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NFL DFS Picks

Welcome home NFL DFS fans! This week, we have another solid slate on DraftKings with big prizes pools to take down so let’s get started with our top NFL DFS picks for this week’s main slate!

For those of you new to Picks and Pivots, the goal of this NFL DFS article each and every week is to provide you a “First Look” overview of the slate where we use DraftKings pricing as a baseline to help us get started. Rather than simply write out the “top plays,” this article will focus on slate strategy and roster construction with a GPP mindset to help you get started on your initial builds. Without further ado, let’s dive in!

NFL DFS Picks and Pivots: Thanksgiving Day Slate

As a kid, it was always logical that birthdays and Christmas were my favorite “holidays” – I mean you wake up and get presents, what more could you ask for?

As an adult (well at least in age), there is no day I look forward to more than Thanksgiving – food, family, and all-day football – what more could you ask for?

Do you know what makes this even better? Our Black Friday deal is simply out of control with EVERYTHING at Win Daily being 50% off – you can get a monthly all-access Gold membership for just $15 or lock in a year for just 50 cents a day or $180 for the year. Seriously – do not miss this. With the NBA just weeks away – there is no better time to join.

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While this Thanksgiving may be a but unique due to the continued pandemic, the one constant will be non-stop DFS for us to tilt and a great three game NFL DFS slate that sets up perfectly for tournament play.

This 3 game main slate will force us to make some critical NFL DFS Picks decisions right off the bat – with game environments that will push optimal plays at high ownership – and that all begins with what to do with DeShaun Watson ($7.4K) as the top QB and arguably top overall play against the Detroit Lions.

Watson is the highest projected scoring player in our AETT Model at Win Daily Sports and as other staff have argued here – this is a do not get cute spot for me. The question is not whether to play Watson – it is how you build around him that will make all the difference.

From a macro level, the Texans-Lions game with a 51 game total is the best pure game environment to attack as we not only have the highest Vegas total but we also have a game with two top 12 teams in terms of pace.

With this being just a 3 game slate, I think going with overloaded stacks is a viable strategy to differentiate yourself versus those who play it more traditional with their stacking. As such – I love the idea of going “all-in” with a Texans aerial attack – pairing Watson with Will Fuller, Brandin Cooks and Jordan Akins.

Now, none of these plays in isolation will be sneaky – Fuller and Cooks are projected to be two of the highest owned plays on the entire slate – but the more pieces you add to this stack the more the cumulative ownership on the Texans will decrease.

Taking this one step further – if you are going to overload on Texans than you are predicting a game script in which Watson and company are in a high scoring and close affair that pushes them to their ceiling – and that means the Detroit Lions run back is critical.

Now figuring out the preferred Lions is not as easy due to injury concerns with Kenny Golladay trending towards missing this game while TJ Hockenson and De’Andre Swift are looking more likely to suit up. If we are going with a four or three man Texans stack, then running it back with two Lions skill players will be at the core of my tournament strategy,

As Adam Strangis pointed out in his Game by Game breakdown – running back is THE spot to attack this Texans defense and so Swift would be a priority run back with either Jones or Hockenson as the secondary play based on your roster construction.

One way to really get different on this slate – stack up both offenses…and wait for it – use either the Texans or Lions DST.

Now, typically using a DST against offenses we are stacking is a “fish move” as the kids say – but I think on this small slate it becomes a really interesting strategy for a few reasons.

First and foremost is salary – these two defenses are the cheapest options on DraftKings and I am a huge believer in never paying for defense – in fact, my typical strategy is to build my lineup and simply fit in whatever DST is left.

Secondly, if we are playing a game script of fast pace and high scoring, that would also result in turnovers or DST scores due to the “shoot-out” nature of the game.

Think about it – the Ravens/Steelers are the “best” defense options on the slate because of the slow pace game environment and low projected points but that game also will mean far fewer chances are taken. If you are playing those defenses – you are playing more for the “points allowed” score in your DFS lineups – whereas if you go with the Texans or Lions DST, you are willing to give up the points allowed for the upside that would exist with a pick 6 or special teams touchdown.

The afternoon slate on Sunday actually showed us a path to how this could work if you need some tangible evidence. The Chargers offense went off for ceiling games with Herbert (30), Allen (34) and Henry (15) all hitting for big scores and you could have run it back with the Jets DST at $2K – who returned 4x value at minimim price due to a fumble recovery, blocked kick and a safety.

Rather than see them as a contra play against your stack – use one of these DST’s as part of your stack – assuming we get scoring from not just the offense but also the defense in this high total game.

NFL DFS Picks and Pivots: Wrap up

This three-game slate is going to have some clear chalk paths so simply telling you to play Watson isn’t going to cut it. “Pivoting” to the Dallas/Washington game and using Zeke, Gibson or McLaurin is not actually a pivot in the sense that ownership is nearly identical to the Texans/Lions.

It also does not mean you have to get crazy and play the “off the wall” plays – in fact, I would argue the total opposite. Play the “right plays” and let those who fade them pay the rake – also, instead of picking which ONE player you want in a stack – pick ALL of them.

Take your stand with games versus players.

Assume the Texans offense ALL goes off and you get every pairing alongside Watson to maximize his DFS output versus simply taking only Fuller OR Cooks.

Go all-in. Take a stand. Grab a beer and some turkey and let’s eat!

Stay locked into the news and make sure you join our Discord – we will talk plays and roster construction leading up to lock and I promise – you won’t want to miss it. We have a free 7 day trial – no risk – just join.

Oh and by the way, we have a massive Black Friday deal coming – so stay tuned!

Make sure you are following the Win Daily crew this weekend – as we have all your NFL Content and a FREE Livestream on Sunday!

Jump in Discord today guys and gals and let’s figure out the best path to profit as we build our bankroll for the NFL weekend!

Make sure you follow me on Twitter at @2LockSports and 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 and slate as sports FINALLY return.

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NFL Thanksgiving Day Game By Game Breakdown

We have a really fun three game slate on tap and it should be a good day of football. I just want to say thank you to everyone that is a member and takes the time out of their lives to read my work. The staff and myself are immensely grateful for all of you and I feel lucky that I have somewhere to spout off about football and sports in general. I hope everyone enjoys their holiday and let’s find those green screens for NFL Thanksgiving Day Game By Game Breakdown! Don’t forget about our Black Friday Deal too, 50% off anything on the site!

Texans at Lions, O/U of 51 (Texans -3)

*NOTE* I’ve said this in Discord a few times but let me repeat myself. I won’t play cash games on a three game slate. There’s too much overlap and everyone wants to play the same players. Just because I’m not playing cash doesn’t mean I’m being silly with my bankroll. I’m dialing back my volume and understanding this slate is highly volatile. Missing just one or two players could end it in a hurry. Please, be smart with your bankroll on today’s slate. We can’t stress this enough.

Texans – Pace is 12th

QB – Taking away a game played in awful weather conditions, Deshaun Watson has been ON FIRE since the coaching change. His floor has been 24 DK and he deserves to be the QB1 in salary on this slate. Not only is he the QB1 in salary, he’s the most expensive player overall. It might not be the hardest task to fit him in either because the salaries are pretty soft overall today. This is not a tough matchup at all for Watson and he’s likely to be pretty chalky overall. Sitting sixth in points per drop back and eighth in points per game is a really nice mix for this game.

Facing off against Detroit should be a pretty easy path for Watson. They rank 25th in passing yards given up per game this season and 23rd in DVOA against the pass. Neither represents much of a challenge and Detroit can’t even get pressure on Watson. The Lions have the seventh-lowest pressure rate in football. That’s not a great mix even though Watson has been sacked the seventh-most times in the league. The bottom line is Watson likely represents the safest floor and highest ceiling at his position on this slate.

RB – I’m a Duke Johnson truther from way back and I was excited that he could get a chance to be a lead back in an offense. No disrespect to David Johnson and his injury but I thought this was the chance for Duke in a good offense. That has not worked out in the results department as Duke has a combined 11.9 DK points in two games on 27 total touches. The matchups haven’t been on the tougher side and this one is the best yet. The question is do we have any confidence in actually playing him at this juncture?

He actually saw his snaps dialed back a little bit. This past week he was down to 77% from 95% in Week 9. Ex-Seahawk C.J. Prosise got five touches in this past game but that’s a pretty thin play on this slate and I think we can pass on him. I’d have a share or two of Duke in GPP, but he’s not my overall favorite at the position today. My 2017 version of a fantasy football player might be frowning at me, but that’s where we’re at in 2020. Duke is in play with the Lions ranking 24th in DVOA against the run but the floor isn’t very hard to find. This is mostly a leverage play off the Watson chalk and a risky one at that.

WR – If DK keeps giving me Brandin Cooks this cheap, I’m going to keep playing him. Will Fuller did have more targets in this past game, but that’s been against the grain under this coaching staff. Cooks has been the target leader since Week 5 and still has that lead even though it’s only a difference of six targets. Fuller holds the lead in air yards but that has left him thinner in the receptions department. Cooks has a 37-29 lead and leads in yards at 496-434. I’ve said it for weeks but when the price is so different between the two, it’s just so much easier to plug in Cooks.

Cooks is almost certainly chalky and draws Amani Oruwariye in coverage. The Lions corner has allowed a 1.60 point per target and a 13.5 yards per reception over 55 targets. Fuller will mostly line up opposite Desmond Trufant who has gotten hit in coverage this year. He’s only played four games but the points per target is over 2.00. There is a good argument that if Fuller comes in as a lower rostered play, you should be over the field on him. If everyone plays Cooks and Fuller is the one that goes off, you could have a huge leg up.

With how unstable the running game is, you can make a strong argument to double stack both receivers here. A potential value play could be Keke Coutee. We saw Randall Cobb leave the game Sunday and he’s already listed as doubtful on this quick turnaround. Now, much like Prosise this is a thin play. Cobb was operating as the WR3 in the offense and Coutee was only targeted four times. I think I’d rather play the next player we talk about ahead of Coutee and I believe it’s chasing a score. Nick pointed out the Texans went to a ton of two tight ends sets after losing Cobb.

TE – It sure looks like Jordan Akins is back in his normal pass catching role after fully recovering from his ankle injury. He’s under $3,000 and saw six targets this past week, some of which could stem from no Cobb for most of that game. The 11.6% target share isn’t that bad for a tight end period, especially this cheap. Akins did only play 51% of the snaps on Sunday but Fells was down to third among tight ends in snaps at 34%. It can be noted that Detroit is in the top eight in DK points allowed per game to the position. However, “defense against tight end” doesn’t always hold a lot of water for me. There’s so few fantasy relevant tight ends, that’s not a true measure of how a defense defends the position. With the savings and the opening of Cobb’s targets (14.6% since Week 5), Akins is well in play and is a unique way to stack up chalky Watson.

D/ST – I mean, after seeing Detroit get shut out by Carolina I can’t rule them out completely. They’re the second-cheapest unit on the slate but have only generated five turnovers so far. That’s pretty putrid, although they do at least have 21 sacks. Detroit has allowed the sixth-most sacks this season so if it means fitting another skill player, I can get behind using the Texans defense. That is especially true if the Lions can’t get healthy before Thursday.

Priority – Watson, Cooks, Fuller, Akins, Duke, D/ST, Coutee

Lions – Pace is 7th

QB – I wonder if Matthew Stafford goes a little overlooked here. He’s had some issues for sure and last game was about rock bottom for the year. The lack of weapons around him shone through and he flat out didn’t play well either. However, if we think that Watson can put up some points, Stafford is going to have to cut it loose to try and keep up. Cam Newton and the limited Patriots passing game just approached 350 passing yards on Sunday. He’s 14th in attempts and 19th in points per drop back, so you need to catch him in a comeback style game. It doesn’t hurt if he actually has some weapons either, as we learned on Sunday. Stafford just needs some reinforcements here and he could be a solid cheap option.

RB – IF by some chance D’Andre Swift makes it back for this game, he’s going to be a lock for me. Not only is he a lock, he’s my number one running back play on the slate. I don’t particularly expect that with a concussion on a short week, but let’s hold out some hope.

If not, Adrian Peterson and Kerryon Johnson are in a redemption spot but it’s going to take a short memory to go back to them. Peterson had seven touches this past game and Johnson had eight, and neither one of them broke six DK points. Here’s the issue with just casting them aside – Houston is the worst rush defense in football. They are allowing the most rushing yards per game and are 32nd in DVOA against the run. It can be hard to turn away from that matchup, especially when the running back position as a whole is nothing spectacular. Game log watchers might well pass this spot altogether but if it’s AD and Johnson again, they would be on the board as a pivot from other options.

WR – At least part of the reason Stafford and the Lions struggled so badly Sunday was their receiving corps, or lack thereof. Both Kenny Golladay and Danny Amendola were out and that proved to be a killer. Golladay has been out since partway through Week 8 with a hip injury. He was limited once last week and then didn’t practice again. It could be a tough road for him here. Amendola was similar so we need to see if either are cleared. This will be updated when we have a better idea of who’s in and out. Marvin Jones should be in play regardless, but he’s struggled without Golladay this year. At $5,500, Jones has hit 3x just twice all season and that’s with Golladay only playing four full games.

TE – It wasn’t a banner day this past week for T.J. Hockenson but he eclipsed 10 DK points yet again, which is considerable production for the tight end this season. Hockenson has hit that mark in seven of ten games. He may well be about the safest tight end option on this slate. The second-year payer is also fourth among tight ends in red zone targets and third in end zone targets. Lastly, he’s tied for third in touchdowns with five. Houston is right about average against the position and sits at 547 yards allowed so far. There’s value in the safety Hockenson brings, but I’m not convinced we need to “pay up”on this slate. It may be better to go lower in salary and spend up elsewhere. If I can fit him, that’s wonderful. I will have other priorities before putting Hockenson into the lineup.

D/ST – They are the cheapest unit on the slate and I get the idea of a punt. However, it’s really tough to go after a defense that is so pedestrian. They do have 10 turnovers but just 14 sacks. When you combine that with giving up nearly 28 points per game, I would rather figure out how to play the Texans defense of these two options.

Priority – Hockenson, Stafford, Jones, Johnson, TBD by injuries of other players

Washington at Cowboys, O/U of 46 (Cowboys -3)

Washington – Pace is 15th

QB – Regardless of whether we play him or not, shoutout to Alex Smith for enduring an immense amount of pain to get back on the field and get his first win since his injury. That sort of tenacity has to be respected. If we’re talking about just the past three game sample size, Smith and the Washington offense will absolutely be game-script dependent. In the two games that Washington trailed, Smith total 87 pass attempts. In this past week’s game, he only threw 25 times and Washington was in control for the majority of it.

Playing Smith depends on how you view this game going. If Washington is winning and/or it’s close, Smith is not likely to be the best choice. He’s only at a 0.39 pDB so far in his time his season. The positives are the 74.6% completion rate and the 75% completion rate from play action passing. If Dallas can put up some points, he’s interesting as the cheapest starter in GPP. That’s especially true if Watson turns into the chalk we expect. Smith is likeliest the most script-sensitive quarterback option.

RB – Talk about game script sensitive, let’s talk about this backfield. With control of Sunday’s game, Antonio Gibson got 17 touches to just nine for McKissic. In the previous two games, it was McKissic getting the work. He totaled 29 targets in this two games and racked up 27 touches. Gibson had 26 touches and was mostly bailed out by his touchdowns. I would be leaning towards this one being close and Washington not having to play from behind all that much. Even if they trail it shouldn’t get too far out of hand.

The scary part is Gibson only out-snapped McKissic by one measly snap in the best script for him. It’s really a great spot with Dallas ranked 28th in DVOA against the run and are 31st in rush yards allowed per game. We do need to recognize the improvement Dallas has shown the past three weeks. They’re inside the top 10 in rush yards allowed and if that trend kept up, Gibson could be very touchdown dependent. Perhaps it’s because everyone ran on them through most of the season, but Dallas is second-best in receptions allowed to running backs. There’s definitely some facets that don’t jive for Gibson and McKissic. In my eyes, there’s a wide range of outcomes for both but I would lean Gibson of the two.

WR – I’m going to go ahead and play all of the Terry McLaurin, please and thank you. He’s the most expensive skill player on the board and I honestly think he might have the highest ceiling as well. This is a Dallas defense that just got scorched for 11 receptions, 209 yards and three touchdowns by Adam Thielen and Justin Jefferson of the Vikings. Minnesota is a run-first team as well and McLaurin has played well with Smith under center as well. He’s hit at least five receptions and 84 yards in every game. The last time McLaurin played Dallas, he racked up 22 DK with 7/90/1. On top of all that, McLaurin is top 10 in total air yards, first in air yards share (among receivers with five games or more) and eighth in target share. He may not get the recognition but McLaurin is an elite receiver this year. Last but not least, the matchup with Cowboys corner Chidobe Awuzie is excellent. Through limited playing time, Awuzie is well over a 2.50 pPT and a 14.8 YPR.

I don’t particularly love Steven Sims or Cam Sims as they aren’t primary targets in this offense. Cam played over 80% of the snaps this past week but yet was only targeted twice. Steven was targeted three times on 32% of the snaps. Either one of these receivers are no better than fourth in the pecking order and that’s tough to want to play, even as a punt. Cam Sims draws Anthony Brown and his 70.3% completion rate allowed while Steven Sims gets Jourdan Lewis and his 110.6 passer rating allowed. You’d have to hope for a total shootout and Smith throwing 40+ times in this one for it to work, but if you’re playing a few lineups you can afford a risk and get different.

TE – There’s some slight appeal to Logan Thomas in that he could hit double digit DK for $1,200 less than Hockenson. However, you’re losing he safety because Thomas has a much lower floor so far. Targets haven’t really been a big issue with Smith as he has 16 in the past three games. Another positive for Thomas is he plays almost all the snaps. In the past three weeks, he’s not been under 90% of the snaps and he runs routes like few others. He boasts a 92.9% route percentage and that’s third among tight ends. Dallas has allowed five scores so Thomas is an option if you don’t punt down to Akins or spend on Hockenson.

D/ST – Washington could potentially check in as the chalkiest unit of the day. There’s plenty of opportunity to fit them in despite being second-highest in salary. The turnovers have been average at best with just 11 in their 10 games but 32 sacks negates whatever weakness is there. The sack number is tied for third in football and up until Sunday, the Dallas offense has been poor without Dak Prescott. They only allow 22.1 points on the season and as long as I can afford them, they would likely be my preferred option with that pass rush.

Priority – McLaurin, D/ST, Gibson, Smith, McKissic, Thomas, Cam Sims, Steven Sims

Dallas – Pace is 1st

QB – Andy Dalton showed some signs of life on Sunday, throwing three touchdowns but only throwing for 203 yards. Hey, baby steps. The biggest issue is that the matchup is drastically different. Washington is ranked inside the top five in DVOA against the pass and they lead the league in passing yards allowed per game. They have also only allowed a 15:9 TD:INT ratio and that doesn’t look like a spot I’d want to attack on the surface. Dalton is sporting a 40.7% completion rate under pressure, 18th in the league. That’s not ideal with Washington in the top six in pressure rate. Furthermore, Smith is cheaper in a much better spot. We can do better than this at quarterback and Dalton might well be my last choice at the position for this slate.

RB – Another player likely to be heavy chalk in any format is Ezekiel Elliott. Despite backup Tony Pollard flashing his big play ability, Zeke logged 23 touches and I don’t think any back on the slate has that type of touch ceiling. He’s under $7,000 since it’s been such a tough season for Zeke but he does at least have seven touchdowns. With Zeke being super easy to fit, I’m likely to eat that chalk in some lineups since I’m not in love with the backs overall. Washington drops off defending the run as opposed to the pass. They are 14th in DVOA against the run and 18th in rush yards allowed per game. There’s always a strong argument to fade popular players that have a floor and Zeke still does have that this year. Before the Vikings game, he had three straight games under nine DK points. He’s the kind of player that I want some exposure to but will have lineups without him.

WR – This remains mostly a CeeDee Lamb and Amari Cooper zone, but the targets weren’t that far behind for Michael Gallup this past week. There’s one spot that I want to attack the Washington defense through the air and it’s the slot corner. That’s Lamb’s alignment in this offense 85.7% of the times, second-most in football. Of the six targets he got Sunday, two were end zone targets. Lamb will be looking for some redemption after not recording a reception the first time these two teams met. Washington corner Jimmy Moreland is the “weak link” in the secondary with a 68.6% catch rate allowed.

Cooper on the other hand posted 15.5 DK on a 7/80/0, which kind of surprises me. Seeing as he draws Kendall Fuller, I wouldn’t have bet on Cooper here. Fuller is fourth in passer rating allowed at 57.8 and has only allowed 288 yards on 41 targets. I do prefer Lamb but Cooper’s price is very reasonable.

Gallup is perhaps the ultimate GPP play of this offense. He mostly gets Ronald Darby and his 17.1 YPR and Gallup is only three targets away from the lead since Dak was lost for the year. The aDOT is the highest of the trio while all three have three red zone targets. Lamb and Gallup both have more end zone targets than Cooper at a 5-3-2 ratio. Nobody will look at Gallup in this spot but it’s not terrible at all.

TE – If we’re talking tight ends in this game, I don’t think it’s the worst idea to go Dalton Schultz ahead of Thomas. The prices aren’t that far different so it shouldn’t take much to get there. Schultz consistently gets targeted in this offense no matter who has played quarterback, with 30 in the five games without Dak. Overall, he’s racked up a 14.9% target share and an 18.2% red zone share. Schultz has the lowest aDOT of the pass catchers so the safety blanket role seems easy to see. If Cooper and Gallup are potentially muted on the outside, Schultz has some upside. Like Lamb, he didn’t do much the first time with only 2/22. However, this has been a weakness for Washington for most of the season. They’ve already allowed six touchdowns and over 500 yards. Schultz at a couple hundred more than Thomas is intriguing. He and Akins are likely my favorite options at the position.

D/ST – Dallas is right next to Houston in salary and just like Houston, they have few turnovers forced (eight) and are under 20 sacks on the season. Washington is certainly not the most fearsome offense but I’m not really that interested in this unit. Other than the Eagles game, Dallas is just not producing anything for fantasy. Smith is at least a competent quarterback and I’ll save the $100 to play Houston in this range.

Priority – Zeke, Lamb, Cooper, Schultz, Gallup, Dalton

Ravens at Steelers, O/U of 45 (Steelers 4.5)

Ravens – Pace is 28th

QB – It gets harder every week to want to play Lamar Jackson, after another sub-par performance on Sunday. Jackson is not even averaging over 200 yards per game through the air and the rushing production isn’t fully saving him this year. Jackson has been under 19 DK points in six of 10 games so far and I’m finding it hard to suggest him as a Watson pivot. He has one of the more difficult matchups on the board and the first game against Pittsburgh, Jackson was under 50% for completion rate and had four turnovers.

That last part isn’t likely to repeat but Pittsburgh is a difficult matchup for any quarterback. They lead the league in sacks and pressure rate and that’s been a significant issue for Jackson this year. He’s only sitting at a 39.2% completion rate when pressured and is 29th in deep ball completion rate at 28.6%. Watson has the safer floor and might even have the higher ceiling as well. The caveat now is the running back situation for the Ravens. Jackson may have even more on his shoulders in this one, raising the floor and ceiling just a bit.

RB -J.K Dobbins and Gus Edwards rolled up 200 combined yards rushing the first meeting with the Steelers. Now we have news that Dobbins and Mark Ingram are out with Covid. Despite the Steelers being seventh in rushing yards allowed per game on the year, they have allowed the 11th most over the past three weeks. That doesn’t even include the Ravens game. If we kick that in, Pittsburgh has been over 150 rush yards allowed per game the past month. Breaking it down further looks like this –

James Robinson – 73 yards rushing

Bengals RB (four backs split 23 carries) – 139 yards

Tony Pollard – 57 yards

Ezekiel Elliott – 51 yards

J.K. Dobbins – 113 yards

Gus Edwards – 87 yards

Pittsburgh is still sixth in DVOA against the run, but Edwards is now way too cheap for a bell cow role in a rushing offense that ranks first in yards per game. That’s especially true if Pittsburgh’s vulnerability defending the run continues. It’s hard to no just plug it in and get different elsewhere. I would have to assume Baltimore is going to use Justice Hill to some extent, but the Gus Bus sure seems primed for the majority of work.

WR – Someone has to explain to me how you go into a matchup against the Tennessee secondary and target Marquise Brown just three times while Dez Bryant sees five. Of the 431 receiving yards for Brown on the season, 101 came in Week 1 against the Browns. You could argue Brown has been one of the most disappointing players in fantasy this season. This is an example of air yards not always telling the entire story. Brown has a whopping 37.7% of the air yards in this offense and just has so little to show for it. He only has two games of 3x production at this price and will draw Joe Haden for most of the night as well. The veterans corner is still playing strong football, allowing a completion rate under 50% and the fourth-best 1.20 pPT.

I’d much rather play Willie Snead, who has seen his targets explode since Week 8. Snead has a 22.5% target share and 33% of the red zone looks in that time frame. Not only that, but he leads the team in air yards and is ahead of Brown by nine total targets. He scorched Pittsburgh the first time for 18 DK and 106 yards and could do something similar here. If Brown is getting nothing done, someone has to pick up some production and Snead is the next man up. He plays 66.5% of the snaps and draws Mike Hilton in the slot. That’s a good thing for Snead as Hilton has gotten tagged for over a 2.00 pPT. On top of that, he leads the team in receiving yards since Week 8 and PPR points.

Dez Bryant is at least on the radar for a punt. He saw over 50% of the snaps this past week and saw the aforementioned five targets. There wasn’t any red zone work yet but if he got five targets in the first real action since 2017, I wonder if he gets at least the same amount of snaps. Dez had an aDOT of 2.0 (not a typo) so perhaps if Edwards struggles, Dez could be an extension of the passing game? I’m not sold on it totally, but a lineup with him makes some sense.

TE – If we’re just talking talent and role in the offense, Mark Andrews should likely be the TE1 on the slate. He’s coming off his second straight game of at least seven targets and he’s had at least five receptions, 61 yards or a touchdown in both games. The noticeable uptick has come with more snaps and it has coincided with Nick Boyle being lost for the season. Here’s the issue – Baltimore is having issues in their passing game and the Steelers are an elite defense. Going all the way up at this position is kind of difficult, and the first game was without Devin Bush for Pittsburgh as well. You can’t really argue that Andrews doesn’t have to deal with him through the middle. I love the additional snaps and 25.8% target share the past two weeks. It’s just tough to see how he’s successful at this price in the matchup. I believe Andrews is a luxury spend I can’t really afford to jam in as things stand. If Haden can handle Brown, the Steelers can flood the middle of the field to guard Andrews.

D/ST – Baltimore’s defense has tailed off a little bit here lately, only racking up five sacks in the past four weeks. In addition, they’ve generated only 10 turnovers and have had some tough luck on the injury front. Brandon Williams and Calais Campbell are super important cogs in that defensive line. They boast excellent corners but if they can’t generate a lot of pressure, it likely won’t matter. The mid-range salary doesn’t do much for me either against a dangerous offense on the road. Let’s keep an eye on who’s active for them Thursday night.

Priority – Edwards, Snead, Jackson, Andrews, Brown, Bryant, Hill

Steelers – Pace is 23rd

QB – I’m going to be tempted by Ben Roethlisberger in this spot and not just because I’m a Pittsburgh fan. Over the past five games, Big Ben has eclipsed 40 passing attempts four times. Two of those games have produced 28 or more DK and that would rival the ceiling for the other quarterback options on the slate. Roethlisberger isn’t without his flaws this season, but he’s averring almost 2.5 touchdown passes per game and only has five turnovers on the season. He’s answered a lot of questions coming back from elbow surgery, with one notable exception.

The deep ball has been a major issue for Big Ben practically the entire season. He’s been in the bottom five in completion rate on deep balls since the word go and sits inside the top eight in deep attempts. That’s a pretty poor mix and explains why the yards lag behind the touchdown production. Baltimore is just inside the top 10 in DVOA against the pass this season and seventh in passing yards allowed per game. It’s not a plus matchup on paper but if the Ravens front is still hurt and he gets 40+ attempts, this could be a sneaky vintage game for Big Ben.

RB – The usage for James Conner over the past few weeks have been concerning. He’s still generally hitting at least 13 carries but that’s been about the limit. The chances in the red zone have dried up the past month as well, with just five attempts inside the 20. Up until this past Sunday, Conner was averaging 3.1 yards per carry or under. Considering it was the Jacksonville defense on Sunday, I’m not ready to say Pittsburgh has the run game figured out.

Being priced as the third-most expensive back on the slate does him no favors either. The Ravens are ranked third in DVOA against the run and are 16th in rush yards allowed per game. They have allowed seven scores and 55 receptions but there’s not much sticking out in the favor of Conner in this game. In the last month, Benny Snell only has 13 carries and one red zone chance so it’s hard to see where that punt pays off even if he happens to fall into the end zone.

WR – I’m obligated to pump up Diontae Johnson just like every week and he’s among my highest-priority targets on this slate. It’s been simple math so far. When he’s finished a game healthy, he’s had double-digit targets for a massive 29% target share in this offense. I hope game log watchers shy away because of his dud last time. Johnson was evaluated for a hamstring injury in that game early and clearly wasn’t the same after it. The matchup won’t be easy but the volume for that price is astronomical. Marcus Peters is a very good corner and has only allowed a 79.7 passer rating. However, he’s also allowed just about a 62% catch rate and that’s Johnson’s forte.

Chase Claypool already has a serious nose for the end zone and that always leaves him as a super strong play. He leads the team in air yards share at 31.4% and is third in red zone share at 17.5%. Claypool is averaging a touchdown per game with 10 total already and scored the first game. Jimmy Smith was listed as a non-participant in practice Monday, but he played Sunday. Baltimore likely expects him to be in and he has the size and speed to mostly hang with Claypool. Still, Ben loves him and won’t hesitate. The rookie likely has some of the highest touchdown equity of any receiver on the slate and is easily the deep threat for Pittsburgh. It takes one play.

The last piece of the puzzle is JuJu Smith-Schuster. He had a miserable day Sunday and draws Marlon Humphrey in the slot. Humphrey has actually allowed an 88.8 passer rating and JuJu had a solid first game with 13.7 DK points. Smith-Schuster leads the team in red zone and end zone targets and quietly has serious touchdown upside. We need to make sure JuJu is active as he was banged up a little on Sunday. I expect him to suit up here as thing stand. The pricing is very close and I think DK has them priced just right.

TE – Eric Ebron could be a very sneaky option at this position. He has right under a 15% target share in this offense and a 20% share of the red zone looks. Ebron is also tied for third in touchdowns on the team and is the TE12 in PPR. That tends to illustrate how barren this position is but Ebron has at least five targets in each of the past five games. He’s eclipsed double-digit DK points in four of those games and if Roethlisberger drops back another 40 times, he shouldn’t see much of a change in his opportunity this week. The Ravens have allowed over 500 yards and five scores to tight ends so far this year, including one to Ebron in the first matchup.

D/ST – They are the most expensive option but how can they not be? They lead the league in pressure rate, sacks and turnovers. They get an offense that is only 13 yards ahead of the Jets for the least passing yards per game and is now down to their third-string running back. Jackson has been sacked the eighth-most times so far this season and if we can afford them, I’m going to play them. If other defenses are coming in chalkier, this is a great time to pay up for Pittsburgh.

Priority – Johnson, Claypool, D/ST, Roethlisberger, JuJu, Ebron

Core Four – NFL Thanksgiving Day Game By Game Breakdown

Terry McLaurin, Diontae Johnson, Gus Edwards, TBD

We need to see if Swift has any chance of playing in this game before I decide fully on the Core. McLaurin and Johnson are just beyond easy to fit in next to Edwards. Sure, a minimum priced back is going to be popular but there’s many other opportunities to get different on this slate. With a three gamer, it’s best to eat some chalk and have one or two difference makers. A player like Watson is going to be uber chalk but it’s not out of the realm he out-scores every other quarterback by 10 or more DK points. I’d rather be on that side of the equation and go from there.

Let’s have a great Thanksgiving slate my friends! 

Make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life and 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 and slate!

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To quote the great Michael Rasile, “It’s a great day to be alive.” NFL DFS GPP season is here and it’s time for us to get rolling again for Week 11. For those who haven’t read it yet, please check out the Week 11 Cash Game Checkdown for your bankroll sustaining, cash game build advice.

In addition, I would strongly advise reading my NFL DFS Strategy article I published this offseason, before diving into the 2020 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. Let’s get into it.

Please note, everyone on our cheatsheet and the Cash Game Checkdown are also in play for GPPs. This is more to uncover some players people are not talking about… and they should be.

*Keep in mind, you DO NOT NEED to just build your GPP lineups around these players. Players from the Cash Game Checkdown are there because they have extremely high floors and high ceilings. They are key components you should probably build around no matter what type of contest you’re in*

Adjusted Expected Team Totals Rankings for Week 11

  1. Pittsburgh Steelers (22.88)
  2. Minnesota Vikings (22.18)
  3. New England Patriots (21.90)
  4. Atlanta Falcons (21.13)
  5. New Orleans Saints (20.92)
  6. Baltimore Ravens (20.58)

My Personal Top Stacks:
– Dallas Cowboys
– Minnesota Vikings
– Baltimore Ravens
– Atlanta Falcons
– Cincinnati Bengals

NFL DFS GPP Quarterbacks

  1. Lamar Jackson – Clearly the top-dog Quarterback on this slate without Kyler Murray, Patrick Mahomes, Josh Allen, and Russell Wilson. His price is respectable, if not too-cheap on both DraftKings and FanDuel. He should be coming into this slate around 15-20% owned but I’ll be shocked if he eclipses 10% in total ownership.

    Tennessee has absolutely no pass rush and a beaten-up secondary. Lamar will get in done via the run and the pass like he did in 2019tomorrow and replicate a monster outing he put on the Titans last year in the playoffs.

    Use him naked or pair him up with Hollywood Brown and/or Mark Andrews. This is a plus-matchup for both of them! Don’t forget about Derrick Henry on the back-side of this game for some correlation.
  2. Andy Dalton – He’s just way too cheap on DraftKings ($5,300) and offers us a perfect pivot off of 20% owned, Taysom Hill (LOL). I do not understand the love for playing Hill at Quarterback. Load up Dalton against this sieve of a pass defense in Minnesota.

    The only headache here is who to pair him up with but there are plenty of good choices to roll out there and then of course using Dalvin Cook and/or Justin Jefferson or Adam Thielen on the back-end.

    Honorable Mention: Matt Ryan, Cam Newton, Joe Burrow, DeShaun Watson

Running Backs

  1. Miles Sanders – No idea how Sanders isn’t coming in over 15% on current ownership projections. I absolutely loved what I saw out of Miles Sanders last week despite having two touchdowns somewhat vultured away from him (Boston Scott earned his, even though he stepped out).

    There are very few backs that get as many touches as Miles Sanders but all of them are priced over $7K on DraftKings (outside of Mike Davis) and over $8K on FanDuel. Keep in mind, Myles Garrett being out leaves a big hole in this Cleveland defense.
  2. Ezekiel Elliott (DraftKings) We’ve never seen Zeke at $6,500 on DraftKings and I don’t think we ever will again. Take advantage of these savings now that Erving and Martin make their return to Dallas’ offensive line.

    The AETY Model has this game handicapped for a total of 52 points and really loves it’s potential to shootout. Getting a 18+ touch Zeke Elliott really intrigues me in NFL DFS GPP lineups at $6,500 in salary.

    Honorable Mention: Derrick Henry, Alvin Kamara, Kerryon Johnson, Phillip Lindsay, James Conner

Wide Receivers

  1. Julio Jones / Calvin Ridley – I love Matt Ryan this week against the pass funnel, New Orleans defense. I have no idea what to expect from the pace of the Taysom Hill led Saints’ offense, but if they play with a decent tempo, I love this game’s ability to go over the total.

    If that happens, sub-10% owned Julio Jones and Calvin Ridley are in prime spots to produce. If given one choice, I’d choose Ridley due to the savings and seeing more or Janoris Jenkins in coverage, but they’re both great NFL DFS GPP plays in Week 11.
  2. Adam Thielen – If Justin Jefferson is going to garner twice as much ownership as Adam Thielen, I’ll have a ton of Thielen on Sunday. I’ve talked enough about how much I like this game and I love the pairing of Dalvin Cook/Adam Thielen on the other side of my Cowboys’ stacks.
  3. Tyler Boyd – Tyler Boyd under $6K in salary… just go ask Ghost what we do when that is a scenario for an upcoming NFL DFS GPP slate. Jimmy Moreland is a bottom tier slot-cornerback and will struggle all game long against an elite route runner like Tyler Boyd. Both of these teams play at a solid pace so there should be plenty of opportunities for Boyd to shine.
  4. Dallas Cowboys Wide Receivers – Again, I’m not sure who to rank the highest for my Andy Dalton stacks, but if I had to choose, I’d probably lean Amari Cooper first, Michael Gallup (he’s so damn cheap) second, and CeeDee Lamb as the odd man out (or minimal shares in 150 entry contests).

    As most of you are not 150-max entry players, I think you should focus around building your Dallas lineups with Cooper/Gallup or Cooper/Elliott. If you need salary relief in any other NFL DFS GPP lineup, Michael Gallup is more than a viable punt this week as a one-off.

    Honorable Mention: Keenan Allen, Denzel Mims, Marquise Brown, Mike Williams, Marvin Jones, Robby Anderson

NFL DFS GPP Tight Ends

  1. TJ Hockenson – No idea how this dude isn’t projected for 15% ownership, again! No Danny Amendola this week only makes this sweeter for Hockenson.

    Honorable Mention: All of the Popular Tight Ends (Mark Andrews, Dallas Goedert, Logan Thomas, Hayden Hurst)

Good luck to all this week in your NFL DFS GPP lineups!

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 return.

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Another great week for Week 10 NFL DFS Cash Games. Let’s get right back at it for a solid showing yet again in Week 11, which is shaping up to be a really nice slate without a lot of headache decisions. A slate without Wilson, Kyler, and Mahomes should make your roster builds much less of a headache.

The purpose of this article is to identify my top plays for a NFL DFS cash game lineup on DraftKings and FanDuel Sunday Main Slates (also known as a double-up). Players in this article are usually a mix of the following:

  • High-floor/high-volume “safer” players (players with a very low bust-rate)
  • VALUE PLAYS
  • Not a part of a stack – Stacking is great for GPPs, but if you stack in cash games, your lineup is entirely too dependent on said stacked team. If that team does poorly, your whole lineup does… Not a risk we need to take in a cash game. QB/WR pairing is fine, but unless there’s extreme value in a 3-man stack, let’s keep it to QB/WR or QB/TE at most.
  • Extremely chalky for the week… in GPP’s I’ll usually always fade volatile players at > 40% ownership, but in cash games, it’s usually best to eat the chalk. If that player underperforms, it does not hinder your ability to cross the pay-line as 40% or more of the field is in the same boat. If you fade this player(s) and he has a great game, your lineup is likely toast… as you’re now behind 40% or more of the field. Make sense? If not, hit me up on Discord/Twitter to discuss further.

In my opinion, cash games are extremely important for long-term bankroll building and sustainability. I’ll consistently use at least 50% of my weekly bankroll towards cash games. It’s not sexy, but it works and allows me to take big shots in high dollar GPPs.

Long story short, if we hit our cash games each week, the worst we can do is break-even (not counting your GPP shots with the remaining 50% of your weekly bankroll). The weeks you hit both, you smash. The weeks you miss your GPPs, your cash game lineup will carry you. It’s my job to ensure you always hit those cash games.

If you haven’t yet, I would strongly advise giving my NFL DFS Strategy article I published this offseason before diving into the 2020 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. Without further ado, let’s do this thing!

*Some notes on what I believe to be the “optimal” roster build for NFL DFS Cash Games. I’ll include this in all the Checkdown articles moving forward. For Week 11, please see below for my notes on roster construction:

  • ON FANDUEL: LOCK in Taysom Hill at Tight End. It’s embarrassing that they haven’t changed his position, but take advantage of that freesquare. If you don’t play him in FanDuel cash lineups, retire from DFS, yesterday.
  • I’m narrowing down the player pool a lot this week. I see a ton of different cash lineups in the discord with way too may different players in the builds. With this article, we should all be honed in on educated plays and smash this slate.
  • CHALK REPORT: Taysom Hill, Dalvin Cook, Duke Johnson, Giovani Bernard, Jakobi Meyers, Keenan Allen, and Mark Andrews all project to be incredibly high in ownership. I think we’ll likely want to lock in at least two or three of them in our cash games.
  • Just because a player is not mentioned in this article, does not mean they are not cash viable.
  • AETY Model Projections change throughout the week, please ensure you check out our final projections before lock!
  • I update this article periodically through the week. Be sure to check back on Saturday night / Sunday morning for any additions/revisions!!

NFL DFS Quarterbacks

  1. Lamar Jackson ($7,300 DK / $8,400 FD) – On a slate with no Kyler Murray, Patrick Mahomes, and Russell Wilson. Lamar Jackson is clearly the top dog at the Quarterback position. Mike Vrabel will likely have a good game plan to slow down the quarterback that posted over 500 all-purpose yards against him in the playoffs last year, but this Tennessee defense is bad, so Vrabel doesn’t matter to me at all.

    In addition, this price-tag on Lamar Jackson is way too low for the upside he possesses. Great option for cash game and NFL DFS GPP builds this week.
  2. Cam Newton ($6,200 DK / $7,600 FD) – Holy savings on DraftKings! Houston’s defense is absolutely atrocious rating 32nd against the run in DVOA and 22nd in pass defense DVOA. Cam should have a field day in both categories at a very affordable price.
  3. Andy Dalton ($5,300 DK ONLY) – If you need the savings, you can’t really go wrong with using Andy Dalton as your DraftKings quarterback. This game has sneaky shootout potential and this price is fantastic.

    Honorable Mention: Taysom Hill (DK), Justin Herbert, DeShaun Watson, Matt Ryan

Running Backs

  1. Dalvin Cook ($9,000 DK / $10,500 FD) – Expensive as hell, but if you can afford him, you play him.
  2. Alvin Kamara ($9,200 DK / $9,700) – Kamara is much more appealing this week on FanDuel but similar to Cook, if you can afford him, you play him in cash.

    I don’t think it’s 100% necessary to use one or the other in cash, but it’s clearly doable with all of the savings around both sites this weekend.
  3. Miles Sanders ($6,900 DK / $7,700 FD) – Way too cheap for one of the few running backs in the NFL that is not in a timeshare. Cleveland’s run defense is extremely banged up and have been getting worse at defending the run on a weekly basis. With a close spread and an upper-40s point total, this should set up nicely for a very busy Miles Sanders day.
  4. Kalen Ballage ($5,600 DK / $5,800 FD) – If you need to go dumpster diving, it seems like the whole field is going to Kalen Ballage against the Jets. With Ekeler and Justin Jackson both injured, Ballage is clearly the number one running back (played over 70% of the snaps last week) and should be considered for salary relief in your cash game builds.
  5. Kerryon Johnson ($4,000 DK / $4,800 FD) – D’Andre Swift is out, so it’s wheels up to Adrian Peterson and the forgotten Kerryon Johnson. It’s disgusting, but as you saw last week with Mike Davis, you can cash a cash game lineup with 7-8 points out of your running back punt play.

    Honorable Mention: Duke Johnson, Ezekiel Elliott, Giovani Bernard, Mike Davis, Antonio Gibson

Wide Receivers

  1. Davante Adams ($8,600 DK / $9,500 FD) – Adams is matchup proof and offers the highest floor on this slate against Indianapolis’ Xavier Rhodes and Rock Ya-Sin.
  2. Calvin Ridley ($7,000 DK / $7,800 FD) – You’re going to want exposure to this Atlanta/New Orleans shootout and no better way to do so on the Atlanta side with Calvin Ridley coming back at 100% health. Julio Jones is absolutely in play here, but I’ll take the savings with Ridley and a great matchup against Marshon Lattimore and Janoris Jenkins.
  3. Keenan Allen ($7,400 DK / $8,000 FD) – Keenan Allen will likely always make the cash article on a weekly basis. Hard to avoid this target share and consistent double-digit floor. Pair all of that with a matchup against the Jets’ dead last ranked pass defense and you’ll do just fine in a cash build.
  4. Amari Cooper ($5,400 DK / $6,900 FD) – Absolute freesquare on DraftKings against this Vikings’ secondary we pick on weekly. No need to over think this one, this is a great buy-low spot for Amari Cooper (and any Cowboy receiver for that matter) with Andy Dalton coming back under center.
  5. Diontae Johnson ($5,900 / $6,400 FD) – This dude is incredible. When he’s on the field, he collects damn-near a 30% target share. Big Ben loves throwing him the football and for good reason… he produces! Diontae Johnson against the 2nd worst secondary in the NFL is a perfect recipe for NFL DFS cash game success.
  6. Jakobi Meyers ($4,900 DK / $6,000 FD) – On DraftKings, I think rolling out Jakobi Meyers is a lock-button for me. Meyers is still well below what his price should be and he’s built a strong chemistry with Cam Newton over the past month while racking up 37 targets in his last four games.

    Honorable Mention: Terry McLaurin, Justin Jefferson, Tyler Boyd, Marvin Jones, Jarvis Landry, CeeDee Lamb, Denzel Mims

Tight Ends

Tight end seems like an absolute wasteland this week with no Travis Kelce or Darren Waller. I don’t have a great read on where I’m going yet (on DraftKings, because remember, you’re using Taysom Hill on FanDuel), but here are my top options on the slate.

  1. Mark Andrews ($4,900 DK)
  2. Dallas Goedert ($3,800 DK)
  3. Logan Thomas ($3,300 DK)

Defense / Special Teams

I’ll rarely write about defense and special teams in the Cash Game Checkdown. I believe it’s much more important to lock in your key skill position players and hopefully a solid defense fits your build for NFL DFS cash games. Prices considered, here’s who I’ll take a look at:

  1. Los Angeles Chargers
  2. Baltimore Ravens
  3. Washington Football Team
  4. Denver Broncos
  5. Atlanta Falcons

NFL DFS Cash Game Sample Lineup

QB: Lamar Jackson
RB: Kerryon Johnson
RB: Miles Sanders
WR: Diontae Johnson
WR: Jakobi Meyers
WR: Amari Cooper
TE: Logan Thomas
FLEX: Dalvin Cook
DST: Washington

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Welcome home NFL DFS fans! This week, we have another solid slate on DraftKings with big prizes pools to take down so let’s get started with our top NFL DFS picks for this week’s main slate!

For those of you new to Picks and Pivots, the goal of this NFL DFS article each and every week is to provide you a “First Look” overview of the slate where we use DraftKings pricing as a baseline to help us get started. Rather than simply write out the “top plays,” this article will focus on slate strategy and roster construction with a GPP mindset to help you get started on your initial builds. Without further ado, let’s dive in!

NFL DFS Picks and Pivots: Week 10 – A Look Back:

Week 10 was one of the more bizarre NFL DFS weeks we have had this season with uncharacteristically low cash lines for almost the entirety of the slate. With just minutes left in the late games, cash lines were just above 120 DK points in most tournament’s and it was not until the last minute of the Arizona/Buffalo game which saw Allen/Diggs and Murray/Hopkins take down touchdowns at high ownership, that scores really shot up at all.

Looking back at the Milly Maker winner in Week 10, there were some similarities to the previous week’s winners that are worth pointing out. “Meaganjoy” used a Kyler/Hopkins passing stack and ran it back with Cole Beasley in what was ultimately the only correlation they had. They did however continue with the trend of using multiple value pieces in Josh Reynolds and a punt TE in Logan Thomas which has been a trend we have seen nearly every week.

I will say, I am more inclined to go with the larger data set this season which has shown more correlation by and large HOWEVER, the last two weeks the Milly Maker winner’s have toned that back to a degree so it will be a short term trend that needs to be monitored.

NFL DFS Picks and Pivots: Week 11 First Look:

At first glance at this Week 11 pre-Thanksgiving NFL DFS slate, what we find is that we are missing many of the marquee names as the Primetime games have taken away Kyler Murray and Russell Wilson on Thursday Night with Patrick Mahomes and company playing the Sunday Night Football game against the Raiders.

Now it does not mean we are devoid of options in our NFL DFS Picks, and in fact, there are a boatload of injuries that will likely shape some significant value as we head towards Sunday.

Looking at the team totals early in the week, the Falcons/Saints game stands out with a 50+ implied team total and some big-time injury news that could/should open up value. With Drew Brees sidelined, it opens up Jameis Winston and Tayson Hill as cheap QB’s, while the Falcons continue to await the return of Calvin Ridley in their WR room.

Brees is not the only QB with an injury tag heading into Week 11 – as Teddy Bridgewater, Matthew Stafford and Drew Lock are also questionable with the potential to sit out this week’s action.

On the Running Back side, Christian McCaffery is questionable to return after sitting out Week 10 and don’t worry DFS player, Mike Davis is not $4K any more so we do not have to play the “should we fade the chalk” game here.

The other early big name to watch is Joe Mixon, who remains questionable with a foot injury that has opened the door for Giovani Bernard ($5.5K) to take over as the RB1 for the Bengals. After a tough match-up against Pittsburgh last week, this could be a great get-right spot against Washington – oh, and one more little thing. Sunday is Gio’s birthday so fire up the mustache birthday narrative my friends. It never fails.

On the pass-catcher side, we could get some serious value here as players make their way back from injury – and I think savvy DFS players need to be on the lookout for mispriced bargains. The one name that really jumped out to me early was Zach Ertz ($3.7K) who has been designated to return after a high ankle sprain back in Week 6. Tight end is a wasteland again this week which is going to push us to pay down at the position and if a consistent double-digit target threat like Ertz is available to us at this price point – I am all over it.

NFL DFS Picks and Pivots: Week 11 Stacks:

I am writing this on Tuesday morning as a first look, and so the amount of things that can change before we get to Sunday are vast – but I am a believer in the value of this first look – a clear eyed view of the slate before the news comes rolling in and we get inundated with fantasy football group think.

The one game that really jumped out to me at first glance was the Packers/Colts – a game with a 50+ implied total here at the open and one that checks a whole lot of boxes. First and foremost – we have star power on the Packers side with Aaron Rodgers & Davante Adams who week in and week out just continue to deliver at a high level.

Adams was targeted 12 times against Jacksonville, hauled in a spectacular touchdown and even in a “down game” still made his way to 20 DK points. Rodgers was largely ignored all of last week and he ended up around 5% owned in GPP’s – and proceeded to drop 30 DK points with 3 TD’s – just continuing to produce while everyone flocks towards the shiny new QB’s as their DFS toys.

I do wonder how this week will flush out at QB because without Mahomes, Kyler and Russ – we are looking at a player pool that has Lamar Jackson and Rodgers up top and Justin Herbert as the third most expensive QB on the slate! With the injuries we noted above, I wonder if QB will be a pay down position for many – which once again could leave A-Aron, largely over-looked.

Last but not least – Aaron Jones ($7.2K) – the can’t miss RB1 from Week 10 who well, missed. Now 15 DK points was not the end of the world, but it certainly was not the SMASH SPOT that the DFS community was willing to eat the chalk on. Watch this week as Jones gets totally ignored as recency bias rears its ugly head and then when he goes off against the Colts and you scroll through DFS Twitter as everyone tilts – “of course when I don’t play him he does this!”

What really stands out to me is the Indy side of this game and that is largely due to the pricing on the Colts skill position players. The top two WR’s – Michael Pittman and T.Y. Hilton are both sitting at $4K price points and Jack Doyle ($2.5K) could return this week as a minimum priced tight end.

Pittman was the lead dog in terms of targets last week with 8 and now much of the Colts WR interest will depend on the status of Packers shutdown corner Jaire Alexander, who missed last week due to a concussion. With Alexander sidelined, we saw Jacksonville was able to move the ball through the air with cheap plays like Chris Conley and Keelan Cole. If Alexander were to sit again – this Colts passing attack would get a major boost and become an elite PP/$ stack with no pass-catcher over $5K on DraftKings.

One of the reasons we need/want the savings – well, we have some SERIOUS pay up RB options to build around with Alvin Kamara against Atlanta and Dalvin Cook against the Cowboys.

There is a reason both players are sitting at $9K or more – they will be popular priority spends and rightfully so. However, these are the kinds of players and match-ups you want to anchor to and it is one of the reasons that finding 1-2 punt values is a critical part of our process every week.

I think going into this week, locking in one – if not both – will be a cash game staple and a scary GPP fade – but early on, I have no issue locking them into my dummy lineups and simply waiting on the 1-2 value plays to open up – because guess what – THEY ALWAYS DO.

NFL DFS Picks and Pivots: Wrap up

We have 11 games on this Main Slate for Sunday with it setting up more traditionally, with 7 of the 11 being 1 PM EST starts. Heading into the week, the priority is going to be finding ways to pay up at RB (Kamara & Dalvin) but balancing that with high upside passing stacks.

I think as the week unfolds, we will see the value across positions with QB being a spot that could open up a really clear cash game path.

Stay locked into the news and make sure you join our Discord – we will talk plays and roster construction leading up to lock and I promise – you won’t want to miss it. We have a free 7 day trial – no risk – just join.

Oh and by the way, we have a massive Black Friday deal coming – so stay tuned!

Make sure you are following the Win Daily crew this weekend – as we have all your NFL Content and a FREE Livestream on Sunday!

Jump in Discord today guys and gals and let’s figure out the best path to profit as we build our bankroll for the NFL weekend!

Make sure you follow me on Twitter at @2LockSports and 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 and slate as sports FINALLY return.

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The NFL DFS season continues with this week’s Monday night showdown, and we’re helping you win big money in the final Week 10 NFL DFS contests!

Introduction to Single-Game Showdowns

DraftKings calls them “Showdowns,” and FanDuel doesn’t really have a name for them other than “Single-Game Contests,” but whatever we call them they require an understanding of game narratives and game theory – which means we need to target low-ownership players that will give us the best opportunities within the narratives and game outcomes we’re expecting.

My picks will focus almost exclusively on finding GPP-winning combinations that have a chance at taking down the contests you’re entering, be they single-entry or MME. While we can’t cover all the possible combos or provide full lineups for you to deploy, the goal here is to give you the tools to win and highlight some names that will help make for profitable results.

If I enter five lineups in a large-field GPP, at least three of those lineups will focus on the most likely game outcome (based on Vegas odds, props and totals), with one or two contrarian builds. As we know, late-breaking news can have a significant effect on full slates, and that’s just amplified with single-game contests. If you have any questions leading up to lock, please consult our NFL DFS experts in Discord.

Let’s get to the game!

Week 10 NFL DFS MVP candidates (1.5x points)

Some notes on the differences between MVP on FanDuel and DraftKings: The 1.5x point boost on FD comes with no salary penalty, while and DK also bumps the salary to 1.5x – a crucial factor in deciding who we can and cannot afford on both sites. We can use this to our advantage on FD by occasionally targeting non-QBs to establish more variance and more unique lineups, and on DK it allows us to build more hearty overall stacks when we punt the MVP position with a cheap but high-upside player.

Chalk: Dalvin Cook (DK $20,400, FD $17,500)

Pivot: Kirk Cousins (DK $15,300, FD $14,500)

Contrarian #1: Nick Foles (DK $14,700, FD $13,500)

Contrarian #2: Adam Thielen (DK $15,000, FD $14,000)

The easy choice for the captain chalk is Dalvin Cook, who’s season low is 17.1 DK points in Week 2 against Indy. This season he’s scored 21.8, 17.1, 29.9, 31.6, 19.9, BYE, INJ, 51.6 and 42.2 DK points – numbers bolstered by the fact that he’s scored at least one TD in every game he’s played this season (12 TDs in seven games).  He seems matchup-proof at this point.

We could pivot to Kirk Cousins if assume the Bears will stack the box against Cook, and while Cousins isn’t the most reliable real-world QB (or fantasy producer), he’s notched four weeks with at least 20 DK points and he has a bevy of offensive weapons at his disposal: Cook, veteran WR and PPR maven Adam Thielen, talented rookie wideout Justin Jefferson and stalwart TE Kyle Rudolph.

The Vikings are without Irv Smith Jr. this week, which likely dings their red zone efficacy, but the gloriously man-bunned Tyler Conklin could soak up a few extra targets in his stead. Conklin played some in 2019 and has yet to be targeted this season, but he’s the only other active TE on the Vikings roster. He’s dirt cheap and probably not a guy I’d use in more than 1/10 GPPs.

Additionally, it’s not outside the realm of possibility that capable RB Alexander Mattison sees a few additional carries this week, as Cook has logged 30 and 22 carries in his last two games. Outside of that lot and a smattering of the Vikings DST mixed into my builds, I don’t see too many other impact players for Minnesota.

The Bears have a team total under 20 in this game, which is never a good sign for fantasy production.  Nick Foles has his moments, so he’s the most obvious choice for a contrarian builds – which have merit based on both game script and the Vikings’ record against opposing QBs.

I’d love to plug Foles and Allen Robinson into some lineups right away, but AR2 is questionable with a knee injury and we could see more targets heading the ay of both Anthony Miller and rookie Darnell Mooney. Mooney, even as the Bears deep threat, might even be the safer play of the two given Miller’s spotty performance this season – though Miller has a been a favorite feast-or-famine GPP play for me over the past couple of seasons since he seems to make some truly amazing catches when he’s on his game.

Bears TE Jimmy Graham is another relatively safe fantasy option that maintains some upside, and the Vikings yield about a third more production to opposing TEs than the average NFL team. He’ll be a staple of my builds in all formats.

The backfield is a mess, with the team promoting Lamar Miller from the practice squad to help Ryan Nall with RB duties. Miller hasn’t taken the field since 2018 because of an ACL injury and he was cut from the Patriots roster this summer. He could be a free space at just $200 on DK, but he’ll likely split work with Nall and Swiss army knife Cordarrelle Patterson in Week 10. This relatively ugly committee should still be led by Nall, with David Montgomery still in concussion protocol and ruled out for Week 10.

Lastly, there’s no way we can omit the Bears DST – a strength of this team and a glaring GPP possibility when we’re honest about the fallibility of Cousins and the 3-5 Vikings in general. I’ll have shares of both them and K Cairo Santos in GPPs.

Week 10 NFL DFS Utility options (and some DOs and DON’Ts)

Remember to build your team based on a narrative that makes sense, and utilize the WinDaily fantasy toolbox for cheatsheets and projections that can help you tremendously with lineup building.

DO: Build a trio (or quartet) of offensive weapons for a team that makes sense together

DON’T: Forget about the defenses – as both QBs have been known to look downright foolish on the football field.

DO: Use Dalvin Cook somewhere in your lineup – unless you’re planning on him getting injured, which is both mean and dumb.

DON’T: Be afraid to completely fade the Vikings passing game in your “Cook at CPT” builds.

Now that we’ve established some narratives and MVP candidates, the best way to round out this piece is with a list of my favorite options in descending order, based on overall value (a combo of salary and projected points):

  1. Dalvin Cook
  2. Kirk Cousins
  3. Adam Thielen
  4. Nick Foles
  5. Allen Robinson (if active)
  6. Justin Jefferson
  7. Darnell Mooney
  8. Jimmy Graham
  9. Ryan Nall
  10. Kyle Rudolph
  11. Anthony Miller
  12. Lamar Miller
  13. Vikings DST
  14. Dan Bailey
  15. Cairo Santos
  16. Bears DST
  17. Alexander Mattison
  18. Cordarrelle Patterson
  19. Riley Ridley
  20. Olabisi Johnson
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Welcome home NFL DFS fans! This week, we have another solid slate on DraftKings with big prizes pools to take down so let’s get started with our top NFL DFS picks for this week’s main slate!

For those of you new to Picks and Pivots, the goal of this NFL DFS article each and every week is to provide you a “First Look” overview of the slate where we use DraftKings pricing as a baseline to help us get started. Rather than simply write out the “top plays,” this article will focus on slate strategy and roster construction with a GPP mindset to help you get started on your initial builds. Without further ado, let’s dive in!

NFL DFS Picks and Pivots: Monday-Thursday Night Football Slate

What is UP boys and girls? Wow, what a weekend!

First and foremost a HUGE shoutout to our PGA DFS team which absolutely crushed The Masters coverage and led to massive green screens for our very own Stix and Sia as you can see above.

Sunday’s NFL slate was simply wild as the cash line was depressed almost the entire day and the late flurry of scoring in the popular Arizona/Buffalo game really changed the cash position for the entire field as a result. Our Adam Strangis does a great job of breaking down everything from Week 10 in our Cash Game Week in Review.

We are just a week out from Thanksgiving and a week full of football, but before we get there we actually get a solid Monday-Thursday slate we can play this week – really as a result of the marquee Arizona/Seattle match-up on Thursday Night Football.

The Monday Night Football game on this slate is the appetizer – and I use that term loosely – its more like the bread and butter they put on the table before a good meal – sure, it is there and you are hungry but as your Mom always said – don’t fill up on the bread.

That applies to NFL DFS this week as well – as in this two-game slate – your goal should be to minimize your exposure to the MNF game between the Vikings and Bears.

Using our Adjusted Expected Team Totals, we can see the Vikings rank among the highest projected on the week – comparable to the elite offenses we all wanted a part of on Sunday. Conversely, the Bears are by FAR the lowest team total on the board and it makes sense with David Montgomery sidelined and Allen Robsinson questionable with an injury that left him limited all week in practice.

The most “straight forward” path here may be to take the highest correlation pairing with Dalvin Cook ($8.7K) and the Vikings Defense ($2.7K) in what is projected to be a slow-paced game. If the model holds true and this game turns into a Vikings easy win, they can lean on the run and keep this one dimensional Bears offense throwing which would give added turnover upside to the DST.

In the context of the slate, I think it becomes the optimal pairing as well for two reasons. 1) Running back is a wasteland with Montgomery hurt and the Arizona/Seattle backfields being banged up/crowded and 2) Do we really want to play either defense in Thursday Night’s shootout?

By limiting our exposure to Monday Night, we can turn our full attention to one of the best games of Week 11 with the Seahawks and Cardinals in a rematch of a 37-34 shootout in Week 7. The Cardinals are coming off a CRAZY win against Buffalo and this view of the winning TD grab will NEVER get old:

https://twitter.com/AZCardinals/status/1328150856261193728

This game is opening with a 56+ total which is two touchdowns more than the Monday Night snoozefest and where we are going to want the majority of our exposure.

Kyler Murray ($8K) is just an absolute DFS cheat code each week with his rushing upside and arsenal of weapons that resulted in 41 DK points the first time these two teams met. Russell Wilson ($7.2K) has had back to back subpar weeks but he did put up 35 DK points of his own back in Week 7 against Arizona so there merit to playing him as a pivot off the Murray chalk – but that is not an argument I think we really need to have – with how Kyler is playing right now, finding the $800 to get to him should be a priority on this slate.

In the Week 7 meeting, DeAndre Hopkins ($7.7K) put up 10 catches for 103 years and a TD on his way to 28 DK points, while Christian Kirk ($6.2K) went for 8/37 and 2 TD’s of his own for 20.7 DK points. Larry Fitzgerald ($4K) never feels like a play I set out on, but when you get a WR at this price point, playing 75%+ of the snaps in this offense with the high game total, it becomes a viable cheap path to get exposure to this passing attack.

We could get some value at Tight End as well in Arizona as Darrell Daniels left Sunday’s game with an injury which means Dan Arnold ($2.5K) would become the primary pass-catching TE (albeit in a limited role). He had 3 targets against Seattle the first time around, good for 2/57 and 7.7 DK points and had 4 targets on Sunday against Buffalo – good for 4/34 and 7.4 DK points which would return 3X value at his minimum price point this week.

The Seattle run back here starts with the WR’s – DK Metcalf (7.5K) and Tyler Lockett ($6.4K). If you remember back in Week 7,Lockett went nuclear – with 15 catches on TWENTY targets for 200 yards, 3 TD’s and 56 DK points.

Meanwhile, Metcalf was held to 2 catches for 23 yards and yet this week he is $200 more than he was in that match-up while Lockett is the same exact price. Considering the discount and the recent game logs, the ownership disparity should be stark which makes me want to pivot and go heavy on Metcalf as a way to get leverage off the Lockett ownership on a two-game slate.

One option would be to pay up for one of the stud Seahawks WR’s and pair them with a cheap David Moore ($3.7K) who will play the third WR role for this aerial attack and has found the end zone in 2 of his last 3 games.

The running back situation on both teams is a muddled mess with Kenyan Drake back for Arizona and with the Seahawks banged up but I think we are going to need to get our RB2 exposure here with Dalvin Cook locked as our RB1.

Drake ($5.1K) and Chase Edmonds ($5K) are priced fairly on this slate and I think I would rather take the defined roles of the Arizona backs over the guessing game that is Seattle. Drake returned this past week and ran for 100 yards on 16 carries but Edmonds still found his way to 11 total touches which included 3 targets in the passing game.

I think the way you need to approach these backs is by predicting game script. If you think Arizona is going to be throwing – then Edmonds is the preferred target but I also think you can play out the game script where Arizona uses the passing game to get up, and then uses Drake as their “closer” to run out the clock in a positive game script.

NFL DFS Picks and Pivots: Wrap up

We talk about this all the time in NFL DFS but our rosters need to “tell a story” and that is even more important in a short slate or a showdown.

This week I think you need to anchor to which stories you see playing out in each primetime game. On Monday Night Football, the data would have us heavily lean towards a Cook/Vikings slow-paced win over a undermanned Bears offense and all that leads to a shootout on Thursday Night Football.

The ownership should be heavily concentrated on the second game, so finding an in game pivot is going to be the key. Going Metcalf over Lockett, deciding on Drake or Edmonds of hitting which of the $2K tight ends will get you “there” – could be what determines your cash game position.

Good luck this week – let’s get set for Week 11!

Make sure you are following the Win Daily crew this weekend – as we have all your NFL Content and a FREE Livestream on Sunday!

Jump in Discord today guys and gals and let’s figure out the best path to profit as we build our bankroll for the NFL weekend!

Let’s get it tonight my friends!

Make sure you follow me on Twitter at @2LockSports and 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 and slate as sports FINALLY return.

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NFL Cash Lineup Review Week 10

This was a very interesting week. We only had one running back over $8,000 and some of the heavier chalk we’ve seen maybe all year. The pay line was very low this week with a huge amount of busted chalk and it likely only took one or two big plays to make the difference. This week might also lead us to another line of thinking with builds moving forward, so let’s look at NFL Cash Lineup Review Week 10!

NFL Cash Lineup Review Week 10

The Lineup

Quarterback

It become somewhat evident early in the week that it was going to be best to spend up at this position. Normally, I do the exact opposite but we usually don’t have a starting running back at minimum price. With options like Kyler Murray and Josh Allen in the highest O/U game of the slate, the path was there to choose one. The expectation was most folks playing 50/50 this week would lock in Kyler, and we were right. That was why I made the rare exception of including him in my Core Four.

I also considered Jared Goff in this range, as he was $1,500 cheaper. The first two finished about a point apart in DK scoring and Allen would have had the lead if not for last second heroics for Kyler. Goff managed to throw for 300+ yards but ran into a floor game with touchdowns, throwing zero. This week was a good reminder of the floor for Kyler. He flirted with 4x and only threw for one touchdown because the rushing production is so ridiculous for him.

Others Considered – Carson Wentz, Ben Roethlisberger

Running Back

This was honestly one of the easier weeks to fill the two running back spots. Christian McCaffrey was ruled out after the slate released, leaving Mike Davis at minimum price. The matchup was terrible. However, I did think there was a fairly easy route for 12-16 DK in receiving. We also knew that he was going to be uber chalk and in cash, it’s always best to eat the free square. Was Davis good? Nope, but it didn’t really matter in cash lineups because everyone had him. Once a player goes above about 75%, that shouldn’t be a barrier to finding green regardless of what happens.

The first player into my cash was Aaron Jones. Now this was a disappointing effort. Just like Davis, the score he put up truly didn’t matter at this ownership. I just can’t believe he barely generated over 90 yards and didn’t find the end zone in this matchup. He was far, far too cheap and the field easily recognized that. Hence, over 80% of the field rostered him and they should’ve.

After those two slots, it got interesting. Duke Johnson started in my Core but I came off him as we got later in the week. The weather started to become a concern and the O/U dropped by more than five points. When it drops that much we need to make note. Duke had plenty of touch upside but I started to really get skittish on that game environment. The field went that way in part due to salary and in part due to being trained to play three running backs.

Another set of backs that I had in mind was Nick Chubb, Miles Sanders and Antonio Gibson. I just didn’t trust Gibson for cash and figured if he laid an egg, ownership wouldn’t save him. Sanders was appealing and underpriced, and would have smashed had he found the end zone. He also wasn’t super popular so it didn’t make a difference either way.

Chubb was the one I wanted the most and he did run for over 120 yards and scored. It should have been two, but he was unselfish and made the right play for real life. Chubb ducked out on a breakaway run so the Browns could run out the clock. What it came down to was knowing that Kareem Hunt could cap Chubb’s upside. They did split carries almost evenly, so that threat was real even though Chubb still paid off.

Others Considered – Alvin Kamara

Wide Receiver

I felt like wide receiver was jam packed this week and was one of the reasons I opted to play four for maybe the first time in cash. Stefon Diggs was in the Core Four and he played well, going over 100 yards and scoring. That’s about as much as we can ask from any receiver. He also helped us go 4/4 in our prop bets, so this is a Diggs Stan Zone.

The biggest decision came next because I was stuck between Cooper Kupp and Josh Reynolds. I LOVED both of them and was struggling mightily to decide. I wasn’t super convinced Reynolds was cash viable unit seeing Stix write him up and talking with him. Once he convinced me to spend down at receiver, Reynolds was the play. I was using one of the Rams receivers against that Seattle secondary, period. I won’t stack two receivers from the same team in cash so Kupp was out. That left me with a decent amount of salary for the remaining spots.

One aspect I felt I needed with playing Reynolds was stability. I had floor plays in Kyler, Jones, Davis and Diggs. Reynolds was an atypical play so Diontae Johnson made up the difference. Once again, Johnson saw double-digit targets. That’s been a consistent facet of his game every single time he was healthy. He went nuts and 6% and honestly, that was a massive difference. I felt from the time I wrote Game by Game that he was at least $1,500 too cheap. The Steelers have three good receivers but Johnson has been a rock when he’s healthy.

That meant I had a flex spot left and this was a big deviation for me. Michael Thomas was a play I just couldn’t get by. He was under $7,500 and that felt criminal. I know he’s had a terrible season by his standards but this felt like an incredible buy-low play. I couldn’t quite get to Kamara in a way I felt comfortable, so he was out. The play many would have thought of was Keenan Allen, who I was lower on than most this week. He’s playing more outside this season and had a tougher matchup when not in the slot. Allen did score more than Thomas, but that move didn’t particularly hurt. I’ll be intrigued to see how the snaps for Allen breakdown later in the week.

Others Considered – Robert Woods, Christian Kirk, Davante Adams, Brandon Aiyuk, DeAndre Hopkins, Jalen Reagor, Jakeem Grant

Tight End

This position was a mess, as usual. I knew I wouldn’t spend up with no Travis Kelce or George Kittle. It was easy to look at spending down and I started the week with Austin Hooper as nearly a lock in cash under $4,000. With the weather knocking me off that game, I decided to take a shot with Dallas Goedert. He was pushing 40% so that’s what a lot of folks thought. I figured that coming out of the bye week, Goedert would be able to at least hit double-digit DK points. He missed that, but there was not a good play to be had at the position this week. It was mostly who fit into every other portion of the lineup.

D/ST

There was quite a few options here. My main focus was the Saints defense since they were pretty cheap and had some major upside. San Francisco is quite banged up on the offensive side and quarterback Nick Mullens has a propensity for turnovers. On the more expensive side, I did like the Eagles for many of the same reasons. Fortunately they were a luxury and I didn’t pay for that flop. The cheapest side I liked was the Rams but I didn’t trust them in cash against the Seattle offense. I had a healthy share in GPP and that helped a good bit.

Final Thoughts

Even though this isn’t the best proof of the argument, I do believe that on DraftKings playing four receivers makes sense maybe more than ever before. Diontae might actually be the best example. He and Duke were $200 apart. If Diontae only catches five passes for 50 yards, that’s 10 DK points and is likely about as bad as it would get for him. If Duke doesn’t score, he probably needs at least 3-4 receptions and some combo of 60-70 scrimmage yards. I’m starting to believe that four receivers is more than viable in cash and jamming in three backs isn’t always the best plan. This is of course slate-dependent, but it’s something to keep in mind.

Core Four Results

79.1 DK points for $26,600 which was right about 3x return and a little over half the score.

Thanks for reading NFL Cash Lineup Review Week 10 and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life and 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 and slate!

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