal from a point per dollar standpoint. The Bills have played two games without their starting tight end and Beasley has seen 24 targets across those two games. The amount of receivers who have more targets in that span is one, and it’s Tyreek Hill. Don’t hear what I’m not saying – Beasley is not some cheat code on the slate at $5,200 but he could wind up being a strong value. Buffalo has started to see a lot more Cover 2 defenses with deep safeties that have given KC fits lately. That volume doesn’t stay that high for long but the salary is appealing and the matchup in the slot is as well.

Stefon Diggs continues to chase his first monster game and I’ll continue as well. He is still top 10 in targets and unrealized air yards but is top 15 in receptions and yards. Corner Bryce Hall could see the most time on him and he’s given up a 12.1YPR across 41 targets. The Jets losing their best safety in Marcus Maye is a huge blow and Buffalo should be able to capitalize. Emmanuel Sanders continues to be a feast or famine option because he’s either clearing 60 yards and/scoring or not doing much of anything. Brandon Echols will be mostly responsible for Manny Sanders and has allowed 1.48 fantasy points per target. 

TE – Buffalo could get Dawson Knox back in the lineup this week as he started the week with a limited practice. If he is, it’s hard not to have some interest as we have in this entire offense. He is still 11th in red-zone targets among the position despite now only playing six games and he’s still co-leading the position in touchdowns. The Jets are bottom 12 in receptions and yards allowed and will be missing a key defensive player in their secondary as well. 

Update – Knox is back for the Bills as well, lowering my expectations for Beasley.

D/ST – The weekly lesson in why we don’t pay for defenses continued last week because this Bills unit only scored eight DK points. That’s solid, but when you’re paying $4,000 in that spot, it isn’t good enough. They are the number one defense in total DVOA, have the highest pressure rate in the NFL, and have forced over two turnovers a game, but they will almost always be too expensive for my builds. 

Cash – Allen, Beasley

GPP – Diggs, Sanders, Knox, Moss, Singletary

Jets 

QB – In his playing time, Mike White has been fantastic. He put up over 30 DraftKings points against the Bengals and went 7-11 with a touchdown before an injury knocked him out of the game. Having said that, this is his toughest spot to date and it’s hard to love him here. Buffalo is first in DVOA against the pass, they have given up the fewest yards passing, and have a 5:11 TD: INT ratio on the year. Even at $5,100, I won’t go there myself. I think his storybook game plus takes a hit here. 

RB – It’s really tough to get invested in Michael Carter at this DraftKings salary. Only two teams have allowed fewer rushing yards against running backs so far and are fourth in yards per carry allowed. They are inside the top five in about every defensive category that we can list, and they have also allowed the fewest receptions to the position. It’s very tough to build the case for Carter as it is because he’s pushing $6,000. If he was cheaper, I’d be more interested to play him just as a check-down option in the passing game in what projects for a negative game script and against the defense that ranks third in DVOA against the run. 

WR – The Jets look to have their top three receivers in line to play for about the only time this season but that might not be super helpful. Corey Davis, Jamison Crowder, and Elijah Moore all have target shares between 14% and 20% with Davis in the lead. Davis would also likely face the most of Tre White, who has allowed 0.99 fantasy points per target and just a 62.2 passer rating. Crowder will run in the slot against Taron Johnson but he’s only allowed a 50% catch rate. Even Moore would draw Levi Wallace who has only allowed a 9.1 YPR. It’s not a good spot for any, we don’t know much about how all three coexist, and they have spotty quarterback play. 

TE – I am slightly tempted to use Ryan Griffin as a punt with Tyler Kroft hitting the IR since Griffin has an 8.1% target share on his own and Kroft had 6.3%. My hesitation would come because Davis is slated to be back so Griffin is almost surely still fourth or fifth in the pecking order. Maybe if you play 150 lineups, you could have some exposure but that would be about it. 

D/ST – I can’t ask myself into this punt, especially after the Jets lost safety Marcus Maye last week to a torn Achilles. They only have five turnovers on the year and can’t stop either facet of an offense. I don’t expect Buffalo to struggle so badly this week. 

Cash – None 

GPP – Moore, Crowder

Buccaneers at Washington, O/U of 51 (Bucs -9.5)

Buccaneers

QB – We often want some style of rushing upside in this range of salary when we go quarterback but Tom Brady is the exception. He’s on pace for over 5,000 yards and 50 touchdowns to go along with ranking second in red-zone attempts, attempts overall, second in yards, and eighth in points per drop back. Among teams that have played eight games, Washington has given up the most passing yards and the most touchdowns, not to mention sitting 31st in DVOA against the pass. He’s coming out of a bye and a loss in the previous week, meaning we should see the A game from Brady and he’s among the safest options of the slate. 

RB – Fresh off the bye week, Leonard Fournette should still have a stranglehold on this backfield. Even in a fairly negative game script, Fournette still had 11 touches against the Saints and he still played 60.7% of the snaps. Combine that with an 11.4% target share, and Fournette continues to be a strong play. While we’ve attacked the Washington defense through the air more often, they have given up 12 total touchdowns to the backs and over 850 scrimmage yards. They are seventh in yards allowed per carry and 10th in DVOA, so this isn’t the softest spot ever. Still, Fournette is the clear lead back in one of the elite offenses in the league. 

WR – This is one of the position groups that will be very important for the slate. Both Chris Godwin and Antonio Brown seem legit questionable as far as playing this week. That could open up some value but the main focus will shift to Mike Evans who is only $6,900 on DraftKings. He would likely see Kendall Fuller through a large portion of the game and Fuller has allowed 1.59 fantasy points per target so far and is significantly smaller than Evans by about five inches. With Brady’s precision, that could be a lethal combo. If both Godwin and AB are out, Tyler Johnson could be a very strong value play but we’ll need Friday updates. 

Update – AB is out and Godwin is a game time call after logging just one limited practice all week. That means I’m going to have plenty of Evans in all formats and I believe he could be a must play in cash.

TE – It’s not the best sign ever that Rob Gronkowski is still not practicing in full after a bye week to heal from his various injuries. Cameron Brate and O.J. Howard has both played around 50% of the snaps and both have target shares under 9%, while Brate holds an 8-2 edge in red-zone targets. Let’s circle back and see if Tampa is just being cautious with Gronk. Washington has given up 541 yards in eight games to the position so that would help the appeal, especially if the Bucs are missing a receiver. 

Update – Gronk is out this week

D/ST – The Bucs are well in play even at the higher end of the salary I prefer to spend. They are ninth in total DVOA and have a pressure rate of almost 25% and that is despite facing a litany of injuries all season long. They have caused 14 turnovers and Washington has allowed a pressure rate over 20%. 

Cash – Brady, Fournette, Evans

GPP – Godwin if active, Johnson if not, Howard

Washington 

QB – If you’re dumpster diving at the position, there is a case to be made for Taylor Heinicke. The projected game script would be Washington trails quite a bit and the run game is not likely to find much success. Whatever the Washington offense can get done is going to ride on the right arm of Heinicke and Tampa is 10th in DVOA against the pass. The Bucs are only seventh in yards allowed per attempt but they have faced the second-most attempts for teams that have eight games played. You’re really just attacking the volume here and there is no safety in the play. 

RB – So the last game we saw from Washington was rather scary. Antonio Gibson had just 11 touches which was the same amount that Jaret Patterson had and both of those backs played fewer snaps than J.D. McKissic. A three-headed monster is not what we want to see in any backfield, especially since the Bucs have given up fewer than 450 rushing yards on the year, the second-fewest. They are tied for the fifth-most receptions given up to the position and McKissic is one of three players in this offense that has a target share of over 15% on the year. In this projected game script, he could be very valuable on DraftKings that is full PPR. I would rather not play either Gibson or Patterson at this point. It has been a very disappointing season for Gibson so far. 

WR – With Curtis Samuel doubtful (what a lost season for him), Terry McLaurin is going to have my attention in the receiving corps. He’s fourth in air yards, fourth in unrealized air yards, fifth in deep targets, ninth in targets, and 10th in target share. Facing Jamel Dean is no picnic since he has only allowed a 34.5% completion rate across 29 targets and a 54.0 passer rating, which leaves McLaurin as a GPP-only play for me. 

TE – Logan Thomas could be back this week unless he suffers a setback and is priced very affordably on DK. His 16% target share was second behind McLaurin and the Bucs have had their issues defending the pass, impart due to their injuries. They are tied for the third-most receptions allowed and if Thomas is full strength after a hamstring injury, his snap share was 100% in the three games he played. 

D/ST – The glaring weakness for the Washington Football team this year has been the pass defense as they rank 31st and then 30th in total DVOA. They do have a top 10 pressure rate but it hasn’t stopped them from getting shredded, and Brady has faced the lowest pressure rate in the league at just 11.9%. That is not a good mix. 

Cash – None 

GPP – McLaurin, McKissic, Thomas or Seals-Jones, Heinicke

Falcons at Cowboys, O/U of 54.5 (Cowboys -8)

Falcons

QB – I’m not sure why Matt Ryan is still barely $6,000 because he should be more than that, by a good bit. He has scored over 22 DraftKings points in five of eight games and aside from one (mostly predictable) poor game, he’s paid off in four of the past five. Dallas is 24th in yards per attempt allowed but seventh in DVOA against the pass. He’s seventh in red-zone attempts, 10th in overall attempts, 12th in yards, and first in pressured completion rate. Considering he’s had his bye, these are encouraging signals that Ryan is comfortable in the new offense and he’s underpriced. 

RB – It seems like every week, Cordarrelle Patterson is a bit too expensive but every week, he finds a way to get it done. Some weeks he gets it done on the ground and some it is through the air and at some point, you just have to accept that Patterson has a very valuable role in the offense. You can’t just continue to say, “Well, if you take away his 64-yard reception last week” or “He won’t cash in on 12-15 touches” every week. With the Falcons missing one of their premier playmakers on top of that, Patterson is absolutely locked in. Patterson is only 11 carries behind Mike Davis for the team lead and he has a 15.6% target share. The touches he gets are actually better for fantasy if half of them are coming from receptions. Dallas has allowed over 900 scrimmage yards to backs so far and that could be an issue this week. 

WR – Calvin Ridley remains out and it’s been a wild two-game sample without him for these Falcons receivers. The headline is Patterson and Kyle Pitts are the main two cogs but Russell Gage and Olamide Zaccheaus are still in play. Gage went from zero targets to eight while Zaccheaus turned three targets last week into two scores. We don’t want to get into the habit of banking on touchdowns, so Gage would be the favorite here. It would be especially nice if he stayed in the slot against Jourdan Lewis as he’s allowed 1.71 fantasy points per target. 

TE – All of the metrics continue to scream to play Kyle Pitts because you simply can’t ask for more at this point. He’s fifth in slot snaps, fifth in routes, third in deep targets, first in air yards share, third in yards, and fourth in unrealized air yards. It hasn’t made a difference in every game but with Ridley still out at least for two more weeks, he’s going to continue to get all the work he can get. Dallas is in the bottom half of the league in receptions and yards allowed so he’s well in play, especially as a run-back option for Dallas pieces. 

D/ST – Denver was able to smother the Cowboys last week but the Falcons don’t have the same style of personnel, and I can’t see Dallas getting smashed twice in a row. Atlanta has the fewest sacks in the league and has the second-lowest pressure rate to go along with ranking 31st in total DVOA. 

Cash – Pitts, Gage, Ryan 

GPP – Patterson, Zaccheaus 

Cowboys

QB – Dak Prescott saved his day late in the game last week but Dallas got hammered by the Denver defense while the game was in the balance. Atlanta does have a worse defense so I think Dak is a perfectly fine option this week even though I may reserve him for just GPP. The Falcons are 28th in DVOA against the pass and Prescott is ninth in yards per attempt this season to go along with sitting ninth in fantasy points per drop back. This entire game stack does look fairly appealing. 

RB – I’m not sure Ezekiel Elliott could have asked for a better bounce-back spot than he has this week. Atlanta has been hit hard by running backs, allowing over 1,100 scrimmage yards and nine scores. They have given up the eighth-most rushing yards among teams that have only played eight games and are 20th in yards per carry. Dallas was never able to get the ground game established last week but Zeke still had 13 touches and a banged-up knee through the last game. Zeke is sixth in red-zone attempts with eight games played and seventh in carries overall. Only paying $7,000 for him on DraftKings is a bargain seeing as how Atlanta is 27th in DVOA. 

WR – The receiver room for the Cowboys is going to be more difficult to predict week to week now that Michael Gallup is back in action. He hasn’t played since Week 1 and in that 59% of the snaps, he drew seven targets but if you remember, Dallas threw the ball 50+ times. That’s not generally been the plan since and the target share was about 12%. That aspect is likely not too far off and they talked about moving Gallup around more, although he only played four snaps in the slot. 

CeeDee Lamb and Amari Cooper should continue to be the main targets in the passing game and Cooper would see more of A.J. Terrell if the alignments held up. Introducing Gallup back makes that sketchy but Terrell has only allowed a 31.8% catch rate and 0.87 points per target across 22 targets. We all know Cooper can overcome any matchup and after he burned the field last week, he’s interesting with a salary bump as well. Lamb is getting a little too pricey for me but all of these receivers are GPP in a high total game. 

TE – If the down game for Dalton Schultz is almost 10 DK points, that’s not all that bad. Blake Jarwin is on the IR and Schultz played 95% of the snaps and had five targets last week. Even in a crowded offense, he’s managed to have the third-most targets on the team. Even with Gallup on his way back Schultz remains a strong play at this salary. 

D/ST – They have managed to hang in the top 10 in total DVOA but you can see what happens to their fantasy scoring when they’re not forcing turnovers and scoring defensive touchdowns. Atlanta’s offense has been figuring some things out lately and Dallas is just average in pressure rate this season. 

Update – Randy Gregory is out for the defense, making the matchup tougher for Dallas. It does make Ryan more appealing with a pass rusher out for Dallas.

Cash – Zeke, Dak

GPP – Cooper, Schultz, Gallup, Lamb

Saints at Titans, O/U of 44 (Titans -2.5)

Saints

QB – I suppose Trevor Siemian is somewhat in play but I don’t love it. Tennessee is eighth in DVOA against the pass so it’s not the easiest spot from that aspect. They have given up the second-most passing yards but they have also faced the most pass attempts in the league so far. The points per drop back are very low and we know that Taysom Hill lurks to take away the most important snaps in the red zone. 

RB – Alvin Kamara had one of the quieter 20 DK point games we’ve seen from him and some may get a little concerned that Mark Ingram had 14 touches. I’m not as worried because Kamara still had 17 and with no receivers or tight ends to speak of that demand targets, this offense is going to be centered on these two running backs. The game plan is going to be those two combining for 30+ touches and playing strong defense, so not only should we not sweat it for Kamara but Ingram is in play at just $4,500 on DraftKings. Tennessee has given up over 1.000 scrimmage yards against backs, are 22nd in yards per carry allowed, and 24th in DVOA against the run. 

Update – Kamara and tackle Terron Armstead are both out and Ingram is going to be totally justified chalk.

WR – This is still a difficult situation to get a firm grip on. On the surface, Deonte Harris looks like the guy that we want since he’s seen 15 targets while Siemian has been under center. The scary part is realizing that Harris played just 30% of the snaps last week. It’s clear that he and the quarterback have chemistry but I’m not sure why he doesn’t see more time in this scenario. Marquez Callaway and Tre’Quan Smith led in snaps and combined for 10 targets with Callaway getting two red-zone and end-zone targets. Callaway gets the easier post to pick on with Janoris Jenkins who has allowed a 107.8 passer rating and 13.7 YPR. If going this route, I’ll still take the know connection with Harris but the whole situation is very volatile with small sample size. 

TE – It took Juwan Johnson being inactive and the third-string quarterback playing, but Adam Trautman finally saw seven targets in a game! He also played 88% of the snaps and trailed on Harris in targets last week so he’s on the board if Johnson is not active again. Let’s be clear though – there is zero safety in playing Trautman. This offense is not going to throw the ball a ton if they can avoid it. 

D/ST – A lot of the numbers for New Orleans look pretty strong as they have 13 turnovers forced, 18 sacks, a pressure rate over 25%, and they rank third in total DVOA. Only Chicago has given up more sacks than Tennessee and if New Orleans can shut down the run, they can pin their ears back to attack that weakness. 

Cash – Ingram, D/ST 

GPP – Harris, Callaway, Trautman 

Titans 

QB – New Orleans is a little bit more vulnerable to the pass since they sit 23rd in yards per attempt allowed and 13th in DVOA against the pass. That helps Ryan Tannehill’s outlook in this game because they may have a very difficult time finding success on the ground. Tannehill is top 12 in red-zone attempts, yards per attempt, and clean completion rate. He didn’t have to do a whole lot last week which was a surprise and if Tennessee can get away with it, they’ll keep him under 35 attempts. I would much rather play Ryan against Dallas since this game could be very slow and this game has the second-lowest total on the slate. 

RB – Fortunately, the Titans face one of the better run defenses in football so we don’t have to worry about the split they employed Sunday night. Adrian Peterson did lead in carries with 10 while Jeremy McNichols and D’Onta Foreman chipped in seven and five. That split could start to lean towards Peterson a little more as he gets comfortable in the offense but he also generated just 26 yards from scrimmage on 11 touches. New Orleans is first in yards per carry allowed, first in DVOA, and has allowed the fewest rushing yards in the league so far. This is not a situation that I want to invest in, even with Peterson sitting under $5,000 on DK. 

WR – A.J. Brown is probably going to see Marshon Lattimore and I do not care in the least. The real issue with trying to play him is not the 52% catch rate Lattimore has allowed because he’s also allowing a 2% burn rate (181st), a 121.9 passer rating, and 2.16 fantasy points per target. No, the real issue here is the salary of Brown who is the second-most expensive receiver on the slate. It’s a big investment even though Brown has the fifth-highest air yards share in the league. Brown is also ninth in yards per route so the nuclear upside is attainable against a corner who has shown he’ll get beat. The salary leaves him in GPP-only for me, and Julio Jones is not practicing again so we’ll wait for his status until later in the week. 

Update – It’s highly doubtful Jones plays after a DNP ton Friday.

TE – No tight end in this offense has a role worth chasing on anything other than a showdown slate. Geoff Swaim has three end-zone targets, tied for second on the team but also has just a 7.1% target share overall. 

D/ST – Tennessee’s defense has been mostly poor all season but they played with some serious fire on Sunday night. They are up to 10th in total DVOA, have a pressure rate over 26%, and are tied for the fourth-most sacks. Even the 13 turnovers are pretty strong for the price and they could be and quite a few of my lineups at just $2,600. I will confess that they look better in terms of making splash plays (i.e. fantasy-relevant plays) than I have thought for this season. 

Cash – D/ST

GPP – Brown, Tannehill 

Jaguars at Colts, O/U of 47.5 (Colts -10)

Jaguars

QB – Trevor Lawrence is banged up with an ankle injury and the metrics have not been all that great this season. He’s 25th in red-zone targets, 25th in yards, 33rd in yards per attempt, 29th in fantasy points per drop back, and 33rd in true completion rate. Indy is 26th in DVOA against the pass and 27th in yards per attempt allowed so it’s not the toughest matchup. However, Lawrence has exactly two games over 20 DK points. Even at the salary, it becomes about opportunity cost if Lawrence only scores 18 DK. 

RB – It sounds like James Robinson should make it back this week after sitting last game but it’s not the softest landing spot ever. Indy is second in DVOA against the run and has only allowed 4.0 yards per carry, the eighth-best in the league. Robinson has taken over this backfield and the volume will be there barring injury but Indy has put the clamps on just about every back they’ve faced so far. If he were under $6,000, I may consider him because he has a 9.2% target share but at this price, it’s harder to get behind. The Colts haven’t even allowed 750 yards on the ground yet. 

WR – I can sit here and bellyache all I want about why a coaching staff chooses to make Jamal Agnew a priority in their passing game ahead of Marvin Jones and Laviska Shenault, but that isn’t super productive. Instead, I’ll recognize that Agnew has played 62.8% of the snaps and has 31 targets since D.J. Chark was last for the season. He’s been in the slot and Kenny Moore is not the scariest matchup with a catch rate over 60%. Before the Buffalo matchup, Agnew had three straight games with double-digit DK points and remains affordable. 

Jones is still in play since he still is getting targeted with a 17.8% share and a good matchup against Isaiah Rodgers or Xavier Rhodes, pending his health. You attack the Colts through the air and if Lawrence can be passable, there is potential through the air for this corps and the next man we’ll talk about. 

TE – I’m not sure why Dan Arnold continues to be under $4,000 on DraftKings when he’s had double-digit points in three of the past four and has at least four receptions in each game. It’s somewhat of a statement on the coaching but since Week 5, Arnold trails only Agnew in targets by one for the team lead. He remains severely underpriced on DK and I will continue to take advantage. It doesn’t hurt that Indy has given up the second-most receptions to the position, either. 

D/ST – Last week’s whooping of the Bills duly noted, the Jags still have just five turnovers forced and 15 sacks, not all that appealing. They have gotten consistent pressure over 25% but it’s not translating into the plays that matter to us. 

Cash – Arnold, Agnew (won’t be popular enough to play him though)

GPP –Jones, Sheanult, Lawrence, Robinson 

Colts 

QB – Carson Wentz continues to play some good football and continues to be a value that you can feel comfortable with. He is 11th in attempts, 10th in yards, seventh in deep attempts, and 13th in points per drop back. The spot doesn’t get much better than facing the worst pass defense in DVOA and they are 31st in yards per attempt allowed. Wentz and Matt Rayan stand out as the value options at the position and both are well in play. 

RB – It wouldn’t be a surprise to see Jonathan Taylor be fairly popular on this slate, seeing as how he went for 37 DK points last Thursday. He is starting to get more consistent touches with at least 15 in each of the past six games. The part of this matchup that is a surprise is seeing the Jaguars rank eighth in DVOA against the run and haven’t allowed more than 650 rushing yards this year. They are barely over 900 scrimmage yards allowed on top of that. That can be surprising but it’s not an overriding factor in playing Taylor. If the Colts continue to give him 16-20 touches every week, he’s too talented to not produce and he leads the league in red-zone attempts at 44. The next closest is Derrick Henry at 32, for context. 

WR – This is a dynamite spot for both Michael Pittman and Zach Pascal. Starting with Pittman, he is eighth in routes, 13th in targets, ninth in receptions and yards, and 19th in target share. He’s been a master lately and you can see his breakout happening in real-time. Shaquill Griffin has been strong this season with only a 10.2 YPR and 1.42 fantasy points per target but I’m not fading Pittman over just that. He should be closer to $7,000.

If that doesn’t fit your build, Pascal presents some major savings and leads the league in slot snaps. Tre Herndon is back for the Jaguars and has only played four games, but allowed 12 receptions on 13 targets while playing almost all of his snaps in the slot. Nobody will look at Pascal but you should and his price is fantastic to fit everything. You can even include an Arnold run-back for a very cheap mini-stack. 

Update – Hilton is back but I’m not sure that totally derails anyone, including Pascal. In Week 6, Pascal played more snaps but wasn’t targeted much because Parris Campbell was still active and the Colts won by 28. In Week 8, Hilton did leave early but played almost half the snaps. Pascal played 93% and saw eight targets while Hilton saw five. Hilton muddies the waters but he hasn’t shown the ability to take over targets to this point.

TE – I can’t particularly talk myself into this play because the floor is so low for Mo Alie-Cox and Jack Doyle. They both saw one and two targets last game and scored under four DK points. The target share for both players is also under 9% so that doesn’t make sense when Arnold is only $400 more. 

D/ST – As long as the Jaguars offense is on the slate, I will consider the opposing defense. However, the salary is high and the Colts are living on turnovers with a league-leading 20 on the season. That style of metric is not sticky and they could see a dip at any moment. They are 11th in total DVOA but have the lowest pressure rate in the league. They’re in play but I prefer others in their price range this week. 

Cash – Taylor, Wentz, Pittman

GPP – Pascal, D/ST

Lions at Steelers, O/U of 42.5 (Steelers -8)

Lions

QB – The Pittsburgh defense isn’t as good as it used to be but I can’t get on board with Jared Goff. He’s got the volume that you’d want since he’s seventh in attempts but it’s not translating to meaningful production. He is 27th in points per game and 31st in points per drop back so there’s nothing much there to chase. Pittsburgh is 20th in DVOA, pointing toward some regression but just like Lawrence, the upside is very hard to find. 

RB – D’Andre Swift is super talented but this might not be the best spot for him. Pittsburgh is ninth in DVOA against the run and is tied for the fourth-fewest receptions allowed to the position. You can never take him completely out of the equation because he’s leading the league targets for running backs and he has 90 carries on top of that. Since he is projected to be in mostly a negative game script, you could get some big numbers through the air but it’s tough to pay nearly $7,000 just for that. 

Update – Jamaal Williams remains out but that doesn’t change the outlook on Swift all the much.

WR – The receiver options really aren’t for me as no player in the corps has earned a target share over 14.7% for Amon-Ra St. Brown. In the past two weeks, he’s had a zero target game and so has Kalif Raymond. When the floor is legitimately zero and we have options in the Colts game, this is an easy fade for me. I’m not thinking twice here. 

TE – I find myself liking T.J. Hockenson a decent amount this week because the Steelers linebackers can be had in coverage. He’s second in snaps in the slot, third in air yards share, second in receptions, but only 18th in yards per route. That should mostly keep him closer to the line of scrimmage and against those linebackers. 

D/ST – I’ve been playing defenses against the Steelers for most of the year but I’m not sure I can go there this week. Detroit only has the seventh-lowest pressure rate and is 29th in total DVOA. They only have seven turnovers on the year and I’m not sure where those splash plays are going to come from, even against a pretty flawed offense. 

Cash – Hockenson

GPP – Swift 

Steelers 

QB – When a quarterback has shown that his ceiling is all of 17 DK points, you don’t really have any need to play him. Ben Roethlisberger fits that bill and I just won’t build the case for him. He hasn’t thrown an interception in four weeks but has also only six touchdowns in the same time frame. He is 30th in points per drop back, 31st in deep completion rate, and 30th in points per game. Even though Detroit offers an incredible matchup with the 29th ranked DVOA, I don’t trust any type of ceiling. 

RB – Rookie Najee Harris is right behind Swift in targets for backs but the biggest difference is Harris is tied for second in carries on the season. That type of volume makes all the difference and even at his highest salary of the year, he probably shouldn’t be under $8,000. Detroit is 25th in DVOA, 16th in yards per carry allowed, and has allowed the third-most yards to backs among teams that have played eight games. The 16 touchdowns surrendered certainly looks appealing and Harris has 27 opportunities in the red zone this year. 

WR – It looks like Chase Claypool will be out this week which just pushes every target to Diontae Johnson and the tight end. Johnson is fifth in target share on the season and 16th in receptions even with only playing seven games, and he’s 26th in yards. Everything in the passing game flows through him this week and I am very interested because the Lions have no corner that Diontae can’t beat. 

James Washington enters the discussion if Claypool is out as well, but volatility is the name of the game with him. To be fair, it’s not his fault his quarterback is Noodle Arm but you have to understand he’ll slide into Claypool’s role of deep/jump balls and that is NOT a strength for Ben right now. I mean….this is ridiculous. 

TE – We’ve been hammering on this fact but since JuJu was lost for the season, Pat Freiermuth has taken that role and run with it. He’s second on the team in targets, second in red-zone targets, and tied for first in end-zone targets while playing just under 70% of the snaps. Now we add in that Claypool may not play and the role only grows for the young tight end and he is under $4,000 with major touchdown equity. 

D/ST – There is just simply no way I’m paying the top salary for Pittsburgh. They only have eight turnovers forced so even with 22 sacks, it’s hard to argue that they could be worth the salary. Not that averages are everything, but Buffalo is close to double the fantasy points for $100 cheaper in an elite matchup. 

Cash – Harris, Diontae, Freiermuth 

GPP – Washington

Browns at Patriots, O/U of 45.5 (Patriots -2.5)

Browns

QB – I’ not sure that I’ve played Baker Mayfield at all this season and this likely won’t be the slate the breaks that trend. He is fifth in yards per attempt but the Browns simply don’t pass very much at all, sitting 30th in pass plays per game. He is 21st in points per drop back and 25th in points per game. On the flip side, New England is sixth in DVOA against the pass and 12th in yards allowed per attempt. That’s not where I want to invest in at quarterback. 

RB – We could have a very chalky play this week in the Cleveland backfield because Nick Chubb and Demetric Felton have Covid. Now, they are not confirmed out yet and they have a chance to play but the week is getting later. That would leave D’Ernest Johnson as the last man standing and in his one spot start this year, he went for almost 28 DK points and ran for 146 yards against Denver. New England is just 17th in DVOA against the run and they have given up over 1,400 scrimmage yards on the year. If Johnson is the only back, he’s going to be an extremely appealing option at just $4,700 on DK. 

Update – Chubb is out and Johnson is one of the best value plays on the board this week

WR – The first game without Odell Beckham was wildly disappointing for Jarvis Landry who generated only 11 yards receiving. The game script helped limit the ceiling but heavens. His slot rate is down to 40% so he’ll see more of J.C. Jackson in all likelihood. He’s been targeted 56 times this year while allowing just a 55.4% completion rate and 1.47 fantasy points per target. 

Donovan Peoples-Jones saw just three targets but he did play the second-most snaps of the group and saw over 39% of the air yards on one deep ball. The game should be more competitive but this is still a low-volume passing offense, even if Chubb is out. Facing off against Jalen Mills for most of the game helps and gives him a ceiling but the floor is very low. 

TE – Nothing has changed much for the Browns after the OBJ departure because they still played a ton of two-tight end sets and utilized all three of David Njoku, Austin Hooper, and Harrison Bryant. Hooper has the most targets of the group at 30 but that ranks just 21st among the position. It’s very difficult to have much interest in players that aren’t even in the top 20 at a given position and have under 200 yards receiving at this point of the season. 

D/ST – The Browns are still affordable after a monster game last week and they aren’t in the worst spot this week either. They are second in pressure rate and sacks on the season so right off the bat, that’s an appealing combo. They have only forced eight turnovers but the Patriot offense is nothing that would make me worry at $2,800. 

Cash – Johnson, D/ST 

GPP – Peoples-Jones, Landry

Patriots 

QB – Cleveland is 10th in yards allowed per attempt and 19th in DVOA against the pass, so this spot is somewhat of a mixed bag for Mac Jones. Unless it is a glaring spot for him, I haven’t been interested and will continue to feel that way. He’s 11th in attempts but only 20th in yards per attempt and 28th in points per drop back and 29th in points per game. Jones also only has 10 touchdown passes and hasn’t shown anything worth playing at this point. 

RB – Perhaps it was due to injuries, but the trio of Damien Harris, Rhamondre Stevenson, and Brandon Bolden formed a three-man committee last week and that would be an issue. Harris had 15 carries and scored, but did virtually nothing else. Stevenson and Bolden had 10 and eight each while no back played more than 46.8% of the snaps. Stevenson and Harris are dealing with injuries early on in the week so it remains to be seen if they can suit up. If someone winds up missing, the backfield gets more appealing. However, Cleveland has allowed the fewest rushing yards among teams that have played nine games already. We’ll update this later on. 

WR – Jakobi Meyers is going to tempt me here for sure because he’s back under $5,000 and he flopped in a major way last week. Meyers is playing at a top 10 slot rate in the league and he’s 13th in receptions, so there is value right there. The Browns have good corners across the board and that’s a small issue and Troy Hill has only faced 17 targets. Hill has allowed a 108.2 passer rating and I’m not sure how much the Patriots want to test the other guys like Denzel Ward. Meyers would be the only option here in my eyes. 

TE – Hunter Henry continues to feel pretty pricey given some of the other options we’ve talked about that are cheaper. He is part of the gaggle of players that are behind Meyers for second in targets and does have the second-most red-zone targets, which helps. Still, the Browns have been tougher on the position so far with under 400 yards allowed so he’s likely a touchdown or bust option. 

D/ST – New England continues to generate turnovers with 16 on the year and they’re just under 25% in pressure rate this year. They are fifth in total DVOA and in play but I’m not in love with the salary. The Browns offense does have plenty of issues but it just seems like a little too much to spend. 

Cash – None, Bolden is in the running if Stevenson and Harris are both out

GPP – Meyers, Henry

Vikings at Chargers, O/U of 53 (Chargers -3)

Vikings

QB – You can discuss how good Kirk Cousins is for real-life football all you want but he’s valuable for fantasy. He’s ninth in attempts, 14th in yards, 16th in points per drop back, and 10th in points per game. Now, the matchup is not ideal as the Chargers have allowed the second-fewest yards on the season with just 10 touchdowns allowed. They back that up as they are ninth in DVOA against the pass and 13th in yards allowed per attempt, but if the game shoots out the volume will overcome the matchup. 

RB – We’ve been attacking this spot all season long and I will not be stopping with Dalvin Cook on deck. He put up 18 DK points last week and missed a rushing touchdown by inches while racking up 20 touches. The Chargers have come up to 20th in DVOA against the run this season but are still allowing the worst yards per carry in football. They still lead the league in rushing yards among teams who have played eight games and gave up 71 yards to the corpse of Jordan Howard last week. Cook is very cheap for the blowup potential in this game. 

WR – It’s not the easiest spot for Justin Jefferson and Adam Thielen, but the Chargers were short corners last week so that’s still a wait-and-see facet. Jefferson is top 15 in yards, receptions, unrealized air yards, red-zone targets, and deep targets but there’s no excuse for him to be 18th in targets overall. The 24% target share is good but should be higher for a player this good and he’s only had nine total targets in the past two weeks. I do wonder if they make it a larger point to get him the ball this week. Thielen is always a threat to find the end zone but is a very pricey boom or bust option. He does have 11 red-zone targets on the year and six end-zone targets. I want to see who is active for LA before deciding. Last week, the injuries opened up DeVonta Smith for a big game. 

Update – Michael Davis is doubtful and Asante Samuel Jr. is in. Davis has been the best corner by the statistics so both guys are in play here, especially Jefferson.

TE – Tyler Conklin is always one of those guys that is fine if he fits, but he’s not someone I actively seek out. The 15.2% target share looks great and the 15% red-zone share is nothing too bad either. The Chargers have allowed the sixth-most yards and five scores so if you’re projecting this to shoot out, he’s going to be a good way to get exposure and not eat some of the chalkier options. 

D/ST – Minnesota is surprisingly eighth in total DVOA, not something that you would expect. The Chargers have only given up 14 sacks so far this year but the Vikings are second in sacks and have a pressure rate of almost 28%, fourth in the league. With the Chargers struggling a little bit lately (by their standards), you could make the case although I’m not going there myself. 

Cash – Cook, Jefferson

GPP – Cousins, Thielen, Conklin 

Chargers 

QB – Justin Herbert had a monster game last week and there’s plenty of reason to think that happens again this week. He’s fourth in attempts, sixth in yards, 10th in air yards, ninth in deep completion, 12thin points per drop back, and fourth in points per game. Minnesota is 18th in yards allowed per attempt and ranking third in DVOA against the pass doesn’t exactly match with what they have given up. They are in the bottom half of DraftKings points given up and just haven’t faced a ton of attempts so far. Herbert and the Chargers can make sure those numbers flip and I have zero reservations about Herbert this week. 

RB – It will be a test of my patience to play Austin Ekeler this week since he was one of my most rostered players last week and he flopped badly. Still, he got another 20 touches and these games just happen some weeks. We can’t let it bother us and Minnesota is eighth in DVOA against the run but that hasn’t totally translated. They are 22nd in rushing yards allowed and 30th in yards per carry allowed. Don’t look at the game log last week and realize that Ekeler is still at a very fair price for being one of the only workhorse backs in the NFL. 

WR – There is going to be a point where Mike Williams goes nuts again because he won’t stay quiet forever. Having said that, Keenan Allen is in an amazing spot in the slot against Mackensie Alexander. Allen is fourth in receptions, fourth in red-zone targets, and sixth in targets. Meanwhile, Alexander has allowed 1.51 fantasy points per target and Allen can cook any corner in this league. 

Williams has not had the mojo going lately but that could leave him in a prime spot to break the slate since he has six touchdowns and he’s had the bigger splash play ability in the offense. Cameron Dantzler could draw the assignment and Williams isn’t going to continue to see just five targets per game like the past three weeks. Dantzler has allowed an 11.5 YPR and Williams is likely going to be ignored. 

TE – Donald Parham scored the touchdown last week but both he and Jared Cook hit double-digit points on DraftKings and Parham didn’t play any extra snaps at just around 40%. The Vikings have yet to give up a touchdown to a tight end all year and these two only have a combined eight red-zone targets on the season. Cook is slightly preferred but neither is a priority. 

D/ST – The Chargers have generated a top 10 pressure rate at 26.6% but 15 sacks are pretty pedestrian for this point in the season. They are also 20th in total DVOA so they are a weird mix, as is Minnesota. Cousins has been pressured the fourth-most in the league so far but has only been sacked 10 times. 

Cash – Ekeler, Allen, Herbert

GPP – Williams, Cook

Panthers at Cardinals, O/U of 44.5 (Cardinals -10.5)

Panthers

QB – As of this writing, Cam Newton has just signed with Carolina for a significant chunk of money so he is going to be the starter at some point. The only question is if he can be ready for this week and I would lean no, but that’s not set in stone. P.J. Walker is likelier to start but either way, it’s not an easy spot. Arizona is second in DVOA against the pass and only the Broncos have given up fewer pass yards among teams with nine games played. It’s not worth going after this game from this angle. 

Update – It is confirmed that Walker is starting this week. 

RB – He may have only played 49% of the snaps last week, but Christian McCaffrey went right back to 18 touches and he generated 106 scrimmage yards. Arizona is second in DVOA against the run so the matchup is not great but when has that ever mattered for CMC? It’s odd to see them only allowing two touchdowns at this juncture but they have also allowed almost 1,200 scrimmage yards and are tied for the sixth-most receptions. With Carolina relying on a backup quarterback, CMC is virtually a lock to see 20 touches and is under $9,000. I’m not sure how often we’ll get that. 

WR – D.J. Moore could be the ultimate GPP play because the field may just decide to not play him in a somewhat difficult spot with a total unknown at quarterback. That’s a fair way to look at it but Moore could also be hyper-targeted like he has so far and make it work. He is third in both routes run and targets, not to mention sitting in the top seven in receptions and yards. The results have been brutal in the last few weeks and Byron Murphy has been playing well for Arizona. He’s been targeted 44 times and has only allowed a 56.8% catch rate. With Walker, we’re in a totally unknown territory so it would be very fitting if Robby Anderson and his sixth-most unrealized air yards finally clicked. Marco Wilson has allowed a 13.3 YPR and a 135.9 passer rating but you have to have some serious guts. 

TE – No tight end has had a role worth playing and I’m not convinced Walker changes that fact this week. Even if it does, we can react later to it. On top of that, Arizona has been one of the best teams defending the tight end this year with under 330 yards allowed and just one score. 

D/ST – Carolina sit seventh in pressure rate and are over 20 sacks on the season so they could be a very contrarian play if Arizona is still short-handed. They are sixth in total DVOA and have played well but the matchup is still to be determined with the Arizona injuries. 

Cash – CMC

GPP – Moore, Anderson

Cardinals 

QB – It appears that Kyler Murray will only miss one game, but we have to start getting a little concerned with the lack of rushing. He is 11th among quarterbacks in rushing yards and only has three rushing touchdowns, which really explains why he hasn’t had the nuclear upside we were accustomed to last season. Don’t get me wrong, being first in true completion rate, second in yards per attempt, seventh in passing yards, and fifth in points per drop back are not a bad thing at all. However, he’s averaging 3-4 points fewer than Allen and Brady, for example. Brady is cheaper in an elite spot where he could throw 3-5 touchdown passes without much of a question. Having an ankle injury isn’t going to help matters and I don’t have a strong need to pay the highest salary on the slate here. 

RB – James Conner shattered the slate last week when Chase Edmonds was injured and the $6,300 salary seems high…until you realize exactly what Conner’s role was last week. 

The issue with playing Edmonds or Conner was the exact issue with the Buffalo backfield. The roles were too separated to ever feel great about playing one of them. The metrics for Conner support that he is at least $1,000 too cheap, even with the Cardinals saying Eno Benjamin will play a bigger role. Carolina is sixth in DVOA against the run but this is still just too much work to pass up at this salary. 

Update – Edmonds is out

WR – This situation will need clarity with respect to DeAndre Hopkins and if he’s available. He’s still not practicing so it’s not looking great. If he sits out, the duo of A.J. Green and Christian Kirk look way better and underpriced. Hopkins would remove a 20% target share and the team leader in red-zone and end-zone targets. We’ll circle back on Friday to discuss the matchups a little more in-depth. 

Update – We don’t have official word but it doesn’t look good for Hopkins. He hasn’t practiced all week so Green and Kirk become much more appealing. Green could see more of Stephon Gilmore, who does have two interceptions already and hasn’t given up much with his handful of playing time in Carolina. Kirk would draw Donte Jackson who sits at 1.55 fantasy points per target. Arizona moves guys around a lot so the matchups aren’t set in stone and all three (including Moore) are in play. I wouldn’t trust them in cash with the other options we have.

TE – I simply don’t understand why Zach Ertz is so expensive. He’s had one strong game with a score and been under nine DraftKings points in his other two games with the Cardinals. I’ll grant you that they had a backup quarterback last week but they were also without their top two receivers and he still generated very little. Until the salary changes, I’m not that interested in five, four, and five targets per game. 

D/ST – If you spend up, the Cardinals have to be on the radar. They are all the way up to second in total DVOA and have nearly a 26% pressure rate and have the third-most sacks with 17 turnovers forced. They’ll be getting a very inexperienced quarterback on the road and it’s a tough spot for the Panthers to walk into. 

Cash – Conner

GPP – Kyler, Green, Kirk, Moore

Eagles at Broncos, O/U of 45.5 (Broncos -2.5)

Eagles

QB – I’m really struggling to find the logic in losing Miles Sanders and THEN turning into a running team, but that’s what the Eagles have done the past two weeks. Jalen Hurts has only thrown 31 times and while some of that can be blamed on blowing out Detroit, he still threw just 17 times last week. That is an issue for Hurts because he’s second behind only Lamar Jackson in scramble attempts this season and it’s been reflected in his fantasy scores of 16 and 11 DK points. His price continues to trend down but against a defense that is 15th in DVOA, the upside is there if Denver can cover the receivers. It means Hurts would get back to running which is the reason we play him. 

RB – This sounds gross but if you’re going to play an Eagles back, it may well be Jordan Howard. In the two games that Miles Sanders has missed, Howard leads in attempts at 29 and he has a monster red-zone share with 12 carries. That’s seven more than any other player in those two weeks and he’s posted at least 13 DK points. He’s yet to record a target and Denver is 22nd in DVOA against the run. It’s very uncomfortable to consider playing Howard and we should have other values in this price range but if he’s getting 15 carries with that level of touchdown equity, it can’t be ignored either. 

WR – Devonta Smith remains the only receiver of interest and he has the sixth-highest air yards share, ninth most unrealized air yards, and he’s top 15 in deep targets. The status of Patrick Surtain for Denver is important in this matchup. Ronald Darby has allowed a 102.4 passer rating through 30 targets while teams have tried to pick on Surtain with 54 targets and he’s only allowed a 73.1 passer rating. Smith is a little pricey for my blood but if Surtain is out, I’d be more comfortable with the salary. 

Update – Surtain had a limited practice on Friday and is questionable.

TE – Dallas Goedert has been totally fine since Ertz was traded but it hasn’t led to a giant breakout. He has yet to hit 14 DK points and the good news is he co-leads in targets since that point with 18. He is a fine cash option but is a little pricey for a player that has yet to flash the upside we’d want. 

D/ST – Philly kind of checks in as a mediocre option with a bottom 10 pressure rate on the year and just 17 sacks so far this season. The big plus for them is Denver has allowed the second-highest pressure rate so far and the third-most sacks. Even with just eight turnovers forced, they are on the board at their price and you hope they get to the QB 4-5 times. 

Cash – Hurts, Goedert

GPP – Smith, Howard, D/ST 

Broncos 

QB – I feel like this is every week, but I don’t hate Teddy Bridgewater. Be mindful, I’m not jamming him into anything but the price is right and he has a full board of weapons in this one. We saw last week that he can produce solid fantasy scores and even though you can’t bank on a rushing score, he only threw 28 times with the game script. Philly is only 21st in DVOA against the pass and there’s only one corner who makes me hesitate. Teddy B is ninth in red-zone attempts and seventh in air yards, so there is some upside in the play and we have some options to A. stack him with and B. run back with an Eagle player. 

RB – The Broncos bludgeoned the Cowboys last week and both Javonte Williams and Melvin Gordon had at least 17 carries and they both racked up at least 80 yards on the ground. Having said that, they still split work and snaps like they have all season long and you’re just taking shots at who you think could score. MG3 has held the edge all year in red-zone attempts at 19-12 so with the salary relatively the same, he gets the edge for me. Philly is 24th in DVOA against the run so there’s some potential but the split isn’t going anywhere. 

WR – Jerry Jeudy continues to be my guy and he’s not expensive again. He’s going to stay in the slot for the majority of snaps and sees Avonte Maddox who has allowed a catch rate approaching 70%. Jeudy saw a 32% target share in a very run-heavy game script last week and he has a ceiling of 10+ without much of a stretch. Courtland Sutton should lock up with Darius Slay for most of the snaps and Slay has played well, which could be a boost for Tim Patrick. If Patrick sees Steven Nelson that is a big advantage for….well, any receiver so far. Nelson has allowed a 128.1 passer rating and 2.15 fantasy points per target. The Broncos will surely be hunting that matchup and Patrick is sneaky. 

TE – Noah Fant is back in action this week and that gives the Broncos what amounts to a full hand on offense. Splitting a moderate amount of work with three other receivers isn’t going to be ideal but Fan is still second on the team in targets on the year. The other good news is Philly is last in receptions allowed, 31st in yards allowed, and lead in touchdowns given up with eight. There really isn’t a better matchup so Fant is a very solid option but you have to live with some potential volatility with the health of the Broncos offense. 

D/ST – I do not hate this play at all with all the issues the Eagles have displayed this year. It’s not my favorite pricing ever but the Broncos have generated the fifth-most sacks so far this year. The pressure rate is right about 25% and the passing game for Philly is nothing special. Even with the Broncos likely losing Patrick Surtain in the secondary, they aren’t out of play for me. 

Cash -Jeudy, Fant, D/ST

GPP – Patrick, Sutton, Bridgewater, MG3, Williams 

Seahawks at Packers, O/U of 49 (Packers -3)

Seahawks

QB – I’ll be interested to see what the field does with Russell Wilson but he does seem like a strong value coming back from an IR stint. Green Bay has clawed up to 12th in DVOA but is still missing their best corner and Wilson is still first in yards per attempt in his sample size. His fantasy points per dropback also remain first and he averaged over four deep attempts per game. Wilson should really never be below $7,000 in salary and I’m ready to be overweight in GPP formats. 

RB – It looks like the Seahawks may welcome back Chris Carson in addition to Wilson this week and that would be pretty intriguing at $5,700 on DraftKings. Green Bay is only 16th in DVOA against the run so nothing we should worry about very much and when Carson was healthy, he never had fewer than 13 touches in any game. He also had seven attempts in the red zone and the Packers are 26th in yards per carry allowed. We’ll need to make sure he’s active but it’s not the worst landing spot ever. 

Update – Carson did not make it off the IR for this week, leaving Collins in play at $5,200 and the field may largely ignore him with value backs that are cheaper.

WR – It’s not the largest discount ever, but D.K Metcalf under $7,000 is always some style of a bargain and he gets his quarterback returning to the offense. Metcalf proved he could be productive without Russ to some extent, never dipping below 11.8 DraftKings points. If the alignments hold, Metcalf will see some of Kevin King and that has me beyond excited. Metcalf is seventh in yards per route, 12th in target share, and he’s second in touchdowns. King has struggled with speed receivers and Metcalf is right out of a lab with his speed/size combo. Tyler Lockett will greatly enjoy the return of Russell as well and he’s 11th in yards per route to go with the eighth-highest target share. Chandon Sullivan has allowed a 63.2% catch rate across his 19 targets so far and Wilson can use both receivers to slice and dice this secondary. If we get enough cheap backs, you can stack Russ with both receivers and run it back with the best receiver in football. 

TE – Even with Wilson back, Gerald Everett only has an 11.2% target share and two red-zone targets all season. 

D/ST – Let’s talk about this when we know which quarterback is in for the Packers. 

Cash – Russ, Metcalf, Lockett

GPP – Collins

Packers 

QB – We won’t know until Saturday if Aaron Rodgers will be back but if he’s not, I’m not going near Jordan Love. He made a couple of good throws last week but mostly looked pretty rough. Seattle is 24th in DVOA against the pass so far this year and is closing in on almost 300 yards per game given up. Let’s update this Saturday but an angry Rodgers at home against a sub-par defense mostly speaks for itself. 

Update – Rodgers is back but one injury of note is tackle David Bakhtiari is doubtful. I’m not a believer that Seattle can make that hurt but it’s still a loss.

RB – It’s going to be extremely hard to turn away from Aaron Jones under $7,000 against a defense that is 23rd against the run in DVOA and has allowed just over 1,400 scrimmage yards this year to go along with seven total touchdowns. A.J. Dillon has been more involved lately but that also has to do with the Packers being short receivers in one game and starting Jordan Love in the other. There is really no reason to fear the split at this point because it’s not terribly different than last year. Jones is third in red-zone attempts to go along with a 14% target share and the co-lead in red-zone targets. This has every chance to be a monster game from him and he could obliterate this salary. 

WR – If Rodgers is back, I will have so much Davante Adams on this slate. He is first in air yards share, third in receptions, fourth in yards, first in yards per route, first in target route, fourth in targets, and fourth in points per game. He’s under $8,000 and has about the highest ceiling on the entire slate, especially now that Wilson is back to put points up for Seattle. No other receiver has more than a 14% target share and I’m not all that interested in the secondary receivers. With Jones and Adams both so cheap, both can be played in this game safely. If you wanted to go there, Marquez Valdes-Scantling has a 30% air yards share and a 20.4 aDOT. 

TE – There is not a tight end worth playing here. 

D/ST – The Green Bay defense has been playing much better lately and they do have more than 20 sacks on the year. The pressure rate isn’t great at under 24% and Wilson is back so I’m not going there, but the Packers haven’t scored under five DK points since Week 1. 

Cash – Adams, Jones, Rodgers

GPP – Dillon, MVS

Cash Core Four

D’Ernest Johnson, Davante Adams, Dalvin Cook, Mark Ingram

The punt of Dan Arnold on DK goes a long way to making it all work

GPP Core Four

D.K. Metcalf, Emmanuel Sanders, J.D. McKissic, Dan Arnold

Arnold is popular and I’m playing him in cash but I’ll be far overweight in GPP as well. First, the salary is just not where it should be given his role in the Jacksonville offense. Secondly, he allows me to build whatever else I like teamed with Johnson from Cleveland. When I’m playing McKissic, it allows me to get different at RB and run back any Tampa stacks with ease.

Stacks

Seahawks/Packers – Metcalf, Lockett, Wilson, Collins – Run-Backs – Adams, Jones, Rodgers

Vikings/Chargers – Cook, Jefferson, Thielen, Conklin, Cousins – Run-Backs – Allen, Ekeler, Williams, Herbert, Cook

Buccaneers/Washington – Brady, Evans, Godwin/Johnson, Fournette – Run-Backs –McKissic, McLaurin, Seals-Jones

Falcons/Cowboys – Zeke, Dak, Cooper, Gallup, Lamb, Schultz Run-Backs – Patterson, Pitts, Gage, Ryan

Jaguars/Colts – Wentz, Pittman, Taylor, Pascal, Hilton – Run-Backs – Arnold, Agnew, Jones, Lawrence

Thank you for reading my NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 10 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 9 NFL DFS GPP slate! For those who haven’t read it yet, please check out the Week 9 Cash Game Checkdown for your bankroll sustaining, cash game build advice before building your NFL DFS GPP lineups. After a MONSTER Week 8, let’s roll right into another juicy 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. This will not be an article where I write about Christian McCaffrey, Derrick Henry, Dalvin Cook, Travis Kelce, etc… they’re likely always in a smash spot and worth rostering if that’s what your build calls for. Now, let’s get into it.

Games I’m most interested in getting exposure to:

LAC/PHI
MIN/BAL

GB/KC
HOU/MIA

NFL DFS GPP Quarterbacks

Justin Herbert ($7,000 DK / $7,600 FD)

Herbert season is officially back for me this week despite the let-down in Week 8 when New England completely took the air out of the ball and ran it down the Chargers’ throat. Honestly, every team should adapt that same game-plan against this putrid Chargers’ run defense, but I don’t see Nick Sirianni sticking to a run game in a game that will be high in pace and back and forth in scoring. Justin Herbert grades number one in the AETY Model in expected passing yards this weekend and he also offers us significant leverage on the 35% ownership tag on running back Austin Ekeler.

Ekeler can certainly have a great game here… I’m not saying you should fade him, but if his production comes via the pass like it usually does, Herbert will correlate well with that ownership on Ekeler. If the Chargers can get ahead early, this gamescript is going to bode well for a shootout and I’m all for it with Justin Herbert projected for 3-5% ownership. You can make a sexy game-stack with some of the pairings/run-backs below.

Key Pairing(s): Keenan Allen, Austin Ekeler, Mike Williams
Key Run-back(s): Dallas Goedert, Devonta Smith, Kenneth Gainwell (yes, the guy 30% of the field played last week, lol. Now is the time to play him at 1% ownership in a gamescript that doesn’t include Philadelphia being up by 40 points).

Patrick Mahomes ($7,800 DK / $8,500 FD)

I’m not in love with Mahomes this week but I’ll always go heavily overweight on Patrick Mahomes when he’s under 10% in ownership projection. The reason I do not love this spot as much as I want to is due to the Packers’ incredibly low pace of play… with Aaron Rodgers. With Rodgers now out, I cannot imagine they speed up the offense whatsoever as they lean on Aaron Jones and A.J. Dillon.

Having said that, I just can’t envision a world where Mahomes doesn’t light the world on fire in this matchup and declare on the FOX Game of the Week that the Chiefs’ offense is just fine.

Key Pairing(s): Travis Kelce, Tyreek Hill, Mecole Hardman, Darrel Williams
Key Run-back(s): Aaron Jones, A.J. Dillon, Davante Adams

Tyrod Taylor ($5,000 / $6,900 FD)

Likely a DraftKings ONLY play for me, but Tyrod Taylor is returning under center for the Houston Texans to take on Miami and their 26th ranked passing defense. It’s absolutely gross, but a semi-dual-threat quarterback at $5K against a terrible defense (and a game with a relatively high total) is something I’m interested in this week. I personally will be pairing him with Nico Collins and using a Miami run-back due to the lack of defense on both sides of the field this week. If you can stomach that build, you can afford the world in the rest of your lineup.

Key Pairing(s): Nico Collins, Brandin Cooks
Key Run-back(s): Jaylen Waddle, Mike Gesicki, Myles Gaskin

Honorable Mention: Kirk Cousins, Jalen Hurts

Running Backs

Dalvin Cook ($7,700 DK / $8,800 FD)

Dalvin Cook grades out as the third best running back in Week 9 on the AETY Model and will be a massive focal point of this Vikings’ offense as they try to keep Lamar Jackson off of the field. In a game with the highest total on the slate and the highest owned quarterback on the slate (Lamar Jackson), why does no one want to play Dalvin Cook on the other side? Baltimore’s running defense is nothing like it used to be.

Ezekiel Elliott ($7,000 DK / $8,200 FD)

There’s no leverage in this play at all as he’s likely the highest owned running back and yes, usually I never write about the high-chalk players in this article, but for clarity, Ezekiel Elliott is my highest rostered player in Week 9. I’m in love with this matchup against a Denver team that appears to have thrown in the surrender towel. In addition, La’el Collins returns to the Dallas offensive line… let’s roll.

Contrarian Values:

Zack Moss
Devontae Booker
Kenneth Gainwell

A.J. Dillon
Darrel Williams
Eli Mitchell
(if Jeff Wilson is inactive)

Honorable Mention: Aaron Jones, Nick Chubb, Alvin Kamara

NFL DFS GPP Wide Receivers

Justin Jefferson ($7,500 DK / $7,600 FD) / Adam Thielen ($6,900 DK / $7,400 FD)

Extremely affordable on FanDuel but still in play on DraftKings. Similar to the Dalvin Cook write-up, NO ONE is playing Justin Jefferson or Adam Thielen. The Baltimore secondary is trash and currently grades 23rd in pass defense DVOA. I usually prefer to focus on Thielen against man coverage (Baltimore’s tendency) and Jefferson against zone coverage, but they’re both in an excellent gamescript at borderline zero ownership.

Keenan Allen ($6,700 DK / $7,000 FD)

Like Ezekiel Elliott, I’m just adding Keenan Allen in the article for the transparency. Allen is a core play for me this weekend as I always pick on the inside of the Philadelphia secondary. He makes a perfect pairing for my favorite GPP quarterback in Justin Herbert and grades out as a top-six value in the AETY Model.

Jerry Jeudy ($5,000 DK / $5,800 FD)

Hello, Mr. Jerry Jeudy. We’re going to pray on the recency bias of DFS players and go at Jerry Jeudy the week after he was 15-20% owned and let down the DFS community. The best part of this play is that he correlates perfectly on the other side of my love for Ezekiel Elliott and also is massive leverage over a 40% owned Broncos tight-end, Albert “O” chalk week.

I’m not saying Albert “O” is a bad play by any means, but if you can find a way to pivot to Jerry Jeudy on the other side of your Elliott builds, you’re not going to regret it. Jourdan Lewis is one of the weaker spots on this Dallas defense and look for Teddy Bridgewater to use the middle of the field a lot on Sunday as they play catch-up. As much as Noah Fant helps Albert “O”, this is still a significant bump up to Jerry Jeudy at 2-5% ownership… Leverage City!

Honorable Mention: Mecole Hardman, Nico Collins, Mike Williams, Deebo Samuel

Tight Ends

Honestly, my tight-end pool is directly from the Week 9 Cash Game Checkdown. My priorities in GPP would go as follows:

  • Travis Kelce ($7,000 DK / $7,800 FD)
  • Dallas Goedert ($4,500 DK / $6,200 FD)
  • Darren Waller ($6,200 DK / $6,800 FD)
  • Mike Gesicki ($4,900 DK / $6,500 FD)
  • Tyler Conklin ($3,000 DK / $5,200 FD)

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 9

We are back for Week 9 and this slate is a little bit better than last week, even with some crazy news already. There are 11 games on this slate and we have a lot to get to so let’s not waste any time in the NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 9!

Bills at Jaguars, O/U of 48.5 (Bills -14.5)

Bills 

QB – It speaks to just how good Josh Allen is when he can do virtually nothing for a half of football and wind up scoring almost 30 DK points. He’s as close to bust-proof as you get in fantasy and he deserves to be the most expensive option on the slate. The Jacksonville defense is going to have a difficult time mounting any resistance as they are dead last in DVOA against the pass. Allen remains in the top-five in air yards, touchdowns, red-zone attempts, and all rushing categories. If you pay up, this is your man right here. 

RB – It wasn’t the biggest game for Zack Moss on Sunday, but he did exceed 11 DK points for the fifth time in six games. Moss played 64% of the snaps this past week and out-classed Devin Singletary in about every way possible. He had three red-zone carries to just one for Singletary and saw seven targets, easily the most of the season for him. If Moss is going to see both the targets and the red-zone work, there is not much of an argument to be made to play anyone but him. It’s a bit surprising to see Jacksonville rank third-best in yards per carry allowed, but that is the case heading into Week 9. They’ve allowed the sixth-fewest rushing yards to backs among teams that have only played seven games on top of that, making Moss a very average play on paper. He’ll need to find pay dirt to have a ceiling. 

WR – I’m going to continue to jam Stefon Diggs in lineups until I get that nuclear game and it could very well be this week. He’s still 10th in unrealized air yards and just 16th in receptions and 20th in yards but the potential is there. Tyson Campbell or Shaquill Griffin has nothing for Diggs as they are both over a 1.40 FPPT and Campbell is spiked at 2.17. It’s a great bounce-back spot for Emmanuel Sanders as well, coming off a goose egg. He was popular too so his league-leading aDOT of 18.2 might go lower rostered than it should. 

Cole Beasley got some of the work I expected from the Bills losing their starting tight end, and then he got some more. It was very frustrating to play Sanders and see Beasley go nuts and I doubt he gets 13 targets again. However, if they’re in the same style of spot they were last week he could play 71% of the snaps again. 

TE – Tommy Sweeney played 82% of the snaps last week which is encouraging for a backup. He also may not be needed as Dawson Knox is listed as day-to-day and could be active for this game. We’ll have to circle back for this play but the Jaguars have given up the fifth-most yards on the season to the position. 

Update – Knox is out but it’s still difficult to trust Sweeney after he got very little work last week. We also have another punt down the line.

D/ST – The Buffalo defense should have a monster day this week as they are first in total DVOA, generate the highest pressure rate in the league, and have forced 18 turnovers (tied for the most). Jacksonville’s offense has been mostly terrible and a rookie quarterback is not likely to find much success here. Still, $4,000 is a lot to pay for. 

Cash – Allen, Diggs, Beasley 

GPP – Sanders, Moss

Jaguars 

QB – Is Trevor Lawerence a very talented quarterback with a bright future? You bet. Am I playing him against what is statistically the best defense in football while Lawerence is 29th in FPPD, 24th in points per game, 24th in yards, and 13th in attempts? No, no I am not. 

RB – It’s going to be very difficult to build the case for James Robinson here. He was injured early last week and only had five touches, so he has to overcome that in the first place. Even then, Buffalo has been tough on opposing backs. They’re fifth-best in rushing yards allowed per game, sixth-best in yards per carry allowed, and 5th in DVOA against the run. No team has allowed fewer receptions to backs and only five teams have allowed fewer receiving yards. This seems like a poor investment with a rookie quarterback at the helm and a catastrophe as far as coaching goes. 

Update – Robinson is questionable with just one limited practice and I’m certainly not playing Carlos Hyde.

WR – I haven’t been interested yet and that’s not changing now. Marvin Jones likely sees Tre White, who is back to form and boasts a 42.9% catch rate allowed through 42 targets and a 0.92 FPPT. Jamal Agnew has been way more involved lately but sees most of Levi Wallace and his 1.43 FPPT. Lastly, Laviska Shenault hasn’t even been successful in the offense since D.J. Chark went down for the season. On top of all of that, Lawerence has to get them the ball which is a dicey proposition. 

TE – I’m not as excited as I was last week, but Dan Arnold is becoming a big part of this Jacksonville offense. In his three full games, he has an 18.4% target share and is only three targets off the team lead. It’s a brutal matchup for the offense as a whole but Arnold could be the safety valve with a 5.2-yard aDOT. Buffalo has excelled against the position, but they’ve only played one great player in Travis Kelce. Arnold was a priority last week but that’s not the case this week. 

D/ST – They just got worked by Geno Smith, there is zero chance I’m touching the Jaguars against the Bills offense. 

Cash – None 

GPP – Arnold 

Texans at Dolphins, O/U of 46 (Dolphins -5.5)

Texans 

QB – Just like last week, my interest depends on Tyrod Taylor’s status. If he’s back in action, I’m going to have what is likely an unhealthy amount. He had a 0.89 FPPD and that would rank among the leaders at the position. Miami is 26th in DVOA against the pass and 24th in yards allowed per attempt, so this would be a soft landing spot to come back into the lineup. Look for an update Friday night. If Davis Mills is still starting, I’m not looking here at all. Even in the great matchup, he’s 33rd in FPPD, 27th in yards, and 33rd in accuracy rating. 

Update – Tyrod is back and it is wheels all the way up at his salary. 

RB – There was a logic behind thinking David Johnson would get played more with Mark Ingram being traded to New Orleans. Well, Houston wanted to make sure they blew that one right out of the water as he played 18% of the snaps (!) and saw them knock the mothballs off Rex Burkhead to handle seven touches. This committee approach is death for fantasy and they’re not going to get me again. I’m all the way out, even though the matchup is great against the Dolphins and the 16th ranked DVOA against the run. You simply don’t know who it’s going to be on any given week. 

WR – Brandin Cooks still being in Houston after the trade deadline is a bad move by them but it helps us this week. Miami has been exploitable all year through the air and Cooks is the unquestioned alpha in this passing game. He’s fourth in air yards share, 10th in yards, fourth in receptions, sixth in target share, and seventh in total targets. Byron Jones and Xavien Howard are both having subpar seasons and Cooks has a lower time in the 40-yards dash, suggesting he can run right by them. Nico Collins could have a tougher time against Howard and it remains to be seen what kind of chemistry he has with Tyrod. His 15 targets over the past three weeks are duly noted, but Cooks is the man in this offense and is not priced accurately. 

TE – I’m not excited for anyone here but if Pharaoh Brown sits again, a stone-cold punt could be rookie Brevin Jordan. He played last week and only ran 10 routes, so the floor here is zero. Still, he turned four targets into 3/41/1 and he’s a big dude at 6’3″, weighing 245 pounds. He also saw a red-zone target and Miami has allowed the second-most yardage to the position. 

Update – Brown is out.

D/ST – It does seem that Miami is good for a turnover or two per game, and Houston does have nine on the season. When we’re in the punt range for defense, we just don’t want a negative and that doesn’t feel like it would happen this week. Houston also has a pressure rate under 20% so maybe if they fit, but nothing more. 

Cash – Tyrod, Cooks

GPP – Collins, Jordan 

Dolphins 

QB – We kind of knew to avoid Tua Tagovailoa last week but I have to give him some respect for grinding out 16.2 DK points in an awful spot. Houston is 16th in DVOA against the pass and are 30th in yards allowed per attempt, so there is much more appeal this week. The Texans are also at 15 passing touchdowns given up, so here is some upside to be had for Tua. For as much as everyone loves to hate him, he’s 15th in FPPD which is totally fine given his weapons. Also, he’s eighth in deep ball completion rate and fourth in red-zone completion rate. I’ll remain interested under $6,000. 

RB – I mentioned that it’s hard to trust this team as a whole but if there was ever a spot to take the chance on Myles Gaskin, this is it. He’s still under $6,000 on DK and we can gripe about Salvon Ahmed taking seven carries and two targets, but Gaskin still had 15 touches last week. Throughout the season, he has 66 carries while no other back has more than 35 and he has a 12.9% target share. That’s plenty at this salary and the Texans bleed production against running backs. They are 31st in rushing yards allowed, 30th in yards per rush, and are dead last in rushing yards allowed. The next closest team that has played eight games is Chicago, and Houston has them beat by 131 yards. 

WR – The duo of DeVante Parker and Jaylen Waddle both saw double-digit targets last week, which was a surprise. Waddle has the eighth-highest slot rate of any receiver in football and that matches him on Tavierre Thomas if the alignments hold up. He’s allowed a 72.7% catch rate but just a 1.24 FPPT so far on a few targets. Waddle leads in target share on this team however so he’s not a bad play.

Terrance Mitchell would draw Parker and Mitchell has a 108.8 passer rating allowed with a 1.86 FPPT. Parker could be a super sneaky player in a game that could be an ugly shootout with either defense being that proficient. 

Update – Parker has ended up on the IR, and that gives a huge bump to Waddle and the next player.

TE – I’m not sweating a bit of a down game from Mike Gesicki in Buffalo. He’s still leading the position in slot snaps and he’s third in air yards, receptions, routes, and targets. It tells you a lot that he’s a top-eight tight end in points per game with just two touchdowns. He’s under $5,000 yet again and the Texans are tied for the most touchdowns allowed with the seventh-most yards given up. This is a great spot for him and an option for a cheap Tua stack if you wish. 

D/ST – Can I answer this when I know who starts for the Texans? If it’s Mills, I’m willing to give it a go but if it’s Tyrod, I’ll pass. Miami is only 26th in total DVOA and they have just 12 sacks. Their drop-off in quality has been swift and very surprising. 

Update – Not interested with Tyrod active. 

Cash – Gesicki, Waddle, Gaskin

 GPP – Tua

Falcons at Saints, O/U of 41.5 (Saints -6.5)

Falcons 

QB – I’m not really looking to Matt Ryan at all. It’s a tough spot with the game being in New Orleans and the Saints ranking fifth in DVOA against the pass and 20th in yards per attempt. The kicker is the Saints defense has a 10:11 TD:INT ratio and that’s pretty impressive at this point. To Ryan’s credit, he is first in completion rate while pressured but that is linked to sitting 25th in yards per attempt and 30th in air yards per attempt. He’ll just dump it off to the nearest receiver and that’s not going to get it done against New Orleans. 

RB – It was a bit surprising to see the touches go backward for Cordarrelle Patterson on a day when the Falcons were without Calvin Ridley, who we wish nothing but the best as he steps away from the game to deal with his mental health. I have a massive amount of respect for someone making that public because it’s hard to ask for help, and it’s even harder to put it out there for public consumption. Patterson saved his day with a touchdown and he did have 14 touches, which is not something to get too worked up over. The largest issue is it is difficult to run on the Saints with their second-best rushing yards per game allowed and tied for best yards per carry allowed. The DVOA backs that up as they sit second against the rush. Just like we talked about with Robinson, you’re starting to pay for mostly receiving work and he’s not cheap enough to eat a running back spot for that path to points. 

WR – Without Ridley, logic would have told us that Russell Gage would see a big bump and then the Falcons burned that logic to the ground. He played 67% of the snaps but Tajae Sharpe saw the targets in garbage tome with six, and that tied for the team lead. I didn’t even know Sharpe was still kicking around the league in honesty. The problem with that is he’ll likely see some of Marshon Lattimore who has a 50% catch rate allowed and a 21.8 YPR that has been skewed by a couple of big plays against elite receivers. Sharpe is not that, to be sure. Olamide Zaccheaus only played about 40% of the snaps for one target and my initial thought is to just leave this group alone. If Gage stays in the slot, he’ll see Chauncey Gardner-Johnson which is a decent matchup. The trust factor is just zero. 

TE – After Ridley got ruled out, Kyle Pitts seemed primed for a big game and it did not come close to happening. He saw six targets but only brought down two of them with 83% of the snaps. Ridley will be out for some time so Pitts is the defacto number one receiver in this offense. He’s already fourth in routes and deep targets among tight ends, and he’s eighth in yards per route. The unknown is how he handles being the focal point of a good defense (you can’t count the London game against the Jets). In the first sample we had, things did not go well. I don’t think he’ll be a primary target for me. 

D/ST – I would like to build a case for Atlanta but I’m not sure it can be done. They are 30th in pressure rate and total DVOA with only 10 sacks and six turnovers. Even with some questionable quarterback play from the Saints, it’s not an appealing spot. 

Cash – None

GPP – Pitts, Gage, Patterson

Saints 

QB – I never thought I would say this, but I hope Taysom Hill makes it back for this game. Now if you’ll excuse me, I have to go dry heave in the corner for a second. 

Alright, I’m back, and as gross as it sounds, Hill would be in strong consideration for me this week. I might even be willing to pair him with his running back because Hill is one of the Konami Quarterbacks. His rushing potential makes him a very strong fantasy play. Hill had a four-game stretch last year as the starter and finished as the QB4, 11, 8, and 11 in those four weeks. That was despite throwing just four touchdowns and at only $5,500, you have to give him a long look if he’s active. 

Update- Hill was not able to make it out of concussion protocol so Trevor Siemian will start but I would so much rather play Tyrod.

RB – Alvin Kamara is very likely to be chalk and I’ll be a part of that reason this week in some format or another. The Saints are going to continue to get iffy quarterback play and Kamara will continue to get loaded up with touches, seeing another 22 this past weekend. Sure, Mark Ingram is going to handle 8-10 touches per game but Kamara still had five red-zone carries and Atlanta sits 25th in rushing yards allowed per game, 20th in yards per carry allowed, and 25th in DVOA against the run. 

Additionally, they’ve allowed the third-most receptions and receiving yards among teams with seven games played. This is a smash spot for Kamara and he has no peers among the position this week. He will be the only running back above $8,000 on DK and that will lead the entire field right to him, justifiably so. He did suffer a little in the receiving game when Hill played, but he hasn’t been utilized the same way this season anyway. 

WR – I’m mildly interested in Tre’Quan Smith this week because since he’s been back in the lineup, he has basically tied for the second-most targets behind Marquez Callaway and he has two red-zone targets, second on the team as well. He’s been the most productive Saints receiver for fantasy on minimal targets and a 59% snap share. He’s been kicking into the slot about half the time, which helps him avoid A.J. Terrell. Smith is still cheap enough and past that, I’ll skip this. Callaway leads in targets with 33 and that is 61st in the league. 

TE – The tight ends for the Saints continue to not be utilized and Juwan Johnson and Adam Trautman have combined for 31 targets in seven games. 

D/ST – They will likely be a little too expensive for my blood but this is a great spot. They don’t have to deal with the dynamics of Ridley in the passing game and Ryan has faced the 10th highest pressure rate in football. New Orleans has 16 sacks and 13 turnovers, both things we look for in picking defenses. If you love your lineup and they fit, bully for you. I’m just not rebuilding a lineup to make them work and I realistically never will. 

Cash – Kamara, maybe Taysom

GPP – Smith, Ingram, D/ST

Broncos at Cowboys, O/U of 49.5 (Cowboys -10)

Broncos 

QB – Last week was a major flop for Teddy Bridgewater, only managing 12.6 points against a vulnerable Washington defense. The metrics always look fine for him as he’s 12th in yards per attempt, sixth in red-zone completion, and 13th in touchdowns. However, he’s also 30th in deep-ball completion rate and 24th in FPPD. Dallas is an odd mix of metrics because they are seventh in DVOA but have also allowed over 2,000 passing yards. The 11 interceptions are saving them to some extent but I can’t muster up much enthusiasm for Teddy Two Gloves here. Maybe if he has to throw a lot in a negative game script he can get there but that’s about the limit. 

RB – Another week and another 50/50 split for Javonte Williams and Melvin Gordon. MG3 looks great from the box score because he scored twice but past that, his 13 touches generated just 62 scrimmage yards. Williams had 11 touches for 48 yards and it remains basically impossible to separate them for fantasy. Add in that Dallas is 11th in DVOA against the run and 16th in yards per carry allowed and it’s hard to build a case to play either back. 

WR – It didn’t work out for me last week but I’ll go right back to Jerry Jeudy. Not only did he not suffer any setbacks from the ankle, but he also played over 70% of the snaps. The ball just go spread around so much that it was tough for anyone to have a big game with nobody getting more than four targets. Jeudy has been in the slot for the vast majority and that matches him on Jourdan Lewis who has allowed a 98.6 passer rating and a 1.64 FPPT. 

Courtland Sutton could be someone that gets shied away from because he’s facing Trevon Diggs who is having a big year but when he gives up production, he gets burnt. Diggs is giving up an 18.4 YPR and is 82nd in passer rating given up. That is perfect for Sutton’s game since he is third in air yards share, first in unrealized air yards, and first in deep targets. Sutton is burning Diggs for a long touchdown, as long as Teddy can put the ball on him. 

TE – It will be a tight timeline for Noah Fant to get back from a positive Covid test so we may have a punt option in Albert Okwuegbunam at nearly minimum price. Fant has a 19.6% target share and Okwuegbunam sits at 8.4% so there is plenty of work to go around for tight ends, especially if the number one option is out. Dallas is in the bottom half of the league in receptions and yards allowed to the position on top of that. 

Update – Fant is not expected to be active.

D/ST – As long as Dallas has their starting quarterback in this game, I’m not playing a defense against the Cowboys. 

Cash – Jeudy, Okwuegbunam

GPP – Sutton

Dallas 

QB – By all accounts, Dak Prescott will be back in action this week and that is great news. He’s just flat-out fun to watch, even if you’re not a Cowboys fan. He’s under $7,000 and that is going to be extremely tempting, in part because Denver is 21st in DVOA against the pass and 14th in yards allowed per attempt. Dak is seventh in yards per attempt, third in play-action completion rate, third in deep completion rate, and ninth in FPPD. Dallas is at home in this one and the Broncos defense is not that fearsome, especially since pass rusher Von Miller is now a member of the Rams. 

RB – Denver is 27th in DVOA against the run, which you wouldn’t know by the red number next to Ezekiel Elliot’s name for his matchup. I’ll give them their 12thin yards per carry allowed but with Dallas, the matchup matters less because they are an elite offense when Prescott is playing. Zeke still recorded 20 touches last week and did about as much as could be expected while Minnesota dared Cooper Rush to beat them. Elliott is fifth in red-zone carries among players that have fewer than eight games, so his touchdown equity is always there and the price is still very affordable. 

WR – We may have one more week of just Amari Cooper and CeeDee Lamb by themselves in the corps because Michael Gallup is likely one more week away. I used “may” in that sentence because Lamb sprained an ankle in practice and is now questionable. That would be a big loss as Lamb is eighth in yards on the season and 13th in yards per route. He would likely see more of Ronald Darby who has only been targeted 15 times but has allowed a 130.1 passer rating. Cooper would see fellow Alabama alumni Patrick Surtain and despite teams trying to pick on the rookie with 50 targets, he’s held his own with a 50% completion rate and 78.8 passer rating. I’d be way more likely to go after Cooper if Lamb is out, but Lamb would be the preferred target if healthy. 

Update – Lamb logged a limited practice and is questionable for he game. If he’s out, Cooper is a smash play in cash and his salary really is crazy low.

TE – I never thought we’d still be talking about Dalton Schultz as an option at near $5,000 but he’s kept on producing. Well, not last week but that was the Cooper Rush game. Schultz is sixth in receptions, seventh in yards and fourth in target rate on top of eighth in points per game. As long as Prescott is back in this game, Schultz is playable but I do prefer Gesicki. 

Update – Blake Jarwin is out and that clears the path even more for Schultz.

D/ST – Dallas is sort of expensive even though they are paying well as far as generating turnovers. My fear in playing them is they only have 12 sacks so if the interceptions stop, what do they have to fall back on? Just as we saw last game, the floor is fairly low. 

Cash – Dak, Zeke, Lamb, Schultz

GPP – Cooper

Patriots at Panthers, O/U of 41 (Patriots -3.5)

Patriots 

QB – I can’t help but think if the Patriots get Mac Jones some real weapons that this kid could be a fantasy force, as much as a non-entity in rushing yards can be at the position. However, those players aren’t going to get there before Sunday so Jones is still a very bland option. Carolina is sixth in DVOA against the pass and third in yards allowed per attempt, which is an issue right there. Jones has managed to claw his way to eighth in yards and he leads the league in accuracy rating, but the FPPD is 28th in large part because he’s only thrown nine touchdowns on the year. The Panthers have allowed the fewest yards passing of any team that has played seven games so this doesn’t seem like a great mix for Jones. 

RB – We’ve wanted to be careful with the matchups that we play Damien Harris in and this spot doesn’t exactly leap off the page at first. Carolina is 19th in DVOA, and they also surrender 4.4 yards per carry which is 22nd on the season. What’s propping them up is they’ve only allowed three rushing touchdowns to the position and that is the second-fewest. It’s always a little tough to play Harris when he’s over $6,000 because he has no role in the passing game with a target share of 4.3%. In honesty, I would rather take the shot at Gaskin for $200 cheaper. 

WR – When you’re not fired up about the quarterback, it’s a little harder to get there for a receiver unless he has some elite metrics. Jakobi Meyers is not that. He splits his snaps about half and half between the slot and outside so the matchup is less important, but remember that the Panthers now have Stephon Gilmore as well. Meyers is eighth in receptions so that keeps in the running on DK but he’s also 30th in yards, hasn’t scored since college, and isn’t even in the top 20 in target share. 

TE – It remains pretty difficult to trust either Hunter Henry or Jonnu Smith. Henry only saw three targets last week and while they both have a target share above 11%, it’s just not translating into much production. Henry is 14th in points per game and 11th in receptions and yards. It’s a pretty unspectacular play and the Panthers have been good against the tight end. In this range, we have better options. 

D/ST – I’m casting aside the Patriots unit quickly because IF I were to pay up, I’d just play the Bills. New England creates the splash plays we love with 13 turnovers forced and 18 sacks to go along with being 11th in total DVOA. There’s just not a strong case to play them over Buffalo in that range. It would be a little closer if the Panthers have to play the backup quarterback. 

Cash – None 

GPP – Meyers, D/ST, Henry 

Panthers 

QB – It looks like P.J. Walker is going to be in line to start this game unless something changes with Sam Darnold. Walker has all of 71 attempts at the NFL level, and that’s not ideal going up against Bill Belichick and the 10th best DVOA defense against the pass. They also have a 12:10 TD: INT ratio and it will be an uphill climb for Walker to find any success here. I will steer clear of the passing game in this one. 

Update – Darnold is still questionable but either way, I’m not heading here.

RB – Chubba Hubbard is in a similar boat as Harris in that the targets have not been there in the way we thought they would be without Christian McCaffrey. Now, CMC might practice this week but we’ve been down this road already once this season. I’ll believe he’s active at 11:30 on Sunday or if he’s not on the report at all come Friday. If he’s out, Hubbard is getting the rushing work with 24 carries last week but Ameer Abdullah started to carve out a role with eight rushes and five targets. I’m not buying into playing him at this juncture but it just takes more away from Hubbard as far as receiving work. New England is 17th in DVOA against the run and has allowed and is seventh in yards allowed among teams with eight games played. 

Update – Christian McCaffrey now might play in this one but they still don’t even know and it’s Friday night. To me, that wouldn’t leave me with much confidence that he makes it back.

WR – It’s D.J. Moore or bust here…at least that’s what logic would tell us. I’m going to hate myself but *sighs* Robby Anderson could make some sense. I know, I’m sick of hearing it too. I’m not going to list his metrics again. He’s having one of the worst seasons with the amount of volume he sees in history. However, Belichick always works to take away the top option. That is unequivocally Moore, who is top-eight in air yards, yards, receptions, routes, and targets. If they force Moore from the game, all that work has to go somewhere. Anderson is next up, although Terrace Marshall cleared concussion protocol this week and could see extra targets as well. Either way, I’m not chasing Moore this week. 

TE – Both Ian Thomas and Tommy Tremble are under 7% for their target share, which doesn’t do anything for us. 

D/ST – The Panthers look like one of the stronger units on the slate with their salary included. They are top-five in pressure rate, have the fourth-most sacks at 21, are eighth in total DVOA, and have forced eight turnovers. This New England offense is not one to fear and they shouldn’t be $2,600. 

Cash – D/ST

GPP – Anderson, Moore, Hubbard, Marshall 

Vikings at Ravens, O/U of 50 (Ravens -6)

Vikings 

QB – I guess the good news for Kirk Cousins is that he’s not in primetime this week? He was roasted by about everyone last week for his play against the Cowboys and the 13.2 fantasy points don’t exactly bring you much comfort. After a strong start, the bottom has mostly fallen out for Cousins with three of his past four games scoring under 15 DK. He does have one over 31 DK in that span as well, but playing in Baltimore isn’t likely to snap him out of the funk. They are 23rd in DVOA and 28th in yards allowed per attempt, but Cousins is 20th in yards per attempt, 30th in accuracy rating, 19th in FPPD, and 19th in red-zone attempts. That’s not a super appealing array of metrics. 

RB – It has been kind of a bizarre season for Dalvin Cook. He’s only played five games and has only cleared 22 DK points once with two games under 10 DK. Granted, one of those games was injury-related but his target share has come down under 11%. That’s not helping the floor for Cook but Baltimore is 15th in DVOA against the run. The potential is always there but I do wish he had more receiving work coming to him. The last we saw Baltimore’s defense they were getting walked all over the field by the Bengals but are coming off a bye. The high-end of the backs aren’t that great this week so Cook is in play, but I’m not in love with him or this Minnesota offense at this point. 

WR – Justin Jefferson is having somewhat of a quieter season than some thought but he’s still in the top 20 in receptions, yards, air yards, routes, and targets. He hasn’t been bad by any stretch and faces off against Marlon Humphrey, who has a 2.05 FPPT and an 18.8 YPR. There is the big-play ability for Jefferson if Cousins can actually find him. The next time I get Adam Thielen right could be the first time but we sort of know what he is – touchdown or bust. In seven games, Thielen has scored in five of them and cleared at least 15 DK. In the two he didn’t find the paint, he hasn’t hit eight DK. The matchup against Anthony Averett is not an easy one with a 1.42 FPPT and he always feels pricey to me. 

TE – Ty Conklin is always in play to some extent because he does have a 14.1% target share and is third in red-zone share. Conklin is in the top 12 in receptions, yards, routes, and targets. He’s also $1,000 less than Henry from New England and that helps the cause because even 10-12 DK points get you to what you need. Just remember that Baltimore giving up production is skewed by having faced some of the most elite tight ends in the league. 

D/ST – I have no real reason to attack a Ravens offense coming off a bye week and getting healthier. We’ll see if something changes during the week but as of now, this would be a defense that has least has a chance to go into the negatives. They are fourth in DVOA and The Ravens have allowed 21 sacks, so I’ll give them that. Still, you aren’t going to feel good here. You’d have to hope they get to Jackson a bunch of times. 

Cash – Jefferson, Cook

GPP – Thielen, Cousins, Conklin 

Ravens 

QB – Minnesota has been surprisingly good against the pass as they sit third in DVOA and that is notable. They are also 21st in yards allowed per attempt and Lamar Jackson is fifth in both yards per attempt and air yards, a nice mix of attacking the defense. Even with his bye week, he’s still second in deep attempts and he’s third in FPPD, to go along with third in points per game. Jackson and the Ravens offense should be healthier coming out of the bye week and he’s got some weapons to put up a big game, let alone his rushing prowess. This is a strong bounce-back spot after a down game in Week 7. 

RB – There’s a chance that Latavius Murray could be back after their bye week and let’s all hope so because watching Devonta Freeman and Le’Veon Bell is not super fun. Granted, Murray isn’t a world-beater either but he’s still better than the other two options. Minnesota is only 20th in DVOA and the Baltimore offense is generally difficult to defend with Lamar running around. There is not a lot of receiving upside with Murray but $5,500 is very affordable on this slate. If he gets closer to 12-14 carries, that could be all you need for the matchup. 

Update – Murray is doubtful for this one but in all honesty, instead of turning to the run game with Freeman and Bell, I’d rather hope for the ceiling game from Jackson and the passing game.

WR – This is going to be a difficult situation to get ahold of every week. Sammy Watkins is back at practice and that makes just the receivers a three-headed monster with him, Marquise Brown, and Rashod Bateman. The Ravens are only 21st in attempts and have a pretty darn good tight end as well, so the ceiling for any of these guys is depressed when all are active. Brown is still going to be the lead dog with a top-10 mark in air yards and deep targets, but he was already 23rd in targets overall. Watkins has just a 20% target share on the year while Bateman has been at 17.7%. Bashaud Breeland and Mackensie Alexander are both over a 1.50 FPP, but guessing right on a limited passing game is going to be frustrating. The volume is simply not there to support all three PLUS the next man on our list.

Update – Bateman popped onto the injury report on Friday, not generally a great sign. If he is out, I’ll have a whole lot of Hollywood Brown with the starting running back out on top of it.  

TE – One of the reasons that I’m not as excited to play Pitts is Mark Andrews is cheaper by $400. The game before the bye week was the lone game under double-digit DK points and sometimes you’re just going to have a down game. He’s sixth in air yards share, second in yards, fourth in receptions, third in target share, and second in yards per route. The Vikings have yet to allow a touchdown to the position but they have faced a parade of sub-par options. Andrews is easily the best tight end they’ve played all season and Andrews has every chance to notch the first score against them. 

D/ST – The Ravens are reasonably priced and they do have a top-eight pressure rate on the season. The DVOA is poor at 24th and Cousins has only taken 10 sacks but he’s faced the fifth-most pressure. Something has to give at some point. They’re on the table but I would stop short of saying they’re a primary target. 

Cash – Jackson, Andrews

GPP – Murray, Brown, Bateman, Watkins 

Browns at Bengals, O/U of 47 (Bengals -2.5)

Browns

QB – It’s getting late into the season to expect Baker Mayfield to be something different than he is, which is nothing special. He’s 22nd in red-zone attempts, 26th in accuracy rating, 25th in FPPD, 26th in points per game, and has all of six passing touchdowns. Cincinnati is 13th in DVOA against the pass and ninth in yards allowed per attempt, and Mayfield is playing with a torn labrum in his left shoulder. I’m not super interested in him even at the cheap pricing. We can get exposure to this game in other facets. 

RB – Did Nick Chubb do something to the Browns coaching staff? Kareem Hunt is out but Chubb was still out-carried in the red-zone by De’Ernest Johnson, and guess who got the score? It wasn’t Chubb. He also didn’t see any more targets with just one so while I do really love this spot, we need to be careful of the floor. We saw it again last week with under eight DK points even though he got 17 touches. If Johnson is in the Hunt role since he got three targets, he could be a crazy deep-field GPP option. The Bengals have bled production in the passing game and have allowed the most receptions to backs in the league. They are also 10th in DVOA against the run so if they can contain Chubb, Johnson could see some work. 

Update – OL Jack Conklin is out, which is a blow to this running game.

WR – Fare thee well, Odell Beckham. The Browns hardly knew you. With the news that OBJ is basically getting paid to stay home, Jarvis Landry and Donovan Peoples-Jones are going to be primed for larger roles. Landry sees the least amount of change in my eyes and already had a target share of 22.8% and an aDOT of 8.2-yards. He’s still playing a good chunk of snaps in the slot and that leaves him on Mike Hilton who has allowed a 74.4% catch rate through 39 targets. Peoples-Jones has a 15.9-yard aDOT and that likely doesn’t change too much if he steps into the Beckham role. He doesn’t look like anything crazy special and with the tight ends being involved, this is another low-volume passing attack. They only run 30 passing plays per game and Landry is going to surely lead in targets, leaving not much for Peoples-Jones or even Rashard Higgins. 

TE – Life is probably easier for the passing game without Beckham, but let’s not forget that all of the tight ends are splitting snaps and targets. None of Austin Hooper, David Njoku, and Harrison Bryant are over 24 targets and we’re into Week 9, so that’s not great. When we’re talking about a three-headed monster at the tight end spot, I’m not very interested. 

D/ST – Cleveland faces a tough offense but man are they cheap. They are just 19th in DVOA but they also carry a pressure rate over 27.5% and have 22 sacks, a top-five mark in the league. Cincinnati has allowed the eighth-most sacks on the season along with a 23.4% pressure rate. To top that off, only one team has more interceptions thrown than the Bengals. 

Cash – Landry, D/ST

GPP – Chubb, Peoples-Jones, Johnson, Baker

Bengals

QB – It seems like Joe Burrow is just continuing to get better and even at just 22nd in attempts, he’s sixth in yards and third in yards per attempt. Burrow is also eighth in FPPD, third in touchdowns and seventh in deep completion rate. Cleveland is 25th in DVOA against the pass and 12th in yards per attempt allowed. If the offensive line can give him time, Burrow is on the board here and the clearly superior option on paper in this game. He’s back under $7,000 which is more comfortable for a player with virtually no rushing upside. 

RB – Joe Mixon continues to find ways to get touches and this past week he had 18 total. He had two touchdowns and played nearly 80% of the snaps, so his salary is very warranted. He’s still second in the league in carries and his target share is 8.7% which isn’t great, but it helps a little bit. The catch is Cleveland has been excellent against the run as they are tied for the lowest yards per carry allowed and they sit third in DVOA against the run. Knowing that Mixon doesn’t have a ton of receiving work to fall back on does raise some concerns. It’s a fair salary but this may not be the spot to pay up for him. 

WR – This trio continues to be mostly a duo when they are all active. For the most part, Tyler Boyd has taken a backseat when Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins have played with last week being the one weird exception. Chase proved he’s not just a deep threat with a two-yard score last week and still saw nine targets, so I’ll have no issues playing him. He’s still the alpha and top 10 in air yards and yards total. Denzel Ward has only been targeted 28 times but has allowed a 121.7 passer rating and a 2.01 FPPT through those targets. Higgins would see more of Greg Newsome who has been targeted just 17 times and allowed a 109.9 passer rating. Even with Boyd in the slot, the individual matchup is nothing to fear as Troy Hill has allowed a 72.7% catch rate. It’s only 11 targets but these corners have been just alright and not much more. 

TE – C.J. Uzomah continues to either break the slate or not hit 10 DK points and there’s not much in between. I’m continuing to not play him since his target share is just 9.5% and his red-zone share is only 3.7%. Those just aren’t stable metrics, nor are his 23 total targets (29th) and 289 yards (14th). He’s scored five times, tied for most among tight ends and that is the only thing keeping him afloat. 

D/ST – Cincy is 13th in DVOA and has a solid pressure rate to go with their 21 sacks but I’m not convinced I love them here. I’d likely just play the Browns or come up a little bit. The Bengals struggled with the Jets offense and the Browns could be rid of a lot of pressure that was the OBJ situation. 

Cash – Chase, Higgins

GPP – Burrow, Boyd, Mixon

Raiders at Giants, O/U of 46 (Raiders -3.5)

Raiders

QB – On paper, Derek Carr doesn’t look like the worst option as he’s sixth in true completion rate, eighth in deep completion rate, sixth in yards per attempt, and fifth in yards. The offense will also look very different than the last time we saw it and it’s hard to say exactly how this offense functions with the absence. New York is 11th in DVOA so the matchup is surprisingly a little tough. They are also 13th in yards allowed per attempt so this isn’t the strongest spot on the board.

RB – This is a very strong spot for Josh Jacobs, even though the price is a bit high at first look. It has been a tough year for Jacobs with injuries but he still leads the team in red-zone rush attempts and carries, despite playing five to seven for Kenyan Drake. We don’t think of him having receiving upside but his target share is 9% and that’s higher than Mixon. New York is 21st in DVOA and yards per carry allowed, meaning there should be room for Jacobs to produce. Only four teams have given up more rushing yards against backs and they have seen the fifth-most carries with five touchdowns allowed. 

WR – This is a horrible subject to write on. Henry Ruggs is no longer with the Raiders as he was in a drunk driving accident that left a victim dead. This isn’t the place to get too far into it, but I’ll just quickly say that if you’re reading this – please, please just get an Uber. It’s never worth it and the damage you could do is irreversible. We’re going to discuss what this passing game looks like without Ruggs, but there are obviously much more important issues at play here. Thoughts and prayers are with the victim’s family who had their world ripped apart. 

With Ruggs off the field, it really becomes a question of who exactly stretches the field for this offense. It’s a big reason I’m a little hesitant of Carr in this game. Hunter Renfrow jumps off the page a little bit with a 20.1% target share and now a 14.2% share is out of the offense. Perhaps the Raiders finally play Bryan Edwards and actually target him now instead of the 11.8% share he’s got so far. If that’s the case, Renfrow can still be mostly in the slot and against Darnay Holmes. He’s only allowed a 44.4% catch rate across 18 total targets to this point as a part-time player. Edwards would likely see James Bradberry who has gotten shredded by about every receiver he’s faced. 

TE – We’ve been talking all year about how the targets have been more evenly distributed among the Raiders after Week 1 and Darren Waller only has a 20.2% share since that point. That likely changes this week since Ruggs had a 15.4% target share and 28.3% of the air yards share, which both need to be filled. Waller is going to be one of the prime candidates to do so and is sixth in routes while sitting third in unrealized air yards. With the changes in the Vegas offense, I’m more interested in Waller than I have been in recent weeks. 

D/ST – The Raiders check the boxes for a defense under $3,000. They have 18 sacks and a top-six pressure rate, which is a great start. The nine takeaways aren’t special but the opposition could help with that. The DVOA is average at 15th and that is good enough for this matchup. 

Cash – Renfrow, Waller

GPP – Jacobs, Carr, Edwards, D/ST 

Giants 

QB – Daniel Jones suckered me in on a showdown last week but I’m not falling for that again. The past four games have looked a lot more like the rest of the career for Jones, with five turnovers against just three touchdowns. To be fair, his weapons in this offense have been massively smacked by injuries. That isn’t his fault at all but it doesn’t change the fact of wanting to play him in this spot. He’s only 20th in FPPD, 17th in points per game, and is just 16th in red-zone attempts. Vegas is 19th in DVOA against the pass but they can get pressure and jones is 13th in completion rate under pressure. 

RB – Devontae Booker has been pretty productive since Saquon Barkley has been injured, scoring at least 10.9 DK points in each game. He’s been the guy with at least 16 touches in every game as well so the price isn’t all that bad. Vegas is 13th in DVOA against the run and they’ve given up almost 1,000 scrimmage yards in seven games with nine touchdowns allowed. If Barkley remains out, Booker is well in play at this point. Since the Dallas game when Barkley left early, Booker has an 11.3% target share and has played 83.3% of the snaps from that game forward. 

WR – It has been the case for a while but we need clarity on Friday. Sterling Shepard is already doubtful and will reportedly miss multiple weeks. Kenny Golloday and Kadarius Toney were limited today, so they both at least have a window to make it back for this one. It’s also possible that neither one does and Darius Slayton is the WR1 in the offense. That would not be ideal. 

Update – Shepard is officially out, as expected. Toney has practiced all week and is expected to play, in which case I’m moderately excited for him. He’s been in the slot around 37% of the time and if Golladay is back (he is questionable and did practice this week), Toney could jus live in the slot in this game. Nate Hobbs has played a good deal of slot for the Raiders and has played it well, only being targeted 17 times. However, he has a 1.52 FPPT across those targets.

TE – I’m saying this while rolling my eyes but Evan Engram is at least worth discussing. The Giants receiving options continue to be a M*A*S*H unit and Engram is one of the only ones left standing. My largest issue is the price because even last week, he only saw four targets and barely cracked 10 DK points even with a touchdown. We need to see who is actually available this week but he’s at least on the radar and Vegas has allowed the ninth-most yards and four scores. 

D/ST – They really fall into no man’s land for me salary-wise. The pressure rate is under 20% although they do have 18 sacks, and the DVOA is 14th. The Raiders are outside of the top 12 in pressure rate allowed and sacks, so it’s not a smash spot. It’s truthfully hard to gauge how the Raiders play in this spot and I can’t pretend to know. If the focus isn’t there for obvious and understandable reasons, New York has potential. 

Cash – Booker, Toney

GPP – Slayton, Golladay

Chargers at Eagles, O/U of 49 (Chargers -2)

Chargers 

QB – I’d like to buy-low into Justin Herbert but the price didn’t really move that much for a player that has scored 12, 15, and had a bye week in the past three weeks. The shine has come off him a little bit but even with the struggles, he’s still 10th in yards, fifth in attempts, ninth in red-zone attempts, 13th in FPPD, and eighth in touchdowns. Philly is 12th in DVOA and 11th in yards allowed per attempt so this is not a cakewalk by any stretch. I think the matchup combined with the recent play could make Herbert a dynamite GPP option, but nothing more. 

RB – So much for Austin Ekeler being bothered by a hip injury. He played 75% of the snaps and carried the ball 11 times with a total of 10 targets with six receptions. Most importantly, he had another four red-zone carries and only two other running backs have more targets than Ekeler on the year. The volume is not safer from many other players and the matchup is pristine. Philly is 22nd in DVOA against the run and they have allowed the second-most receptions against backs, not to mention over 1,300 scrimmage yards and nine scores. If you wound up building around Kamara and Ekeler, that could be a great start for a cash lineup. 

WR – Mike Williams was mostly held in check last week as suspected and he doesn’t get a much easier matchup this week either. Darius Slay is having a strong year with just a 58.3% catch rate and a 1.26 FPPT across 36 targets. Williams still has the air yards share lead and a 22.3% target share, along with the most end-zone targets on the team. His past two slow games have coincided with a bit of a knee injury and Herbert’s slow play. Going back to him is a GPP move only and I like Keenan Allen better again this week. Allen is eighth in receptions, 12th in routes, and 10th in targets. He leads the team in red-zone targets with 11 and is playing a good deal in the slot so his matchup is never as important because he moves around. 

TE – Philly has had issues all year with the tight end position and Jared Cook is next in line. They have allowed the most receptions and are tied for the most touchdowns allowed, while Cook is an important cog for the Charger offense. He’s got the sixth-highest slot rate among the position along with 10th in targets. The production has been flighty game to game, but this is a great spot for Cook to pay off a relatively cheap price. 

D/ST – I will have none of the Chargers defense. Until they can stop the run to any extent, it’s a massive blind spot for them. Running the ball successfully lessens the chances for splash plays and Philly can run the ball when they choose to. 

Cash – Ekeler, Allen

GPP – Herbert, Williams, Cook

Eagles 

QB – Of course the day the Eagles offense finally goes off, it had nothing to do with Jalen Hurts after weeks of them not doing a ton, and Hurts is a fantasy monster. The Chargers are two separate defenses rolled into one unit because they are excellent against the pass in DVOA at fourth. It’s the other facet of the game they struggle in. Hurts does have a little more rushing upside than normal, but his passing floor might be lower than last week. He’s still 19th in yards, 21st in yards per attempt, 31st in true completion rate, and 17th in touchdowns. Since he’s a Konami Code, he’s always in play. 

RB – Call me what you will but I’m ready to go right back to Boston Scott. The Chargers are incapable of stopping the run and are dead last in yards per carry allowed, DVOA, and 31st in rushing yards allowed to the backs. They’ve also had one fewer game so, among teams with seven games played, LA has allowed almost 200 yards more than the next team (Vikings). Scott got all of the run when the game was close on Sunday and then split work with Jordan Howard as the game wore on. Scott legitimately took every carry in the first quarter so, for me, he is still the primary target in the backfield. Kenneth Gainwell didn’t get his touches until the game was well out of hand and he still couldn’t get much going. Scott is still very affordable and the matchup couldn’t get much better. 

WR – I can’t express how little I want to do with DeVonta Smith this week (which means 100/2 game is imminent) against this talented Chargers corner trio. All of Michael Davis, Chris Harris, and Asante Samuel Jr. have had success this season and although the numbers for Samuel and Harris are eroding a little as the season goes, Davis will be the primary corner on Smith and his FPPT is just 1.51. Smith is the one in the offense but he’s also outside the top 25 in yards, receptions, targets, and he’s 49th in points per game. That is not someone I want to pay $5,200 for in any way. He’s talented and can fly so maybe he breaks a long play but that almost has to be what you bank on with just one touchdown this year. 

Update – The matchup for Smith has changed significantly, as Davis and Samuel are both out. It’s still hard to use the word trust with Hurts, but it’s a massive improvement for Smith and I’m far more apt to include him in game stacks especially.

TE – It’s hard to trust any pass catcher for Philly, but Dallas Goedert is the highest on that list. In the past two weeks without Zach Ertz, Goedert is tied for the lead in targets at 12 and has scored the most fantasy points of any pass-catcher. Despite the Chargers boasting strong safety play, they have given up the fifth-most yards and only the Ravens have allowed more with seven games played. The price is super appealing and he should be over $5,000 for the rest of the year. 

D/ST – I prefer other punt spots but Philly could be a GPP style play. The Chargers have scuffled lately and the Eagles are top 12 in DVOA against the pass. That could give this offense some issues and Herbert has been dreadful in the past couple of games. With a pressure rate over 25%, that could be enough to cause issues. 

Cash – Scott, Hurts, Goedert

GPP – D/ST, Smith 

Packers at Chiefs, O/U of 47.5 (Chiefs -7.5)

Packers 

QB – Aaron Rodgers is out for this game and he gives way to Jordan Love, who sits at just $4,400 on DK. The easy approach is to just ignore him with Tyrod sitting at $600 more and having an actual track record to fall back on. It will be interesting to see how the field treats Love because you can fit a LOT of skill players into the lineup with a $4,400 quarterback and a punt defense. Love is a total unknown at the NFL level with just seven pass attempts in his career. We know that the Chiefs are a great matchup as they sit 30th in DVOA against the pass but it seems an unnecessary risk at this point. Green Bay could really turn the clock back for smash-mouth football in this game. 

RB – I’m not expecting Aaron Jones to get 22 touches including seven receptions again since the Packers should be healthier. Still, this is an amazing spot for Jones since the Chiefs have allowed over 1,000 scrimmage yards and are 29th in DVOA against the run. He’s also still accumulating the majority of the carries on the team and has 28 red-zone carries to 10 for A.J. Dillon. Jones is also tied for the lead in red-zone targets so if the touchdowns go his way, he could be in for a monster day. I’ll be fascinated to see what happens with ownership between Jones, Kamara, and Ekeler. Oh, we also have a stud making his return to the lineup in this next spot that is also in a smash spot. 

Update – This was written before Rodgers was ruled out. Aaron Jones is going to maul this Chiefs squad and is my number one target out of the offense. I like Dillon a lot more now too because Green Bay is going to try and pull the same game plan as last week when Dillon had 16 carries. 

WR – Davante Adams appears to be on track to start this week and he could be quite the GPP play. Almost everyone will (justifiably) shy away from Adams at this salary with Love at quarterback. It’s not to say Adams isn’t one of the most gifted players in the league but his timing with Rodgers is a big reason why they are both excellent. That can’t be replaced by Love, plain and simple. Having said all of that, Adams is such a large portion of the Packers passing game it’s not like love is going to ignore him either. Adams is third in receptions, fourth in yards, first in yards per route, and second in target rate. The Chiefs don’t have any reasonably strong members of the secondary past Tyrann Mathieu. If GB can stay in this, it’s going to be because of Jones and Adams. I would not be looking at anyone other than Adams past GPP at this juncture. 

TE – With Love playing and Robert Tonyan out for the year, it’s easy to skip over Marcedes Lewis at $2,900. 

D/ST – I’m getting more tempted every passing week to play the defense against the Chiefs, but the loss of Rodgers is so massive that I won’t take the risks. The Packers defense could be on the field a lot and put in bad field position. They’re not even super cheap. 

Cash – None

GPP – Jones, Dillon, Love, Adams 

Chiefs 

QB – If everyone is just jumping off the train with Patrick Mahomes after two poor fantasy games, count me among the people that will play him a lot. Look, things aren’t great in KC right now and the offense has been poor lately. Don’t let that cloud the fact that Mahomes is still second in attempts, third in yards, eighth in air yards, fifth in red-zone attempts, fourth in touchdowns, and 12th in FPPD. If that’s a “bad” season, sign me up. He’s under $8,000 and Green Bay is just 18th in DVOA against the pass. I’m not even buying he may not have a ceiling because they’re a heavy favorite now. If KC gets the offense on track, they’re not calling off the dogs until very late. 

RB – He may have only played 19.8% of the snaps but Derrick Gore sure made an impression. He turned his 11 carries into 48 rushing yards and a score and he really looked like he had some juice. Darrel Williams had 13 carries and six targets, generating 110 scrimmage yards. Six of 11 carries for Gore came in the red zone, compared to just two for Williams. Clyde Edwards-Helaire is not back yet and the Packers are 29th in yards per carry allowed, 30th in DVOA against the run, and have allowed seven scores. Williams is the much safer play but Gore has my interest in GPP settings to afford other players. 

WR – Struggles with the offense or not, Tyreek Hill at $7,900 is glaring. It was made worse by his 18 targets on Monday night after the slate was released. He is sixth in routes, first in receptions, fifth in yards, fourth in completed air yards, and eighth in deep targets. The Packers have a corner group made up of rookie Eric Stokes, Kevin King, and Rasul Douglas who was sitting on his couch about a month ago. King especially has always struggled with speed receivers and he’s averaging 18.8 yards per reception. Mecole Hardman is under a 15% target share but is still a clear third in the pecking order and has plenty of chances against this corner group as well. 

TE – One of these games, Travis Kelce is going to go absolutely bonkers and yet…I can’t say when that’s going to be. He hasn’t been over 20 DK since Week 2 and this offense as a whole just isn’t passing the eye test right now. They’re struggling mightily and Kelce took the brunt of it Monday night. He turned in one of his worst games of the season and that makes five games straight he’s been under 18 DK. Al the metrics still look great with the most routes, targets, air yards, receptions, and yards. It mostly speaks to how high Kelce’s bar is and $7,000 is low for him in general. As I said, he’s going to break a slate. It’s just a matter of when and how confident you feel. 

D/ST – I suppose that the Chiefs defense could be chalky now since they are priced for Rodgers. There are not a ton of metrics to support that with just 11 sacks, eight takeaways, and 31st in total DVOA. Still, Love is a total unknown at this point in Arrowhead. 

Cash – Hill, Kelce

GPP – Mahomes, Williams, Gore

Cardinals at 49ers, O/U of 45 (49ers -2)

Cardinals 

QB – I still think Kyler Murray plays but he’s dealing with an ankle injury and I’m not happy to hear that. His big plays are part of his appeal and if his ankle is bothering him, that’s going to make life really difficult. San Francisco is only 22nd in DVOA against the pass and Murray has a massive ceiling as he’s sixth in FPPD. However, Mahomes has a massive ceiling as well for $100 less. Let’s talk about this a little more on Friday when we see if he practiced at all. 

Update – Kyler has not practiced all week and is questionable, but is not expected to play. It’s very easy to avoid the vast majority of this offense.

RB – At the same price, I’ll continue to keep playing Chase Edmonds over James Conner since Edmonds has the passing work. Conner has just five targets all season whole Edmonds is at a 15.1% target share. Conner has a 20-11 advantage in red-zone carries but he can’t continue to just score touchdowns and not do much else. The 49ers are 7th against the run in DVOA and have only allowed 583 rushing yards against backs through seven games. I don’t think either is a primary target on the slate. 

WR – This room could wind up being a mess. DeAndre Hopkins is dealing with a hamstring injury that forced him from a portion of the last game. He came back but he was clearly not right so this is a real concern at this point. On top of that, A.J. Green is on the Covid list but is NOT ruled out yet. Rondale Moore and Christian Kirk would both step into major roles but we need updates here. Losing Hopkins who has a 20% target share and Green who has a 17.6% target share would be a big deal. They have the first and second most targets on the team. 

Update – Hopkins is the same case as Kyler, questionable but not expected to play. Green will not be back for this game either, so the receivers are down to Kirk and Moore. The latter has the most of my attention because his aDOT has been so low all year. If Colt McCoy is indeed the starter, the emphasis will have to be on quick passes and Moore can break a big one with the ball in his hands.

TE – Zach Ertz is far too expensive in my eyes. He’s seen nine total targets in Arizona and has seven receptions for 108 yards, but we’re getting close to $5,000. Why would we view him as a better play than Gesicki or Goedert? He’s up to 60% of the snaps but that’s still significantly behind those other two in his price range. Additionally, the ball gets spread around so much in the Arizona offense that it doesn’t make sense to pay this salary, although he will be needed more now.

D/ST – Arizona still has a pressure rate of nearly 26% and 20 sacks, not to mention 14 takeaways. They are also second in DVOA behind only Buffalo but the 49ers only have allowed an 18.9% pressure rate. Arizona is fine for the salary although San Fran is getting healthy. 

Cash – None if Kyler is out

GPP – Moore, Edmonds, Kirk, Ertz

49ers 

QB – If I’m going to miss a Jimmy Garoppolo ceiling game because he rushed for two touchdowns and threw an 83-yard pass that accounted for 25% of his yardage, I’ll sleep perfectly fine at night. The big pass got him the 300-yard bonus and with two rushing scores, those three plays were worth roughly 18 of his 30 DK points. I know, playing the “well, if you take away this play” game is not wise in general. It’s notable when the plays are far outside a normal outcome for a player. Arizona is second in DVOA against the pass and yards allowed per attempt while Jimmy G is just 14th in FPPD. 

RB – Eli Mitchell continues to dominate when he’s healthy but you can’t help but feel that comes to an end at some point with literally zero targets. He only has four all season and has not seen a single one in the past two games, which really lowers the floor. Can he continue to rip off over six yards per carry? He better at this salary because if he hadn’t reached the 100-yard bonus and scored in the past two, the game logs don’t look nearly as appealing. Arizona is ninth against the run for DVOA but they also allow the second-highest yards per carry on the year. Only allowing two touchdowns on the ground has helped make them look much better against backs, so Mitchell is a GPP play only for me. 

WR – It’s all Deebo Samuel, all the time. We’re only half-joking because Brandon Aiyuk had one of his best games as far as involvement. That led to about 87% of the snaps and seven targets for 10.5 DK points. Samuel once again went nuts for 26 DK and didn’t even score a touchdown. Byron Murphy should see the most of Samuel and has had a good season, with a 56.1% catch rate and a 99.1 passer rating. That’s not enough to scare me off Deebo who is second in yards, 11th in receptions, sixth in targets, and first in target share. 

Update – Deebo is looking like he could legitimately be questionable for this game and is rending towards missing. If Aiyuk can’t get anything done in that case, he never will.

TE – By all accounts, George Kittle is back and would be cheap. I’m not casting him aside at $5,200 but he’s coming off yet another injury and he wasn’t a huge part of the passing game as it was. He was in a route 71.5% of the time, which is 11th. The 21.5% target share isn’t bad per se, but not what you’re hoping for with an elite tight end. For context, Kittle is running around 25 routes per game. Kelce is at 35 and Waller is at 34. That’s a stark difference. Even Gesicki is at 30. I’m not wholly convinced Kittle is a smash play even at the salary. 

Update – Kittle will be active for Week 9 and now may have a bigger role than anticipated right off the bat.

D/ST – I am kind of willing to take a shot because the Cards are banged up and missing pieces, but the pressure rate is only 22.6% with 16 sacks. Even more notable are the five takeaways through seven games, which limits the appeal here. 

Cash – Deebo

GPP – Mitchell, Kittle, Aiyuk and the latter two can be cash plays if Deebo is out

Cash Core Four

Austin Ekeler, Ezekiel Elliott, Jarvis Landry, Marquise Brown

Sammy Watkins is now out and Brown has moved to one of the top projected WR on the slate as far as rostership.

GPP Core Four

Alvin Kamara, Tyrod Taylor, Brandin Cooks, Mike Gesicki

This quartet still allows me a good chunk of the Eagles game and pairs it with Kamara, who I am shocked is barely at 10% projected rostership.

Stacks

Chargers/Eagles – Ekeler, Allen, Herbert, Williams, Cook – Run Backs – Scott, Smith, Goedert, Hurts

Vikings/Ravens – Jackson, Brown, Andrews, Bateman, Watkins – Run Backs – Jefferson, Cook, Thielen

Chiefs/Packers – Mahomes, Kelce, Hill, Williams, Gore – Run Backs – Jones, Adams, Dillon

Bills Stacks – Allen, Diggs, Sanders, Beasley, Moss – Not forcing a run back

Browns/Bengals – Burrow, Chase, Higgins, Boyd, Mixon – Run Backs – Landry, Chubb, Johnson, Baker

Texans/Dolphins – Tyrod, Cooks, Jordan, Collins Run Backs – Waddle, Gesicki, Gaskin, Tua

Thank you for reading my NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 7 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 8 NFL DFS GPP slate! For those who haven’t read it yet, please check out the Week 8 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 will not be an article where I write about Christian McCaffrey, Derrick Henry, Dalvin Cook, Travis Kelce, etc… they’re likely always in a smash spot and worth rostering if that’s what your build calls for. Now, let’s get into it.

Games I’m most interested in getting exposure to:

TEN/IND
CAR/ATL

PHI/DET
NE/LAC
TB/NO

NFL DFS GPP Quarterbacks

Justin Herbert ($7,300 DK / $7,800 FD)

Next to Tom Brady and the Bucs, the AETY Model projects Herbert and the Chargers to continue to play their up-paced, pass-heavy offense with a total of 40 pass attempts. Volume is king. In my opinion, Herbert is the second best quarterback on this slate (behind Josh Allen) and looks to be coming in around 5% in total ownership. With Austin Ekeler banged up (if he even plays), the Chargers will need to lean on Herbert and these talented pass catchers to win a tight-projected game at home against the Patriots.

Carson Wentz ($5,700 DK / $7,200 FD)

Surprisingly, the highest total on this slate features two of the heavier run-offenses in the NFL with the Titans at Colts (total of 51) but the AETY Model agrees that this game has a lot of touchdown equity and potential for a solid pace. Wentz has starting to come on lately and the Colts’ offensive line appears to be 100% healthy and you know I always find an angle to pick on the Titans’ secondary, so here we go Carson.

I’m still skeptical this game turns quite run heavy and the clock dwindles, but going with Wentz offers me a lot of savings for the rest of my build, especially if you stack him with Michael Pittman who’s priced like a fringe WR2.

Honorable Mention: Josh Allen, Jalen Hurts, Jameis Winston, Sam Darnold

Running Backs

Derrick Henry ($8,900 DK / $10,500 FD)

King Henry under 10% in ownership and under $9K in salary on DraftKings? What a time to be alive. The Colts’ run defense grades #1 in run defense DVOA but just gave up over 100-yards on the ground to Eli Mitchell. It’s not the tastiest of matchups, but it’s a 10% owned Derrick Henry at an affordable price-tag in a matchup with the highest total on the slate.

Nick Chubb ($6,800 DK / $8,000 FD)

Nick Chubb is going to be under 4% in total ownership on both FanDuel and DraftKings this weekend despite no Kareem Hunt to take away significant snaps and more importantly, offensive tackle Jack Conklin is back. This Browns’ offensive line is the best in the business and 100% healthy for the first time since Week 1… when Chubb went for over 100 all-purpose yards and two scores (with Kareem Hunt playing over 47% of the snaps). Light it up, Nick Chubb!

Eli Mitchell ($5,400 DK / $5,800 FD)

As you noticed in the Cash Game Checkdown, I’m locking in Eli Mitchell. Simply way too cheap and offers me many different avenues to roster the studs being wrote up in this article.

Honorable Mention: Damien Harris, Alvin Kamara

NFL DFS GPP Wide Receivers

Stefon Diggs ($8,100 DK / $7,300 FD)

Absurdly priced on FanDuel and likely to be insane chalk (for good reason), but on DraftKings, I’m making it a priority to play Diggs in lineups that I can afford him as he’s coming in under 10% in ownership. Stefon Diggs is a route-running extraordinaire and should be primed up for his first blow-up game of 2021 at home against the Miami Dolphins’ man-coverage.

DJ Moore ($7,200 DK / $7,700 FD)

What more do we need to see from Atlanta’s 30th ranked pass defense (DVOA)? They consistently get torched and this is a perfect buy-back spot for Moore who has one of the highest expected target shares in the NFL. Like most weeks, this game against the Falcons has significant shootout potential.

Keenan Allen ($6,500 DK / $6,900 FD)

I’ll go back to the well on my boy Keenan Allen to pair with one of my favorite quarterbacks on the slate, Justin Herbert. If this game plays at a high pace, this is an excellent price for a low-owned Keenan Allen who should have his way with Jalen Mills on the inside of the New England secondary.

Amon-Ra St. Brown ($3,900 DK / $5,100 FD)

As much as everyone loves this Philadelphia/Detroit matchup, no one is talking about pass catchers for Detroit other than D’Andre Swift. I personally wish Kalif Raymond was a bit cheaper on DraftKings like he is on FanDuel, but I simply can’t afford him on most DraftKings builds.

St. Brown is going to be my Hail Mary, 1% owned wide receiver who offers my builds a lot of value to pay up elsewhere. While no one is likely to go back to the rookie slot receiver after a zero-target game last week, I’m confident this is a big time spot for St. Brown (who has averaged a 70% snap share over the past four weeks) against the inside of the Philadelphia secondary.

Honorable Mention: AJ Brown, Diontae Johnson, Kalif Raymond, Laviska Shenault, Tre’Quan Smith

NFL DFS GPP Tight Ends

T.J. Hockenson ($5,400 DK / $6,200 FD)

It’s a bit of a nasty tight-end slate and as much as I love Kyle Pitts, my main focus this week inside the numbers is T.J. Hockenson. Again, as much as the DFS community loves this game and hosts most of the chalk players on the slate, no one is talking about any Detroit Lions outside of Swift. Other thank Kyle Pitts, Hockenson is the only tight-end the AETY Model projects for over a 20% target share and 25% red-zone share.

Honorable Mention: Kyle Pitts, Jared Cook, Dallas Goedert, Tyler Higbee, Mike Gesicki

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 8

We’re back to a larger slate with 12 games this week and it’s important to remind everyone to shrink the player pool. We have enough of a sample with players that I am at the point where the write-ups might be a little shorter. Since we have so many games this week, let’s get right after it in the NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 8and carve the paths to green!

NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 8

Dolphins at Bills, O/U of 49.5 (Bills -13.5)

Dolphins 

QB – If you’re like me and of the mindset that it’s still far too early to declare Tua Tagovailoa as not a good NFL quarterback, you may want to keep that to yourself for another week. I believe that Tua might yet be good (he’s working with a rookie receiver as his number one and a poor running game) but this is not really the week to test it. Buffalo has been a fantastic defense this year and rank first in DVOA against the pass, first in yards per attempt allowed, and they have allowed the fewest passing yards with a 5:10 TD:INT ratio allowed. Tua is 13th in FFPD but this is too tough of a spot to go after him even with the salary baked in. 

RB – If Myles Gaskin can hold onto the role he had this past week, he would be valuable. He played right about 65% of the snaps and had 19 total touches, which is what we were hoping for all year. This still may not be the week to test the theory because the Buffalo defense has been stout outside of getting trampled by Derrick Henry. They have only given up 392 total rushing yards to backs and Henry has the only three rushing touchdowns. The sixth-best DVOA matches so I’m not terribly interested. The only case to build is he gets it done on his receiving work alone and he does have a 13.2% target share. Still, the salary would demand 5/50/1 through the air if he can’t get anything done on the ground.

WR – We know that Will Fuller will not be active this week, so that leaves us with Jaylen Waddle and maybe DeVante Parker. Waddle has been playing well in the past couple of weeks with over 15 DK points and part of that has been the options were pretty thin. That could still be the case but this is a tough secondary to crack. Waddle has the sixth-highest slot rate in football and that leaves him on Taron Johnson for most of the game, who has only allowed 0.95 FPPT. Parker would see either Tre White or Levi Wallace, both of whom have allowed a catch rate under 60%. This is far from my favorite spot to attack. 

Update – Parker is questionable after limited practices all week. I’m still not interested inn playing him though.

TE – It has helped that the receiving corps has been thin but Mike Gesicki has turned it on in the past five games, scoring at least 16 DK in four of them. Miami has actually unleashed him because, for those first couple of weeks, he wasn’t running many routes. Fast forward to Week 8 is suddenly eight in points per game, first in slot snaps, and fifth in routes while also in the top five in receptions and yards. His 24.5% target rate is also ninth in the league so while Buffalo has defended the position well, Gesicki has been a favorite in this offense for too long to ignore. He’s still not over $5,000 on DK. 

D/ST – I’m not sure I would go with the Dolphins defense if they were under $2,000. They only have 12 sacks and nine turnovers and it’s hard to see them having a lot of success against one of the best offenses in football. 

Cash – Gesicki 

GPP – Waddle, Gaskin

Bills 

QB – Josh Allen is the top salaried quarterback on the slate and he deserves it. He’s second in red zone attempts, sixth in air yards, sixth in FPPD, and he’s first in fantasy points per game. Miami has fallen off a cliff for the 26th ranked DVOA and they are only five yards away from giving up the most passing yards in the league. There isn’t much to say here other than he can be played in all formats and it’s always a fun time to stack him with a pass-catcher or two. 

RB – The Bills are continuing to split work but Zack Moss has gotten the more important work with a 17-8 lead in red zone carries and he only trails Devin Singletary by six carries, despite one fewer game. The snaps have been skewing towards Moss as well and the matchup is delightful. The Dolphins have given up just under 750 rushing yards so far and sit … in DVOA. With Buffalo being a massive home favorite, you’re playing Moss with an expectation that he’ll get the most carries on the team while they’re leading and chances at the touchdown. 

WR – In the past, we haven’t liked this spot because the Dolphins have Xavien Howard and Byron Jones but it has been a nightmare season for them. Howard is a 2.12 FPPT and Jones is at 1.65. This isn’t a matchup to shy away from and the Bills have lost their starting tight end who has a 12.3% target share. That means a bigger piece of the pie is open for Stefon Diggs, Emmanuel Sanders, and maybe even Cole Beasley. Things started to click for Diggs right before the bye week and he’s still eighth in air yards, 11th in deep targets, eighth in unrealized air yards, and fourth in red-zone targets. He leads the team in targets and is a fantastic option. 

Sanders doesn’t have the targets but he has the explosiveness with a slight lead in air yards share on the team. The role isn’t stable with a 17.3 aDOT but those are high-value targets and if Beasley sees more work without the tight end, it becomes even easier to stack Allen with two receivers. You could even be very bold in deep GPP and run all three. There is a possibility that if Allen throws 35 passes, this trio could account for 25 targets or more. 

TE – With Dawson Knox expected to miss a couple of weeks with a broken hand, maybe folks want to consider Tommy Sweeney but that’s not the easiest sell for me. He caught a touchdown prior to the bye week but we have a Jacksonville tight end for $100 cheaper that is actually involved in his offense. If we were in desperate need, it might be one thing to throw a dart and hope. As it stands, I think more work gets funneled to the receivers and backs at this point. 

D/ST – Why in the world is Buffalo so cheap? We have a defense over $5,000 but the Bills are $3,300? They are tied for the league lead in turnovers in one game fewer than anyone else near the top and they have the fourth-highest pressure rate. Tua has four picks in basically three games and Buffalo is allowing under 17 real points per game while ranking first in total DVOA. 

Cash – Allen, Diggs, Moss, D/ST 

GPP – Sanders, Beasley 

Rams at Texans, O/U of 47.5 (Rams -14)

Rams 

QB – There have been few quarterbacks that have brought the consistency that Matthew Stafford has this year. He’s never been below 18 DK points and he’s the QB6 on the season. Stafford is third in red zone attempts, third in yards, fourth in air yards, 12th in deep-ball completion rate, and number one in pressured completion rate. Houston is surprisingly 12th in DVOA against the pass but they have also given up the fourth-highest yards per attempt this year. I can’t give you any reason to not play Stafford at this juncture. 

Update – Lineman Andrew Whitworth is out for this game and while it does hurt them a little bit, I’m not sweating it against the Texans. It shouldn’t be enough to derail the entire unit against this opponent.

RB – I’m fascinated by Darrell Henderson this week. He scorched the field last week, being rostered upwards of 75% in cash games last week. Henderson managed to generate just 9.4 DK points against the Lions and the matchup got even easier this week. Houston has allowed the most rushing yards to backs at 891 along with seven touchdowns. They also rank 27th in yards per carry allowed, 30th in DVOA against the run, and he got 18 touches last week. You just have to trust those amount of touches paying off far more often than not and put last week behind you. 

WR – Cooper Kupp is on pace to have one of the greatest fantasy seasons we’ve seen and I’m not sure there’s a lot that is unsustainable. He’s first in receptions, yards, red-zone targets, targets overall, and he’s second in target rate. The nine touchdowns are high but if Davante Adams had these metrics, nobody would question it. Stafford loves Kupp and no other player in the offense has a share over 20.8%. He’s worth every dollar of salary, every week. 

Robert Woods and Van Jefferson continue to be very much second fiddle players in the offense and Woods does have nine red-zone targets, which helps but that is also third on the team. Woods feels a little pricey overall and Jefferson will never be anything but GPP. There’s not a strong enough corner to warrant any concerns about playing any receiver (especially Kupp) but Woods has the toughest path to hit value. 

TE – The offense just seems so crowded that Tyler Higbee gets left in the cold more often than not. When the top three receivers combine for 67% of the targets and the running back is at just about 11%, there isn’t much left for Higbee. His eight targets last week were a season-high and it turned into very little. The one aspect to really like is he has 11 red-zone targets but just two touchdowns. While Higbee is ninth in receptions, he’s only 31st in yards per route and 15th in target share. There isn’t a lot to love but the Texans have allowed six touchdowns, tied for the most so maybe he sees some positive regression on the red zone work. 

D/ST – We said last week that you can’t pay this price for a defense and the Rams scored seven DK points. The price rose by $100 and I’m not interested as they need to have a massive game to justify it. LA is a very strong defense but the salary is unwarranted, even ranking fourth in total DVOA. 

Cash – Kupp, Henderson, Stafford

GPP – Jefferson, Higbee, Woods 

Texans 

QB – If Tyrod Taylor makes it back this week, we could be in business. In his playing time, he has a 0.89 FPPD and for context, Josh Allen is sixth at 0.67. Taylor was playing extremely well in his limited time and while his full game was against Jacksonville, his first half against Cleveland was dynamic. He accounted for 16 DK points on just 11 attempts and one rushing touchdown. It’s not easy getting dropped into action against the Rams and their fourth-best DVOA against the pass, but Taylor is $4,900. That has to be interesting regardless of matchup and we should project a negative game script. That means plenty of dropbacks and opportunities, and I would be very happy to play Taylor at this salary. 

Update – Tyrod is not ready to play yet so I’ll be far less interested in the offense as a whole.

RB – The Houston backfield is still basically unusable. David Johnson leads in snaps at 43.9% and has the most valuable role as the receiving back. His target share of 11.8% would be useful if he was getting rushing work on top of it but he has a total of 27 attempts on the season. The ceiling has been 11.8 DK points and that was in Week 1 against Jacksonville. Even in a script that would tell us Houston trails, I’m not playing Johnson. 

Update – Mark Ingram has been traded to the Saints so you can make more of a case for Johnson. He should have more of the world on the ground along with Phillip Lindsay. I still would much favor Johnson in a projected negative game script.

WR – We would all feel better if Tyrod plays but regardless, Brandin Cooks is in play. His slot rate is 18.5% so he could avoid Jalen Ramsey (39.1% slot rate) for some of the game and Cooks is fifth in receptions and 14th in yards on the fourth-highest target share in football. He shouldn’t be under $6,000 for this role, regardless of who’s throwing him the ball. If Taylor does play, Cooks goes from a value to a glaring mis-price. 

If you think Ramsey faces off against Cooks more since the slot rate is steadily going down, Nico Collins should come into play. Ramsey is only at a 1.41 FPPT and over the past two weeks, Collins has had a 15.1% target share on about 60% of the snaps. He hasn’t been playing the slot at just 12.5% so he should miss Ramsey almost altogether. He hasn’t shown a lot yet but this will only be his fifth game in the NFL. 

TE – When Taylor played in Week 1, Pharaoh Brown saw five targets and posted a 4/67 line but Jordan Akins and Brown both played over 60% of the snaps and neither has a target share over 9.8%. 

D/ST – Houston is allowing 29 points per game, have the fifth-lowest pressure rate, and are 18th in total DVOA. That’s a bad mix against the Rams. 

Cash – Cooks

GPP – Collins, Johnson

49ers at Bears, O/U of 39.5 (49ers -4)

49ers 

QB – It’s hard to build the case to play Jimmy Garoppolo when he’s sitting 25th in FPPD, 28th in fantasy points per game, 27th in red zone attempts, and 28th in QBR. Chicago is seventh in DVOA against the pass and 18th in yards per attempt allowed. The 49ers offense is very one-dimensional right now in that it’s passing the ball to one player and hope. The salary is cheap but there is a good reason for it. 

RB – One thing we know for a fact is Trey Sermon is out of this rotation. Coming out of a bye week, Eli Mitchell played over 66% of the snaps and had 18 carries. Make no mistake, that role is valuable and on the San Francisco offense, the run game is above average. My only fear with Michell is he did not have a single target while JaMycal Hasty saw six. That is not great for the floor of Mitchell because he’s not going to run for the 100-yard bonus and a touchdown every single week. At the same time, Chicago’s run defense hasn’t been that great so far as they are 21st in yards per carry allowed, 28th in total rushing yards allowed against running backs, and 17th in DVOA against the run. I would prefer not to play Mitchell in cash but he’s firmly on the board for GPP because neither quarterback in this game is all that great. 

WR – We can only target one receiver in this corps and it is Deebo Samuel. No other player is averaging even five DK points and Samuel is 12th in receptions, fourth in yards, third in target rate, and seventh in targets. All of this is more impressive considering he has had his bye week already. Normally I’m not eager to attack Jaylon Johnson for the Bears. He’s been excellent outside of last week against Mike Evans but that’s not his fault. Even after the speed bump for Johnson, he’s only allowed a 48.4% catch rate but the metrics are so overpowering for Samuel, I won’t back off just because of Johnson. 

TE – Wake me up when George Kittle comes back from IR because Ross Dwelley has not been visible at all in this offense. Really, nobody outside of Deebo in the passing game has been usable. 

D/ST – The San Francisco defense is well in play if you’re not liking the Bills (I prefer Buffalo) in part just because of the opponent. Chicago has allowed a 26% pressure rate and leads with 22 sacks allowed. The 49ers are only 18th in total DVOA, they only have 12 sacks, and the pressure rate is in the bottom 10 but the matchup is glorious. 

Cash – Deebo, Mitchell, D/ST 

GPP – Hasty 

Bears 

QB – I’m not sure if I’d play Justin Fields if you paid my entry fees. This passing game is so far beyond broken and while it’s popular (and mostly justified) to blame Nagy, Fields bears some blame as well. He’s showing flashes but he’s just not nearly consistent enough. He’s been under 10 DK in every start but one and this team has no idea what to do with the passing game. There is just no chance for Fields to succeed for a myriad of reasons and I just hope he survives this season. 

RB – I did not expect Khalil Herbert to remain the lead back when Damien Williams came back. Perhaps this past game was just because Williams was coming back from Covid, but Herbert has to be the lead man until David Montgomery is back. Herbert was outstanding against one of the nastiest run defenses in football for over a year running. Herbert handled 23 touches (catching every single target) and generated 133 scrimmage yards. He was wildly impressive and the matchup gets easier as the 49ers are 18th in yards per carry allowed and 10th in DVOA against the run. Herbert has handled at least 18 touches in every game and the passing game is nowhere to be found. Unless Matt Nagy pulls the rug out from under us, Herbert is far too cheap at $5,400 on DK. 

WR – I never thought that Allen Robinson would be $4,900 and I would just walk on b but that’s the state of this Bears offense. Someone explain it to me like I’m five because Robinson isn’t in the top 50 in routes, receptions, yards, yards per route, and points per game. Darnell Mooney has the target lead at 44 but they have combined for just seven red-zone targets. There is no value to be had in this offense and they have had some great spots over the past month. 

TE – If we’re not playing a player of A-Rob’s caliber, I’m surely not going after Cole Kmet. He has just 19 receptions on the season and he’s yet to cross nine DK points. There’s no reason to think that has suddenly shifted. The sad part is his target share is 17.1% and it’s turning into nothing. 

D/ST – We look to spend as little on defense as we can every week and the Bears do check that box. The turnovers haven’t been there with just eight but they are eighth in total DVOA, have 21 sacks, and hold opponents to 23.1 points per game. That looked better before they met Brady and the Bucs and nobody is confusing the 49ers for that offense anytime soon. 

Update – Khalil Mack is out and Akiem Hicks is questionable, although he was full go on Friday for practice. I’ll likely pass on the Bears defense.

Cash – Herbert

GPP – None 

Bengals at Jets, O/U of 42.5 (Bengals -10.5)

Bengals 

QB – The shift is happening in Cincinnati where Joe Burrow is taking more control of the offense and he’s cleared 30 pass attempts in each of the last three games that have been competitive. He’s still turning the ball over just a bit much with eight picks but we can live with that pretty easily. He’s surrounded by talented receivers and with added volume, he can turn into an elite option for fantasy. Despite sitting 24th overall in attempts, Burrow is sixth in yards and 11th in air yards, along with second in yards per attempt. Burrow is eighth in FPPD and New York sits 22nd in yards per attempt allowed and 28th in DVOA against the pass. The only reason Burrow could flop this week is if the game just doesn’t stay close enough. 

RB – It’s early in the week but I feel like either Joe Mixon or Ja’Marr Chase (and some with both) will be in a lot of my lineups. The Jets have allowed 683 rushing yards through just six games with 10 touchdowns and they also lead the league in receiving yards allowed to backs at 479 yards. Sitting 27th in DVOA doesn’t make the matchup any more difficult. That is a whole lot of production and Mixon is still second in carries across the league. I almost want to qualify him as 1A because Derrick Henry is so far above the pack that it doesn’t seem fair. Anyway, Mixon and the Bengals project to be in a positive game script and a heavy favorite is always appealing when they are under $7,000. I do feel like this could have been a slight let-down spot after a massive win in Baltimore, but the Jets don’t have the tools on either side of the ball. 

WR – I’m not sure what else to say about Chase. I mean, I thought he could struggle last week if Baltimore was able to get pressure and I couldn’t have been more off base. He is a monster and is having legitimately one of the best rookie seasons in NFL history. The added volume for the passing game is a big boost for him as well and he’s done this sitting just 20th in targets. He put it on Marlon Humphrey, one of the better corners in the league so Brandin Edhols and Bryce Hall don’t have much of a shot here. Tee Higgins is still a value as well because he leads in target share at 27.4%. At some point, there will be a game where Chase doesn’t go off and Higgins has the red zone target lead and is tied for end zone targets. Tyler Boyd has not been fantasy-relevant when all three are active and we wouldn’t project this game to be one where Cincy has to pass a ton to get him to value. 

TE – C.J. Uzomah continues to test my patience because he’s had two weeks of 24 DK or more in the past four on a combined 14 targets. We’re talking three targets per game basically and you simply can’t go after that little volume. Of those 14 targets, he’s caught 13 of them for five touchdowns. This is nothing more than a bizarre string so please don’t game log chase. Uzomah only has a 9.2% target share and exactly one red-zone target. His span of production is insanity, but not anything close to sustainable. 

D/ST – Are the Bengals a strong play? Very much so as they are fifth in total DVOA with a pressure rate over 25% and 19 sacks. They face off against a very weak opponent and the only real issue is they are more expensive than Buffalo, who I’m already fixated on. The Jets already have allowed 20 sacks on the year and that could get worse in this one. 

Cash – Mixon, Burrow, Chase

GPP – Higgins, D/ST 

Jets 

I’m breaking with the positional sections here because, with one exception, it’s back to #NeverJets right now. This was a thing last year when it was pretty much Jamison Crowder or no other player, but now with Zach Wilson out, this offense is derailed (to what extent it could be derailed further). Mike White will stay as the starting quarterback and Cincinnati is eighth in DVOA against the pass this year. White was drafted in 2018 and just threw his first NFL pass on Sunday. 

My gut reaction was to ignore this whole team, in honesty. However, Michael Carter saw nine targets last week along with 11 attempts while playing 72% of the snaps. He’s turning into the workhorse right now and is still under $5,000. With White starting again, Carter is likely to be leaned on this week as well. The nine targets led the entire team and the Bengals lead the league in receptions allowed to backs and are ninth in receiving yards allowed. If this game goes the same direction as last week, Carter should have plenty of opportunity through the air and makes for a cheap run-back with Bengals stacks. 

Update – Corey Davis is out with a hip injury and he does lead with a 20.2% target share and air yards share at 31.9%. That pushes more work toward Crowder, which makes him slightly more interesting for GPP but that would be as far as I go. If he sticks in the slot, he’ll draw Mike Hilton who has allowed a catch rate over 75^ and a 103.2 passer rating.

Cash – None 

GPP – Carter, Crowder

Titans at Colts, O/U of 51 (Colts -1.5)

Titans 

QB – Maybe now the Ryan Tannehill finally had a strong game, he can get back to being a strong fantasy asset. The price feels a bit high this week but Indy is a matchup you target through the air. They are 25th in yards per attempt allowed and 22nd in DVOA against the pass, not to mention being tied for the second-most touchdowns allowed. Now, the metrics for Tannehill don’t look special as he sits 34th in deep-ball completion rate, 21st in FPPD, and 22nd in catchable pass rate. I know his receiving crew has been banged up but still, those are not great marks. Playing him is a little bit of a leap of faith but that’s what we did last week and we were quite happy, even in a blowout. 

RB – We don’t need to spend a ton of time on Derrick Henry who has dropped under $9,000 and his low-water mark lately was last week at 16.4 DK. The receiving work isn’t always stable but he has at least 20 carries in every single game except for Week 1. We pay for volume at the running back position and nobody has it as Henry does. He leads the league in carries by 68 attempts. The Colts are 12th in yards per attempt allowed and they’ve surrendered 602 rushing yards against backs. Even the best DVOA against the run doesn’t shift my view much. It might not be the best matchup on paper but that doesn’t matter much when Henry is involved. 

WR – Part of me still wants to play Julio Jones but the target share is only 17.8% with a 29.4% air yards share and the target share is 50th in the league. It also helps that A.J. Brown hasn’t come up over $7,000 in salary after going off last week. His target share is 24.9% and the air yards share is over 39%, which is top 15 in the league. He would likely see Xavier Rhodes who has allowed a 109.8 passer rating and the FPPT is 1.84. If Rock Ya-Sin makes it back, his lack of speed is going to be an issue with a 4.6 40-yard dash. Either way, we finally saw a big game from Brown and I’m excited to go back to the well. 

Update – Julio is out, Brown just moved to an elite play.

TE – Not tight end is worth taking the risk on here as Anthony Firkser holds the target lead at the position with 15 for a 9.6% target share. 

D/ST – If you got wild and played the Titans defense against the Chiefs, bravo. That doesn’t mean that I want to replicate it this week since they are bottom 10 in total DVOA and have just eight turnovers. I do have to credit them for the 28% pressure rate they’ve generated but the Colts got back one of the best offensive linemen last week, so I’m not convinced they maintain that in this contest. This game could shoot out and it’s not the right spot I don’t think. 

Cash – Brown, Henry

GPP – Tannehill

Colts 

QB – Nobody tell GravMatt but Carson Wentz is this week’s Matt Ryan, in that he’s cheaper than he should be and a player I’m happy to go after. He works in a game stack very easily and could be in consideration for cash (although Tyrod would be number one if paying down) because that’s how bad the Titans defense has been in general. I know they just shut out Mahomes but that speaks more to Kansas City issues. Tennessee is still 21st in yards per attempt allowed and 18th in DVOA against the pass. Wentz has been playing well in the past four games with nine total touchdowns against two turnovers. Getting Quenton Nelson certainly helps as well and Wentz is 15th in FPPD. That’s enough in this matchup at this price. 

RB – Jonathan Taylor is on a heater right now and hasn’t scored under 22 DK points in the past month. The scary thing is he’s only had more than 16 carries once in that span and 21 touches are the most he’s gotten in a single game. Taylor and the Colts enter this huge divisional showdown against one of the worst run defenses in football so far since they rank 25th in yards per carry allowed and 25th in DVOA against the run. The total yardage doesn’t look bad at 547 but only three teams have faced fewer attempts than Tennessee. Taylor has one of the best skill sets in all of football and we should feel comfortable with at least 16 touches here. 

WR – I would rather T.Y. Hilton sit but even if he doesn’t, I’m looking at Michael Pitman. His breakout continued this past week with a 100-yard effort and he’s now 13th in yards overall. The 23.3% target share is totally fine and he’s also 14th in routes, always a welcome metric. Pittman could see some Janoris Jenkins who has allowed a 14.8 YPR across 33 targets, including a 72.7% catch rate and a 1.98 FPPT. When Hilton did play, he only saw about half the snaps and four targets, which turned into 12 fantasy points. The salary isn’t terrible but Pittman is $400 more and that’s not a discussion for me. 

Update – Hilton is questionable but is trending towards playing, so he would fall into the GPP category for me.

TE – Mo Alie-Cox is almost in the same boat as Uzomah in the past month. He has four touchdowns on 15 total targets, and I’m just not that interested. I know I’m dismissing guys out of hand but the tight end position is very cut and dry for me this week and we’ll get there. Alie-Cox is a full touchdown or bust play this week. 

D/ST – If I were to play a defense, it may well be Indy. They have forced 16 turnovers and have 14 sacks while giving up 21.3 points per game. Realistically, the Tennessee offense outside of Derrick Henry has left a lot to be desired this year. Tannehill has been brought down 21 times and they have nine turnovers. Lastly, Indy is inside the top 12 as far as total DVOA goes. 

Cash – Wentz, Taylor, Pittman

GPP – Hilton, Alie-Cox 

Steelers at Browns, O/U of 42 (Browns -3.5)

Steelers 

QB – Ben Roethlisberger couldn’t muster up 12 DK points at home against Seattle and now he goes on the road against Cleveland? Am I supposed to want to play him? No, thank you. He’s 32nd in FPPD, 31st in deep ball completion rate, 32nd in true passer rating, and 31t in yards per attempt. He’s one of the easier players at the position to skip at this juncture having not exceeded 18 DK in any start. 

RB – If Taylor from the Colts turns out to be popular, Najee Harris could provide an interesting pivot. Even before talking about the running potential, Harris is six targets behind form the lead for running backs despite playing one less game than D’Andre Swift. He also is second in receptions and sixth in carries. Volume is king and the Steelers are without JuJu Smith-Schuster, which adds even more receiving upside. There just aren’t many backs that have a 19.7% target share in the league so even in the face of the Browns ranking third in DVOA against the run, you can’t take Harris off the table. 

WR – We can immediately cast Chase Claypool as a GPP-only play and you only have to look at his last game to see why. Seattle is a bad defense against the pass and Claypool saw seven targets. He turned that into 3.7 DK points and with his quarterback, consistency is nowhere to be found and won’t be. The lone reliable option is Diontae Johnson and at the pricing, he’s the play for sure. His target share of 28.6% is seventh in the league and the chemistry with Big Ben is there in spades. Johnson has only had one game with under 10 targets this year and the matchup doesn’t look awful. Denzel Ward typically won’t shadow and he has a 1.94 FPPT with a 121.6 passer rating this season anyways across 28 targets. Greedy Williams has better stats with a 1.50 FPPR and a 91.8 passer rating but Diontae gets open against anyone. 

TE – One tight end that is firmly on my radar is rookie Pat Freiermuth and it’s not just because he posted his best DK score of the year. It’s because he played 60% of the snaps and saw seven targets for 17.9%, tied for second on the team. It is not a coincidence that it happened in the first full game without Smith-Schuster. His aDOT was just 5.1 and he took the exact role JuJu was playing. With a quarterback that is utterly incapable of throwing downfield, The Muth is Luth as the Fantasy Footballers would say. 

Update Eric Ebron is out, making The Muth an even better play.

D/ST – Even if the Browns are playing a backup quarterback, $4,300 is rich. They are ninth in total DVOA and third in pressure rate with 15 sacks, but I also watched them get pushed around in a half of football by Geno Smith and Alex Collins. I also don’t trust the offense to not put them in really tough field positions so I won’t be spending this much. Only three teams have forced fewer than five turnovers as well. 

Cash – Johnson, Freiermuth, Harris 

GPP – Claypool 

Browns 

QB – We’re going to have to get clarity on this later in the week. Baker Mayfield has a left shoulder that is all kinds of injured and he may not be able to make it back. Case Keenum would start and he was…passable against the Broncos but that was about all I could say. Pittsburgh is 13th in DVOA against the pass so they aren’t invincible, but I don’t think either player would be that appealing this week. Let’s see who’s starting first and foremost. 

Update – Mayfield is without an injury designation so he’ll be starting. I’m still not big on this game at all, but it does make the next player a little more appealing.

RB – The fact that Kareem Hunt is out could possibly mean Nick Chubb actually gets a target or two considering he has all of five on the season. Before his injury, the Browns were starting to ride Chubb with at least 21 carries in three straight games. The matchup is not ideal since the Steelers are ninth in DVOA against the run but this game projects to be close. Pittsburgh is a strong defense but they’re not invincible and they are actually 17th in yards allowed per carry. Cleveland is second in rush attempts per game and has the most rushing yards per game so I would give the edge to Chubb in this spot with no Hunt to siphon work. 

WR – This receiving corps is a mess. Even if Mayfield plays, Jarvis Landry and Odell Beckham have struggled mightily when they’ve been healthy (at least as far as fantasy is concerned). No player is over a 21.7% target share or 35.3% of the air yards share and that is Beckham. Pittsburgh has struggled against WR1 so far this season and Joe Haden has fallen off. He’s been targeted 18 times and has allowed a 139.1 passer rating with a 2.34 FPPT. If the quarterback could actually get him the ball, Beckham could smash this price tag but that’s been the case for a month now. Landry is dealing with a second knee issue now and that is far from ideal. I’d be willing to take some chances on Beckham in GPP if Baker is back for this game. 

TE – I have zero reasons to go here as Austin Hooper, David Njoku, and Harrison Bryant are all mixing in. The first two have 22 and 21 targets while Bryant has chipped in 12 so they are all just eating into the other one’s production. 

D/ST – Cleveland is tied with Pittsburgh with just five turnovers but they have 20 sacks and the second-highest pressure rate in football. The biggest catch with playing defenses against Pittsburgh is Big Ben getting rid of the ball so fast, he’s hard to get sacked. They only have given up 12 and it’s not because the O-line is good. The defense just can’t get there that quick but Cleveland is 15th in total DVOA, more than enough here. 

Cash – Chubb, D/ST 

GPP – Beckham

Eagles at Lions, O/U of 48 (Eagles -3.5)

Eagles 

QB – Jalen “Garbage Time” Hurts continues to be a bit scary in real football but an absolute stud in fantasy. He has not been under 21 DK points in any game and is only 16th in passing yards but fourth in FPPD. He’s also third in points per game in large part because of the rushing production. Hurts leads in rushing touchdowns and is second in rushing yards, a massive bump. Detroit is 27th in DVOA against the pass so there is even more upside to the passing game in theory. Based on what he’s put in front of us this season, Hurts is about as safe as they come. Just don’t watch the game. 

RB – At least early in the week, it appears that Miles Sanders has an uphill battle to get back for this game. He sprained an ankle early and the snaps were largely handled by Kenneth Gainwell after that point with 50.7% compared to 33.3% for Boston Scott. The carries were about equal at 6-5 in favor of Scott but Gainwell had the more important role in the passing game at an 8-2 target lead. They are on the road again but against the Lions so the game script might not be so negative like it was last week. I still favor Gainwell and Detroit ranks 21st in DVOA against the run so you have opportunities for both. I would somewhat expect Gainwell to be chalky and that could present Scott as a prime leverage candidate in GPP. 

Update – Sanders is on IR.

WR – Part of me is so frustrated with this Eagles offense that I don’t want to look at Devonta Smith but the other part knows how exploitable that Detroit secondary is. The underlying metrics for Smith are excellent as he sits 12th in air yards, seventh in unrealized air yards, 12th in routes, and 18th in targets. It has only translated to WR46 on a points per game basis but Amani Oruwariye and Jerry Jacobs aren’t corners you’re going to fear. Jacobs has only been a part-time player and Oruwariye has allowed a 73% completion rate and 2.37 FPPT across 26 targets. There’s a big game somewhere in here for Smith but it’s just a matter of picking the right week. 

TE – In his first game with Zach Ertz, Dallas Goedert played 92.6% of the snaps and saw five targets. However, he ran a route on 88% of the dropbacks for Hurts and this type of volume is what we’re after. With the mediocre return from that game, his salary is still very reasonable and the metrics would show that without Ertz, Goedert won’t be under $5,000 much longer. The Lions have been solid against the position but the volume is too much to cast aside. 

D/ST – I have a feeling the Eagles defense might be popular at under $3,000 but I’m not sure I’m that interested if they are. They only have 11 sacks and seven turnovers forced, not to mention a bottom 10 pressure rate. When a unit carries those metrics and is only 23rd in total DVOA, it’s pretty hard to get all that excited even though the Lions have allowed 17 sacks so far. We’ve 

Cash – Hurts, Gainwell, Goedert

GPP – Smith, D/ST, Scott

Lions 

QB – Jared Goff is third in attempts so the volume is elite and he’s turned that into 29th in yards per attempt, 27th in deep-ball completion rate, 30th in pressured completion rate, and 29th in FPPD. I am just not interested in him at all and he goes in the Big Ben category where it’s an easy pass. 

RB – For only the second time this season, D’Andre Swift is at the $7,000 plateau and I’m not afraid of the salary in this spot. First off, Philly’s runs defense has taken a step backward as they have given up the second-most rush yards against backs on the season. That opens the door for Swift already and they are also in the bottom-eight in receptions and receiving yards allowed to the position. The DVOA against the run has also fallen to 29th so they are vulnerable in all areas. The usage for Swift has been similar to what we have seen for Alvin Kamara in years past. He’s not generally going to get 15+ carries but when he hovers around 12-14 and then tacks on 5-7 receptions, that role is more valuable than an 18-20 touch back with no passing work. Swift has 120 total touches on the season and only Kamara, Mixon, Harris, and Henry have more. 

WR – It’s Week 8 and Kalif Raymond is more expensive than A-Rob and OBJ, just as we all expected two months ago. He has seen at least six targets in four of his last five games but the one he didn’t, he was a goose egg. On the season, his target share is just 15.2% with three red-zone looks so at best, we’re looking at the third option in the passing game behind Swift and the tight end. Detroit moves their guys around as he has a 30% slot rate but Darius Slay is on the other side with an 84.4 passer rating allowed along with a 1.33 FPPT. I may not fear Slay with a great receiver, but Raymond is not that. Amon-Ra St. Brown looked to be coming on but he was not targeted once this past game, so you have a pretty strong idea of what the floor is. 

TE – He has a poor quarterback throwing him the ball, but even just over the past two weeks T.J. Hockenson has 20 targets and he has one target edge on Swift for the team lead. He also is second on the squad in red-zone targets to go along with ranking second in receptions, sixth in yards, second in routes, and second in slot snaps. His skill set is fantastic, it’s really just more about the player getting him the ball that can’t be trusted. The Eagles linebackers have really struggled in coverage though and are tied for having given up the second-most receptions and most touchdowns. Everything is there for Hockenson to have a big game and he’s very much an appealing target. 

D/ST – We’ve used them as a punt multiple times this year even though they are 27th in DVOA and have just seven turnovers. They have gotten home for 20 sacks, which isn’t that bad and Hurts can always throw a pick or two. 

Cash – Swift, Hockenson 

GPP – D/ST 

Panthers at Falcons, O/U of 45.5 (Falcons -3)

Panthers 

QB – If you want to talk about leaps of faith, playing Sam Darnold would absolutely qualify. Much like Goff, the volume couldn’t be better as Darnold sits fifth in attempts but 20th in yards. His terrible connection with Robby Anderson has hindered his play to some extent and Darnold is 26th in deep-ball completion rate. He’s also 22nd in FPPD with just seven passing touchdowns. Darnold is only 28th in yards per attempt and even though the Atlanta defense is bad at 30th in DVOA against the pass, the Giants defense wasn’t much better. Once a quarterback like Darnold gets pulled out of the lineup, I get skittish and I think he would be MME only just based on matchup. 

RB – Here we go again with Chubba Hubbard. It was a dynamite spot last week and he mostly fell flat, but he inherits another great spot this week and he’s still just $6,000. It would be one thing if he had never had a big game to this point but he posted 21 DK points against the Eagles so we know that outcome is possible. In the four games that CMC has missed, Hubbard has at least 15 touches in every single one and Atlanta is 28th in DVOA against the run, 20th in yards per attempt allowed and has allowed 494 rushing yards on the sixth-fewest attempts faced. There’s no way to make a case that Hubbard is safe, but he’s in the player pool for GPP. If the offense around him becomes a little more functional, the upside is there. 

WR – We’ve talked about a few receivers right around $7,000 on DK so far and I can’t help but think D.J. Moore could get lost in the shuffle. Darnold has been left for dead by the masses and he’s not played well. That has had an adverse effect on Moore, who hasn’t gone over 13.9 DK points in the past three games. However, he’s had 30 targets in that span and it shouldn’t change this week. Lest you forget, he’s fourth in air yards, fourth in receptions, sixth in yards, third in unrealized air yards, sixth in deep targets, second in routes, and sixth in target share. I mean, he’s the complete package in what we want from a fantasy receiver. A.J. Terrell has been fantastic so far but I still would favor Moore in any individual matchup. Robby Anderson continues to defy physics and all of science by having a ton of targets and air yards with virtually zero production. He’s going to go wild on one of these slates and I’m going to be furious if I don’t have him somewhere. 

TE – No tight end for the Panthers has a target share over 6.4% and is not worth playing. 

D/ST – Carolina has posted a 27.3% pressure rate so far and has 17 sacks along with just six turnovers, but the Falcons have impressively only allowed nine sacks so far. They are 11th in total DVOA and are a good real-life defense that allows under 21 real points per game but I don’t have that much interest with the other options. 

Cash – Moore

GPP – Hubbard, Darnold, Anderson 

Falcons 

QB – It looks like Matt Ryan is starting to understand the Arthur Smith offense. He’s hit at least 22 DK in the past three games and in four of the past five. He is third in pass plays per game but only 21st in passing yards with some struggles added in to start the year. Carolina has remained strong in DVOA against the pass at ninth but one note is Ryan is third in pressured completion rate. If the Panthers defense can’t rattle him, there is an upside to be had at this price tag. 

RB – We’ve talked at various points that sometimes snaps can be overrated but the prime example might be Mike Davis. He played over 60% of the snaps last week but he only had four touches, which makes him unplayable at this salary (or really any other). Cordarrelle Patterson took over this backfield with 14 carries, five red zone attempts, and five targets. It wasn’t the most spectacular return at just 14.1 DK points but when a player is getting 15+ touches at just $6,200, he is on the board. Carolina continues to dip in DVOA against the run as they are 19th and have allowed 620 rushing yards. What is notable is the lead the league in receiving yards allowed at just 86 and no other team is under 160. Patterson is going to be a play for us at times the rest of the season but this isn’t the spot that screams to play him. 

WR – Calvin Ridley is entering that Robby Anderson territory. He only has five games played but he’s 18th in targets, fourth in red-zone targets, and 10th in air yards share. It hasn’t clicked the way you want to yet but even last week, he had 10 targets. Call me a fish but I’m playing Ridley at $6,600 with 10 targets every week. He’s too talented and even with Donte Jackson and A.J. Bouye on the other side, I’m willing to go there. Both corners are above a 1.40 FPPT so they haven’t been total lockdown players. Bouye has also played over 70% in the slot which could have him on Russell Gage. He only has a 12.5% target share and is fourth in the passing game behind Patterson, Ridley, and our next man. 

TE – I said last week that Kyle Pitts having a monster game was not just due to Ridley being out and he backed that up in a major way with 7/163. The argument would be Ridley didn’t do much but the elite set of metrics has started to shine through for Pitts. He’s first in air yards shard, third in yards, seventh in receptions, fourth in deep targets, fifth in yards per route, and sixth in slot snaps. He’s the TE7 (fifth in points per game) and has all of one touchdown. He’s everything you could want from a tight end and it’s a nightmare to try and guard him. If you want to stack him with Ryan or play him as a mini-stack, I’m all for it. 

D/ST – The Falcons are under $3,000 but have just five turnovers forced and 10 sacks. They’re in play just because of the Carolina struggles lately but I do like others much better. I have no trust they can make the splash plays that matter. 

Cash – Ridley, Patterson, Pitts

GPP – Ryan, D/ST 

Patriots at Chargers, O/U of 49 (Chargers -5)

Patriots 

QB – Mac Jones has been in rhythm lately with at least two touchdown passes in three of the last four, but only the Jets matchup produced anything of fantasy relevance. Seeing how the Chargers are fifth in DVOA against the pass and they only have a 9:6 TD:INT ratio, Jones wouldn’t appear to be a great option. It’s always a surprise to see him sixth in attempts but that speaks to just how little he’s actually getting accomplished. Jones is 27th in FPPD and not even inside the top 20 for quarterback ranks in the season. Among teams with six games, only the Bills have allowed fewer passing yards. 

RB – If New England can keep this game close, Damien Harris should smash again. The Achilles heel for the Chargers has been the run defense, where they rank dead last in both DVOA and yards per carry allowed. For further context, among teams that have played six games so far, the Chargers have given up the most rushing yards to backs by 111 yards. It’s not particularly close. Harris has eclipsed 100 yards in back-to-back games now and is in a prime spot to do it again. He doesn’t have a role in the passing game so the floor is low for a player that costs $6,100 but he’s ninth in carries and has 65% of the New England running back attempts. 

WR – This is not the spot to try and get a New England receiver correct in my eyes. The Chargers have a dynamic set of corners in Chris Harris, Michael Davis, and Asante Samuel Jr. They have allowed just about a 100 passer rating collectively and Harris is playing the slot for them mostly. The catch rate is 65% but Jakobi Meyers has only seen a 78% catchable pass rate. He’s managed to get to eighth in receptions, but the upside doesn’t appear to be there on paper. I’m sure now that I’ve said that, he’ll score his first touchdown this week. 

TE – Hunter Henry and Jonnu Smith are virtually in a dead heat in targets at 32-30 and Smith actually leads the team in red-zone targets. Henry is on the field for more snaps by over 20% but it’s not meaning a whole lot. We’ve hit the point where the price has gotten a little too far apart in my mind. I’m not looking to play either but I’d rather spend less and take a dart on Smith for $1,400 less but I’ll just play another $2,800 tight end. 

D/ST – I know that the Chargers offense got smoked the last time we saw them but the Patriots defense gets them coming out of a bye week. They only have a 21.6% pressure rate and the Chargers have one of the lowest pressure rates allowed so far. New England is just 14th in DVOA and not a priority play. 

Cash – None 

GPP – Harris, Smith

Chargers 

QB – The Patriots have done a solid job against the pass so far, sitting 14th in DVOA and having allowed 1,819 yards with just 10 touchdowns. Justin Herbert is coming off his worst game of the season previous to the bye week and I’m curious what Belichick does. Does he just totally sell out to slow down Herbert and one of his receivers? I’d think they’ll try to do that and let the run game go wild if it can but with the Patriots traveling West, I still like the spot for Herbert. Despite the rough game and a bye, he’s seventh in attempts, 10th in red zone attempts, 11th in yards, and top 10 in touchdowns and points per game. Of the top six salaried players at the position, Herbert could well be sixth and that could be fun. 

RB – I’ll never tell you to skip Austin Ekeler as he is one of the best backs in the league and can do it all. One of the largest worries with Ekeler was the red zone work but his 19 attempts are tied for the second-highest among backs who have played fewer than seven games. Ekeler is also third in red-zone targets on the Chargers and is a threat with the ball in his hands, no matter how it gets there. The target share of 13.4% will generally provide a safe floor and New England has struggled against pass-catching running backs. They rank in the bottom-five in both receptions and yards allowed in addition to ranking 14th in DVOA against the run. There is no reason you can’t play Ekeler this week and it’s quietly an elite spot for him.

Update – This is worrisome for Ekeler because he did not practice most of the week. The last time we saw this, he didn’t receive a single target in Week 1  but still had 15 rushing attempts. The work would likely be split among Larry Rountree III and Justin Jackson if he were out.

WR – The preference in receivers likely falls back to what you believe Belichick tries to take away. My personal lean is he does everything he can to limit Mike Williams. He’s been the more productive and explosive between he and Keenan Allen, to take nothing away from Allen. Williams has had the higher aDOT by 3.7 yards and has more yards between the two, not to mention a big lead in end zone targets at 7-3. Belichick could try and force the Chargers to drive the field with “dink and dunk” passing with Ekeler, Allen, and the tight ends. That doesn’t mean it’s a sure-fire plan but we could see a lot of two safeties playing deep to roll to Williams, wherever he goes. J.C. Jackson has played mostly on the outside and has allowed a 1.43 FPPT and just a 54.9% catch rate. Jalen Mills is their other corner of note and he hasn’t played well, unsurprisingly. 

TE – Jared Cook continues to be the preferred play over Donald Parham with a 33-9 lead in targets and Cook is actually third on the team in targets (basically tied with Ekeler) and he’s 12th in routes, red-zone targets, and he’s 19th in total targets. That’s not a bad set of metrics for the price tag and if you think that the focus goes on either Williams or Allen, Cook may find some room to operate this week. It doesn’t matter much to me the Patriots have allowed the third-fewest yards to this point. 

D/ST – The Chargers are fine at 16th in DVOA and they have generated a top-six pressure rate but they’ve only gotten home 13 times. The flip side sees the Patriots giving up just a 21.4% pressure rate and just 14 sacks, so the Chargers are fine, if unspectacular.

Cash – Ekeler, Allen

GPP – Herbert, Williams, Cook

Jaguars at Seahawks, O/U of 43.5 (Seahawks -3)

Jaguars 

QB – Trevor Lawrence is one of the two rookie signal callers that hasn’t totally fallen on their face so far, even though he’s been far from spectacular overall. Having said that, improvements have started to show up with a completion rate over 61% in each of the last four games and two games over 270 passing yards. The metrics look rough but he’s had a lot against him as well, including horrid coaching and play-calling. Lawerence is dirt cheap however and faces the Seattle defense that is 25th in DVOA against the pass and 23rd in yards per attempt. Coming out a bye week should help and you’re banking on the improvements continuing to flow for the rookie. If the running back is popular, the passing game is a nice pivot. 

RB – It’s very hard not to love James Robinson here. Ever since Week 3 when the Jaguars got their act together and started feeding Robinson the ball, he’s played on 75.5% of the snaps and has 81.9% of the running back attempts in those four games. 14 of those attempts have come in the red zone and the 10.2% target share is not too shabby either. Now we factor in a Seattle defense that is 11th in DVOA against the run but have allowed 779 rushing yards and it’s easy to see why we like J-Rob. The only factor standing between him and a big game is his head coach, but even Urban Meyer shouldn’t be able to ruin this spot for Robinson. 

WR – The Jacksonville offense finally remembered that they had Marvin Jones, who saw 10 targets in the last game before the bye and he posted a 7/100/1 line. He leads the team in target share even though 21.8% is not the most ideal number ever. Both DJ Reed and Sidney Jones are over a 1.40 FPPT so Jones checks in as a solid option since he’s still under $6,000. Maybe the Jags have a plan of how to integrate Laviska Shenault more into the offense, but the addition of Jamal Agnew has not been a welcome development. In the two full games since the loss of D.J. Chark, Agnew has played 61% of the snaps and has one more target than Shenault. He’s outscored him by four points but the hope is seeing Shenault get targeted 10 times in London is a sign of things to come. 

TE – You guys know I love me some Dan Arnold for cheap and that’s not going to change this week. Since he’s gotten to Jacksonville and had time to actually prepare, he has a 17.6% target share which is good for third on the team and he’s only two targets behind Jones for the team lead. Arnold is just under 68% of the snaps and the tight end is utilized in this offense. Knowing the matchup on the other side is appealing as well because if Seattle tries to match him with safety Jamaal Adams, it could be an advantage for the Jags. Adams is one of the worst coverage safties in football so Arnold is way too cheap for this spot. 

D/ST – You can punt with the Jags defense since the Seahawks offense is in dire straits but just understand what you’re getting into. They only have eight sacks and two turnovers, both dead last in the league. They are also dead last in DVOA so there’s not much to love past the matchup. 

Cash – Robinson, Jones, Arnold 

GPP – Lawerence, Shenault, Agnew

Seahawks 

QB – Geno Smith hit D.K Metcalf for an 84-yard touchdown early on Monday night and it subsequently took him 21 attempts to pass for 83 more yards. Not only is he playing poorly, but Seattle also isn’t counteracting it with volume. Of course, that makes sense. You’re not going to put it in the hands of a quarterback who stinks. You can just easily find $200 more for Lawerence on the other side of the game who is actually talented. 

RB – It may feel gross, but Alex Collins is in play at just $5,300. If Pete Carroll is willing to hammer him into the teeth of the New Orleans defense 16 times for just 35 yards, Collins should get plenty of work against the Jags and that matchup is about polar opposite. Jacksonville is 20th in DVOA against the run and are over 550 rushing yards allowed in six games. Collins has been getting the volume regardless of success and it is extremely clear they don’t trust Smith to do anything. 

WR – The outcomes for Tyler Lockett and D.K. Metcalf has been somewhat as I thought they would go with Smith under center. Lockett has suffered greatly, racking up just 10 targets and totaling 7.7 DK points in the two games. The timing and chemistry between him and Russell Wilson were so vital and it shows. Metcalf has at least hit 11 DK points and he can just be the brute in routes and find the ball. He also has the speed to break a long one, but don’t confuse that with safety. Even on Monday night when he had an 84-yard score, he had one catch for 12 yards the rest of the way on just four more targets. The matchup is pristine but the trust is zero in this entire offense. 

TE – Gerald Everett has a target share under 12% and he’s seen three targets per game with Smith under center, not exactly anything we’re looking to chase. About the only case to make is the Jags are seventh-worst as far as yards allowed to the position goes but the passing game is so unstable, there can’t be an ounce of trust. Give me Arnold on the other side of the game for less salary. 

D/ST – Just like the opposing defense, you could argue that the Seahawks are in play strictly based on who they play. They are 21st in DVOA, have 13 sacks, and a 21.3% pressure rate along with just seven turnovers. There are stronger options in this salary range. 

Cash – None 

GPP – Collins, Metcalf, Lockett

Washington at Broncos, O/U of 44 (Broncos -3)

Washington 

QB – It looks like we’re getting more of Taylor Heinicke and in some ways, it’s not all his fault. His receiving crew is banged up to a large degree but it’s been a tough road as of late. If he hadn’t run for 95 yards this past week, you were under 15 DK points on the passing production. Denver is an odd spot because they rank 24th in DVOA against the pass but have only allowed the 12th fewest passing yards and just eight touchdown passes. Heinicke is 13th in attempts but only 22nd in yards, 25th in yards per attempt, and he’s made the second-most turnover-worthy plays. Facing the Broncos in Denver isn’t appealing. 

RB – The duo of Antonio Gibson and J.D. McKissic continue to be a little bit tough to gauge (wait until we get to the next team) as they split snaps. Gibson still had 16 touches but the production has just not been all that great lately. Knowing he has a hairline fracture in his leg doesn’t seem to be helping at this point and with very little receiving work to prop him up (7.7% target share), he’s becoming a volatile two-down hammer back and that’s not super appealing as he Broncos have allowed 609 yards through seven games. Denver has also allowed the third-fewest yards receiving which wouldn’t be what we look for to play McKissic. There may not be a whole lot to love in the Washington offense. 

WR – For now, we can only really talk about Terry McLaurin because the corps behind him is all at various stages of questionable. McLaurin has all the elite metrics that we love including ranking first in air yards share, eighth in yards, 10th in receptions, and fifth in raw targets and target share. The duo of Patrick Surtain and Ronald Darby have played solid football but both have a FPPT over 1.25. Surtain has only allowed a 79.3 passer rating buy McLaurin is hyper-targeted and one of the higher-end receivers in football. I very much doubt you’ll need him in cash but he’s on the board for GPP for talent and utilization alone. We’ll have to update anyone else on Friday when we have a better idea of who’s getting a helmet. 

Update – Dyami Brown and Curtis Samuel are both still out so Adam Humphries is mildly in play, but far from my favorite.

TE – If Logan Thomas can’t make it back this week, Ricky Seals-Jones is still way too cheap. he’s seen a 99% snap rate in these past three games while racking up an 18.3% target share and a massive 58.3% red zone share. You’re not getting that amount of important work for under $4,000 very often and we’ll just have to wait and see how the week shakes out. 

D/ST – I’m well past the point of making the case for Washington. They are 28th in DVOA, allow 30 points per game, and have just eight turnovers. Even against a flawed offense, I’m not going there. 

Cash – None, Seals-Jones is closest 

GPP – McLaurin

Broncos 

QB – Typically, Teddy Bridgewater isn’t really in our sights but the Washington defense has been so unexpectedly poor that you can make the case. They are 29th in DVOA and 24th in yards per attempt allowed, which is a big boost for Teddy Two Gloves. It also fits a certain Broncos receiver’s skillset incredibly well but we’ll get there in a minute. If you’re looking for something special from Bridgewater, you’re in the wrong spot because he is firmly average. He ranks between 12-18th in attempts, yards, yards per attempt, and touchdowns. Two aspects that Teddy B brings to the party are he’s sixth in red zone attempts and fifth in completion rate, both of which could pay off at this salary. It feels like there are a few sub-par quarterbacks who are in fantastic spots this week. 

RB – I’m going to let Heath Cummings sum this up in perfect form – 

You can keep calling for the Williams breakout week but I’m here to tell you without breaking a massive play for a score, it’s not coming. The touches aren’t changing in this backfield. I’m leaving it alone because it is about as close to a legitimate 50/50 split as we get. 

WR – Provided he does not have a setback in practice, Jerry Jeudy looks far too cheap. He barely played before an ankle injury derailed half of his season but he’s now had medical clearance since last week. Even on 46.9% of the snaps in Week 1, Jeudy had seven targets and was dominating that game. He’d be in an awful lot of lineups given the struggles of the Washington secondary. Both Kendall Fuller and William Jackson are over a 1.70 FPPT and they’ve been shredded by just about anyone in sight. 

If Jeudy becomes popular (my expectation), Courtland Sutton could be a great pivot. He is more expensive but he’s been excellent for the Broncos, ranking first in air yards, fourth in air yards share, and in the top 12 in receptions and yards. On top of that, he leads receivers in unrealized air yards, and getting Jeudy back makes this offense much harder to cover. My initial plan is to have one of these Broncos receivers in a lot of my lineups this week. 

Update – Jeudy missed practice on Friday with some soreness, so Sutton is now the safest play with Jeudy being GPP if he’s active.

TE – I can never seem to get a good read on Noah Fant. Many of his metrics are strong for a tight end, sitting third in routes, eighth in yards, fifth in receptions, and seventh in touchdowns. However, he’s 26th in yards per route and just 15th in target rate. The return of Jeudy isn’t really ideal as far as now there are three cogs that have to split targets. Fant just always feels expensive and I’d be looking for GPP shots only. 

D/ST – Denver is 26th in total DVOA but they do have 15 sacks and have a pressure rate over 25%. They do have nine turnovers but in fairness, Washington has only allowed a 20.8% pressure rate and just nine sacks. 

Cash – Sutton

GPP – Jeudy, Fant, Teddy B

Buccaneers at Saints, O/U of 50 (Bucs -6)

Buccaneers

QB – Tom Brady hasn’t run since the fifth grade but he’s first in yards, pass plays per game, red zone attempts, and touchdowns. New Orleans is sixth in DVOA against the pass and has only given up six touchdown passes. You know what else? I don’t care. Brady has done this while missing multiple key pass catchers for multiple games. If you want to play him, you play him. There’s no other way to say it at this juncture. 

RB – The season marches on for Leonard Fournette with another 17 touches against the Bears, generating 90 scrimmage yards and a score. That is basically his range of outcomes at this point since he owns the backfield and the only somewhat fear is New Orleans is second in DVOA against the run and they have only given up 333 rushing yards. With the matchup on tap and other options, Fournette isn’t a high priority and I’m more interested in the passing game. 

WR – The expectation was probably that Antonio Brown would be back for the game, but that does not appear to be the case as he had a crutch today in practice. That means that Chris Godwin is WAY too cheap again on DK at just $6,400. For whatever reason, Mike Evans has typically had some terrible games against the Saints and Marshon Lattimore. The Saints corner was drafted in 2017 and the results speak for themselves –

Even last year, Evans had Brady as the quarterback. I grant you that one of those games was opening week with no preseason football, but still. Lattimore is the one I avoid in some spots and the rest of the corps gets to face Paulson Adebo and Bradley Roby. Godwin is the top priority for me at the salaries involved and he saw 11 targets last week. The stacks with Brady get more predictable with Brown out and Godwin is front and center with perhaps one other player. 

TE – If Rob Gronkowski makes it back, I’d be interested. He has a 15.7% target share and a red zone share of 21.7%, the second-highest on the team behind Godwin. The Saints have yet to give up a touchdown against a tight end but they have also not played a single tight end of any reputation at this point. Don’t let the matchup deter you because it’s very misleading. 

Update – Gronk is questionable but practiced in limited fashion all week.

D/ST – Tampa has the highest blitz rate in the league and I expect that to create some issues for the Saints. They’ve generated a 23.5% pressure rate and have forced 14 turnovers, tied for the second-most in football. The total DVOA is seventh in football despite the injuries they’ve been dealing with and the price is fine. 

Cash – Godwin, Fournette, Brady

GPP – Evans, D/ST 

Saints 

QB – With the other cheaper options we have in front of us, it’s not easy to feel confident in Jameis Winston. He couldn’t crack 225 passing yards on 35 attempts against the Seattle defense, which is not something you write home about. Winston is 28th in air yards, 24th in red zone attempts, 31st in pass plays per game, and 16th in points per game. I’ve said this before but if this is the style of play, the Saints should just start Taysom Hill and be done with it. Winston is buoyed by a 78.9% completion rate in the red zone and when that normalizes, his production is in trouble. Tampa is hurting defensively but they are still 11th in DVOA against the pass and I’m not looking at Winston much. 

RB – It took until Week 7 but Sean Payton finally remembered Alvin Kamara is…well, Alvin Kamara. He saw 11 targets this past week with 128 receiving yards and a score. On top of that, Kamara added on 20 carries! He probably doesn’t have 20 carries against the Bucs defense this week but we did talk about Kahlil Herbert putting it on Tampa. They also have given up the second-most receptions to running backs so the field will really dictate what I do with Kamara. There’s a big chance folks just go to Henry at this salary and if Kamara is sub-10%, that is very interesting. He is still the New Orleans offense. 

WR – No receiver has a target share over 19.1% which is an issue. The larger issue is even though Marquez Callaway leas in the share, he has 28 targets. That is 64th and the routes are 74th. Even in a negative game script (likely), I can’t get behind this. Sitting at $5,400 with Manny Sanders, Michael Pittman, and other options within $200 that are just flat out better makes Callaway not interesting to me. 

TE – Both Adam Trautman and Juwan Johnson have target shares under 9% and average under six DK points per game. Johnson has all of seven receptions on the season while Trautman is at nine. 

D/ST – I will not play a defense against the GOAT. 

Cash – None 

GPP – Kamara

Cash Core Four

Chris Godwin, D’Andre Swift, Darrell Henderson, A.J. Brown

GPP Core Four

D.J. Moore, Kyle Pitts, Keenan Allen, Jerry Jeudy

Stacks

Bucs/Saints – Brady, Godwin, Gronk, Fournette, Evans – Run Backs – Kamara, this is a rare spot where I’m not forcing a run back. Brady doesn’t care about the score and you don’t need the Saints to force the issue.

Titans/Colts – Tannehill, Brown, Henry –Run Backs – Pittman, Taylor, Hilton, Alie-Cox

Eagles/Lions – Hurts, Smith, Gainwell, Scott, Goedert – Run Backs – Swift, Hockenson

Dolphins/Bills – Allen, Diggs, Sanders, Beasley, Moss – Run Backs Gesicki

Rams/Texans – Stafford, Kupp, Woods, Jefferson, Henderson – Run Backs – Cooks

Jaguars/Seahawks – Lawerence, Jones, Robinson, Arnold, Shenault Run Backs – Metcalf, Collins

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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 7 NFL DFS GPP slate! For those who haven’t read it yet, please check out the Week 7 Cash Game Checkdown for your bankroll sustaining, cash game build advice before building your NFL DFS GPP lineups.

*Having said that, I saw a lot of lineups last week in the Discord strictly with the GPP article players. 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 will not be an article where I write about Christian McCaffrey, Derrick Henry, Dalvin Cook, Travis Kelce, etc… they’re likely always in a smash spot and worth rostering if that’s what your build calls for. Now, let’s get into it.

Games I’m most interested in getting exposure to:

KC/TEN
GB/WAS
ATL/MIA
CHI/TB

NFL DFS GPP Quarterbacks

Matt Ryan ($5,300 DK / $7,300 FD) [Projected Ownership: 2-5%]

As much as I’m not a fan of Matt Ryan, this is an excellent spot for the Falcons offense (that welcomes back Calvin Ridley) traveling to Miami to face their 26th ranked pass defense (in terms of DVOA) and a banged up Xavien Howard. The AETY Model projects this game to be quite up-pace and offer plenty of volume for Matt Ryan and this Falcons’ passing attack. The Falcons have a relatively high implied team total and also grade 7th on the Adjusted Expected Team Totals tool from Win Daily. The Falcons’s rank dead last in run offense DVOA and simply have no efficiency on the ground… If they’re going to put up big numbers, it’ll be via the pass.

I prefer Ryan’s price-tag on DraftKings but he’s certainly viable on FanDuel as well. As I stress on a weekly basis, the “stack-ability” with Matt Ryan is simple: Calvin Ridley and/or Kyle Pitts. I guess I’ll give an honorable mention to Ghost’s boy, Cordarrelle Patterson.

Aaron Rodgers ($7,500 DK / $7,900 FD) [Projected Ownership: 2-5%]

If you’re in the Win Daily Sports Discord, you know I’m all aboard the Aaron Rogers train this week against Washington’s awful secondary (28th in pass defense DVOA). The AETY Model absolutely loves this Packers’ offense this week grading them 4th in total offensive touchdown equity this weekend and also projects Rodgers’ for over 280-passing yards despite most sportsbooks having the prop around 250 yards… I’m expecting Rodgers to come out firing and light up the Week 7 NFL DFS GPP slate, second to only Patrick Mahomes.

Stack him with Davante Adams and hell, you can play Aaron Jones as well. If you want to full game-stack it, Terry McLaurin, Antonio Gibson, Ricky Seals-Jones, and even J.D. McKissic make a lot of sense here depending on the theory of your lineup build.

The AETY Model absolutely loves this Packers’ offense this week grading them 4th in total offensive touchdown equity

Tom Brady ($7,700 DK / $8,000 FD) [Projected Ownership: 2-4%]

Yes, there is a ton of blowout potential with the Bucs hosting the Bears, but that doesn’t seem to negatively affect Brady as Bucs are the most efficient passing offenses in the NFL, grading 1st in pass offense DVOA. In addition, they are averaging over four pass attempts per game than the next leading team. It’s simple, Tom Brady is on a mission in 2021 and Bruce Arians knows this offense is at its best when wearing down opponents defenses with 40+ pass attempts per game. All they do is pass and they’re damn good at it.

Now that Antonio Brown is ruled out, the “stack-ability” with Brady is a lot more predictable. It is Mike Evans and Chris Godwin… both are too cheap on all DFS outlets this weekend.

Honorable Mention: Patrick Mahomes, Ryan Tannehill, Matt Stafford

NFL DFS GPP Running Backs

Aaron Jones ($7,500 DK / $8,500 FD) [Projected Ownership: 4-6%]

If I’m not playing Aaron Rodgers paired with Davante Adams, I’ll be making a priority to find a way to roster Aaron Jones. This is a bit more tougher matchup on the ground against Washington’s 12th ranked run defense (in terms of DVOA) but with how much they struggle through the air, they’re incredible susceptible to multiple touchdown (seven opposing running back touchdowns in the past three games) games to opposing running backs. In addition, they graded 3rd to worst in pass defense DVOA to opposing running backs. Aaron Jones can fill it up in all aspects of the game and should be primed for a 20+ point outing here in Week 7.

Derrick Henry ($9,200 DK / $11,000 FD) [Projected Ownership: 15%]

It’s 2021, the year of Derrick Henry. It’s all systems go for Henry in this matchup against 31st ranked run defense. If you can afford him, he’s an obvious lock-play again this week unless you think the Chiefs’ get well ahead early (which is certainly possible) and gamescript block Derrick Henry a bit.

James Conner ($5,600 DK / $6,500 FD) [Projected Ownership: 2-3%]

Always attack home running backs when they’re a double-digit favorite. We’ve seen Conner provide 3x value in similar gamescripts when the Cardinals are dominating. I don’t see how Houston will be able to put up much of a fight against the 1st place Arizona Cardinals, and neither do the bookmakers as Arizona is an 18-point favorite. The AETY Model grades James Conner as the second highest running back touchdown equity, just behind King Henry. As long as Arizona gets ahead, James Conner will be in for a heavy workload against the 29th ranked run defense (DVOA).

Honorable Mention: Darrell Henderson, Joe Mixon, Antonio Gibson, Josh Jacobs, Damien Harris

NFL DFS GPP Wide Receivers

DeAndre Hopkins ($7,700 DK / $8,000 FD) [Projected Ownership: 5%]

Revenge narrative for Mr. Tulloch in full effect! DeAndre Hopkins is priced down to (-150) to score a touchdown at some books and you can bet your ass he’s getting in the box at least once as the Cardinals host Hopkins’ old squad, the Houston Texans. The Cardinals have the highest adjusted expected team total on the slate so, as much as I love James Conner, this spot supports the narrative of D-Hop getting his as well.

Terry McLaurin ($6,500 DK / $7,200 FD) [Projected Ownership: 4-8%]

As much as I love the Packers’ offense in this spot, in theory, I have to like the Washington Football Team playmakers who benefit from a “play from behind” gamescript. I’ll be adding on to my Packers’ stacks with a run-back or two from the Football Team and there’s no better buy-low spot than Terry McLaurin. McLaurin was big-time chalk last week and let everyone down. I’m 100% going right back to McLaurin here against a Packers’ secondary unit missing their top corner, Jaire Alexander in addition to Darnell Savage and Kevin King highly questionable.

Mike Evans ($6,500 DK / $7,100) [5%] & Chris Godwin ($5,900 DK / $6,700 FD) [10%]

If you read the Cash Game Checkdown then you know that I’m likely locking in Chris Godwin to my cash lineup. On the outside of Godwin, Mike Evans is in as good, if not a better spot than Chris Godwin and has some eye-popping short odds at (-120) to score a touchdown. We know the volume will be there for both of these wide receivers in the best passing offense in the NFL that will throw the ball 40+ times regardless of the gamescript.

Honorable Mention: Tyreek Hill, Mecole Hardman, AJ Brown, Ja’Maar Chase, Allen Robinson, Quez Watkins

NFL DFS GPP Tight Ends

Darren Waller ($6,700 DK / $6,800 FD) [Projected Ownership: 3-5%]

On FanDuel, this price is criminal and Waller will likely be closer to 10% owned over there, but on DraftKings, the ownership is crazy low despite everyone playing Jalen Hurts, Miles Sanders, Dallas Goedert, and Devonta Smith. This an excellent afternoon leverage play in an up-paced game where all the chalk is on one side of the game.

*Sounds like he’s doubtful, moving strictly to the plays below.

Honorable Mention: Travis Kelce, Kyle Pitts, Mike Gesicki, Cole Kmet

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 7

Week 7 is almost here and we are at least spared the horrid Browns against the Broncos game that will happen Thursday night. I will say we get one game that the entire field wants exposure to and then some others that are just alright, so it will be an interesting slate. There may be only 10 games but we have a ton to get to in the NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 7 so let’s get rolling! 

NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 7

Panthers at Giants, O/U of 42.5 (Panthers -3)

Panthers 

QB – Alright so maybe I have to backtrack the Sam Darnold love a little bit. His box score looks worse than it should because his skill players dropped more than five passes last week, which really changes things. If he can’t get it done here, it’s time to worry. The Giants have allowed 14 touchdown passes which are tied for the third-most in football along with over 1,600 passing yards. On top of that, they are 24th in yards allowed per attempt and 22nd in DVOA against the pass. Darnold has got the volume that you’d like for the salary as he’s sitting ninth in attempts and being 16th in FPPD isn’t the worst-case scenario. We should note that the Panthers want to get back to the run and this is a great spot to do it in. Darnold is still a solid choice, but I would reserve him for GPP only. 

RB – I’ll be interested in going right back to the Chuba Hubbard well this week. He’s now had three full games without CMC and has been over 13 DK in two of the three contests and he only has one total touchdown. The targets have been sketchier with two, three, and six but he does have at least 13 carries in all three games. His snap rate is only 59% but Hubbard has handled 88% of the attempts without CMC. With the volume already secure, we can add in head coach Matt Ruhle saying they need to be better at running the ball this week. That would leave Hubbard with a great chance of hitting 3x on his salary because the Giants are 29th in rushing yards allowed per game, 25th in yards per carry, 27th in DVOA against the run, and 31st in rushing yards allowed against the running back. I wish there was a bit more security in the targets but a 9.7% target share isn’t the end of the world and isn’t enough to take me away from Hubbard. 

WR – I’m not falling for the Robby Anderson trap any longer and D.J. Moore would be the only Carolina receiver in consideration for me. Moore had a down game last week but he’s still seventh in deep targets, seventh in yards and fifth in receptions. He’s also third in unrealized air yards so the breakout could be even better than what we’ve seen. The 29.6% target share is fifth in the league and if he sees James Bradberry, he might torch him right off the field. The corner for the Giants has taken a massive step back this year with a 2.37 FPPT, 138.8 passer rating, and a 73.3% catch rate. Moore would be able to have his way with him and the price is fair. 

Update – Terrance Marshall is out and Anderson keeps getting targeted. He’s not doing anything with it but it would make plenty of sense that I would finally not want to play him only to see him go off.

TE – We can’t rust either Ian Thomas or Tommy Tremble as they both have a target share under 7%. Tremble may get the oddball score here or there but you can’t have the confidence to actually play him and it’s best to reserve these plays for showdowns. 

D/ST – I absolutely love the Panthers defense this week. The Giants are going to be missing multiple important skill players in all likelihood. Carolina is eighth in total DVOA, has the third-highest pressure rate in football, and somehow has only managed to have six takeaways. The Giants have only allowed 12 sacks but with Carolina also allowing just 20.2 real points per game, we’re in business at this salary. 

Cash – Hubbard, Moore, D/ST 

GPP – Darnold, Anderson

Giants 

QB – Speaking of having to backtrack, Daniel Jones had a vintage Danny Dimes performance and that is NOT a good thing. He turned the ball over four times and he had been so much better in that facet of the game that it was jarring to see. He’s going to be short on weapons yet again this week and that’s not going to help at all. Carolina has slipped a little in DVOA against the pass to seventh, but that’s not anything that’s vulnerable. Jones is also 25th or lower in deep ball completion rate, red zone completion rate, and catchable pass rate. The turnovers weren’t biting him but he also ranks fifth in passes that could have been intercepted and third in danger plays. With the offense beat up and facing a strong defense, Jones is not where I’m turning to this week. 

RB – I said last week I wanted very little to do with Devontae Booker and that continues this week. Despite overly scoring 10.9 DK points, his salary went up by $100 and he’s yet to get much going on the ground in the past two games. He’s been given 28 carries and only generated 83 yards total rushing for under 3.5 yards per carry. The Panthers have allowed just 545 rushing yards against backs through six games and they also lead the league in receiving yards allowed against backs as well with just 71 yards. They have slipped to 18th in DVOA against the run but that’s not enough to be happy about playing Booker. The volume has been strong for Booker with a 79.7% snap rate and 82% of the attempts the past two weeks. It’s also not a great matchup, salary, and there’s not a strong reason to go here. The Panthers gave up a strong game against Dalvin Cook last week, but Booker is not Cook.

WR – Much like the past three weeks, we’ll circle back to here on Friday. We know that Sterling Shepard is playing and Kadarius Toney will be out. In every game Shepard has finished, he’s seen at least nine targets and he’s run 60% of his snaps from the slot. That could leave him in A.J. Bouye for most of the game while Bouye has given up nine receptions on 14 targets. He’s not a corner I’ll actively avoid at this point and Shepard is extremely cheap for the upside and floor. Darius Slayton and Kenny Golladay are both still questionable so we’ll update this portion on Friday. 

Update – It’s now Friday and I’m not sure how much clarity we actually have. Yes, Golladay is out now but there are murmurs that Shepard suffered a setback with his hamstring. They could be down to John Ross, Darius Slayton (who is still questionable), and Dante Pettis. The fact that Pettis is still on the active roster likely gives you plenty of information on the state of this corps. When things were dire last week, he did see 11 targets and if Slayton and Shepard are both out, he could be worth a shot at minimum salary.

TE – The Giants have really needed someone to step up with their injuries and Evan Engram has not answered the bell. He’s yet to go over five receptions, 55 yards, or 9.5 DK points. His target share is 13.5% but the aDOT is just 5.8 yards and there has only been one red-zone target. With the salary on the wrong side of $3,500, I’m not overly interested. 

D/ST – The way Darnold has been playing lately, you could argue that the Giants are worth a punt here. I’m not sure I’d buy it with only the 30th ranked pressure rate and sitting 25th in total DVOA. Darnold was also sabotaged to some extent by his teammates last week and I’d be looking for another option since New York has only generated eight turnovers on the season. 

Cash – None if Shepard does turn out to be inactive

GPP – Pettis, Engram any receiver that actually makes the lineup at this rate

Jets at Patriots, O/U of 43 (Patriots -7)

Jets 

QB – I simply can’t do it. I still think not everything lies at the feet of Zach Wilson and fully believe in his long-term upside but he has a 4:9 TD: INT ratio and is barely over 1,110 passing yards through five games. New England is 16th in DVOA against the pass and 20th in yards per attempt allowed but Wilson will be on the road and this is just a horrible spot. The rookie is 31st in pressured completion rate, 31st in clean completion rate, and just 27th in catchable pass rate. 

RB – Michael Carter is starting to take the role we want for fantasy on this Jets offense, taking over the lead in the snap rate at 42.7% but most importantly leading in carries at 47. Neither Ty Johnson nor Tevin Coleman are over 26 carries and he’s got the lead in targets among the Jets backs with an 8.4% target share. Having said that, I don’t want to try and go after him against the Patriots. I will grant you that he was fine in the first game against New England with 10.8 DK points but the Patriots defense also utterly destroyed this team in the first game. I don’t expect that to be wildly different this week and even at a lower salary, I don’t think we need to dip into this poor of a matchup. New England is sixth in yards per carry allowed and 17th in total rushing yards allowed while sitting ninth in DVOA against the run. Interestingly, the Patriots defense has also faced the eighth-most carries while the Jets are 31st in attempts per game and just over 20. 

WR – I don’t really have interest in either Jamison Crowder or Corey Davis but I would give a slight lean to Crowder. He’s a bit cheaper and he’s been playing over 58% of his snaps in the slot. Since his return from injury, his target rate is 30% and that would rank ninth in the NFL. Jonathan Jones has played most of the slot snaps for New England and he’s given up a 67.9% catch rate across 28 targets to go with a 1.70 FPPT. Just remember you’re relying on Wilson to get the ball there. Davis will likely see more J.C. Jackson who has been targeted 43 times and only allowed a 58.1% catch rate. I would suspect that Belichick takes Davis out of the game and forces Crowder and Wilson to move the ball. 

Update – I can’t move him into cash, but Jones is out for New England and that make my eyebrow rise for Crowder. He’s a very experienced receiver out of the slot and that is a notable loss that could fly under the radar.

TE – Ryan Griffin and Tyler Kroft have been splitting snaps and they both have snap rates over 63%. However, they’ve also split targets at 15-10 in favor of Griffin and he has the lone end zone target. With target shares under 9% and relying on a rookie quarterback in New England, that’s going to be a pass for me. 

D/ST – The Jets have been much better on the defensive side of the ball than we all thought, although they still rank in the bottom 12 in total DVOA. It’s more they haven’t been a doormat and they do have the fourth-highest pressure rate and blitz about 26% of the time. The Patriots offense hasn’t been anything super scary to this point and New York does have 13 sacks. The turnovers aren’t there with just four but the price is low enough you can play them coming off a bye week. 

Update Linebacker C.J. Mosley is doubtful and that’s not going to help this defense in the least. They’re still cheap enough to consider but I don’t love it.

Cash – D/ST 

GPP – Crowder 

Patriots 

QB – I can’t ever fully get there with Mac Jones and I don’t see that changing this week. He remains super cheap but there’s a reason for that. In this offense, it’s not built for ceiling games. Jones has played pretty well but his high watermark is 275 yards, he’s thrown more than one touchdown twice, and 17.9 DK points have been the ceiling. Going against the Jets doesn’t scream that he’ll need to throw the ball 40+ times and if Jones doesn’t have volume, he has nothing so far. He’s only 28th in FPPD and 24th in yards per attempt. The accuracy has been impressive as he’s top 10 in pressured completion rate, clean completion rate, and true completion rate. It just hasn’t translated to fantasy success yet. 

RB – It looked like Damien Harris was not going to be able to play last week but he suited up and handled 19 touches for 108 scrimmage yards and a score. He is very easily the leader in carries on this squad with 81 but he’s not going to give you hardly anything in the passing game, which means you have to be picky with his spot. This would check the boxes of what we want with New England being favored and the Jets ranking 21st in rushing yards given up in total and ranking 17th in DVOA against the run. I don’t think we can trust Rhamondre Stevenson at this juncture to actually play him but he did make the most of his eight touches with 62 total yards, three receptions, and a touchdown. All that does right now is add instability to the backfield so Harris remains an option, albeit not the safest one. 

WR – The day would have looked a lot different for Jakobi Meyers had he not had his first NFL touchdown nullified by penalty. He is still easily the target lead in this corps with a 25.1% share, he’s ninth in routes, and he is 11th in receptions. The metrics support still playing him but the lack of touchdowns certainly hampers any upside. Additionally, I’m not sure how cash viable he is because we don’t project the Patriots to be trailing that much here. Meyers only has four red-zone targets on the season and zero end zone targets, so it’s best to leave him be in my eyes. I won’t put any stock into the long touchdown from Kendrick Bourne last week since he only has. an 11.6% target share on the season. 

TE – Hunter Henry made the most of his two targets last week with a touchdown but there was not much else to write home about. He did extend his streak of double-digit scores to three games and does lead Jonnu Smith and Henry is also 10th in routes among tight ends with 30.6% coming from the slot. The price isn’t great but Henry is inside the top 12 in receptions, yards, and points per game. He’s the clear choice among Patriots tight ends with the metrics at hand. 

D/ST – I fully expected to dismiss the Patriots defense just based on price but they are actually very affordable for the matchup. I wouldn’t expect 19 DK points like last time but the Pats are still 11th in total DVOA, they have eight takeaways, and the Jets have turned it over nine times through just five games. New York has also surrendered 18 sacks and a pressure rate of almost 30%, so New England is probably my favorite choice at their salary. 

Cash – D/ST 

GPP –Henry, Harris, Stevenson 

Chiefs at Titans, O/U of 58 (Chiefs -5.5)

Chiefs 

QB – Patrick Mahomes continues to turn the ball over at a somewhat scary rate by his standards but it also just doesn’t matter when you’re throwing for 397 yards and two scores. Mahomes is third in total attempts and red zone attempts, not to mention sitting in the top 10 in air yards and passing yards. Mahomes leads the league in touchdowns and he’s eighth in FPPD. The largest issue to pick on is he’s 16th in pressured completion rate and 14th in deep-ball completion rate. This could be the nuclear game since Tennessee is 27th in DVOA against the pass and are 27th in yards allowed per attempt. His salary should have come up more than $100 this week. 

RB – Based on what we saw in the first game with Clyde Edwards-Helaire, Darrell Williams is not expensive enough. He handled 21 rushing attempts and saw half the running back targets with four. Williams was also trusted with all the red-zone work on top of that with three total carries. With that snap share and a 21-3 carry edge on Jerick McKinnon, Williams is still extremely interesting in one of the best offenses in football. He should not be under $6,000 for this role or matchup. Tennessee is 21st in DVOA against the run and this is just an easy plug and play in my eyes. 

WR – This game has what is easily the highest O/U of the week and even though some performances were a little bit average last week, the Titans defense can be had. I typically will go to Kelce before Tyreek Hill but this week is an exception. I think he could go totally nuclear and he’s sixth in air yards, third in yards, first in receptions, ninth in yards per route, and seventh in red-zone targets. Not a soul in this Titans secondary can hang with him and they have allowed the most yards to receivers, the second-most receptions, and are tied for the most touchdowns allowed. Wheels. Way. Up. I’m not overly concerned about his quad as of Friday night, and the same goes for the next player.

If you cannot afford Hill, I’m even totally fine for Mecole Hardman. Normally I’m pretty skeptical but he’s been carving out a more reliable role with a target share of 15.3% and he’s tied for second in red-zone targets behind Kelce. I’m not mentioning the corners because they are not relevant against this passing offense. 

TE – The longer Travis Kelce goes without an eruption game, the closer he gets to the next one. Tennessee has been strong against the tight end so far but they haven’t faced much from the position. Additionally, they have allowed two touchdowns on just 17 receptions against tight ends. Kelce is second in routes, first in targets, fourth in target share, and first in receptions and yards. He’s just a monster and you simply can’t go wrong playing him. 

D/ST – I don’t expect this defense to be able to mount any resistance against the Titans run game so I’m not interested here, even at a lower salary. They have one of the worst defenses by many metrics, regardless of the game against Washington. 

Cash – Mahomes, Hill, Williams, Kelce

GPP – Hardman 

Titans 

QB – This is the make-or-break week for Ryan Tannehill. He has to be able to generate something against this putrid Chiefs defense, even though Washington struggled last week. I will be honest that Tannehill’s metrics look pretty rough. He is not top 20 in yards, air yards per attempt, play-action completion rate, true completion rate, and an awful 33rd in deep ball completion rate. Things have been bad, and they will stick with the run as much as possible. However, KC is 31st in DVOA against the pass and 30th in yards allowed per attempt. If other pieces of this game are chalky with Tannehill being ignored, it could be a great spot for leverage in GPP. 

RB – Is a projection for Derrick Henry to rush for 250 yards and three scores too high? Or is it not high enough? His breakaway run to the house this past week was simply breathtaking and men this size should NOT be able to move this fast. 

The Chiefs have only faced the ninth-fewest rush attempts from backs so far but they are giving up a whopping 5.2 yards per carry, third-worst in football. They are also 31t in DVOA against the run so the boxes are all checked for Henry. We know the Titans are going to involve him no matter what and there’s little reason to believe that Henry doesn’t have the ability to pay off his high price. Henry’s targets have gotten lower lately but it really hasn’t hurt him and it shouldn’t be a total deal-breaker in this spot. This is one of the worst run defenses in football and Henry is going to feast. 

Update – Lineman Taylor Lewan is out but that does not shift my view of Henry. His rushing prop is set above 120 yards.

WR – We’re going to assume that Julio Jones is out seeing as how he didn’t practice and left the Monday night game with a hamstring injury again. A.J. Brown came to life in the second quarter and he would be in line to do it again even if the Chiefs get back Charvarius Ward this week. It’s been a slog for Brown this year between injuries and other issues with his quarterback, so his metrics look rough. What we do know is that roughly 31% of the air yards share and 18.4% of the target share would be up for grabs if Julio sits. Brown will see a lot of it and he already leads the team in targets, end zone looks, and total air yards. He makes so much sense as a run-back option. 

Update – In an unexpected twist, Julio has been practicing in a limited fashion this week. If both of these receivers are active, I’m interested in both and I fell far better about Tannehill.

TE – Part of me wants to play Anthony Firkser because he’s got a chance to score but the metrics don’t really support it. He’s 46th in routes and 50th in points per game, not to mention that the target share is only 10.7%. Perhaps if Julio is out, I can get on board slightly more but the Chiefs have allowed three scores and the most yards against the position. 

D/ST – Kansas City does lead the league in turnovers but it’s just not enough for me to willingly pay for a defense that has every chance to give up 35+ points. 

Update – Pass rusher Bud Dupree looks like he could miss which would make the path even harder on the Tennessee defense.

Cash – Henry 

GPP – Brown, Julio, Tannehill, Firkser

Washington at Packers, O/U of 48.5 (Packers -7.5)

Washington

QB – This section will need an update later in the week. Taylor Heinicke is the nominal starter still but coach Ron Rivera had to address if he was going to continue to start. Ryan Fitzpatrick may have a chance to get back for this game, although that is very murky at this point. Green Bay is 19th in DVOA against the pass but they are also fifth in yards allowed per attempt. Given the projected game script, Washington’s starting quarterback could have value but we need to figure out exactly who that is. 

RB – Antonio Gibson continues to be banged up, nursing a shin injury and now a calf injury the required an MRI. It’s an important injury to monitor because J.D. McKissic is second on the team in total targets and has a 14.1% target share. You’re not going to confuse him with a traditional running back anytime soon because he only has 25 attempts on the season. That would likely come up a little bit if Gibson would be out but facing a negative game script, McKissic could wind up being valuable no matter what. It’s a weakness for the Packers thus far as well as they have allowed the seventh-most receptions against running backs. Let’s see what the practice reports bring us and circle back. 

WR – It’s hard to think that the late addition to the injury report didn’t have a negative effect on Terry McLaurin last week. He had eight targets but he only turned that into 28 yards and four receptions. It was a massive dud and he’s already missed a practice this week. If he can log some type of practice, I’ll have an interest. Green Bay is down multiple corners and would be vulnerable. McLaurin is 12th in routes, third in air yards, and second in unrealized air yards on the season. I just need to see him doing football activities before I bite again. Past McLaurin, we need to see what’s going on later in the week. Curtis Samuel and Dyami Brown are both questionable at this juncture. 

Update – Samuel and Cam Sims are both out but it looks like Brown will suit up. McLaurin would still be my main focus here.

TE – The metrics held firm for Ricky Seals-Jones last week as he played almost every snap again and he’s had a 17.7% target share in those two games with the team lead in red zone and end zone targets. The quarterback is relevant here because Heinicke has had some solid chemistry with Seals-Jones while Fitzpatrick would be a little more unknown. Having said that, RSJ is still under $4,000 and is a very appealing option in what projects to be a negative script. 

D/ST – Washington is getting a pressure rate of almost 27% but they aren’t getting the sacks yet with just 12 on the season. They have forced seven turnovers but are 29th in total DVOA and face one of the best quarterbacks to ever throw a football. 

Cash – Seals-Jones

GPP – TBD on Friday

Packers

QB – The Washington pass defense has been among the worst this season and they sit 28th in DVOA and 25th in yards allowed per attempt. I still have to point out that Aaron Rodgers hasn’t been spectacular for fantasy this season, ranking just 13th in points per game. You coal argue he’s a bit overpriced for being just 23rd in attempts and 23rd in yards, but he is 11th in FPPD. The biggest knock this season has been the accuracy deep, which he ranks 27th in deep-ball completion rate. Having said some of this, I won’t take Rodgers off the table. The spot is way too good and we just saw Mahomes threaten 400 passing yards. Based on what we have in front of us, Rodgers can throttle this defense if he chooses to. 

RB – This has some earmarks of an Aaron Jones spot since he’s guaranteed 15+ touches in every game and remains fourth in red zone carries and second in red-zone targets. Washington has given up almost 900 scrimmage yards and 10 touchdowns already against backs, the most in the league. The game script projects to be positive and while A.J. Dillon has at least 11 touches in the past three games, the Packers are running the ball almost 26 times per game. There’s enough meat on the bone for Jones to eat and Dillon to have a role as well. The box scores haven’t been spectacular outside of one game but even with Washington sitting 12th in DVOA against the run, Jones can easily get it done. 

WR – The decision between Tyreek Hill and Davante Adams is a difficult one. Adams is going to feast against this defense which he does about every single week with the highest target share in the NFL at 36.3%. He is also seventh in red-zone targets, first in yards and receptions, second in air yards, and third in yards per route. William Jackson and Kyle Fuller are the top corners but both have surrendered at least a 1.60 FPPT and a passer rating of 98.0. Randall Cobb and Allen Lazard are still under a 9% target share on the season so it’s very difficult to get onboard there. Cobb wasn’t even targeted so Lazard would be the preferred target if you’re going full passing game. 

TE – There is not a tight end of fantasy relevance on the Packers roster. 

D/ST – If the Panthers and Patriots weren’t right there, perhaps I’d be more interested. Green Bay is still 23rd in total DVOA but they have faced nine turnovers. The pressure rate is fine at 24% but Washington has only allowed a 20.7% pressure rate on the season. 

Cash – Adams, Jones 

GPP – Rodgers, Lazard, Cobb

Falcons at Dolphins, O/U of 47.5 (Falcons -2.5)

Falcons 

QB – For all of Matt Ryan’s faults this year, he has three games over 22 DK points and three of the past four. He’ll be getting his number one receiver back in the mix and one aspect that really helps him is sitting fifth in red-zone attempts. His play-action completion rate is one of the highest in football at 76.7% and you can make the argument that he’s starting to jive with the new coaching staff. It doesn’t hurt that he’ll take on a Dolphins team coming back from London and their defense has absolutely fallen off a cliff. They have only generated two interceptions compared to 13 touchdowns allowed and rank 26th in DVOA against the pass. This game could well wind up shooting out. 

RB – Maybe we’re taking too much away from one game that left the Falcons short-handed, but the Cordarrelle Patterson usage in Week 5 was encouraging. He played almost 60% of the snaps and had 14 carries against 13 for Mike Davis and Patterson added on nine targets. Now, he’s not going to see nine targets every game but he will continue to have a role in each facet of the game. Patterson has logged six targets or more in every game but the first and he’s continuing to carry the ball enough. There is a discussion to be had that he might be too expensive (he certainly is on FanDuel) but there’s something to be said for the role being more important than snap rates. Miami has given up 951 scrimmage yards against backs with nine touchdowns. It’s not the most traditional path but with the matchup at hand and averaging over 15 touches per game, I’m interested. Davis is in play as well but he’s much more of a cash option than GPP. We should still get 12-14 touches at the salary, which isn’t bad. 

WR – Calvin Ridley is $6,600. I’m not sure I thought I would ever see this. He’s 28th in targets despite only playing in four games to this point and eighth in target share. His share of the air yards is 48.8% and that is the third-highest in the league and he’s seventh in red-zone targets. Ryan has been playing better and we used to avoid this matchup with Xavien Howard and Byron Jones on the outside. Both of those corners have allowed an FPPT of at least 1.75 and a passer rating over 100. They have not played up to their standards this year and Ridley is far too cheap. I don’t believe he’s safe enough to be a cash play but for GPP there is no question. Russell Gage looks like he’s ready to come back but he’s behind Ridley, Pitts, Patterson, and even Davis in target share on the season. 

TE – I’m not sure I want to spend this much but the Kyle Pitts breakout game wasn’t solely due to Ridley being out. All of his metrics were screaming big things were going to happen for him. Among tight ends, Pitts is inside the top 12 in routes, slot rate, air yards, red-zone targets, receptions, routes, unrealized air yards, and points per game. That is all with having one less game than the majority of other tight ends. Miami has given up three touchdowns and Pitts is being utilized as a receiver. It’s just a question of the cost. 

D/ST – Miami might have some issues offensively but trotting out the Falcons defense is a tough sell. They are 30th in total DVOA, they have the sixth-lowest pressure rate, and only have three turnovers forced on the season. It’s difficult to advocate for that, even as a value play. 

Cash – None

GPP – Ryan, Ridley, Pitts, Patterson, Davis 

Dolphins 

QB – I’m not sure I’d suggest watching the film from the last game because there were some really shaky moments for Tua Tagovailoa but he wound up scoring 25 DK and he’s still very cheap in a great spot. It’s also fair to point out he was missing multiple receivers, so that’s to be factored in. In his playing time this season, he’s 19th in FPPD which is certainly not special but he’s also thrown just 78 passes total. I’ve said this for a while with Tua but it’s so hard to judge him with so little time on the field. I’m willing to stack him in GPP since he is so cheap to get access to the Chiefs/Titans game and it’s a good spot. Atlanta is just 30th in DVOA against the pass and 18th in yards per attempt allowed. Top that off with an 11:1 TD: INT ratio for the Falcons, and Tua could easily hit 20 DK points again. 

RB – I can’t possibly imagine having any confidence in playing Myles Gaskin this week. In the past five games, four of them have seen Gaskin log five carries or fewer. Three of those games saw Gaskin score under 10 DK points and the lone outlier was a 10 reception game with two scores and we can safely cast that aside as anything to grasp on to. Things really bottomed out last week in London when Gaskin only played 35.7% of the snaps and touched the ball just seven times. If this turns into a triple-headed monster, it will be impossible to glean any value here. As it was, Malcolm Brown and Salvon Ahmed both had almost the same amount of touches as Gaskin. On top of everything else, most teams get a bye week coming back from London. This is not ideal for Miami, whose season is spiraling fast regardless of the fact Atlanta is 24th in DVOA against the run. 

WR – Jaylen Waddle would be interesting again if the receivers from Miami were out. Last week he was missing both DeVante Parker and Preston Williams so Waddle was fed the ball for 13 targets and he found the end zone twice. If those two are back, this situation does get a lot tougher to decipher. Waddle does lead in target rate and red zone target share so he does have that going for him but with his teammates missing games, it’s hard to tell if that’s going to continue. He’s been playing a ton in the slot at almost a 59% rate and he is eighth in receptions and seventh in routes. Avery Williams has only been a very part-time player but likely covers the slot now and he’s allowed five receptions on five targets. We need to know who’s available before deciding. 

Update -Parker and Williams are both questionable after limited practices all week so they could turn this corps into a mess. If all the receivers are active, I’d rather just play the next man on the list. Parker would likely see a lot fo A.J. Terrell, who has played much better this year.

TE – One of the reasons I’m hesitant to pay for Pitts is Mike Gesicki is still just $4,700 and that’s crazy to me. Through the last four games, he’s scored at least eight DK points and has a minimum of six targets. He leads the position in snaps from the slot and air yards share at 25.8%. All of the sudden, Gesicki is also in the top six in receptions and routes and he thrived with Tua under center, a nice step. Granted, the Dolphins were thin at receiver but it’s still an encouraging sign and Gesicki can be a major weapon in this offense. Atlanta has given up three touchdowns on just 18 receptions against the position so Gesick has a chance to score this week as well. 

D/ST – What happened to this defense? I know they were down corners last week but they are still 26th in total DVOA and the pass rush has barely gotten a 22% pressure rate. The seven turnovers are fine but nothing special and they didn’t even look that good against the Jaguars, of all teams. I would definitely make an effort to get to any of the three defenses directly above them. 

Cash – Gesicki

GPP – Waddle, Tua, Parker, Gaskin

Bengals at Ravens, O/U of 47 (Ravens -6.5)

Bengals 

QB – Joe Burrow dipped back under 30 passing attempts this past week but that had much more to do with the score than anything else. That facet should change this week because Baltimore’s offense is much higher quality than the Lions and Burrow is 13th in yards and fourth in yards per attempt, helping mitigate being just 24th in attempts. Burrow is also third in deep ball completion rate and second in catchable pass rate, speaking to his accuracy so far. Baltimore is just average in DVOA against the pass and after they shut the door on the Chargers, I wouldn’t be shocked to see Burrow not be popular at all. 

RB – It was nice to see Joe Mixon back and scoring gobs of fantasy points last week and his price did not move all that much. One of the best aspects of last week was Mixon getting six targets because that had been an issue. His target share is still only 9.4% which is not special but maybe isn’t the largest surprise given the receiving crew for the Bengals. The Ravens matchup is a tough one to gauge, honestly. They have allowed the seventh-fewest rush yards against backs but the most receiving yards. The yards per carry allowed would back up the stoutness of the rush defense as Baltimore ranks 11th in that aspect as well and 13th in DVOA against the run is not bad at all. Having mentioned that, Mixon is second in the league in carries. That volume is not typically available at this salary. 

WR – Ja’Marr Chase finally didn’t score this past week but still scored 13.7 DK on just six targets. He has just been an explosive play waiting to happen every single week with a reception of at least 34 yards in every week. His air yards share is second in the NFL and the yards are fourth while he runs the sixth-highest yards per route. Chase likely draws some of Marlon Humphrey and he’s only allowed a 47.1% catch rate across 34 targets and I’m not the biggest fan of Chase this week. I’m not convinced that Burrow has time to find him much with a 15.7-yard aDOT. 

If he’s having trouble getting the ball out, Tee Higgins and Tyler Boyd (to a lesser extent) could be interesting. Higgins has a higher target share than Boyd and would be my choice, although corner Anthony Averett has only allowed a 58.1% catch rate. Just going by the matchup would put us on Boyd out of the slot against Tavon Young who has allowed a 1.96 FPPT across 14 targets. I still side with Higgins but Boyd could be very sneaky. 

TE – Sometimes, tight ends score a touchdown and we shouldn’t go overboard. That is the case for C.J. Uzomah who only had three targets and recorded 15 yards to go with his touchdown. The target share of 9.4% is not encouraging considering who else is in the offense. 

D/ST – Baltimore has too many ways to beat you and even though Cincy has been a strong defensive unit this year, it’s risky. The Bengals have gotten through six weeks as a top-five unit in total DVOA, which is very impressive. They have only generated six turnovers so far which is a small problem and the pressure rate is under 23%. I’m going to pass against one of the better offenses in the league. 

Cash – Mixon

GPP – Burrow, Higgins, Boyd, Chase

Ravens 

QB – What a weird game from Lamar Jackson last week. He threw for under 70 yards and only had one total touchdown, but the Ravens offense moved the ball and put up points. I think it’s pretty easy to just say variance and move along because Jackson is still an elite play. It will be interesting to see how the field treats him after he burned a lot of folks last week. Cincinnati is eighth in DVOA against the pass but Jackson is 10th in yards, fifth in yards per attempt, fourth in FPPD, and 10th in deep-ball completion rate. The offense got more dangerous in the passing game with Rashod Bateman joining the lineup last week and Jackson kicks in the third-most red zone carries and the most rushing yards among quarterbacks. I wouldn’t let last week dissuade me at all. 

RB – It is Week 7 of the year 2021 and we’re possibly considering Le’Veon Bell or Devonta Freeman as options in the Ravens backfield. Life comes at you fast. Latavius Murray was forced from last week’s game and could miss some time. If that happens, this is going to be a tougher backfield to figure out, in honesty. Bell and Freeman both played under 35% of the snaps and had nine and eight carries. Freeman certainly did much more with his work than Bell with a 5.9 yards per carry against 2.3 yards for Bell. Freeman also held an edge in red zone carries at three to two, although Bell had the one carry inside the five. Cincinnati ranks eighth in yards per carry allowed but with the Ravens run game (fourth-most attempts and yards on the season), the matchup isn’t always that important. Both would be in play without Murray, and I would give Freeman a slight lean. 

Update – Murray is out and I stand by everything said in this analysis.

WR – It was super encouraging to see Bateman come off the IR and walk into a snap share over 60% and tie for the team lead with six targets. It didn’t translate for a lot of production but he is still nearly minimum and he only ran 19 routes. Both the boundary corners in Chidobe Awuzie and Eli Apple have been good this year with a 1.42 FPPT or less to this point. 

Not to be forgotten, Marquise Brown is still there as well and he’s been phenomenal but things could get very crowded, very quickly. Baltimore is only 25th in passing attempts on the season and that’s just not likely to change. Sure, Hollywood is 10th in yards and seventh in deep targets with five touchdowns but we could see a lot more games of 5-6 targets for every cog in this passing game. I think you’re going to have to pick your lane and not stack Lamar with more than one option for right now. 

Update – Sammy Watkins is out and Bateman enters the cash conversation for me at this point.

TE – Mark Andrews has been awesome this year, even though the perception wasn’t great about two weeks ago. He’s scored three times and leads the position in yards and is second in receptions, not to mention sitting second in air yards and deep targets. He’s such an integral part of the offense that the matchup doesn’t exactly matter, including the Bengals. The price is fair and I have no issues playing him at all. 

D/ST – The Ravens unit is still in play even though the Bengals have weapons. They have a pressure rate of 26% and a blitz rate of 32% and the blitz rate is top-five in the league. Burrow has been brought down 16 times this year and they’ve turned the ball over eight times. As much as Burrow has flashed at points, seven interceptions is a lot, and Baltimore sitting at home under $3,000 is interesting. 

Cash – Jackson, Freeman, Andrews, Bateman

GPP – Brown 

Lions at Rams, O/U of 51 (Rams -14.5)

Lions 

QB – When the coach is openly saying you need to play better on a rebuilding franchise, that’s not a great sign. Jared Goff finds himself in that exact spot and has to face the fourth-best DVOA defense against the pass. Gross. Three of his five games have been under double-digit scores on DK and we can’t even rely on garbage time at this point. Even Blake Bortles was good for garbage time back in the day. In the past four games, Goff has thrown a combined four touchdowns and that is despite being top-five in attempts on the season. He’s 29th in FPPD and there is no compelling reason to play him, even at such a low salary. 

RB – Here we go again with D’Andre Swift. With his role in the receiving game, Swift is in play at this salary against just about everyone. Only Najee Harris has seen more targets among running backs and that alone is interesting. He’s splitting time with Jamaal Williams and he’ll take carries but Swift is still averaging 11 carries per contest. This game should have a very negative script in a hurry as the Lions are heavy underdogs. Swift also gets the ball when it matters most, leading the team in red-zone targets and carries. The Rams are 20th in yards per carry allowed as well, which continues o be a little surprising. With the Detroit defense not likely to mount much resistance here, Swift could have a chance at 6-7 receptions and a score. It’s plenty to chase at this salary. 

WR – Both Amon-Ra St. Brown and Kalif Raymond feel gross and unnecessary with how poorly Goff is playing. St. Brown has a 21.4% target share over the past two weeks, almost double Raymond so I would focus there. He’s been in the slot for 66% of his snaps and has been getting some volume, but that also puts him against Jalen Ramsey for a huge part of the game. He’s slid into the slot for 43% of his snaps and is only allowing a 1.36 FPPT on the season. You’re only playing Lions as a run-back option this week and I would rather go with Swift or our next player. 

TE – T.J. Hockenson finally woke up a little bit even though it took a massive 11 targets to get him there. I still have little confidence after Coach Campbell was calling out Goff in the press conference but the metrics are so hard to ignore. Hockenson has been inside the top 10 in points per game, yards, receptions, air yards, and red zone targets. The Lions should get pummeled on the road and the Rams have allowed the 10th most yards on the season against tight ends. If you’re stacking the Rams, he’s one of the options for a run-back. 

D/ST – There is no reason to go here. 

Cash – None 

GPP – Swift, Hockenson 

Rams 

QB – If you’re a key play on the Rams, you’re in a smash spot this week and it starts with Matthew Stafford. He’s third in touchdowns, second in yards per attempt, and eighth in red zone attempts even though he’s just 17th in attempts overall. This is something of a “revenge” game which I’m sure others will point out. Just keep in mind, Detroit worked with him to get him out so he didn’t have to endure another rebuild at this stage of his career. I’m not sure how much animosity there is considering he got traded to an incredible landing spot. Detroit is 25th in DVOA against the pass and dead last in yards allowed per attempt. Stafford should be able to carve them up at will. 

RB – If you thought Darrell Henderson was chalk last week, get ready for this week because he’s going to be extremely popular. He’s a heavy home favorite and continues to be the workhorse for one of the best offenses in football. Henderson played 81% of the snaps and racked up 21 total carries with five red zone attempts and two attempts inside the five. Sony Michel only saw 18% of the snaps and had nine carries, which is not enough to worry about him stealing work from Henderson. Detroit is 18th in yards per carry allowed and even though he missed a full game, Henderson ranks 13th in carries across the league. Having a salary under $7,000 makes him one of the strongest plays on the board, especially in cash. 

WR – If you wind up not paying up for Adams or Hill, Cooper Kupp has to be next on your list. He’s just destroying everything set in front of him and he showed even in a total boat race, he can still have a massive game. He is first in receptions, second in yards, fourth in yards per route, fourth in slot snaps, and first with seven touchdowns. It’s not crazy to think he scores again and he has given us exactly zero reasons to not play him every week with the highest target rate in football. 

Robert Woods is a fine option and I don’t think they go too long without feeding him more targets than last week, but Van Jefferson has my eyes. DeSean Jackson has seen his relevance dwindle the past couple of weeks with just one catch in each of the last three games and just seven total targets. Meanwhile, Jefferson has 14 and he also has the highest aDOT of the three main receivers. With Detroit allowing the highest yards per attempt, Jefferson sporting a 13.1 aDOT is very appealing. 

TE – I can’t find the reason to play Tyler Higbee ahead of Gesicki or others we haven’t got to yet. Higbee is fine but sits fourth in the offense in target share at 12.6%. He’s involved since the routes are 11th but Higbee is also under 40 among tight ends in air yards and target rate. You can fall back on him being ninth in receptions but you get so much more for your dollar if you just move to Gesicki. 

D/ST – I fully expect them to have a great game but there is a 0% chance I ever pay $5,000 for defense on the main slate. That’s all that needs to be said. 

Cash – Henderson, Kupp, Stafford 

GPP – Woods, Jefferson 

Eagles at Raiders, O/U of 49.5 (Raiders -3)

Eagles 

QB – Jalen Hurts is a very bizarre evaluation. I’ll be the first to tell you – I’m not a pro scout and I’ll never pretend to be. When I’ve watched the Eagles offense this season, I’m not sure if they know what the identity is or how they plan to consistently move the ball. It seems like they put Hurts in shotgun and tell him to have at it. There are almost no designed plays past receiver screens to get the ball into their hands and let them do their thing. Hurts has been very inaccurate, sitting 29th in catchable pass rate and 27th in true completion rate. He’s also just 18th in passing yards and 19th in passing touchdowns. 

The man is the QB5 for fantasy this season. His rushing production puts him over the top with five rushing scores and 300 yards on the season. He will always be in play for any format, you just have to look away until the game is over. 

RB – Can we get Miles Sanders some carries, for the love of goodness? He has 29 carries in the past four games combined and has managed 141 rushing yards on minimal work. I’d love to have full confidence in playing him but I suppose if I did, he also wouldn’t be just $5,100. Vegas is allowing the seventh-most yards per carry on the ground so this is a great spot to finally have a big game and Hurts struggled badly last week. I think the whole offensive system really leaves a lot to be desired but the easiest fix on the fly is to simply run the ball more. With Sanders, talent isn’t the question. It’s the number of touches he has but in this game, I’ll be happy to play him in GPP because when he blows up, it’s going to be a huge score in a tournament with Sanders vastly underpriced. 

WR – The only player we can really consider is Devonta Smith and even then, I’m not likely. I’m a believer in his talent but the utilization leaves something to be desired. Smith has the seventh-highest air yards share in the league but he’s outside the top 30 in yards and receptions. It tells you something when his air yards share is so high but the yards per route is 80th. He is wildly inconsistent and has to be GPP only. The corner duo of Casey Hayward and Nate Hobbs have played well on top of it. Hobbs has only allowed a 1.52 FPPT while Hayward is at 0.73, good for the 11th best in the league. 

TE – Zach Ertz is now in Arizona and as long as Dallas Goedert is off the Covid list, he is very interesting. His metrics are not that great but if you combine Goedert and Ertz together, the targets share is a little over 27%. I’m not saying Goedert gets every single target but that is a big shift in the offense. We have to project since Goedert’s routes and targets are paltry but it does help immensely that Vegas has allowed the fifth-most yards, the second-most receptions, and four touchdowns. The matchup in that aspect is pristine and I’m willing to bet he sees some type of extra work. 

D/ST – Philly has one of the lowest pressure rates in football and only 11 sacks, not exactly ideal. The six turnovers are mediocre and they are only 18th in total DVOA. The Raiders have allowed the third-most sacks in football but I’m not sure that’s enough to get super excited about the Eagles. At their price point, I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re the cash game pick for the majority of the field. 

Cash – Hurts, Goedert

GPP – Sanders, Smith

Raiders 

QB – Derek Carr enjoyed his first game under a new head coach, going for 341 yards and two scores. Now he faces the Eagles coming off a mini-bye week, and they rank 12th in DVOA against the pass and eighth in yards allowed per attempt. Carr is very affordable for ranking second in yards and third in attempts, despite the tougher matchup on paper. He’s only 23rd in FPPD but the volume is helping overcome that mark and he’s only thrown 10 touchdown passes. He is around $5000 too cheap but I don’t want to go there in cash unless he’s wildly popular for some reason. 

RB – This is quietly a good spot for Josh Jacobs, even though I’m not a strong fan of the salary. He continues to be the man in the Raiders backfield when he’s healthy and he tacked on another 17 touches last week. In the past, Philly has been stout against the run but that’s changed this year as they rank 25th in DVOA against the run and have given up the fifth-most rushing yards against backs on the year. They have faced the second-most carries n the season but that goes back to their offense not being all that good this season. Jacobs is locked into 15 touches or more and has plenty of opportunities to score in this one as well with 11 red zone carries in just four games. 

WR – Henry Ruggs has one of the most distinct roles in football and it’s the deep ball. He’s third in deep targets, ninth in completed air yards, and 17th in yards per route. Now, he’s barely in the top 50 in targets overall so you’re not banking on volume and that leaves him GPP only. He also gets a tougher matchup with Darius Slay, who has only allowed a 1.34 FPPT and a 9.8 YPR. Ruggs has the speed to get by anyone but it’s not the most ideal spot ever. 

Hunter Renfrow will draw Avonte Maddox in the slot and he’s only allowed a 53.8% catch rate on 13 targets. Renfrow is mixing in as one of the main options with Ruggs and the next man we’re going to talk about. Prior to last week, he had at least six targets in every single game and still carries a little bit of value on DK. 

TE – I will continue to be a little underweight on Darren Waller. Since Week 2 has started, Waller is the TE8 in PPR formats and he’s almost 20 points behind the top three players. Waller only has 23 receptions in those five games and just a 20.2% target share. While nothing about that is objectively bad, it’s certainly not worth paying up for with the other options. The fact that Ruggs continues to be getting more involved has put a cap on Waller, at least as far as production has gone this year. The only saving grace is Philly has been abjectly awful against the position with five scores allowed and the third-most receptions allowed. I’m not telling you to not play him at all, just to be aware of how this offense has been running for most of the season. 

D/ST – I wouldn’t argue anyone playing the Raiders against this version of the Philly offense. It’s dysfunctional to be sure and Vegas has a pressure rate over 26% on the season. They also blitz under 14% of the time so they may be able to limit the damage Hurts can do on the ground. He’s only been sacked 12 times and Vegas has forced seven turnovers while giving up just 23 points per game. 

Cash – Waller 

GPP – Ruggs, Carr, Jacobs, Renfrow 

Texans at Cardinals, O/U of 47.5 (Cardinals -17.5)

Texans 

QB – If you ever wanted me to believe in a conspiracy about the NFL being fixed, I think you could point to the Davis Mills game against New England in Week 5. He should have gotten whipped all over the field but he put up 312 yards, three touchdowns, and no turnovers. I felt like I had missed something about him. It turns out that thought was misplaced because Mills went right back to barely exceeding eight DK points last week against the Colts. His scores so far in games he has started are 10.7, -0.32, 27.7, and 8.2. You tell me which you think is out of pocket. Arizona is second in DVOA against the pass and I’m not interested here. 

RB – Houston got steamrolled last week and despite that, David Johnson only saw two targets so it suddenly seems as if even that aspect of the game is unstable for Johnson. It’s impossible to project the Texans to be in anything other than a very negative script this week. Arizona is the lone undefeated team in the league and it’s a “revenge” game for Johnson. There’s still no floor for him and if Murray winds up being out for Baltimore, I’d rather play Lev Bell or Devonta Freeman. 

WR – Mills may stink but he can still support Brandin Cooks and he’s still too cheap. Cooks leads the league in air yards share and is 10th in air yards while sitting in the top 12 in receptions and yards. That’s a serious accomplishment with such a weak quarterback and all he does is produce. With the Texans checking in as one of the largest underdogs on the slate, Cooks is well in play in all formats. 

The punt GPP play could be Nico Collins. He came back last week and played 57% of the snaps and had six targets. That was very encouraging and it’s the same principle of Cooks. If the Texans are going to be trailing, they need to throw an awful lot and there is a cheap opportunity here. He should avoid Byron Murphy who has been strong this year with only a 54% catch rate allowed. I’m fine playing Cooks against him as the more accomplished receiver. 

TE – There is no tight end of fantasy relevance on the roster. 

D/ST – There is no chance I’m going against the Cardinals after last week. They were down multiple coaches and the quarterback was banged up and it didn’t matter in the least. 

Cash – Cooks 

GPP – Collins 

Cardinals 

QB – I will never tell you don’t play Kyler Murray ever again. I wanted nothing to do with him last week and he bludgeoned the Browns defense with four touchdowns on just 229 passing yards. If we’re spending up I do still prefer Mahomes because Murray continues to not run many times (seven is a bit misleading because some were scrambles and he totaled just six yards) and that facet of his game hasn’t been needed nearly as much. He’s second in FPPD and fourth in red zone attempts, rising his ceiling every single week. Houston is 11thin DVOA against the pass but 29th in yards per attempt allowed. Murray is always in play and I’m betting everyone just plays Mahomes in this range. 

RB – I’m likely not playing either but if you go this route and believe the Cardinals roll, James Conner is the guy you want to chase in my eyes. There is a noticeable swing in his carries when the Cards win by multiple scores since he’s had at least 16 carries in three games when Arizona won by more than 14 points. That outcome is certainly in the realm of possibility and Chase Edmonds has not been doing much since he’s had an injury to deal with. He’s only generated a total of 84 scrimmage yards in the past four games and 40 of them came on one rush attempt. Houston is 29th in DVOA against the run and is 28th in yards per carry allowed With both players at the exact same salary, Conner would be my choice as I think he’s got a good chance to do some work in the fourth and hit pay dirt. 

WR – I’m not buying into DeAndre Hopkins still because he only had three receptions last week for just 55 yards. I will stand firm in him being a WR2 masquerading as a WR1 in salary. The target share is only 39th in the league so if we want those kinds of metrics, why not play A.J. Green or Christian Kirk? The main two corners of Houston are Vernon Hargreaves and Terrance Mitchell, both of whom have a FPPT of at least 1.79. Kirk is 19th in yards per route and has a target rate of 21.7% while Green is seventh in red-zone looks. They all rotate around and the latter two have slot rates above 30% on the season. 

TE – Without knowing just how much Zach Ertz will play in this game, it’s hard to decide on playing him. The price could wind up being cheap because Maxx Williams had a 10.8% target share. That’s not a ton but in one of the best offenses in football, it was working in some weeks. The Texans are in the bottom-five in receptions, yards, and touchdowns so even if Ertz just plays in the red zone, there is touchdown upside. Maybe the practice reports give us some clues this week. 

D/ST – Arizona checks in as a strong option once again and it’s a little funny to see the defense that is averaging the most DK points on the slate sit at $3,100. They are second in total DVOA and have the second-highest pressure rate in football, generating 17 sacks and 13 turnovers. Mills is getting pressured over a quarter of the time and Arizona is super affordable. 

Cash – Kyler, D/ST 

GPP – Kirk, Green, Conner, Hopkins, Edmonds 

Bears at Buccaneers, O/U of 47 (Bucs -12)

Bears 

QB – Justin Fields got what we wanted last week as far as trailing on the scoreboard and a great defense to face…and he threw the ball 27 times and had 14.3 DK points. Fields only rushed the ball six times and is still struggling to complete passes, with a 53.5% completion rate. He’s 31st in yards per attempt and only 30th in catchable pass rate. Tampa has been decimated by injuries and sits just 18th against the pass in DVOA but Fields is still a very tough sell for me. The Chicago passing offense general looks brutal right now. He’s 33rd in pressured completion rate and Tampa is going to do their best to get after him. 

RB – We’ve seen running backs have some success in the passing game against this Bucs defense and that’s the only route you can take. They are second in yards per carry allowed and fifth in DVOA against the pass and Chicago will struggle to run the ball. What I’m going to be interested to see is if Damien Williams is off the Covid list. If he’s not or he’s not ready to play yet, Khalil Herbert has flashed in his time on the field. The receiving chops are still questionable at the NFL level with just two receptions on three targets but both backs are priced at an appealing level. Williams would have the better end of receiving work but the largest fear is the totality of the offense. They couldn’t get a lot done against the Packers defense, which is far worse than Tampa. 

WR – I’ll let Mike Clay sum this up – 

No, I don’t want to play Allen Robinson this week. The Bucs secondary is decimated but when the offense is dysfunctional, it doesn’t matter. Ask the Eagles how that went. 

You could twist my arm to play Darnell Mooney who has performed better with Fields and in the past three weeks, he has a target lead of 20-15 over Robinson. Mooney also has a red zone target while Robinson has zero. Still, it is very risky GPP only for playing Mooney. 

TE – If you wanted to get nuts, Cole Kmet can be considered as a punt option. His targets have gradually come up in the past three games and he leads in red-zone targets. Granted, that’s just two targets but it still counts. The Bucs are tied for the third-most receptions given up and they’ve also given up four touchdowns. 

D/ST – I’m not playing any defense against this Bucs offense, it’s a terrifying proposition. 

Cash – None, Herbert could be considered if the backfield is his again 

GPP –  Mooney, Kmet 

Bucs 

QB – There is not a lot of quarterbacks that I’m interested in at $7,700 with no rushing ability but Tom Brady breaks the mold. Yes, Chicago is sixth in DVOA against the pass but they are also 19th in yards allowed per attempt and the matchup is always secondary for Brady. He is first in both attempts and red zone attempts, first in yards, second in touchdowns, third in points per game, and 12th in FPPD. You can’t ever go that wrong playing the GOAT. 

RB – I don’t think I’ll pay the price tag very much this week, but Leonard Fournette has taken over this Bucs backfield and it’s not particularly close. The snap rate is still just 59.8% on the year but it’s approaching 70% in the past three games and he’s soaking up around 70% of all running back attempts. On top of that, an 11.5% targets share is quite the cherry on the sundae. I would point out that his last three games of at least five targets likely don’t stay put because Rob Gronkowski has missed those games. It’s hard not to think those two things are not related. Having said that, the volume for Fournette is undeniable and they will be in a positive script almost surely. The matchup isn’t all that bad either, with Chicago 13th in yards per carry allowed and 23rd in DVOA against the run. He’s pricey, but not totally off the table and if his targets stick with Gronk back, the floor is much safer as well. 

WR – I think it’s going to be another Antonio Brown day. There is a solid chance that Jaylon Johnson of the Bears could be trailing Evans a lot in this game and he’s only allowed a 1.35 FPPT and a 77.6 passer rating. Brady has shown he won’t go after matchups that he’s not crazy about and Brown has been red hot lately with at least 24 DK in his past two games. AB has a 31.1% target rate and is seventh in yards per route on just 55.6% of the snaps. He’s a case study in snaps sometimes being overrated. Chris Godwin has been a bystander lately for the most part but he’ll get a lot of Duke Shelley in the slot. Shelley hasn’t been poor with only a 58.3% catch rate but that’s not enough to scare Brady. I’d rank them AB, Godwin, and then Evans for this one knowing that Evans still has a giant ceiling. 

Update – The Bucs passing games will be missing two key cogs in Brown and Gronk. I expect Godwin to stick in the slot a decent amount and Shelley has moved to a DNP on Friday, not a good sing for Sunday. I would be surprised if Godwin does not see 8-10 targets this week and Tyler Johnson enters the fray in GPP. We’re looking at the minimum salary and even in just 30% of snaps, he has 14 targets compared to three for Scotty Miller a right about the same snap count. Godwin is likely a lock for me in cash games on DK.

TE – Gronkowski has still not practiced as of this writing, but it’s only Wednesday so let’s not overreact quite yet. We’ll update this on Friday and see what it looks like. Cameron Brate has taken a backset in snaps to O.J. Howard over the past two weeks and Howard has doubled him up in targets at 10-5. He would be my pick if you stack with the tight end.

D/ST – Tampa still has a ton of injuries on this side of the ball and even in a great matchup, they are heavily overpriced. Fields is getting pummeled with 18 sacks taken through just four games but I can’t justify $4,000 with the other options on the board. 

Cash – Brady, Godwin, Fournette

GPP – Evans, Johnson

Cash Core 4

Derrick Henry, Darrel Williams, Darrell Henderson, Chris Godwin

To the surprise of nobody, Henry has taken over the highest ownership projected on this slate. Pair him with Rashod Bateman to fit it and let’s ride!

GPP Core 4 

Miles Sanders, J.D. McKissic, Julio Jones, Tyreek Hill

With Henry now moving further up the board in ownership, there is an opportunity to spend down at that position and then in turn, spend up on elite receivers and tight ends.

Stacks

Chiefs/Titans – It’s the same drill as last week in that we want as much as we possibly can from here. Henry/Hill/Kelce/Hardman/Brown/Julio/Williams and both quarterbacks are all in play.

Lions/Rams – Kupp, Stafford, Henderson, Jefferson, Woods, Higbee – Run Backs – Swift, Hockenson

Washington/Packers – Adams, Jones, Rodgers – Run Backs – McLaurin, McKissic, Seals-Jones

Falcons/Dolphins – Gesicki, Tua, Waddle, Parker – Run Backs – Ridley, Patterson, Pitts, Ryan

Bengals/Ravens – Jackson, Andrews, Bateman, Brown, Freeman – Run Backs – Higgins, Mixon, Chase, Boyd, Burrow

Thank you for reading my NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 7 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 6 NFL DFS GPP slate after a HUGE Week 5 from Win Daily Sports and our members! For those who haven’t read it yet, please check out the Week 6 Cash Game Checkdown for your bankroll sustaining, cash game build advice before building your NFL DFS GPP lineups.

*Having said that, I saw a lot of lineups last week in the Discord strictly with the GPP article players. 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 will not be an article where I write about Christian McCaffrey, Derrick Henry, Dalvin Cook, Travis Kelce, etc… they’re likely always in a smash spot and worth rostering if that’s what your build calls for. Now, let’s get into it.

Games I’m most interested in getting exposure to:

– Chiefs / Washington
– Bengals / Lions

– Cowboys / Patriots
 Chargers / Ravens
Texans / Colts

NFL DFS GPP Quarterbacks

Patrick Mahomes / Taylor Heinicke

As you see above, I’m all in on this matchup with a 54-point total and a 32nd ranked overall defense (in terms of DVOA) against the 28th ranked overall defense (in terms of DVOA). We talked a bit about “predictable stack-ability” last week and that’s exactly what this game offers (in addition to zero defense). Like usual, I do not care what ownership on this game comes in at, I’ll get different elsewhere.

If you want Mahomes, you know who to stack him with (Hill, Kelce, and Hardman). If you want the savings Heinicke offers, you also know who to stack him with (McLaurin, Seals-Jones, or even Adam Humphries). Don’t overthink this slate, your lineup should have exposure to this game in some way, shape, or form.

Justin Herbert

Justin Herbert at a 5% ownership projection? Sign me up. I do think this game will be a bit slower in pace than KC/WAS, but that shouldn’t scare us away from playing one of the best QBs in the NFL in Justin Herbert. The AETY Model predicts Herbert and the Chargers to lead this slate in passing attempts and that alone has me interested in Herbert and the Chargers. The more pass attempts a QB has, the higher his ceiling in fantasy football, make sense? Let’s ride.

Like Mahomes/Heinicke, you know who to stack him with!

Honorable Mention: Joe Burrow, Mac Jones, Carson Wentz

Running Backs

Kareem Hunt

Hunt will likely be 50-55% owned in all contests (if not higher in cash) while Nick Chubb sits this one out against the Arizona Cardinals. See the Cash Game Checkdown for more thoughts on Kareem Hunt, but all in all, I’ll be well over the field with the freesquare Hunt offers us in our NFL DFS GPP lineups.

On FanDuel, I prefer Mixon at a cheaper price tag, and on DraftKings, if you’d like to fade Hunt, the preferred pivots are directly below.

Antonio Gibson

I would have guessed Gibson would come in around 20% in ownership projections but for some reason, the field is not that interested in Gibson (5-8% ownership estimate). The main theme of this article is to get exposure to this game against the Chiefs and what better way than the lead running back who poses the highest touchdown equity on the Washington offense? The Chiefs rank dead-last against opposing running backs.

Joe Mixon

I’ll keep this one brief, the Lions defense is dreadful in all formats and there’s NO ONE behind Joe Mixon on the depth chart to take snaps away from him (Samaje Perine on the COVID-19 list). Mixon is one of the few (if not the only) running backs on this slate who can realistically see 30 or more touches… Volume is KING!

Honorable Mention: Ezekiel Elliott, Austin Ekeler, Javonte Williams, Khalil Herbert, D’Andre Swift

NFL DFS GPP Wide Receivers

Keenan Allen

See Cash Game Checkdown for thoughts on Keenan Allen. He’s likely my highest owned wide receiver in Week 6.

Ja’Maar Chase

The Detroit Lions rank 27th in pass defense DVOA and literally do not have a pro-caliber cornerback healthy for this matchup. What more does the DFS community need to see from Ja’Maar Chase before he’s a staple at $7,000 (or more) in salary and 15% owned?

Tyreek Hill / Mecole Hardman / Terry McLaurin

Exposure to the Chiefs / Washington game! If you cannot afford Tyreek Hill, I absolutely adore this matchup for the young, Georgia standout, Mecole Hardman. The target share continues to rise and the 50-plus percent slot-rate should offer plenty of insurance that Josh Gordon will not be taking snaps away from Mecole Hardman. On the other side, there’s not much to say about Terry McLaurin… he’s a star with a ridiculous expected target share, in a shootout against a horrible pass defense.

Michael Pittman / Brandin Cooks

Both of these guys are the top wide receivers (by a wide-margin) on their respective teams. We pick on the Colts’ secondary every week and this matchup is pristine for Michael Pittman. This is one of the “mini-stacks” I’ll be using often to get some exposure to both sides of the ball in what could be a sneaky, but gross shootout.

Adam Humphries

This is absolutely gross, but every damn optimizer in the world is pushing out nothing but Travis Kelce and Ricky Seals-Jones, double tight-end lineups. Yes, Seals-Jones is in a nice spot, but this dude has left much to be desired throughout his five year NFL career. I understand that the optimizers spit this double tight-end duo out for value, but with no Curtis Samuel this week, Adam Humphries will be my pivot away from the Seals-Jones chalk.

My KC/WAS lineup may not be that different than those from an optimizer, but if you can fit three stud running backs in your lineup with your KC/WAS stack, you’re already much different than the field (as they’ll be using their flex spot for one of the tight-ends). If a 1% owned Humphries can get to 10+ points, I like my odds to beat the Kelce/Seals-Jones optimized lineups in a NFL DFS GPP contest.

Honorable Mention: DJ Moore, Amari Cooper, Amon-Ra St. Brown, Courtland Sutton

Tight Ends

*I’ll be extremely heavy on Travis Kelce. Again, I do not care about the ownership. In lineups I do not have Kelce, here’s who I would prioritize…

Darren Waller

Waller is likely to go completely un-rostered on this Week 6 NFL DFS slate. I personally will be trying my best to move up to Kelce, but with how stingy the Denver secondary is to opposing wide receivers, this could sort out to be a perfect pass-funnel up the middle to Darren Waller. If you want to make yourself a little afternoon 5% owned mini-stack, Waller and Sutton or Waller and Javonte Williams can certainly provide difference-making upside in larger field GPP contests.

T.J. Hockenson

As much as I love the Bengals offense this week, in theory, I should be very interested in a Detroit Lions run-back in those lineups. In many of my efforts to make a Cincinnati/Detroit game-stack, I’m about $1,000 short in salary to afford D’Andre Swift. This leads me to a 5% projected ownership, T.J. Hockenson. Despite the steam Amon-Ra St. Brown seems to be generating, T.J. Hockenson is still the alpha in this passing attack. This game has shootout potential and T.J. Hockenson has slate-breaking upside in those types of gamescripts.

Honorable Mention: Mark Andrews, Jared Cook, Hunter Henry

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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We are back for Week 6 after a very strong Week 5 that saw a ton of scoring on all fronts! The slate is smaller this week with bye weeks starting up so always be mindful to narrow that player pool. Even with a smaller slate, we have a lot of work to do in the NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 6 and find our paths to green screens!

NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 6

Texans at Colts, O/U of 43.5 (Colts -10)

Texans 

QB – I was 100% wrong on Davis Mills last week as he put up 27 DK points in a wildly impressive effort against New England. I would still tend to think that was an aberration and not something we should chase. Mills is only 26th in FPPD, 23rd in pressured completion rate, and 32nd in clean completion rate. What’s interesting with Mills is the way to get to the Colts is through the air as they sit 30th in DVOA against the pass and they have given up the most passing touchdowns at 15 despite facing the fourth-fewest attempts. I suppose that if you play 20 lineups, you can make the argument but we have a very strong value at the position that I already love. 

RB – We can continue to safely avoid the Texans running backs for DFS. David Johnson has taken over the lead in snaps at 42% but also sits third in carries behind Mark Ingram and Phillip Lindsay. Johnson is second on the team with 16 targets (yes, that qualifies for second on the Houston offense) but that’s barely three targets per game. It’s not enough to try and guess right for Johnson and the scoring upside is non-existent. Ingram will get the majority of the rushing attempts with three games over 13 carries on the season, but only one time has that resulted in more than five DK points. There’s no tangible reward for going this contrarian, even on a smaller slate. 

Update – If you needed more reason to skip these backs, lineman Laremy Tunsil is out as well.

WR – We faded Brandin Cooks last week facing the Patriots but it’s a really good time to get back on board. Cooks was very quiet last week as we predicted but even after the dud, Cooks still is third in air yards share at 47.5%, second in target rate, and inside the top 12 in receptions and yards. The quarterback play is far from a guarantee but Cooks gets such a massive share of the passing game and he’s so inexpensive that I feel comfortable playing him in all formats. Indy could be without Rock Ya-Sin and Xavier Rhodes this week, leaving Cooks with an even more appealing matchup. 

Past that, Chris Moore popped up this past week with the injuries the Texans are dealing with. He was signed to the actual team from the practice squad and caught all five of his targets on 62% of the snaps. Danny Amendola was out and Moore has played 42% of the snaps from the slot, so he could be a punt but he needs Amendola to remain out. Let’s see what the week of practice brings us. 

Update – Amendola is questionable coming into the weekend but never logged a full practice all week.

TE – Both Pharaoh Brown and Jordan Akins continue their timeshare at the position with at least 54% of the snaps but neither has a target share over 9%. Even at the minimum price, there is no particular reason to punt especially with the tight end I already have my eye on. 

D/ST – The Texans defense sits 25th in sack percentage, bottom five in pressure rate, and sit 15th in total DVOA. While they have generated eight turnovers so far, Indy is giving up just a 25% pressure rate. Houston is cheap so maybe I would use them as a total punt if I loved the rest of the lineup, but that would be the extent of it. 

Cash Plays – Cooks

GPP Plays – Mills, Moore if Amendola is out

Colts

QB – You can consider Carson Wentz and I can guarantee that GravMatt will be playing him in at least one lineup. The Texans are ninth in DVOA against the pass, which is higher than we would expect. The 7:6 touchdown to interception ratio is solid as well. Wentz is only 21st in FPPD but he’s third in deep ball completion rate at 50% and 12th in clean completion rate. The Colts are just 14th in attempts but at this salary, it could only take one or two deep balls to pay off. I would prefer the running game for the most part in this contest, however. 

RB – Jonathan Taylor had the breakout game that we’ve been hinting at for the past couple of weeks but it came through the air for the most part with 116 receiving yards and a score. His 9.6% target share is not the worst ever, but he’s also fifth on his team in targets so I’m not sure we should continue to expect massive games receiving. What we do love is his continued work in the RZ as JT sits third in RZ carries and has just one touchdown. That will not continue and Houston is 30th in DVOA against the run and has given up 562 yards on the ground. The mid-range in running back is crazily crowded this week but Taylor is absolutely in that mix and he could have another monster game, this time coming from his rushing production. 

WR – It may not be the largest pie out there but Michael Pittman has all the metrics of an alpha receiver that we want. He has a 25.3% target rate, six RZ targets, is ninth in routes run, and has an air yard share of 36.7%. Pittman is also 11th in receptions and inside the top 20 in yards on top of that, so the salary is fairly low. What could throw a monkey wrench into things is T.Y. Hilton has returned to practice for the first time this season. With him back in the mix, it nixes Paris Campbell and Zach Pascal out of my builds, assuming all three are healthy. I still would fully expect Pittman to be the alpha but would have concerns about how the share is divided. Any matchup on Venrnon Hargreaves or Terrance Mitchell of Houston would not concern me. 

Update – Hilton is expected to be back this week but we will know for sure Saturday. If he’s back, I’d be a little less likely to mess with this corps. It would be fairly amusing if Hilton had a big game because historically, he’s smashed the Texans at home. It’s just not the best idea fresh off the IR.

TE – If you wanted to take some kind of chance with the Colts, you could take a swing at Mo Alie-Cox who has started to take targets from Jack Doyle. Over the past three weeks, Alie-Cox has 11 targets to just four for Doyle and he’s had three EZ targets in that time as well. He did score twice and without a touchdown, you may not get much production out of him but the Texans are tied for the most touchdowns, they have allowed the fourth-most yards and the second-most receptions to the position. He would be on my radar if you’re playing 20 lineups or more, although I plan on spending up at the position. 

D/ST – Well, at least this unit isn’t $4,900 like the Patriots were last week. The Colts are fine at the salary as Mills still has gotten sacked 11 times already and Indy has forced nine turnovers through five weeks. They are right in the middle of the pack in sack percentage at 6.1% so if I wind up with $3,500 left, I’d be fine playing them. I won’t go out of my way to jam them in. Additionally, the Colts are 23rd in total DVOA so there is nothing special here. 

Cash Plays – Taylor

GPP Plays – Pittman, Hilton, Alie-Cox

Packers at Bears, O/U of 44 (Packers -4.5)

Packers 

QB – Can you play Aaron Rodgers on any given Sunday? Of course. It’s Aaron Rodgers. However, this is not going to be a week where I’m actively going after him. Chicago is fourth in DVOA against the pass and they have only allowed the 12th fewest yards passing in the league. That never matters much to Rodgers but he is just 15th in FPPD, ninth in touchdowns, and just 21st in passing yards. Rodgers is 21st in attempts as well and it does help his cause that he is fifth in RZ attempts. Given the slate in front of us, I’ll have other targets as a higher priority. 

RB – It can be frustrating to play Aaron Jones. There’s nothing wrong with playing one of the best backs in football but the ceiling game can be hard to capture and A.J. Dillon is a thorn in his side for fantasy production. I’m not saying we should but into Dillon scoring over 17 DK last week because he’s not going to go 4/49/1 in the receiving game very often. What I’m saying is Dillon has 33% of the attempts from the position and he’s split the targets by a 10-20 split with Jones. With Dillon taking a third of the work, it does make it harder for Jones to go nuts even though it is very obviously possible. The price is solid at $7,300 for Jones and in fairness, he’s eighth in carries and 15th in targets among his position. Only three players have a higher number of RZ attempts than Jones and he is tied for third in RZ targets. The matchup is not the friendliest since the Bears have allowed 456 yards on the ground and only 176 through the air. It will be interesting to see how the field treats him but I’m betting he slots in as a very strong GPP play as a pivot off the passing game. 

WR – All hail Davante Adams who remains one of the safer bets in fantasy. Despite being only 22nd in routes run, Adams is first in targets, first in air yards, fifth in air yards share, third in deep targets, fifth in RZ targets, and first in target rate, receptions, and yards. The scariest part of all of this is he only has two scores so far and ranks fifth in unrealized air yards. He’s the WR4 on the year and has a much larger ceiling to get to as well. He will Miley draw Jaylon Johnson who has had an outstanding year thus far with a 41.2% completion rate allowed on just 17 targets. Additionally, he’s sitting at a 0.95 FPPT and I felt out do not care. There’s not a corner in the league that can shut down the Adams/Rodgers connection. 

Randall Cobb came back to Earth last week with only three targets on just 54.7% of the snaps. That’s going to leave him as a touchdown or bust candidate although rolling in the slot against Duke Shelly is an advantage for Cobb. Shelly has allowed a 77.8% coach rate on nine targets and Rodgers could try and pick on him a little bit with Cobb. Allen Lazard continues to be the “WR2” in snaps at 85.9% but he’s a cardio king with just a 7.1% target share since the Packers lost Marques Valdez-Scantling to injury. 

TE – I will continue to ignore Robert Tonyan with a running back-esque 10.6% target share and just nine receptions on the season. 

D/ST – I suppose you can play the Packers defense as they scored seven DK last week without two of their most important players. I don’t love the salary since they sit just 20th in sack percentage and bottom-eight in pressure rate. The saving grace is the takeaways have been there with eight and the Bears have already allowed the second-most sacks in the league. I do wish they were more around the $3,000 range. They are also just 20th in total DVOA, speaking to where they are as a unit. 

Cash Plays – Adams, Jones

GPP Plays – Rodgers, Cobb, D/ST 

Bears 

QB – It appears that Justin Fields will be able to make it for this game but I’m not sure how interested we should be. If the Bears have their way with this game, Fields isn’t going to throw a whole lot as he has not exceeded 20 attempts in any game. He does get the ball downfield with the seventh-highest air yards per attempt and he’s eighth in deep ball completion rate. I would bet this is going to be the best day for Fields fantasy-wise out of necessity but Green Bay is 17th in DVOA against the pass and this could go south in a hurry. 

RB – While I firmly believe that Damien Williams is still a strong play, Khalil Herbert emerged as a very strong option as well. They were splitting this backfield a lot more than most of us foresaw. Now, Williams got the only three targets for the running backs and he held an advantage in RZ carries at 3-2 and 2-1 inside the five. Herbert had more carries at 18-16 and gained 11 more rushing yards. He played extremely well and even though he had no receiving work, he remains under $5,000. The Bears are eighth in rushing attempts on the season and clearly want to run the ball and play defense to win games. They aren’t going to put the game in the hands of Fields if they can avoid it and the best way for them to win is to keep Green Bay off the field. The Packers are 18th in yards per carry allowed so far and if Herbert manages to score, he could be a great value. What makes that play even better in GPP is Herbert is a direct pivot off one of the chalkiest plays on the slate. Williams has the likeliest chance to pay off since he’ll get the passing work (it appears) but both backs are extremely viable. 

WR – I don’t know how anyone can have the slightest bit of faith in Allen Robinson or Darnell Mooney. I grant you that the Bears may well have to abandon the run in this game but if not, the production will likely remain minimal. Since Fields took over as the starter, Mooney leads with 16 targets while A-Rob has 14. Neither has a RZ target and neither has an aDOT above Mooney’s 11.9-yard mark. They have only averaged around eight points per game and the offense has frankly been miserable. I would still want to play Robinson because he may draw the majority of Kevin King, who has long been a target of ours. He’s only been targeted six times in his two games but has allowed a 26.6 YPR and has an absurd 4.05 FPPT. If A-Rob can’t get it done here….I don’t know what else to say. Mooney could see some of Chandon Sullivan or Eric Stokes and he has the speed to get by them. It’s just a matter of the ball getting there. 

Update – Kevin King is out and Rasul Douglas (who has been a Packer for about two weeks) will be forced into action. A-Rob has only gotten in one limited practice but there doesn’t seem to be much of a concern he misses the game.

TE – I feel like Cole Kmet should be better with a 15.8% target share but he only has one single RZ target. That’s as many as Jesper Horsted who has played just one game. The only way you go here is if you think the Packers start scoring at will and the Bears can’t stick within the game plan. Past that, there’s no reason to go there. 

D/ST – Green Bay only has five turnovers on the season and Rodgers has been sacked just 10 times. While Chicago is fifth in total DVOA, first in sack percentage, and has seven takeaways…it’s hard to go against Rodgers and company. They’re not even overly cheap, either. 

Cash Plays – Williams

GPP Plays – Robinson, Herbert, Mooney

Chiefs at Washington, O/U of 56.5 (Chiefs -6.5)

Chiefs 

QB – We’re in Week 6 and the QB1 is Patrick Mahomes, to the surprise of nobody. He’s expensive to be sure but he should be and he sits sixth in attempts, fifth in RZ attempts, seventh in passing yards, first in passing touchdowns, and sixth in FPPD. What is crazy so far is the deep ball completion rate is just 33.3%, 23rd in the league. The matchup is pristine as well since Washington is 29th in DVOA against the pass, has given up the seventh-most yards, and the second-most touchdowns. It doesn’t get that much better as far as the matchup goes. 

RB – I said we had a chalky play and I’m talking about Darrel Williams. With the news Clyde Edwards-Helaire missing the next couple of weeks, Williams will take the reins in this backfield and had been taking some chunks out of the backfield work. Coming into this game, he had 20 carries and five targets as the backup in the previous three games. I would be surprised if he doesn’t take the lead and Jerick McKinnon takes the change of pace role. We’ll keep an eye on the practice reports and the coach speak through the week, but Williams appears to be the next man up. For the most part, this is just a salary play. You’re getting the main running back in an excellent offense for under $5,000. As it stands, there is not much to overthink here. Washington has oddly given up six touchdowns receiving already in addition to two rushing touchdowns. With almost 600 scrimmage yards allowed, Williams has a shot for at least 80 all-purpose yards and a score which is well worth his salary. 

WR – I’m going to assume the next position we talk about is chalk because the price is egregious. However, that makes Tyreek Hill one of the most elite GPP plays on the slate if popularity shakes out as I suspect. Hill is way more expensive and the path of least resistance is just playing the tight end. Reek is still 15th in routes, second in receptions, fourth in yards, and 10th in unrealized air yards. He’s also ninth in yards per route and the target rate is sixth in the league. William Jackson will draw some of the work against Hill and he’s been the lone corner that’s played alright with a 1.53 FPPT. Hill kicks into the slot 38.4% of the time so the matchup isn’t super important. 

I suppose you can take a stab at Mecole Hardman who has a 16.4% target share but just a 14.9% air yards share. He rotates into the slot as well but with only three deep targets, it’s a harder sell. 

Update – There was some mild concern about Hill not practicing until Friday, but there seems to be no danger of him sitting at this point.

TE – Every week, we talk about how much we’d love to get Travis Kelce in our lineups but he’s typically at least $8,000 and it can be difficult. He might be coming off two slower games but the man is $7,000. We have value at running back already to make it pretty easy to afford Kelce and a player like CMC, at least I believe so. Kelce is third in routes, first in receptions, second in receiving yards, second in unrealized air yards, and fourth in target share. For context, Darren Waller was more expensive last week. This price does not make sense and he is one of my highest priorities as things stand. 

D/ST – The Chiefs are one of the worst defenses in football by almost every measure. They rank dead last in total DVOA, 31st in sack percentage, have just four turnovers forced and are allowing an average of 31.4 points per game. That’s enough said right there. 

Cash Plays – Mahomes, Williams, Kelce 

GPP Plays – McKinnon, Hardman

Washington 

QB – New Orleans is fifth in DVOA against the pass so maybe it’s not a surprise that Taylor Heinicke struggled last week. Well, this week is a new week and Heinicke is in a massive bounce-back spot for under $6,000. This Chiefs defense is the stone worst right now and they have given up the fifth-most passing yards in the league. He is 14th in FPPD which is not that bad for a backup and Heinicke has been pretty fearless with the ball. That can be a double-edged sword when the defense is good but the Chiefs defense is very much not that. I have zero fear with Heinicke this week and he might be one of my favorite options on the board at the position this week. He’s just too cheap in a game that carries the highest O/U on the slate. 

RB – Antonio Gibson continues to play with a stress fracture in his shin, which is kind of insane to hear for an NFL running back. Gibson is not getting the receiving work we all wanted but he is also sixth in carries across the entire NFL and ninth in rushing yards. While we didn’t see the Bills really hammer the Chiefs on the ground, they just made their bones through the air and Washington should be more balanced. They just miss out on the top 10 for rushing attempts per contest and the Chiefs have allowed the third-most yards per carry at 5.2 yards and almost 700 scrimmage yards. Gibson should be able to find plenty of success on the ground and even with a slightly lower floor than may be perceived, it’s hard to pass on him under $7,000. J.D. McKissic has an 11% target share and if you think this game really goes up and down, you can save money and take the gamble with him. KC has allowed the fourth-most receiving yards to the backs and McKissic (and Gibson) can give this linebacker corps fits. 

WR – This is about the textbook definition of smash spot for Terry McLaurin and he’s not expensive enough. I mean if he was $8,000 I’m not sure he’d be expensive enough. Since Week 2 when Heinicke took over full time, only Davante Adams and Cooper Kupp have more targets than McLaurin. Only five players have a larger share of the air yards and only three have a larger share of the targets. He’s inside the top 12 in receptions, yards, and unrealized air yards and this could be a game where the yards get realized. KC has only seen the sixth-fewest receiver targets but has allowed almost 800 yards and seven touchdowns. McLaurin is going to eat and even if he sees Charvarius Ward, it will. Not. Matter. 

Update – So the Chiefs are going to be without Ward and lineman Chris Jones. That is awful news for them but we need to keep an eye on McLaurin. He was added to the injury report Friday. Generally, that ends very poorly but Washington says it was very precautionary. Additionally, Curtis Samuel is out and Dyami Brown is questionable. Carter could well be a value in this game.

We’ll need to see how the practice reports shake out. Curtis Samuel and Dyami Brown are both banged up and DeAndre Carter stepped up for 69.8% of the snaps and saw eight targets. He converted for 4/62 and if he has an elevated role, the minimum price is appealing as a punt to fit some other things. 

TE – I can already tell you that I’m very excited for a Washington stack with a Kelce run-back and Ricky Seals-Jones would be part of that stack. He is far too cheap for the spot and he stepped directly into the Logan Thomas role with 98% of the snaps, had eight targets, three RZ targets, and two EZ targets. That absolutely plays at $3,000 and KC is tied for the fourth-most receptions surrendered to the position and dead last in yardage. 

D/ST – Washington couldn’t slow down the Saints and despite their issues, Kansas City is much more talented than New Orleans. Even at just $2,000, I’m not touching them. 

Cash Plays – McLaurin, Heinicke, Gibson, Seals-Jones

GPP Plays – Possibly Carter 

Rams at Giants, O/U of 48.5 (Rams -9.5)

Rams

QB – Matthew Stafford is well in play this week as usual at the helm of one of the better offenses in football. Stafford is only 16th in attempts but he makes up for the slightly lower volume with the seventh-most deep attempts and the ninth-most RZ attempts. Stafford also sits third in yards, fifth in air yards, and eighth in FPPD. There is not much to hate on here as the Giants are 22nd in DVOA against the pass and they have given up 10 touchdowns so far. Stafford should have his way with this defense and I will certainly have a game stack with him at the center of it with other pass game options. 

RB – It was an overall weird night for the Rams last Thursday night as the offense wasn’t exceptional in a smash spot and it appeared that Darrell Henderson and Sony Michel split work. Michel carried the ball 11 times but the vast majority of that came on one series when Henderson had an injury crop up with his arm. It was frustrating to see Michel poach a late touchdown but overall, I’m not sure we shouldn’t expect Henderson to be the lead dog in the backfield. He’s logged at least 16 touches every single game he’s played in and has a 7.5% target share in a crowded offense. With the Giants getting gouged on the ground to the tune of the third-most rushing yards of 615 through five weeks, Henderson has a dynamite spot. We played Zeke last week at $7,000 in this exact matchup and Henderson checks in $1,000 cheaper than that. With the volume we can expect, he’s a strong value on the slate. 

WR – Cooper Kupp had a “down” game but still scored 16.2 DK points and Stafford missed him horribly on at least two targets, one of which would have been a touchdown. I’m pointing that out to prove that Henderson, Kupp, and Robert Woods can all co-exist within the same game in this offense. Woods was reintroduced into this offense with 14 targets for 12/150. It’s been a long time coming but the offense will always work better when both these receivers are thriving. Woods will draw some of James Bradberry which was a touch concerning last year but he’s struggled this year with a 2.24 FPPT and a 13.3 YPR allowed. Kupp is up to 56% in the slot and Logan Ryan will see the majority of those plays and he’s allowed a 70% catch rate on 10 targets. It’s much easier to play Woods now because McLaurin is right there cheaper than Kupp, but both are well in play. I would still reserve Woods for GPP just in case. Both Van Jefferson and DeSean Jackson could take a deep ball but D-Jax only has 11 targets in the past three weeks compared to 16 for Jefferson. I will say D-Jax is number one in yards per route while Jefferson is 48th, so that speaks to what the roles are. 

TE – The price is sort of up there for Tyler Higbee, although there is a safety that comes with him. He does have an 11.8% target share which is fine but my fear would be Woods coming on. Is there a ceiling that comes with Higbee if Kupp and Woods are getting the targets they did last week? At least for one game, the answer is no because he only saw two total targets. The touchdown saved him and in honesty, he’s in a no man’s land for fantasy. I will spend up or down, leaving Higbee alone in a game where we wouldn’t project the Rams to have to press the gas pedal to score. 

D/ST – If you didn’t know already, look at what score the Patriots defense put up last week against the Texans offense. The Rams are facing the B team for the Giants in all likelihood but you would want around 15 DK points from them to pay off $4,700. I will have zero interest in that salary. 

Cash Plays – Henderson, Stafford, Kupp

GPP Plays – Woods, D-Jax, Jefferson, Higbee 

Giants 

QB – We’ll have to update things later on in the week. Daniel Jones has to clear concussion protocols and that will dictate a good bit about the offense. Mike Glennon was barely passable in relief and we have enough of a sample of him in the NFL that we won’t look that direction. 

Update – Jones is on track to play this week so perhaps he volume works out for him. The Rams are only 16th in DVOA so they haven’t been the scary matchup we’ve been accustomed to in recent years.

RB – I don’t want to cast him aside outright but I’m not sure how much Devontae Booker I will have on this slate. For $500 less, we can play Williams from KC, and for $600 more we can just play Henderson on the other side of this game. Booker scored twice and gobbled up snaps and touches in the wake of Saquon Barkley being injured last week. Now, Booker handled 88% of the snaps and 19 total touches on four targets, playing most of the game with a backup quarterback as well. That is a strong point in his favor because getting that style of volume at this salary is fantastic. I do think we project a game script where they trail so he has some safety built-in with receptions, especially if the Giants are still dealing with injuries to skill players. We may not have a ton of super expensive backs but the mid-range is super crowded this week. My early read is Booker is more than fine, but I like others better. The Rams have given up over 670 scrimmage yards so Booker is not off the table completely. 

WR – As it is for the rest of the team, we can’t do anything until we see who is available for the Giants. Kadarius Toney completely broke out on Sunday and he’s moved around with 37.3% of his snaps in the slot. The 2.73 yards per route is 14th and he’s looked excellent with the ball in his hands and a very tough player to defend. Even if Sterling Shepard and Darius Slayton come back, I’d be surprised to see Toney retreat to the bench. In addition, the Giants will almost surely be without Kenny Golladay. It could be another very big game for Toney, but we have to see who’s in uniform for the team. The good news is Jalen Ramsey won’t shadow and that is a giant help. 

Update – Alright, here’s what we know. Shepard is back, Toney and Slayton are questionable, and Golladay is out. What that means for me is I would only look at Toney IF Slayton still sits. If all three are active, it’s probably a good time to be cautious. I would still prefer Toney of the three, since Shepard will see more of Ramsey from the slot. If Slayton is out, I’m much happier to play Toney.

TE – The Giants spent most of the game without Shepard, Slayton, Golladay, Jones, and Saquon. Evan Engram managed four receptions for 55 yards. It’s very difficult to have any faith in that and I’m playing Seals-Jones in nearly every lineup where I could theoretically afford Engram. 

D/ST – We will also have zero interest on this side against one of the better offenses in football. They are only 28th in sack percentage and 29th in pressure rate. If you give Stafford and that group mostly free rein, they are going to put up a lot of points. 

Cash Plays – Toney if Slayton is out

GPP Plays – Jones, Shepard, Booker

Bengals at Lions, O/U of 48 (Bengals -3.5)

Bengals 

QB –  This is a great spot for Joe Burrow as the Lions have allowed over 1,300 yards on the fewest pass attempts in the league. That would explain ranking 27th in DVOA against the pass and Burrow is fifth in yards per attempt and 11th in FPPD. The only real issue holding him back is the lack of volume right now as he sits 26th in attempts and just 29th in RZ attempts. The kid gloves might be coming off with 70 attempts over the past two weeks and he’s been over 20 DK points in both games. Granted, one of those games hit overtime but still. I do like the spot for him to take advantage of the secondary and I think we see another long bomb touchdown with a certain receiver on the other end. 

RB – This is absolutely a spot where you’re hoping either Joe Mixon is healthy and takes his normal workload (unlike last week) or he sits entirely. Mixon had just 10 carries and played only 28% of the snaps last week which frankly makes it look like an egregious decision to let him play. There was really no point to it. If we know he’s better this week, he joins the mid-range fray as an option as well. Much like Gibson, the passing work isn’t there like you hoped with just 10 targets on the season. With the Lions yielding 562 yards on the ground with six touchdowns already, Mixon may not need the passing work to put up a big number. The Bengals have to hope Mixon is better because Samaje Perine has entered the Covid protocols and will likely miss Sunday’s game. 

Update – Mixon is said to be ready for a full workload this week according to coach Zac Taylor. If that’s the case, Mixon is not nearly expensive enough.

WR – It’s really hard to not have Ja’Marr Chase as one of the better plays at the position this week. He’s only trailing Randy Moss in fantasy points through the first five games of a career and that is extremely high praise. Chase has broken a reception of at least 34 yards in all five games and has found the end zone in four of five games as well for five total touchdowns. He has the highest air yards share in football, sits third in deep targets, and seventh in yards despite just 23 receptions. The past two weeks have been great for him with 19 total targets and he is the alpha in the offense, period. Detroit is down to their third and fourth corners as starters so there is no matchup to worry about. 

I still will continue to stack Burrow with Chase and Tee Higgins as opposed to Tyler Boyd because when they have all been active, Boyd has 18 targets compared to 22 for Higgins. The second-year receiver has not hit under double-digit DK points as well and he should not be the cheapest of the three receivers. Make no mistake, Chase is the main target but Higgins is a strong secondary one in my eyes. 

TE – Not that it was any kind of brave stance but I am happy to see C.J. Uzomah go back to fantasy irrelevance. The passing game will have a tough time sustaining the three receivers, let alone a tight end and Uzomah only has a 9.2% target share. 

D/ST – This play makes plenty of sense since the Lions have allowed 14 sacks on a 26.3% pressure rate and Cincy is 13th in sack percentage. The Bengals have also forced five turnovers and sit seventh in total DVOA. The price is a hair higher than I’d want but it seems like that’s the case with every defense this week. 

Cash Plays – Burrow, Chase, Higgins

GPP Plays – Mixon, Boyd, D/ST 

Lions 

QB – We’ve seen the floor for Jared Goff lately with under 10 DK points in two of the past three games. Cincinnati is still 12th in DVOA against the pass and has only allowed six touchdowns to this point. Goff is fifth in attempts but the volume isn’t always going to save him because he’s 27th in FPPD. He’s also thrown just seven touchdowns on the season and it’s very hard to have any sort of trust here. With multiple quarterbacks that are under $6,000, Goff is a fairly easy pass for me. 

RB – The Lions backfield is the perfect example of why snap counts are important, but they are also just one tool in the toolbox. Last week saw D’Andre Swift play over 70% of the snaps and he rolled up 102 scrimmage yards with a score and added six receptions for a total of 17 touches. Just looking at that, you may think that Swift is taking over the backfield but not so fast. Jamaal Williams only played 32% of the snaps but he touched the ball 15 times. This approach from Detroit is completely understandable but it does cap the ceiling Swift carries every week. His salary is low enough that he is well in play and the Bengals are tied for the second-most receptions given up against backs. I like Swift for GPP but we can’t exactly trust him in cash with Williams soaking up so much usage. Swift should continue to be on the low side of popularity and with a team-leading 21.6% target share, he makes a lot of sense as a run-back for a Bengals stack. 

WR – I’m not sure I want to mess with anyone past Amon-Ra St. Brown, who appears to be coming on in his rookie year with two straight weeks with eight targets. Now Quintez Cephus joins Tyrell Williams on the IR and there are not many bodies left. In the past two weeks, St. Brown has had an air yards share of 18.4% but has a 23.5% target share. No other receiver is in double digits in that time and St. Brown has been in the slot for 64% of the time, leaving him on Mike Hilton most of the time. Hilton has allowed an 82% catch rate and a 1.81 FPPT so St. Brown is still fairly cheap for his new role. 

TE – The metrics certainly still point to T.J. Hockenson being an elite option at the position but the results have been….not good in the past three weeks. The total in those three weeks has only been 13.4 DK points on 13 targets and the price just isn’t really moving. He is still sixth in targets, eighth in RZ targets, fifth in receptions and eighth in yards but the bulk of it has come from the first two weeks. There has to be a big game coming with these types of metrics but I would reserve my Hockenson lineups for game stacks. The Bengals have yet to play any tight end of repute but they also have only allowed 153 yards to the position so far on just 16 receptions. 

D/ST – There is a lot of risk to this play but Detroit is quietly fourth in pressure rate and sixth in sack percentage on the season. Joe Burrow has been brought down 14 times already and they have turned the ball over seven times, which is good news. The bad news is they also sit 30th in total DVOA so they could wind up getting gashed in every facet by the Bengals offense. Still, they are so cheap that if they can get 3-4 sacks and a turnover, that could be enough to get them there. 

Cash Plays – Swift, St. Brown 

GPP Plays – Hockenson, D/ST 

Chargers at Ravens, O/U of 52 (Ravens -2.5) 

Chargers 

QB – Just putting aside fantasy for a minute, this quarterback matchup is the best of the weekend in my eyes and will be wildly entertaining to see Justin Herbert face off against another young gun. Herbert is coming off just a monster game (as is his counterpart) with over 45 DK points and he’s just playing phenomenal ball right now. He’s put himself on the forefront of the MVP conversation in the early going and his arm is flat-out special. After five weeks, he checks in fourth in yards, seventh in air yards, second in attempts, fourth in RZ attempts, and 12th in FPPD with the third-most touchdown passes. With Baltimore only ranking 20th in DVOA against the pass and giving up the fourth-most passing yards, Herbert is a dynamite play again this week in all formats. 

RB – Perhaps the largest knock on Austin Ekeler coming into the season was the potential lack of RZ work. Well, he has answered that concern in spades as he is fourth in RZ rushing attempts and 11th in RZ targets among backs while averaging almost 25 DK points per week. Since Week 1 when he was fighting an injury, he’s had at least five targets in every single game and the low mark for touches is 17. He is a workhorse in about every sense of the word, so I don’t believe him to be overpriced at all. The matchup used to be scary but the Ravens defense isn’t quite as good as it has been in the recent past. Also, the Chargers offense is so difficult to defend overall and Ekeler is sixth among backs in receptions so the floor is high as well. 

WR – I tend to think that Keenan Allen will close the gap a little bit on Mike Williams in fantasy points since Williams is leading 114.1 to 76.9 but I’m becoming less sure each week. Williams has just two fewer targets on the year but has a higher air yards share by almost 10%. Both players are in the top seven in receptions on the year and Williams holds a serious edge in yards at 471-369. He also has six EZ targets to three although Allen holds the lead in RZ targets at 9-5. This game is shaping up to be a huge shootout and my only beef with Williams is the price. He’s the WR3 and with the targets being so close, Allen at $6,400 is an easier play to fit in. Allen also plays in the slot a lot more and sees mostly Tavon Young in the alignment. Young has allowed a passer rating of 146.1 on nine targets so far while Williams gets Marlon Humphrey. He’s allowed just 13 receptions on 24 targets for a 1.75 FPPT. Both are well in play but I would prefer Allen just by a hair. 

Update – Williams has not practiced all week and if he’s out, Allen is a stone cold lock in cash games.

TE – Donald Parham has had a touchdown heater with one in each of the past two games but he’s seen a total of five targets and has only carved out a 6.3% target share in those two games. Jared Cook is sitting at 12.7% and is still the much better and safer play for just $300 more. Cook is only on the field about 60% of the time but he’s eighth in routes and just outside of the top 12 in both receptions and yards. It’s interesting to see that he’s seventh in unrealized air yards and Baltimore has had issues with tight ends all year, by the numbers. They have faced Kelce and Waller so grain of salt there but Cook is always viable in a stack with Herbert and another Charger. 

D/ST – It can be difficult to get too excited to play defense against the Ravens (i.e. the Lamar Jackson Show) because it can be hard to see any upside. The Chargers are only 16th in sack percentage and Jackson has been brought down 13 times. Baltimore only has six turnovers on the season and the Chargers have been so poor stopping the run, they could get trampled. LAC is also only 18h in total DVOA so they don’ seem to be the greatest fit ever. 

Cash Plays – Herbert, Ekeler, Allen, Williams

GPP Plays – Cook 

Ravens 

QB – Not to be outdone by Herbert, Lamar Jackson had a masterful game on Monday night. He overcame a bad fumble to post one of the best games of his entire career and put the Ravens squad on his back with a mind-boggling 504 yards of total offense. Jackson became the first player ever to throw for over 400 yards and complete at least 86% of his passes and I’m not sure the ’86 Bears were stopping him last week. His touchdown rate came up to 4.8% but is still lagging behind his career mark of 6.4% which means we should have more to come. Jackson is first in air yards per attempt, first in air yards, fifth in yards, fifth in deep ball completion rate, and second in FPPD. If you’re not playing one of the quarterbacks in the Chiefs game, this game is surely the next stop. The Chargers do rank 11th in DVOA against the pass but I’m not sure I care when Jackson is sitting at this salary. 

RB – Baltimore had their streak of 100-yard rushing games snapped last week but they might get right back on track in this one. LA has been decimated on the ground and has given up the most rushing yards to backs in the NFL at 679 through five games. They have faced the seventh-most attempts but teams tend to attack your weakness and the tandem of Cleveland last week and Baltimore this week is a horrible 1-2 punch for the Chargers defense. Latavius Murray would likely be the lead back again but I’m interested to see if Ty’Son Williams has left the doghouse yet. We’ve said it before – YPC isn’t everything but when Murray sits at 3.4 yards for the season and Williams sitting at 5.5 in mostly the same offense is saying something. Williams has had issues with ball security and blitz pickup, which will get any back off the field in a hurry. It’s still a situation to monitor but one of these Ravens backs shapes up to be a fantastic play on Sunday. 

WR – We should expect rookie Rashod Bateman to make his debut this week but the star of this corps is still Marquise Brown and the price is flat disrespectful. He’s averaging almost 22 DK points and is still under $6,000. He’s been moving around with 21% of his snaps in the slot so I’m not exactly worried about the matchup. Brown is eighth in yards, has scored five times, and if he catches even one of his drops in Detroit he would be a top-five receiver on the year. The Chargers boast Michael Davis, Asante Samuel Jr., and Chris Harris at corner but Brown has the speed to beat any of them on any play. Across the past 12-14 games dating back to last year, Brown has been one of the most consistent receivers in fantasy. 

TE – Holy smokes Mark Andrews was great on Monday night. He made big catch after big catch and put up 44 DK points, which is just nuts. You obviously can’t expect that again but his salary was released before the game and he’s coming on a little bit. He’s been over 18 in two of his past three games and he’s fifth in routes, fifth in air yards share, second in total air yards, first in yards and second in receptions. Sure, one massive game helps a ton but the six RZ targets are fourth as well. We’re not going to see the Ravens pass so much very often, but the tools are all there and if you don’t go Kelce, Andrews is a phenomenal play here. The Chargers have allowed the third-most yards against the position along with being tied for the most touchdowns allowed at four. 

D/ST – We’re at the point that I won’t touch a defense who’s up against LA. That’s a wildly talented unit and the Ravens just got pushed around by *checks notes* Carson Wentz. 

Cash Plays – Jackson, Hollywood, Andrews

GPP Plays – Murray 

Vikings at Panthers, O/U of 44.5 (Vikings -1.5)

Vikings 

QB – I’ve happily played Kirk Cousins on a couple of slates this year, but this one doesn’t strike me as another week to test it. Cousins is a better player than he typically gets credit for but I’m also not going out of my way to play him in tougher matchups. Carolina checks that box sitting second in DVOA against the pass and they have allowed the fewest yards so far on the second-fewest attempts. They also have yielded just seven touchdown passes and can get pressure like few other teams thus far. Cousins deserves credit for ranking 10th in pressured completion rate at 49.3% but this defense is tough and we don’t need to force it, especially on the road. 

RB – We will have to circle back when we know more but the broad strokes here are if Dalvin Cook plays and is ready to roll, you’re not getting him under $8,000 very often regardless of the matchup. Likewise, if Cook sits again, Alexander Mattison is still wildly cheap at $6,200. He’s put up 26 and 30 DK in games that Cook hasn’t been active for this year and has touched the ball a total of 64 times in those two games. It has to be noted that Mattison got those starts in a smash spot against the Lions and Seahawks. Maybe he doesn’t put up 26 or more against the Panthers, who have only allowed 433 scrimmage yards to backs. It would still be hard to overlook a player who has averaged 32 touches in Cook’s absences. Let’s see what the practice reports bring us. 

Update – I’m very tempted to have some exposure to Cook this week. All the attention is on the mid-range and he’s sooooooo cheap. I get the matchup is terrible, but this is Dalvin with no injury designation under $8,000. Normally the field flocks to him and by all expectations, they are not in this spot.

WR – Adam Thielen has really kind of struggled after the explosion in Week 1 and we see what he looks like when he’s not scoring and it’s not always going to be pretty. He is down to 70th in yards per route and outside the top 30 in yardage so far. We can’t even blame unrealized air yards because he’s 40th in that metric. All this is coming with the fourth-most routes in the league and with the matchup, he’s not that interesting to me. 

Justin Jefferson remains in the top 10 in routes, receptions, yards, and he’s 23rd in yards per route. He’s also in the top 12 in air yards share and targets overall and the individual matchup may not be that bad for him. He should get plenty of C.J. Henderson or Donte Jackson, who both have allowed at least a 1.88 FPPT. I’m not making him a priority since I don’t particularly trust Cousins in the matchup but he will surely not be popular. 

TE – It always seems like you can maybe play Ty Conklin but the reality is in four games, he hasn’t crossed 8.1 DK points. Conklin is 10th in routes and 10th in receptions but is also just 18th in yards and 19th in RZ targets. The Panthers have only allowed 214 yards and two scores so the 13.6% target share is fine, but not exactly worth paying for in my eyes. 

D/ST – I played them last week and I may go back to the well, although the matchup is tougher. The Vikings are third in sack percentage, second in pressure rate, and are only one sack away from the lead in the league. Carolina is tied for the fourth-most sacks given up so they can get home, but the return of a star player lowers their appeal. 

Cash Plays – Cook 

GPP Plays – Jefferson, Thielen, D/ST 

Panthers 

QB – Things totally bottomed out for Sam Darnold last week with just nine DK points but he’s played so well for the most part that I’m not shy to go back to him. It needs to be pointed out that he’s thrown five interceptions the past two weeks but he’s faced two top DVOA defenses against the pass without a main cog in the offense. While Minnesota ranks sixth in DVOA against the pass (very surprising), Darnold gets that main cog back this week and he’s still 10th in attempts overall and 16th in FPPD. Where Darnold has really shone early is pressured completion rate, which sees him sitting fifth at 56.6%. That’s a valuable skill to have against the Vikings pass rush and he could be a sub-3% play that scores over 20 DK points. 

RB – Welcome back Christian McCaffrey. We’ve missed you. The Panthers cut Rodney Smith after Sunday’s game, which is very telling that CMC will be back this week. He seemingly was close last week so we can feel comfortable playing him in our lineups and he will be chalk this week. Not only is he below $9,000 on DK (insert your favorite GIF of someone laughing), but he is the only back on the slate hat is over $8,000. Just like we saw with Derrick Henry last week, the field will (rightfully) flock to CMC and I will be overweight in GPP as well. You simply don’t get a player of this caliber at this price tag and when you do, you hammer it. He already has over 300 scrimmage yards under his belt in two games and about a quarter worth of playing time this year. CMC is still fourth in the team in targets, which says all you need to know. Minnesota has allowed 790 scrimmage yards against backs so far this year and this is a fantastic spot with an egregious salary. Don’t galaxy brain this one. 

Update – CMC is out and I am sad. Chubba Hubbard racked up 29 total touches last week and was utilized more in the passing game, which was very encouraging. He really shouldn’t be under $6,000 while CMC is inactive. Minnesota is 20th in DVOA against the pass

WR – I can’t do another week chasing my tail with Robby Anderson but this is a fantastic bounce-back spot for D.J. Moore. He finally had a down game but this week he draws a good bit of Patrick Peterson in coverage and he’s allowed a 1.79 FPPT and a 13.9 YPR. Moore is going to give him some issues in this one and he’s bringing an elite set of metrics to the party. He’s in the top 22 in air yards share, air yards, receptions, yards, routes, target share, and yards per route. You honestly can’t ask for much more at this salary and while I won’t have a need in cash with McLaurin, what a pivot Moore could turn out to be. 

TE – With the expectation that CMC is back, it’s really difficult to feel comfortable with either Ian Thomas or Tommy Tremble getting a ton of targets again. Tremble has only played 38% of the snaps the past two weeks while Thomas is at 63% but they have combined for just 13 targets. Some of those are going to funnel toward CMC and I will pass here. 

D/ST – All in all, the Panthers are one of the better options on the slate. They are second in sack percentage while leading the league in pressure rate and they sit third in sacks. Cousins has only been brought down nine times but his pressure rate is over 30%, third-highest among starting quarterbacks. Carolina is also second in total DVOA and sits under $3,000. 

Cash Plays – D/ST 

GPP Plays – Hubbard, Moore, Darnold 

Cardinals at Browns, O/U of 49 (Browns -3)

Cardinals 

QB – It’s been a slow three weeks for Kyler Murray and one stat that jumps out is through those three games, he has a combined 59 rushing yards with one rushing touchdown. That’s not super ideal when a quarterback is only 19th in attempts (though sixth in yards). Kyler is the best at completing the deep ball at a staggering 72.7% and he’s second in clean completion rate and catchable pass rate, so he’s about as accurate as you could ask for. The good news is he’s eighth in RZ passing attempts but the rushing numbers just haven’t been overwhelming so far. Just among quarterbacks, he’s seventh in RZ carries, ninth in rushing yards, and fourth in carries. hose are all fine, but not exactly what we were expecting. Cleveland is only 19th in DVOA against the pass and if they can get pressure on Murray, maybe it forces him to leave the pocket a little bit. I do prefer Mahomes and the players from the Ravens game at this point.

Update – This has turned into a miserable spot for Kyler and the Cardinals. They will be without multiple coaches including head coach Kliff Kingsbury. Kyler’s shoulder is banged up a little, limiting his rushing upside. There is supposed to be wind up to 20 MPH. The whole Cardinals team is mostly a fade for me in this spot.  

RB – It was not a banner day for the duo of Chase Edmonds and James Conner last week. Edmonds was fighting a hammy injury and generated just 34 yards on nine touches while Conner managed 37 yards on 11 touches. When you score a touchdown like Conner did and only manage 10.7 DK points, that’s nothing to get excited about. It has been hard to play either with much confidence and that remains the case this week. Unless one misses, they both have such defined roles that it caps each other. Conner is going to be the man in the RZ with 15 carries while Edmonds is the man in the passing game with a 16.6% target share. Given their prices and the value on the slate, it’s pretty easy to fly on by these players. If you want to attack the Browns defense, I’d rather go with Edmonds since the passing game is more stable than banking on a touchdown but I don’t see myself playing either. 

WR – This may be my least favorite part of the article because I’m not sure how to project this receiving corps. We saw DeAndre Hopkins get back in the groove a little bit last week with a score and 6/87 but he only had nine targets. That’s the most Nuk has had all year with just a 21% target share. My view on him hasn’t changed very much as I think he’s more WR2 with upside but he’s still very much priced as a WR1. The rest of the corps in A.J. Green, Rondale Moore, and Christian Kirk all split 13 targets which are so thin that it’s difficult to get after. 

The only thing to hold on to is Moore and Kirk split snaps about right down the middle this past week so perhaps it’s a sign that Moore will get involved to a higher degree. Moore has played most of his snaps in the slot (as has Kirk) and that would leave them on Troy Hill for the most part. That’s better than Nuk dealing with mostly Denzel Ward but none of these options are cash plays. I do like trying to get the big game from Moore but it could easily be Kirk as well and that has been the issue with the Cards all year. 

TE – It appears that Maxx Williams suffered a serious knee injury and Demetrius Harris appears to be next in line, sort of. He only has three targets on the season but he played nearly 60% of the snaps last week. If we didn’t have a strong value already in RSJ for Washington, maybe I’d be a little more interested. The difference is we’re projecting Harris to take a role while we’ve seen RSJ do it and the price difference is only $500. 

D/ST – Along with the Panthers, I dig the Cardinals here to some extent as well. Defenses are so tricky sometimes you just play a good one at a cheap price and hope for the best. Arizona is fourth in total DVOA, 11th in sack percentage has forced 10 takeaways, and is allowing under 18 points per game in real life. Cleveland exploded last week but they haven’t been the most prolific offense this season. 

Cash Plays – Kyler, D/ST 

GPP Plays – Edmonds, Moore, Kirk, Nuk, Green

Browns 

QB – I for one will not be buying in o the odd Baker Mayfield game where he barely clipped 300 yards and threw for two scores. Even after that, he sits 26th in attempts, 24th in RZ attempts, 22nd in yards, 31st in deep ball completion rate, and 27th in pressured completion rate. With Arizona sitting third in DVOA against the pass and giving up the eighth-fewest passing yards, it’s very difficult to build a case for Mayfield. 

RB – We got the Nick Chubb monster game and it happened pretty much like we said it had to happen. He didn’t score twice but 161 yards and a touchdown tend to play well for DFS. Nothing really happened this past week to make me re-think this Cleveland backfield. Chubb will always be a strong option as he’s one of the best pure running backs in football. His floor for DFS is super low with just about no passing work and now he’s over $7,000. You have to ask yourself how likely it is he scores 21-24 DK points with just rushing yards and touchdowns before plugging him in. Arizona is 13th in DVOA against the run and they have surrendered 493 yards on the ground. Kareem Hunt remains heavily involved in all aspects of the game and he’s leading the team in targets with a paltry 21. He was the better points per dollar play than Chubb (and has been repeatedly) since he has receiving upside and gets RZ and goal-line work. For me, I’ll continue to utilize the better points per dollar player although both are starting to get up there. There are not many teams that the RB6 in PPR settings is priced $1,000 less than the RB12, but that’s what we have in Cleveland. 

Update – Chubb is out. Hunt is the RB6. Do NOT play cash games without Hunt this week.

WR – There has to be a game where it clicks for Odell Beckham at some point. Through his three games, he’s right around 75% of the snaps, leads the team in targets with 19, and has a 35% air yards share. He’s already 20th in unrealized air yards but only 11 of his 19 targets have been catchable at a 57.9% rate. OBJ is 22nd in deep targets and he is extremely cheap for the upside he possesses. He should face Robert Alford who has been targeted 15 times for a 73.3% completion rate and a 1.79 FPPT. With a passing attack that is so low volume and has tight ends and running backs involved heavily, I’m not looking for a different option in this corps. 

TE – I would have never thought David Njoku would have gone for 30 DK last week, especially with the Chargers secondary on the other side. On the season, he and Austin Hooper have split targets almost right down the middle with Njoku holding a slim 17-16 lead. That’s kind of a problem because they both play over 62% of the snaps but they just crush each other most weeks. Njoku hasn’t cleared four DK points in three games. Hooper has yet to hit double digits so we have better options. 

D/ST – The Cardinals haven’t been special lately on offense but I’m not playing the Browns after watching them get shredded by the Chargers. 

Update – Given all the factors working against Arizona, I am fine with the D/ST in GPP.

Cash Plays – Hunt

GPP Plays – Chubb, OBJ, Njoku, D/ST

Raiders at Broncos, O/U of 44 (Broncos -3.5)

Raiders 

QB – The Raiders are facing a difficult week that includes a coaching change but they specifically left both coordinators in place. The offense should continue to mostly revolve around Derek Carr who has been a strong option for fantasy most weeks. He’s third in attempts, fifth in RZ attempts, second in yards, and third in air yards. Utilizing Henry Ruggs in the passing game is starting to pay off for this offense as it now has a more diverse set of skills and it’s been a big help to Carr. The largest issues are the lack of touchdowns with just eight and sitting 25th in FPPD. Denver is 13th in DVOA against the pass but has also allowed the fifth-fewest yards and only five touchdown passes. I have no real reason to get after Carr this week. 

RB – If Josh Jacobs continues to see five targets a game, that would be a monster boost for his fantasy appeal. I’m not sure I want to project that, but Kenyan Drake has simply not been involved to this point. As we said, I don’t expect a ton to change in this offense since the OC remains in place but the matchup is not ideal for Jacobs. Denver is 10th in DVOA against the run has only given up 344 rushing yards. We can feel great about the volume for Jacobs since he’s had 18 and 20 touches in the past two weeks all we like, but there is not much of a reason to go here with the other players we have in this salary range. Jacobs is a pretty easy back to kick out of the pool this week in my eyes. 

WR – There are only two receivers that have a target share of over 11.9% since Week 1 and they are Henry Ruggs and Hunter Renfrow. Ruggs is not likely to be a high-volume option at just a 16.1% share but he leads the team in air yard share at 30.1%. Ruggs is 11th across the NFL in total air yards and with his elite speed, it can break open a game at any moment. He also has the 14th most unrealized air yards but there is some major volatility. He’s scored under 13 DK points in four of five games and faces some of Kyle Fuller, who doesn’t have the speed to keep up with him. 

The safer play is Renfrow who is mostly in the slot at 59.2% and he’s 15th in receptions. That’s a nice bump on DK and Bryce Callahan plays the slot. He’s only been targeted 12 times and has only allowed 57 yards but Renfrow is such a big part of this offense that I would still trust him in this spot. 

TE – We talked about this last week but the trend continued for Darren Waller and that is he’s not been the target hog we saw in Week 1. In the past four games, he’s only seen 29 targets and that’s tied with Renfrow for the team lead. It’s also under 21% for the target share and he trails Renfrow in both receptions and yards over the past month. Overall, Waller is first in routes, third in yards and receptions, and first in unrealized air yards. I would have to think that Kelce is going to be very chalky so the argument is there to play Waller instead. I’m just not super thrilled to see where this offense has been for Waller in four of five games. 

D/ST – Vegas is 18th in sack percentage and 13th in total DVOA, making them a not-super-appealing option. Denver has only turned it over four times and while Denver has allowed a pressure rate over 30%, it hasn’t killed the quarterback play to this point. 

Cash Plays – Renfrow

GPP Plays – Ruggs, Waller

Broncos 

QB – Teddy Bridgewater did very, very little for the most part last week but managed to turn it on a little bit late and score just under 20 DK points. While he is eighth in air yards per attempt and seventh in RZ completion rate, Teddy B sits 25th in attempts and just 23rd in deep ball completion rate. Combine that with being 18th in FPPD and we don’t have the most appealing option for fantasy. The loss of multiple receivers has not helped but Vegas has allowed the fourth-fewest passing yards on the 12th most attempts and only six touchdowns. Ranking 14th in DVOA against the pass is respectable so I will not have much reason to go here. 

RB – We’re pretty much just treading water in the Broncos backfield. I would love to see Javonte Williams get the lead here but it’s not happening. He and Melvin Gordon split the carries almost dead down the middle this past week as always, with Williams generating 61 rushing yards to 34 for Gordon. What I think happens in this game is the same script we saw for the Bears last week. Both Damien Willams and Khalil Herbert produced, but if you don’t get the touchdown you’re not going to be all that happy. We’ve said for three weeks that we want to get ahead of the Williams breakout game and that theory applies, but this feels like the wrong slate to take that chance with the other backs around him. 

WR – Denver is down to only two receivers that matter for fantasy in Courtland Sutton and Tim Patrick. Sutton is getting up there in salary and I can’t say he’s my favorite target on the slate. Still, since Jerry Jeudy was injured Sutton leads the team in targets with a 27.7% rate and a 47.3% air yards share. He’s also leading in the EZ targets so the value of his role would be the highest to chase. He could avoid Casey Hayward, whose alignments so far would face more of Patrick. He’s been pretty consistent outside the Baltimore game when Drew Lock played with at least 12 DK in four of five games. The target share isn’t bad either at 18.5% but neither are the strongest plays this week. 

TE – I think Noah Fant might be the most boring player at the position to discuss. He’s sixth in routes run and eighth in receptions, both of which are interesting. he’s also 17th in yards and 31st in yards per route. His aDOT is only 6.0 yards and that is the lowest among the options in the Denver passing game. I’ll give him credit for being fourth in RZ targets but overall, there’s not a lot to write home about here. Fant is a great athlete but they aren’t exactly using him as such in this offense. 

D/ST – The Broncos are a strong play in real life as they are only allowing 15.2 points per game, are 10th in total DVOA, and have 12 sacks to go along with the eighth-highest sack percentage in football. Still, I can’t justify this salary as we’re pushing $4,000. Derek Carr is third in sacks taken at 15 but it’s a lot to ask for a return at the price point. 

Cash Plays – None

GPP Plays – Sutton, Williams, Fant, Patrick 

Cowboys at Patriots, O/U of 51 (Cowboys -3.5)

Cowboys 

QB – I will admit that I struggle with Dak Prescott a little bit. He’s wildly efficient right now and playing the best football of his career. He’s only 19th in attempts but he’s top 10 in RZ attempts, yards per attempt, accuracy rating, deep ball completion rate, and catchable pass rate. The touchdown rate of 7.9% is wildly above his career number of 4.8% so that is a small red flag and if he’s not throwing 3-4 scores, throwing it 32 times or fewer will make it a bit difficult to sustain fantasy worth at the salary. With the Cowboys a road favorite, I don’t think it’s wise to slot in Dak for more than 35 attempts at the most and I much prefer Lamar or Herbert in this range. Dallas has shown us how they handle positive game scripts. 

RB – Reading that game script has been important for the Cowboys this season. As we talked about, the passing attack has not been seeing heavy volume for the past month and if you think that script plays out again, Ezekiel Elliott is still cheap. He went for 28 DK last week and his price rose by $100. OK? Thanks for that love DK because there is just no way that should be a thing. Zeke is third in carries across the past four weeks with five rushing touchdowns and 419 rushing yards. He’s not garnering a ton of targets with 14 but it’s just enough to have a little bit of a safety net. Despite New England adding a lot to their front seven in free agency, they sit just 22nd in DVOA against the run and have allowed 490 yards on the ground. The scary part about that is the Pats have faced four of the bottom seven teams in rushing yards per game. This is easily the most accomplished rushing team they have faced and Zeke is a road favorite. He could be very overlooked and if that’s the case, makes for an elite GPP play. Tony Pollard continues to be involved, but it is clear who the alpha in the offense is and that is an underpriced Zeke. 

WR – We’re going to tie this together in the tight end section, but in the past four weeks when the Cowboys have mostly been in winning scripts, Amari Cooper and CeeDee Lamb have been under a 22% target share and the highest score between the two of them has been 18.8 DK from Lamb last week. If we’re thinking the Cowboys are in another positive game script, Lamb and Cooper would be hard-pressed to get to a 3x return here. Cooper has a bit of a tougher matchup on paper against J.C. Jackson who is sporting a 1.40 FPPT on 28 targets so far. Lamb should face Jalen Mills who would be the easier path but neither salary is the most appealing thing ever. I’d rather play the running game and it’s startling to see the next stat. 

TE – Here’s something fascinating – Dalton Schultz leads the Cowboys in targets over the past three weeks and it’s not exactly close. He has 23 targets in that time and Cooper and Lamb have combined for 27. I don’t really expect that trend to continue but the connection between him and Dak has been real. Schultz also leads in RZ targets and has 18 receptions with three touchdowns in the past three games. New England looks great against tight ends but they have played nobodies at the position so far. Schultz is only 20th in routes but he’s second in target rate, fourth in receptions, and fifth in yards. He’s still under $5,000 and all the metrics at hand tell us he shouldn’t be. 

D/ST – If the other sub-$3,000 options aren’t your speed, Dallas is where you should head. They are on the road but they are also sixth in total DVOA and sit second in the league in turnovers forced with 12. While they do sit 30th in sack percentage, it says a lot that they’re forcing turnovers with no sacks. Dan Quinn has made a big difference for this group and the Patriots are tied for the second-most turnovers. Dallas should be able to force a rookie quarterback into a couple of mistakes here. 

Cash Plays – Zeke, Schultz, D/ST 

GPP Plays – Dak, Lamb, Cooper, Pollard

Patriots 

QB – Dallas is seventh in DVOA against the pass and they have 10 interceptions already, but I think Mac Jones could have some moderate value. I use the word moderate with purpose because the highest DK score he’s had so far has been just 17 DK but at $5,100, he does save plenty of salary. The Cowboys have allowed the most passing yards in football in part because they’ve faced the second-most attempts and they’ve given up 10 touchdowns. The rookie is ninth in attempts but only 20th in yards and 30th in FPPD. You’re banking on the script, matchup, and likely some garbage time to get you there but it is possible with such a low price. 

RB – Last week screamed it was a Damien Harris spot until late in the week and he was without four offensive linemen. This week I would lean much more towards playing Brandon Bolden if anyone out of this backfield. The expectation is for the Patriots to trail and if they do, Bolden would be the most valuable Patriots player in the backfield. Since James White has gone down, Bolden has 14 targets, good for an 11.6% target share. White was at an 11.9% share and he would have been an interesting value in his spot. Bolden may not be as skilled as White, but the role is certainly his. It’s not a time to play a two-down hammer back and that is exactly what Harris is. Bolden could be a strong punt if you decide to spend elsewhere, although it’s much easier to just play Darrel Williams. 

WR – It’s very interesting to see that if alignments hold, Jakobi Meyers would not see a lot of Trevon Diggs and that would be a huge boost for Meyers. He is the only Patriots player with a target share over 14% (and the only one I’d be interested in past a tight end) and his air yards share is 29.9%. The lack of touchdowns is simply baffling for his role in the offense and that has to change at some point. Meyers is fourth in routes, 10th in targets, and seventh in receptions. Considering the Cowboys have allowed the third-most yards and are tied for the seventh-most receptions, this is a fantastic spot for Meyers. He could face Jourdan Lewis who has allowed a 1.83 FPPT. There is another clear run-back option after Meyers if you’d like for a mini-stack. 

TE – We’ve come to another strong value as we should project the Patriots to trail and have to throw a lot in this game. Hunter Henry is coming on strong with 19 targets over the past three weeks and he leads Jonnu Smith in snaps and targets in that span. It really seems like he’s gotten up to speed in the offense after an injury in the preseason and only Meyers has more targets in the past three weeks. He also leads in touchdowns with two and Henry is now in the top 12 in routes, receptions, and yards. He would make a lot of sense as a run-back for a Cowboys player. 

D/ST – I will have no Patriots defense here even though they are at home. Dallas only has five turnovers on the year and Dak only has a 13.3% pressure rate with eight sacks taken. 

Cash Plays – Meyers, Henry

GPP Plays – Bolden

Cash Core 4

Kareem Hunt, Khalil Herbert, Travis Kelce, Jakobi Meyers

Lamar Jackson is the highest quarterback in popularity but I’m personally going with Heinicke in cash. Before his dud last week against the Saints, he rattled off three straight QB1 performances.

GPP Core 4 

Chubba Hubbard, Joe Mixon, At Least Two Players from KC/Wash

I’m mixing in anyone from the Chiefs game into every single lineup with two players at a minimum. In one lineup, I do plan to go cheaper at running back over Mixon and Hubbard to play Kelce and Hill together.

Stacks

Chiefs/Washington – All of it. Literally, all of it.

Chargers/Ravens – Herbert, Ekeler, Allen, Williams, Cook – Run-Back – Hollywood, Andrews, Murray, Jackson

Bengals/Lions – Burrow, Mixon, Chase, Higgins – Run Backs – Swift, Hockenson, St. Brown

The next set of games is more of a mini-stack focus for me as opposed to anything over three players.

Texans/Colts – Cooks – Run Backs – Taylor, Pittman

Packers/Bears – Adams, Jones Run-Backs – Robinson, Herbert, Mooney

Cowboys/Patriots – Zeke, Lamb, Schultz, Cooper Run-Backs – Meyers, Henry

Thank you for reading my NFL DFS Game by Game Breakdown Week 6 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 5 NFL DFS GPP slate. For those who haven’t read it yet, please check out the Week 5 Cash Game Checkdown for your bankroll sustaining, cash game build advice before building your NFL DFS GPP lineups.

*Having said that, I saw a lot of lineups last week in the Discord strictly with the GPP article players. 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 will not be an article where I write about Christian McCaffrey, Derrick Henry, Dalvin Cook, Travis Kelce, etc… they’re likely always in a smash spot and worth rostering if that’s what your build calls for. Now, let’s get into it.

Games I’m most interested in getting exposure to:

– Giants / Cowboys
– Titans / Jaguars
49ers / Cardinals
– Packers / Bengals

NFL DFS GPP Quarterbacks

Trevor Lawrence ($5,800 DK / $6,500 FD)

I was a bit surprised when the AETY Model spit out the Titans/Jaguars game as one of it’s favorites in terms of “stack-ability” but when you look at the metrics, this game should offer little-to-none on the defensive side of things… leading to a lot of potential for points. The Titans’ defense grades 25th in pass-defense DVOA while Jacksonville is dead last (32nd). Despite Tennessee struggling to stop the run, and Jacksonville really toning down their fast-paced offense last week against Cincinnati, the AETY Model projects Lawrence for over 35 pass attempts. At these price-tags, I’m going to take a shot on a 2% owned, Trevor Lawrence in what should be one of the sneakier (but ugly) shootouts on the slate.

You want to have some salary relief? Stack up Lawrence, Marvin Jones, Laviska Shenault and run it back with Derrick Henry and AJ Brown.

Dak Prescott ($6,900 DK / $8,100 FD)

When looking at the Adjusted Expected Team Totals tool, the Dallas Cowboys grade out as the number one offense overall for Week 5 NFL DFS. In addition, Dak Prescott equates a 3.6x value on this crazy cheap price-tag on DraftKings. He’s going to be popular, but like last week when we were all in on Jalen Hurts, I don’t really see a need to get much different at the Quarterback position while Prescott is at home against the 24th ranked pass defense in terms of DVOA. You know who to stack him up with!

When looking at the Adjusted Expected Team Totals tool, the Dallas Cowboys grade out as the number one offense

Honorable Mention: Joe Burrow, Kyler Murray, Kirk Cousins, Jalen Hurts

Running Backs

Ezekiel Elliott ($7,000 DK / $8,000 FD)

The Giants’ run defense is arguably as bad (if not worse) than their pass defense and again, I want exposure to this Cowboys offense as they are atop of the Team Totals Tool tab on Win Daily Sports. He’s currently (-150) to score a touchdown and right at 100 all-purpose yards at the Sportsbooks… the knee injury should be nothing to scare you off of Elliott at sub-10% ownership in an excellent matchup with the highest total on the slate.

The Cowboys offense has been incredibly efficient (5th in pass offense DVOA, 1st in run offense DVOA) so I’m not totally against the idea of using Dak Prescott and Ezekiel Elliott together despite the somewhat negative correlation in NFL DFS GPP lineups.

Nick Chubb ($6,700 DK / $7,500 FD)

Welcome back to the GPP article, Mr. Nick Chubb! If you’ve noticed a theme, we’re always looking to attack the Chargers’ on the ground as they’re giving up a ridiculous 5.3 yards per carry to opposing rushers. At 5% ownership, I absolutely love the idea of rolling with Nick Chubb against this Chargers run defense that bleeds points to opposing running backs. His props at the Sportsbooks are right there with Ezekiel Elliott and the matchup is better than Elliott’s… If I trust the AETY Model, I trust Nick Chubb here to blow up the slate at extremely low ownership.

Alexander Mattison ($5,500 DK / $6,500 FD)

If Dalvin Cook is ruled out Sunday morning, Alexander Mattison will be a stone-cold lock in all of my lineups. Simple as that, I don’t care what his ownership turns out to be.

Aaron Jones ($7,900 DK / $8,400 FD)

As much as I love Davante Adams (likely to be 20% owned in Week 5 NFL DFS) in a bounce back spot against the Bengals’ secondary, the AETY Model has a lot of love for Aaron Jones. If you’ve been with Win Daily for the last couple of years, you know that when the AETY Model says to play Aaron Jones, you play Aaron Jones. Like Chubb, Aaron Jones is likely to come in around 5% in ownership giving us a lot of differentiation in our NFL DFS GPP builds.

Honorable Mention: Saquon Barkley, Derrick Henry, Austin Ekeler, D’Andre Swift, Josh Jacobs, Leonard Fournette

NFL DFS GPP Wide Receivers

Justin Jefferson ($7,700 DK / $8,000 FD)

Another sneaky stack that grades out incredibly well for me this week is Kirk Cousins and his number one wideout, Justin Jefferson. The Detroit Lions secondary is absolutely demolished with injury and grades 30th in pass defense DVOA. Justin Jefferson is one of the elite route runners in the NFL and should have an absolute field day at home in the dome against the Lions. The AETY Model projects Justin Jefferson for right around 90 receiving yards and 7 receptions, grading him as the #2 overall wide receiver on this slate behind Davante Adams.

DeAndre Hopkins ($7,600 DK / $7,500 FD)

No idea what FanDuel was doing here with D-Hop’s pricing, lol. Hopkins is still one of the best wide receivers in the NFL and I want to get exposure to this division game with a total right around 50 points. D-Hop will see a lot of Emmanuel Moseley in coverage and that is a matchup I’m always interested in attacking.

Ja’Marr Chase ($5,800 DK / $7,300 FD)

With no Jaire Alexander, the Packers’ defense is honestly atrocious grading 20th in pass defense DVOA (that was with Alexander healthy) and 27th in run defense DVOA. With Joe Mixon banged up and highly questionable to suit up, look for the Bengals to go back to their Zac Taylor roots in a more up-tempo, no-huddle passing attack. Chase should be price in the low-to-mid $6K range on DraftKings so let’s take advantage of the savings while they’re available.

Marvin Jones Jr. ($5,700 DK / $6,600 FD)

Don’t get me wrong, I love Laviska Shenault again this week (AETY Model’s #1 wide receiver value), but let’s not forget about the slate-breaking upside in Marvin Jones. Jones’ enters this week leading the Jaguars with a 23% target share and a ridiculous 44% red-zone target share. Shenault is an excellent value overall but Marvin Jones is the player on this Jacksonville team that offers NFL DFS GPP winning upside, especially when he’s projected to be 2-5% owned.

AJ Brown ($6,500 DK / $6,900 FD)

Unfortunately, it doesn’t appear that we’ll see AJ Brown unowned as he returns to the field in Week 5 as we expected earlier in our research this week, but again, I want exposure to the Titans/Jaguars game and AJ Brown is price at a nice discount on both sites. We know where the production is going to come from on both sides of the football:

– Derrick Henry
– AJ Brown
– Marvin Jones
– Laviska Shenault
– James Robinson

One of the issues I have with other game stacks and what not in DFS is guessing where the production is going to come from. That is a non-issue with this game. You know who the studs are, play them!

Honorable Mention: Davante Adams, Terry McLaurin, Adam Thielen, CeeDee Lamb, Amari Cooper, Brandon Aiyuk, Allen Robinson, Devonta Smith, DJ Moore, Henry Ruggs, Amon-Ra St. Brown, Curtis Samuel

NFL DFS GPP Tight Ends

*If you can afford Darren Waller, you play him. It looks like the majority of the field is going to go down to punt-priced, chalk. I don’t hate any of the chalk options this week, but the easiest way to differentiate in a positive way, it’s avoiding punt-play chalk tight-ends.

Mike Gesicki ($4,200 DK / $5,600 FD)

We all know you cannot run the football against Tampa Bay and the Bucs are a 10-point favorite here giving the Dolphins the pass-happy gamescript as they play catch-up from the get-go. The Bucs grade 25th in DVOA against the tight-end and also give up a significant amount of fantasy points to slot receivers. Mike Gesicki happens to play both of those positions.

Honorable Mention: Darren Waller, Evan Engram, Dalton Schultz, Cole Kmet, Dallas Goedert, TJ Hockenson

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 and slate as sports FINALLY return.

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