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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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NFL Game By Game Breakdown Week 11

At least as of Thursday, this slate is mostly straightforward. There’s only a couple major injuries we’re tracking and only a couple that we knew about. Cash games have been good to us lately and we’ll look to keep the streak alive. There’s another 11 game slate on tap for this Sunday so let’s get to business for NFL Game By Game Breakdown Week 11!

Falcons at Saints, O/U of 52 (Saints -4)

Falcons – 8th in Pace

QB – Atlanta exits the bye week to take on New Orleans and Matt Ryan might not be the best option in this game. He’s been a volume based player this year since he ranks 20th in pDB at 0.45 and is also 15th in touchdown passes. Ryan sits third in total passing yards and first in air yards but that’s coming from over 41 attempts per game. Of his nine games, four have been under 19 DK points which would really hurt at his salary. New Orleans is smack in the middle of the pack for passing yards allowed per game at 15th. Meanwhile, the DVOA is seventh against the pass. Perhaps the one facet that could save Ryan is the Saints are tied for the third-most touchdown passes allowed at 20. He doesn’t stand out to me, but Ryan is always capable of going off for 25+ DK any given week.

RB – Since New Orleans is 0.2 yards off the lead in rush yards per game, Todd Gurley might be a pretty tough sell here. Only the Pittsburgh Steelers have allowed fewer DK points per game to the position and New Orleans is tied for the league lead with just three rushing touchdowns allowed. In nine games, they’ve only let up 892 scrimmage yards and five total touchdowns. Although Gurley sits fourth in attempts and is tied for first in RZ attempts, I’m having a tough time here. The matchup is just so bad against him. He’s going to likely need to score twice to pay off a 3x return that we’re looking for.

WR – The expectation would be that Calvin Ridley would be back in the lineup but you can likely make the case that he and Julio Jones are too cheap. New Orleans is about average as far as DK points given up per game but this is not the average 1-2 combination. Ridley has a 22.2% target share and a huge 36.2% of the air yards while Julio sits at 20.8% of the targets and 26.2% of the air yards. Ridley leads in RZ targets at a 12-8 ratio and EZ work favors Ridley too at 10-7. Having said that, these two are dead even with 43 receptions each and Julio is only 19 yards behind for the receiving lead.

Julio draws mostly Marshon Lattimore and that’s nothing to fear. He’s been terrible with a 2.30 pPT, 125.0 passer rating allowed and a 14.2 YPR. Ridley would actually get the tougher matchup on paper against Janoris Jenkins. He’s only allowed a 1.70 pPT and a 92.1 passer rating, though you can see neither matchup is intimidating at all. I prefer Julio since he’s healthy but I wouldn’t argue using both. If New Orleans continues to shut down the run, the offense is going to be in the hands of the passing game.

TE – Provided Ridley is back, that will lessen my interest in Hayden Hurst. He saw eight targets last week but with Ridley back that could tick down a bit. Hurst has been on the same roller coaster a lot of tight ends have been this year. Over the past seven weeks, four games have bene over double-digit DK points but three have been under 9.5. Hurst has carved out a 15.8% target share but he’s the fourth option in the red zone and that does drop the appeal some. Tight end is a wasteland on this slate, with not a single option over $4,900. I’m not super convinced I want to pay for Hurst as the TE5 but the salary isn’t wholly unfair. New Orleans have struggled against the position at times this year and average the fifth-most DK points per game.

D/ST – It might seem odd, but Atlanta could be this week’s Rams defense. They’re only $2,300 and have been playing better under Coach Raheem Morris. Not only that, but they’ve managed two games at 6 DK points or more the past four. With a bye week to prepare and a walking turnover at quarterback on the New Orleans side, they could make plenty of sense as a punt this week.

Cash – Julio, Ridley

GPP – Ryan, Hurst, D/ST

Saints – Pace is 26th

QB – When the slate was first released, I figured Jameis Winston was likely to be a lock for me in cash at under $5,000. Now, I’m hedging on that a bit. Firstly, Coach Sean Payton is now indulging the fantasy that Taysom Hill could start. Both players are supposed to get work with the first team this week. This simply boggles my mind that we’re entertaining a 30-year old player who has 18 career pass attempts in the NFL. The reports are tha Hill couldn’t be the backup on game day because he has too many other responsibilities to prepare for. I’m pretty sure my eyes just rolled out of their sockets.

Anyways, Jameis “should” start and I’m interested. The Saints are 7-2 and need to keep stacking wins in the NFC. Atlanta still sits 28th in DVOA against the pass and someone like Drew Lock is capable of putting up a big game. My fear is that Taysom vultures all of the RZ work from Winston and leaves us cursing on Sunday. Let’s face it, if Sean Payton is willing to take Brees off the field, he’ll take Winston off without batting an eye. I may well find a safer route in cash games.

*Update* Taysom is reportedly getting the start now and I’m going to preach what everyone else is saying – HE IS A LOCK ON FANDUEL AT THE TIGHT END POSITION. Don’t think about it. Just do it. FD turned their slate into a super flex slate, and took out the worst position on the slate to boot. DO. NOT. FADE. HIM. IN. CASH. Even in GPP, I’m having a tough argument to fade him. Just be different elsewhere. If you send me a cash lineup on FD that doesn’t have Taysom, I’m going to yell at you 🙂

RB – Regardless of how the QB situation shakes out, Alvin Kamara looks awfully tempting on this slate. He’s the most expensive player but he should be, coming off a 30+ point outburst. Atalanta is actually quite good against the run, ranking in the top eight for DVOA. They also sit sixth in rush yards allowed per game but with Kamara, that’s not exactly a huge concern. He has a massive 26.8% target share and 11 RZ looks, most on the team. Atlanta has allowed 53 receptions already and four scores through the air compared with three rushing. Kamara has a combined 36 RZ chances through nine games and has my interest as a Core Four candidate. This doesn’t strike me as a Latavius Murray game and his price is egregious. Maybe the Saints run it more total times, but the RZ work could very easily get poached by Hill.

WR – Oh Michael Thomas I just can’t quit you. He was a massive dud this past week as my cash lineup can attest but the price is so low. He was targeted seven times, which is actually his season high so far. Thomas also played 78% of the snaps and he should have a quarterback that is not afraid to take chances. That could mean good things for his 8.4 aDOT that he has on the year. I don’t expect the Saints offense to change drastically but the deep ball issues for Brees have been well-documented this year. Winston will not have that same issue and hopefully the week of prep allows him to take shots downfield. Thomas has a glorious individual matchup this week with rookie A.J. Terrell. He’s allowed a 2.30 pP and a 127.0 passer rating and even though Thomas hasn’t shown it this year, he’s still a very good receiver.

I will tend to stay away from the secondary options. Emmanuel Sanders and Tre’Quan Smith were both targeted only once last game. Even Deonte Harris saw four looks so it strikes me as odd that Sanders and Smith were mostly frozen out. Sanders at least has a RZ role with the second-most targets inside the 20 but that seems somewhat iffy to bank on. With Winston and Hill mixing at quarterback, this is going to be a stick to the studs week.

TE – Jared Cook wasn’t really spared either on Sunday as he wen for the goose egg on two targets. The Saints passing game was really poor in the second half and that should be noted, as should the difference in matchups. Atlanta isn’t as good as San Francisco, even with the 49ers having injuries everywhere. Cook is not a heavily targeted player in the offense with only a 12.4% share but he does lead in EZ targets and is third in RZ looks. The Falcons lead the league in touchdowns allowed to the position so I actually prefer Cook to Hurst in this game and think Cook could be an interesting stack option in the passing game.

D/ST – New Orleans is coming off a sparkling performance but the price went up and Atlanta is a better offense with better weapons. Matt Ryan has only been sacked 19 times and the Falcons only have eight total turnovers. I think we can find better options this week.

Cash – Kamara, Thomas but overall I am a touch worried about the touchdown equity of this whole offense. Hill could be the Saints version of Tim Tebow. He can run and be very fantasy relevant himself, but he is a total question mark as a passer.

GPP – Winston, Cook, Sanders

Lions at Panthers, O/U is not up

Lions – Pace is 7th

QB – As of now, it looks like Matthew Stafford should be on the field Sunday despite a thumb injury. That’s never something I like to deal with in a quarterback, and has to be noted. Stafford is coming off one of his best fantasy days of the season at 23 DK points. That was surprising considering the Washington pass defense has been excellent so far and he was missing Kenny Golladay. Stafford is 17th in pDB at 0.47 and sits 11th in both passing yards and touchdowns. The Lions are only 15th in pass plays per game so that’s not terrible for Stafford and the price remains super reasonable. Carolina is 24th in DVOA against the pass and 22nd in passing yards per game, so this is an exploitable matchup on paper. The Panthers have allowed only 16 passing touchdowns, which is only about mid-pack. Let’s see how the thumb develops during the week.

RB – I think D’Andre Swift is going to be a Core Four candidate for the first time all season. He finally took over the backfield this past week with 21 touches to five for Adrian Peterson and one for Kerryon Johnson. Even more encouraging was Swift played 73% of the snaps and both of the other backs were under 20%. The rookie generated 147 scrimmage yards and scored en route to 25.9 DK points. His salary shot up by $1,300 but the matchup this week doesn’t get much easier. Carolina is down to 25th in DVOA against the run and 20th in rushing yards allowed per game. Opposing backs have rolled up 1,533 scrimmage yards and scored 12 total touchdowns. Everything lines up for Swift and I have a hard time not loving him this week.

*Update* Swift is out for this game and that means Adrian Peterson and Kerryon Johnson are both well in play at the minimum.

WR – Kenny Golladay practiced in a limited fashion on Wednesday, which is a positive step if nothing else. He’s extremely cheap for the slate, under $6,000 and that doesn’t happen often. Even in limited work this year, Golladay owns 30.5% of the air yards share and 19.5% of the target share. Both those marks lead the team and count me in if he can go. Rasul Douglas should be on the other side and he’s been targeted 63 times, giving up over a 96.0 passer rating and a 65.1% catch rate.

The rest of the receivers hinge on the health of Golladay and Danny Amendola. If those two both play, Marvin Jones is on the fringe of in play. He finally had a big game without Golladay but it’s been the first time out of the four games missed. If Amendola is out, perhaps Marvin Hall steps into a bigger role but that would be tough to project. The Detroit side as a whole needs more clarity come Friday.

*Update* Golladay and Amendola are out. That opens up chances for Hall and maybe even Quintez Cephus but my goal is to focus on Jones and Hockenson in the passing game.

TE – After a dud last week, T.J. Hockenson is much more reasonably priced this week and I’m really interested. I do have to wonder if the toe that he was fighting last week played a factor, so the injury reports will tell us a good story this week. Hockenson has a 17% target share and leads the team in RZ and EZ targets. In fact, he’s tied for third in the RZ and EZ among all tight ends so his scoring potential at the position is among the the highest. The Panthers allow over 14 DK points per game to tight ends and the fifth-most receptions, leaving Hockenson as an excellent target.

D/ST – For a team that averages under three DK points and only has eight turnovers forced with 13 sacks, the Lions are pretty expensive. The pressure rate under 20% doesn’t exactly leave us with confidence that things will change either.

Cash – Jones, Hockenson, AP, Johnson

GPP – Stafford, Hall

Panthers – Pace is 29th

QB – Would we be bold enough to trot out P.J. Walker if Teddy Bridgewater couldn’t suit up? I suppose it’s possible, just like Jake Luton for the Jaguars a couple weeks ago. Walker was an XFL stud for however you value that. Detroit is only 23rd in DVOA against the pass and just let up 370 yards to Alex Smith through the air. Carolina certainly has a better cast than Washington does right now and if Walker can just distribute the ball….he could be a bargain. The Lions average almost 260 passing yards given up per game so Walker could at least be in the GPP conversation. I don’t mind Bridgwater if he starts since he’s seventh in passing yards. The touchdowns still lag and I do prefer other options in Bridgewater’s range.

*Update* It appears that Walker is going to be the starter and I’m warming up to him as the week goes.

RB – Everyone is likely going to hate that I say this but Mike Davis couldn’t be in much of a better spot. He burned a huge portion of the field in both formats last week in a terrible matchup (outside of pass catching). This week is the polar opposite since Detroit is 27th in DVOA against the run and they have allowed the third-most rushing yards and the most rushing touchdowns. That’s not even counting the 483 receiving yards they’ve allowed and the five touchdowns to that side. No other team has allowed more touchdowns to backs. Last week, J.D. McKissic and Antonio Gibson combined for nearly 40 DK points. Davis has 25+ DK upside in this spot and I won’t let recency bias kill this for me. His past four games that ended poorly as the starter came against the first, second, fifth and seventh DVOA rush defenses. It doesn’t get much more brutal than that.

WR – We talked last week about the floor for Curtis Samuel and that’s exactly what we got, even though he had eight targets and three rushing attempts. Surprisingly Robby Anderson also had a pretty big flop of a game and D.J. Moore took center stage with 19.1 DK points. It’s been a long season for Moore, who has been wildly up and down. Generally the most consistent player was Anderson and Sunday was the worst game of the year. The good news is this is a good bounce back spot and both Moore and Anderson are over 21% in the target share department. The air yards are near identical but Anderson has 17 more targets on the season, making him the number one option in the offense. Even the EZ targets are dead even so the matchup could be the deciding factor.

Anderson should face Desmond Trufant and that’s advantage Anderson. Trufant has only played in four games but has been tagged for a 126.6 passer rating and a 2.10 pPT. Moore is likely to see Jeff Okudah but the rookie is under a 60% snap rate. The Lions have deployed Justin Coleman in the slot where Samuel is 49.3% of the time and he’s only allowed a 1.20 pPT. I have them ranked just like their salary does.

TE – Colin Thompson has been active for five games and has one reception for a seven yard touchdown. He can be ignored, as can Ian Thomas who has 18 targets in the season.

D/ST – Depending on the injuries, I prefer Carolina’s defense but neither in this game standout. Carolina is barely over one sack per game and their pressure rate is just over 19%. With eight fumbles forced in 10 games, that’s just not sustainable.

Cash – Anderson, Moore, Davis

GPP – Samuel, Walker

Eagles at Browns, O/U of 47.5 (Browns -3)

Eagles – Pace is 5th

QB – I said last week that Carson Wentz could be a good cash game option but the build led me to spend up. That was quite fortunate for me as Wentz was awful for fantasy, scoring 8.7 DK points and not hitting 57% for his completion rate. This is a make or break week kind of deal for Wentz. The matchup against Cleveland is incredible and barring weather (please not again), Wentz is too cheap. The Browns are 20th in DVOA against the pass and 21st in passing yards per game. That’s with their past two games being in terrible conditions for passing the football. Wentz is 26th in pDB at 0.39 and leads the league in intercept-table passes with 25. While pressured, his completion rate is 32.7% but the Eagles are fourth in pass plays per game. Cleveland is bottom 10 in DK points per game against the quarterback so I will have shares of Wentz this week.

RB – It was incredibly tilting to see Boston Scott and Corey Clement both score while Miles Sanders did not this past week but it was encouraging for Sanders nonetheless. He had 17 touches and accounted for five targets, while Scott and Clement combined for five targets. Sanders was also over 70% of the snaps so the price is still pretty fair here. Cleveland is only 18th against the run in DVOA and allows 104 rushing yards per game. They are top 12 in points per game against the position so Sanders is not a smash play on paper. I prefer to attack with the passing game but Sanders is a nice GPP play with some bigger name backs up top this week.

WR – Even with the return of Alshon Jeffery, it really appears the only two receivers we should look at are Travis Fulgham and Jalen Reagor. Jeffery played under 20% of the snaps and did not record a reception. Fulgham and Reagor were both over 85% of the snaps and Reagor actually paced the receivers with seven targets to five for Fulgham. Reagor also led in air yards last week with 96 and it’s just a matter of time before he breaks off a big play. Browns corner Denzel Ward isn’t a tru shadow corner but he will see some of Reagor. That doesn’t really scare me too much with the salary involved and you’re playing Reagor for the deep ball more than anything. Fulgham should have a bit of an easier time with Kevin Johnson who’s allowed a 104.5 passer rating. I think both are absolutely viable but am still #TeamReagor.

TE – Philly could be back to full strength in the tight end room this week with Zach Ertz potentially returning. The could mean less work for Dallas Goedert but both tight ends have functioned together. They are both incredibly cheap as well so there’s potential for both. Goedert is sitting at a 13.2% target share to 19.8% for Ertz and Cleveland is bottom 12 in DK points allowed per game with five scores.

D/ST – I loved them last week but they flopped pretty badly. Count me right back in since the price dropped $800 and the Eagles can still get home to the quarterback. They’ve logged 31 sacks so far and that’s tied for third in the league. Since the Eagles are solid against the run, they could force Cleveland to rely more on the pass and that’s not what their offense is built for.

Cash – Reagor, Wentz, D/ST

GPP – Sanders, Ertz, Goedert

Browns – Pace is 25th

QB – How can anyone want to play Baker Mayfield at this point? Weather over the past two games duly noted but a full third of his touchdowns came in one game this year. That’s not great when we’re in Week 11. Mayfield has played nine games and has one over 18 DK. ONE. Five of his nine games have been under 15 DK and you need at least that for just 3x return. Philly is 21st in DVOA against the pass but they’re sixth in yards allowed per game. Mayfield is 31st in pass plays per game and no higher than 15th in touchdowns, yards, air yards or pDB. I think Philly can make life tough in the run game but they should be able to get pressure and Mayfield sits at a 38.5% completion rate under pressure. I just don’t see any need to play him.

RB – Philly is the fourth-best team as far as DK points per game, so the matchup is polar opposite of last week for Nick Chubb and Kareem Hunt. It was interesting to see Hunt get more snaps and touches this past week, although that could have been weather and injury related. I don’t think Cleveland really used kid gloves with Chubb since he still had 19 carries but he didn’t have a reception. He only has three on the season and that’s kind of a scary aspect of his game. Philly has allowed 999 scrimmage yards but only nine touchdowns and zero through the air. I don’t feel the need to play Chubb in a tougher matchup with limited touchdown equity and even worse reception floor. His 3.3% target share is beyond poor. Hunt at least is at 12.1% but I don’t think either regret plays at the respective price.

WR – We still don’t have a real look at how the receiver corps is going to shake out after the loss of Odell Beckham. Over the past two games, Mayfield has only attempted 45 passes and that doesn’t tell us an immense amount. The good news is there is one standout and it’s Jarvis Landry with his 36.4% target share in that time frame. He’s the only receiver to have a RZ or an EZ target in those two weeks and he leads in receptions. Landry squares off against Nickell Robey-Coleman for the most part, and he’s allowed a 69% catch rate and a 94.6 passer rating. Landry could really fly under the radar and that target share catches my eye.

Rashard Higgins does have seven targets and would be about the only other player that we could consider here. The only reason that I would go the route is if you think Philly stops the run and Mayfield has to throw over 30 times in his one. Even then, Higgins should see more Darius Slay than anyone. The Eagles corner only has a 10% slot rate and has allowed just a 1.50 pPT on 62 targets this season.

TE – After seeing that Austin Hooper play almost 90% of the snaps and get targeted just twice, some may not want to go right back to the well. I certainly will since the price didn’t move and he played so much. Philly has gotten blasted by tight ends and this shapes up to be a redemption game for Hooper. The Eagles are in the bottom five in receptions allowed, yards allowed and touchdowns. Their linebackers have issues in coverage and Hooper was running hot before the appendectomy. Hooper has run a route over 75% of his snaps and I’d be shocked to see him go 1/11 again this week.

D/ST – Any defense that has a pulse is in play against Philly, although this play takes a hit with no Myles Garrett. Wentz has thrown 12 interceptions and the Eagles are tied for third in turnovers. The Browns have 22 sacks on the season and 14 turnovers forced, so that’s respectable for $3,000.

Cash – Landry, Hooper

GPP – Hunt, Chubb, D/ST

Patriots at Texans, O/U of 49 (Patriots -2)

Patriots – Pace is 20th

QB – Cam Newton continues to be viable almost wholly on his running production because the Patriots passing game is garbage. Sorry, but that’s the truth. Newton is 13th in pDB because of the running stats because he has a 3:7 TD:INT ratio. Cam is 36th in passing touchdowns on the season and he’s played in eight games. Dwayne Haskins, Kyle Allen and Mitchell Trubisky have more passing touchdowns than Cam on the season. Newton is fourth in rushing yards and he’s scored nine times, but that is the only facet that saves him. Houston is 32nd in DVOA against the run so it’s as good as it gets from that angle. I still don’t love playing a quarterback that has such a low floor passing. Even 2019 Lamar Jackson threw touchdown passes. I understand the GPP or cash play but I don’t personally love it.

RB – I really hope Sony Michel is not quite ready to come back, because the duo of Damien Harris and Rex Burkhead really stand out in this matchup. Harris has logged 62 attempts over the past four games and has 352 yards. The bad part is he has all of one target in that span and Cam is stealing the touchdown chances. Harris has five RZ chances to 10 for Newton, which could be a slight issue at this price point. Still, that level of workload against the worst run defense in the NFL has to be appealing.

Burkhead is a little scarier as he only played 20 snaps last week and that seems like it could lead to a floor game in a hurry. Two receiving touchdowns might not be the best chance to repeat but Burkhead has been involved in the pass game more lately. He has 13 targets over the past four weeks and also has 28 carries, much more than James White. If Burkhead maintains the “Swiss Army knife” role he brings value but just remember – this is New England we’re talking about here.

WR – I’m only particularly looking at two options in the passing game this week in Jakobi Meyers and Damiere Byrd. Meyers continued his to streak with another 5/59 on seven targets (and threw a 24-yard touchdown) while Byrd accounted for nine targets and went 5/65. In the games without Julian Edelman Meyers has an astronomical 41.9% of the targets and 63.5% of the air yards. He should not be under $5,000. Better yet, the alignments could mean Texans corner Bradley Roby lines up elsewhere. Even if he moves to Meyers, Roby has had issues this season. He’s allowed four touchdowns, a 63.8% catch rate and a 1.80 pPT. For $4,900 I’m more than willing to roll the dice with Meyers.

Byrd has a 17.6% share and is much better suited for GPP than anything else. The potential matchup with Vernon Hargreaves leaves room to go off as well. The former Buccaneer has allowed a 2.00 pPT and a massive 112.7 passer rating with a 14.0 YPR. That’s the kind of corner Byrd can burn especially at a 4.3 40-yard dash for Byrd.

TE – There was a game where Ryan Izzo was the only active tight end on the roster and he’s still not hit over 5.8 DK points all year.

D/ST – The price is fine but I don’t love them on the road against a much better passing offense than what they saw Sunday night. My issue is they have only 13 sacks all season so can they take advantage of Houston allowing the fifth-most sacks? If they can’t there’s a good chance they flop at this salary.

Cash – Meyers, Harris

GPP – Cam, Byrd, Burkhead, D/ST

Texans – Pace is 11th

QB – I was really excited to play Deshaun Watson last week until the Cleveland weather patterns destroyed that. Watson managed to generate 14 DK points which isn’t the worst case scenario but I’m right back to playing him on this slate. He’s among the top five most talented signal callers available to us in my eyes and $6,500 is very cheap for his potential. New England is all the way down to 30th in DVOA against the pass and this is not the defense we feared. Watson is still inside the top 10 in pDB at 0.53 and he’s eighth in point per game at 22. He also sits inside the top 10 in passing yards and touchdowns, making his price seem very appealing against a not-so-scary matchup.

RB – I don’t fully understand how Duke Johnson gets a price bump after laying an egg of a score last week, but there we are. The good news is Duke barely left the field last week, missing just three plays the entire game. He’s not going to see a ton of work in the passing game because that’s just not what the Texans offense does. David Johnson is at a 9.5% target share and Duke is at 7.8% so he’ll need to get most of his production on the ground. New England is 24th in rushing yards allowed per game and 31st in DVOA against the pass, so I do like Duke again this week. Hopefully in a situation where the passing game is a legitimate threat, he bounces back.

WR – Brandin Cooks continues to be severely underpriced compared to Will Fuller. Under the new coaching regime, Cooks has a 27.9% target share lead to 22.6% for Fuller. Now, Fuller does have the air yards share lead at 33.8% but Cooks has 57 more yards, 10 more receptions and one fewer touchdown. The RZ work is equal at four looks each and Cooks has a 3-2 lead in EZ targets. Cooks has outscored him for fantasy by about 10 points in that span as well. I believe both are in play and you can double up with Watson, but continue to prefer Cooks if playing one at the price.

Cooks also gets J.C. Jackson who hasn’t been great this year. He’s gotten hit with a 2.00 pPT, 15.3 YPR and four touchdowns allowed. Stephon Gilmore was limited Wednesday and he would likely go after Fuller. Motivation is a serious question mark although the Pats have a shot at the playoffs still. Gilmore also has been worse this year with a 1.90 pPT and a 102.4 passer rating, astronomical numbers for the reigning Defensive Player of the Year. Fuller is a walking explosive play so it only usually takes one.

TE – Of course it was Pharaoh Brown with a touchdown catch last week, depriving Jordan Akins or Darren Fells. Akins didn’t play a ton of snaps and Fells was right at 60%. I don’t love any of them this week and it looks like it’s just a mess. Even with all options being under $3,000 I think we can find better options for punts. Akins still has a higher target share, more air yards and double the RZ share so he’s my “favorite” of the group.

D/ST – I’m not really looking toward them because of the Patriots are having success running the ball, Coach Bill Belichick is going to run it 50+ times if he chooses. I don’t see the Texans stopping the run suddenly and the chances for turnovers and sacks are likely diminished here.

Cash – Watson, Duke, Cooks

GPP – Fuller, Akins

Titans at Ravens, O/U of 49.5 (Ravens -5)

Titans – Pace is 4th

QB – I don’t typically play quarterbacks against the Ravens and I don’t see this week being an exception. He started off the season on fire but the past month has seen a downturn with no games over 18.3 DK. The past wo weeks have seen his completion rate below 56% both games and just a total of 24 DK points. Maybe it’s not a surprise that those two games came against teams inside the top six in DVOA against the pass. Baltimore is not far off that mark, sitting 10th. Tannehill has been a little lucky as well. He’s 27th in pass plays per game and 19th in yards, but seventh in touchdown passes and fifth in pDB at 0.56. With the Ravens only allowing 11 touchdown passes on the year and the seventh-fewest pass yards per game, I’m looking elsewhere.

RB – The matchup is even tougher for Derrick Henry and the price is likely a little too high for me. Baltimore is third in DVOA against the run and Henry continues to be completely uninvolved in the pass game, with just 11 receptions on the year. The Ravens have only allowed six total touchdowns so far to backs and are tied for the fewest rushing with three. Henry is a different animal this time of year but the price really concerns me here. I’m not really that interested as things stand, especially with other elite backs available to us.

WR – Last game was really disappointing from A.J. Brown and it seemed as though an early drop really played havoc with him. I don’t think I want to pay all the way up to him at $7,200 with some of the other options/matchups directly around him but he could be a potential slate-breaker with nobody on him. Before the poor game Thursday, he had scored for five straight weeks and eclipsed 80 yards three times. I would suspect that Marlon Humphrey is going to be mostly on Brown, since Humphrey is at about 49% slot snaps. He can kick out to the boundary and give Brown some issues.

The funny part about Brown is Corey Davis has been similar to him without the touchdowns. The targets are only four apart and the air yards are only 14 yards apart. Davis has fewer RZ targets but they both have four EZ targets and is only 20 PPR points behind Brown. In reality, the pricing difference shouldn’t really be $2,400. Davis should see a heavy does of Marcus Peters but that’s not a death sentence. Peters has allowed a 1.70 pP and almost a 62% completion rate.

TE – Jonnu Smith has been about the textbook definition of touchdown or bust this year. He does have eight total spikes but when he doesn’t the results haven’t been great. The log is dotted with 2.3, 1.9 and 4.9 performances. He’s under a 16% target share which is fine and the 30.6% RZ share does help his cause a lot. I just don’t love paying what is top dollar on the slate for a flawed tight end. Smith only runs a route on 59.6% of his snaps, 27th in the league. On top of that, Baltimore has only allowed four scores and are under 45 receptions allowed to the position.

D/ST – The Titans are cheap but they likely should be. They can’t get to the quarterback with only 11 sacks and that’s tied for the second-fewest in the league. They have generated 14 turnovers but I’d rather look elsewhere.

Cash – Davis

GPP – Henry, Brown, Smith, Tannehill

Ravens – Pace is 30th

QB – How the mighty have fallen. Lamar Jackson is under two total touchdowns per game and his production has been much more of a wild ride than 2019. Perhaps I’m being a little harsh but when you average under 200 passing yards per game and are under 60 rush yards per game, you need touchdowns to carry you and that doesn’t always happen with Lamar this year. Having said all of that…..I love him this week.

Look, when old man Phil Rivers hangs over 300 yards and a touchdown on you, the defense just isn’t good. Tennessee is down at 25th in DVOA against the pass and 28th in passing yards allowed per game. The Titans have the fourth-lowest pressure rate in football (and still no Jadeveon Clowney) and when Jackson has a clean pocket, his completion rate is 74.6%. That’s just 17th in the league, but this represent a great spot for passing upside. Add in the production for the legs and I think we get a 2019 style game for only $7,300.

RB – A couple weeks ago when J.K Dobbins and Gus Edwards ran all over the Steelers and they were hot waiver claims, I tried to preach caution. Well, the return of Mark Ingram confirmed my worst fears for at least one game. It was the same evil three-headed monster at running back it has been all year. Dobbins got the most snaps at 44% but that is the high-water mark with all three active. He touched the ball six total times and when all three have been active, they’ve split touches to an immense degree. They just eat into everyone’s production and despite the great spot (Titans rank 19th in DVOA against the run and 18th in rush yards allowed per game) I don’t think any of the three stand out.

WR – If I think Lamar might have a standout game, it stands to reason the receivers have to be in a good spot. Well, mostly because Jackson could just go nuts on the ground but I do like receivers here. Marquise Brown has been totally frustrating this season and has six games under 10 DK points. This is a fantastic spot to get off the hook and go off at the second-lowest price we’ve gotten all year. Even with all his flaws, Brown is one of three receivers in football to have 40% or higher of his team’s air yards.The Titans have allowed the second-most DK points to the position on the season and the third-most yards with the second-most receptions.

Malcolm Butler for the Titans can’t run with him and Adoree’ Jackson will be in his first game action of the year, if he plays. (*Udpate* He will not play). This has to be the spot. I don’t even think using Willie Snead is the worst idea this week. He’s third in targets, air yards, RZ targets and EZ targets in the passing game. The floor is low but the ceiling is high with two games over 18 DK in the past three weeks. The presence of Desmond King isn’t that scary although King has played slightly better with Tennessee.

TE – You can argue over who’s been more disappointing this year, Brown or Mark Andrews and the correct answer is likely both. Andrews only has three double-digit DK games himself and is under 400 yards receiving. He is still fifth in RZ targets among tight ends and tied for fourth in EZ looks. Tennessee has been lust about average against the tight end so far but has allowed five scores. Andrews is absolutely in play in Jackson stacks, and getting the trio of Lamar/Brown/Andrews will likely not get much cheaper than this.

D/ST – The price is a little high here. Baltimore has generated 25 sacks which is great but the Tennessee offense has only given up 12 sacks and only has four turnovers. That leads the league so I don’t see a strong reason to pay top dollar for Baltimore here.

Cash – Jackson, Andrews by default with the state of the position

GPP – Brown, Snead

Steelers at Jaguars, O/U of 46 (Steelers 10.5)

Steelers – Pace is 24th

QB – I’m going to let some Pittsburgh bias in here but shouldn’t Ben Roethlisberger be getting some MVP buzz? He’s fifth in touchdowns and while I give you he’s only 15th in yards, the 22:4 TD:INT ratio is excellent. This was a .500 team last year who only really added Chase Claypool and now they sit at 9-0. The deep ball is still and issue for Big Ben with just a 25.6% completion rate on 43 attempts, but if he starts hitting those it’s going to be scary. Pittsburgh is also down to 24th in rushing yards per game and these contests are starting to be in Ben’s hands more. Over the past month, he’s had three games over 40 attempts and the fourth still had 32. The past two weeks have seen him score at least 28 DK points with seven total touchdowns and 300-yard games each time out. This is likely a good time to mention Jacksonville has the 31st ranked DVOA against the pass. Big Ben is a good shot to continue his hot streak this week.

RB – Conversely, it’s really tough to want to play James Conner. He’s had two straight cupcakes matchups against teams in the bottom 12 in DVOA against the run and has a total of 10.8 DK points. He’s still 12th in rushing yards on the season but he just has looked indecisive the past couple weeks. Jacksonville is 20th in DVOA against the run and 25th in rushing yards allowed per game but I have some reservations here. It’s interesting to note that Pittsburgh is 31st in run success rate on the offensive line. Conner’s price really hasn’t even moved after two flops and it’s much easier to play Swift (if active) for $200 cheaper. The Steelers aren’t shy about throwing the ball and if the run game continues to be below the standard, Conner likely flops again.

WR – Over these past two weeks the trio of Claypool, JuJu Smith-Schuster and my man crush Diontae Johnson have all scored at least 14 DK every week and of six possible games, there are four games over 20 DK. This is sort of a long way to say that if you believe that Ben throws 40+ times again, the mega stack is in play. Now, that is a very dangerous way to live and it could backfire but last week those four players combined for right about 102 points. The salary for this week combined is $25,100 so that would be 4x return but again – quite risky.

If you decide on just one or two, I continue to have them ranked inversely of their salary. Johnson is likely in the Core Four, Claypool is close behind and JuJu is last simply because he costs he most. JuJu and Diontae are over 20% of the target share this year with Claypool at 17% so there’s not a huge advantage if Ben throws 40+ times. I fear exactly zero Jacksonville corners and am not concerned with any individual matchup. JuJu gets Tre Herndon in the slot, Claypool gets fellow rookie C.J. Henderson (and has three inches on him) and Diontae gets Sidney Jones.

*Update* Henderson is out, making this matchup even better

TE – Eric Ebron is always on the fringe of in play and that’s true this week as well. The salary is fine and he’s been targeted at least five times for a month straight now. Last week was the first time in that month that he didn’t put up at least 11 DK points but when all four touchdowns go to the receivers, it’s not hard to see why. Ebron is 11th in route percentage at 78.1% and has nearly a 15% target share. Jacksonville has allowed he eighth-most DK points per game and seven spikes already, so they are vulnerable. If one of the receivers flopped, it’s likely because Ebron scores.

D/ST – This is the same story as the Dallas game for me. Pittsburgh checks all the boxes we want in a defense and is playing a sixth-round rookie. However, paying $4,600 for a defense is simply not something I will do. You need over 13 DK points to return 3x value and in the Dallas game, they scored seven. That would be brutal for the salary involved.

Cash – Ben, Johnson, Claypool, JuJu

GPP – Ebron, Conner

Jaguars – Pace is 6th

QB – It’s pretty difficult to find something to hang on to for Jake Luton. The shine came off this past game with just 9.7 DK points and he barely completed 50% of his passes. The environment should be a lot better than it was in Green Bay but the defense isn’t going to be any easier. Pittsburgh is second in DVOA against the pass and has only allowed 15 touchdown passes to 11 interceptions already. This is pretty much a hands off situation for me and I won’t think twice about placing him in a lineup. I’d rather play P.J. Walker before Luton.

RB – James Robinson is likely to have at least 15 touches but I’m not a big fan of him in this spot. Pittsburgh has mostly been stout against the run, with a couple of exceptions. They are still sixth in DVOA and ninth in yards per game and it makes all the sense in the world to load the box and force Luton to beat them. The Steelers have allowed the least DK points per game to backs this year. That includes just six touchdowns and 960 scrimmage yards total. Robinson is not that expensive for the volume he’s gotten this year (fifth most carries, 10th most receptions) but it’s still hard to play him over Swift given the matchups involved.

WR – I kind of like Keelan Cole this week. While D.J. Chark might get some attention, he’s likely to square off against Joe Haden. Cole has been in the slot about 64% of the time and that is the weakest portion of the Steelers defense. It’s still hard to project who’s the man with Luton in the passing game. Chark has 17 targets, Chris Conley has 16 and Cole has nine. That’s also with Laviska Shenault basically missing both games. That facet is likely to be the same since Shenault is still not at practice as of Thursday. Conley should square up with Steven Nelson who has been a bit of a weaker link. He’s given up a 2.20 pPT and a 123.2 passer rating on 61 targets. Slot corner Mike Hilton is in line to return for Pittsburgh, facing Cole. He’s allowing over a 70% completion rate so there are runback options on a Steelers stack.

TE – Tyler Eifert was sort of interesting last week but I don’t think I’ll go back this week. He has nine targets with Luton under center but has yet to record a single RZ or EZ target. There’s options that aren’t that much more expensive with better quarterbacks and higher chances at production.

D/ST – I’ll pass here considering they give up an average of 30 points and have the fewest sacks in the league.

Cash – None

GPP – Cole, Conley, Chark, Robinson

Bengals at Washington, O/U of 46.5 (Washington -1.5)

Bengals – Pace is 15th

QB – It may not be the best matchup on paper, but count me in for some Joe Burrow this week. Even in bad conditions against a fierce pass rush last week, Burrow threw the ball 40 times. He only managed 12.5 DK points so it’s not like I’m saying Burrow in cash but this is remarkably cheap for him. He’s first in pass plays per game so even with the 27th pDB of 0.38, he’s in play every single week. Burrow is in the top 10 in passing yards and air yards, he’s just been unlucky in touchdowns with only 12. That’s not exactly surprising for a rookie but the salary is enticing. Washington is fifth in DVOA and first in yards allowed per game but showed last week they can be cracked. Burrow is a worthy GPP play with a lot of salary to be spent elsewhere this week.

RB – With Joe Mixon yet to practice, we have another week of Gio Bernard on the docket. Washington is 14th in DVOA against the run but there’s no doubt Bernard has some floor here. We saw it last week with under nine DK. The good news is he was still closing in on 70% of the snaps and we also saw what a talented back is capable of against Washington. I don’t think Gio is the same as Swift but he has receiving upside and if he’g going to get 15 touches or potentially more, he’s likely a little too cheap this week. The field may well overlook him with Burrow and the passing game getting the attention.

WR – The price drop for Tyler Boyd really seems like an overreaction. He still leads with a 21.2% target share and 11 RZ targets, not to mention the five EZ targets that are tied for second. Boyd’s price dropped by almost $1,000 which is unwarranted and he gets one of the better matchups. Jimmy Moreland mans the slot for Washington and has surrendered a 1.40 pPT and a 68.6% catch rate.

Tee Higgins is still interesting at his price point as well since he’s under $6,000. He went off last week and has clearly taken over as the 1A in the Bengals passing game. The issue with Higgins could be the tougher matchup. Kendall Fuller has only allowed a 57.8 passer rating, which is the fourth-best in the league. Much like last week, A.J. Green is not remotely on my radar. It seems like they featured him for that two week stretch to try and swing a trade, because he’s done nothing since then. With Boyd being cheaper than Higgins, it presents an easy path to get a piece of the passing game.

TE – Drew Sample is 20th for route percentage at 66.8% and only has a 7.8% target share on the season. Washington has been vulnerable to this position but there’s not much of a reason to think Sample would get the work to take advantage of it.

D/ST – Even against a flawed offense, it’s hard to throw a defense in there that has 11 sacks and nine turnovers. The pressure rate is the second-lowest in the league and I’ll take my shots with Atlanta in this range.

Cash – Boyd, Gio

GPP – Burrow, Higgins

Washington – Pace is 13th

QB – Alex Smith is chewing up all sorts of yards, combining for 715 the past two contests. The issue is he’s only thrown a single touchdown but he’s completing a high percentage of passes and it feels like the time might be coming for a big game. Heck, he flirted with 4x value at this salary last week on yardage alone. The Bengals haven’t gotten pressure on anyone and they’ve been shredded through the air with the 29th ranked DVOA against the pass. Smith has 15 pass attempts off play action already and is at an 85% completion rate. If that held up, that is first in the league and I think he’s a solid play in any format. The Bengals are second in touchdown passes allowed with 21 on the year.

RB – Thank goodness Antonio Gibson got in for two scores because nothing else really stood out for him in this game. Game script has gone against Washington the past two weeks but it’s hard not to notice the disparity between Gibson and J.D. McKissic. Gibson has only played 46% and 38% of the snaps the past two weeks while McKissic has been on the field at least 70% of the time. The touches have fortunately been dead even at 26 but McKissic now has 29 targets over the past two weeks. That leads the NFL in that time period. The next closest player is Davante Adams at 24. He’s one of only seven players over a 30% target share in that period as well. Especially on DK, both players are very valuable at their price with Bengals ranking 21st in DVOA. Gibson might have a lower floor than appears but perhaps this script doesn’t get so far out of hand.

WR – How can you not want to play Terry McLaurin at this point? He leads the entire NFL in air yards share at 42.6% and the target share of 26.4% is excellent. He’s the WR8 in PPR formats so far this season and he’s still under $7,000 which is too cheap. He hasn’t missed a beat with Smith under center, logging 27 and 18 DK points in the past two weeks. The consistency has been great as well because he’s had one game under double-digit DK points and that was against Jalen Ramsey. McLaurin should eat once again this week. A corner like William Jackson and his 14.3 YPR and 90.8 passer rating allowed don’t worry me.

When we talk about punts, we generally want players that don’t leave the field because hopefully they fall into some production. Cam Sims fits that bill, with over 90% of the snaps last week and Dontrelle Inman not looking like he’ll be out again. Sims has seen nine targets the past two weeks but he has a 100-yard game under his belt as well. The potential is there for this price and the matchup looks good too. He should see LeShaun Sims some of the time and he has a 119.2 passer rating allowed. You could do worse at this range of salary.

TE – I’m back to at least using Logan Thomas as a punt as he’s just $3,300 and he’s seen six targets in both games with Smith. He’s garnered a 13% target share which is enough for this range of a play and the bengals have scuffled against tight ends all year. They’ve allowed the third-most yards and tied for third-most touchdowns along with the seventh-most receptions. If the ball doesn’t go to McLaurin or McKissic, there’s a good cache it gets thrown to Thomas.

D/ST – They did not perform last week but with Washington under $3,000 and the Bengals allowing the second-most sacks on the season, I’m going back with them this week. The pressure rate allowed for Cincy has come down to 21.3% but anytime a defense is at this price with 28 sacks and seventh in DVOA, I’m interested.

Cash – McLaurin, McKissic, Smith, Thomas, D/ST

GPP – Gibson, Sims

Dolphins at Broncos, O/U of 45 (Dolphins -3.5)

Dolphins – Pace is 31st

QB – Word to the wise to young gun Tua Tagovailoa – maybe keep it to yourself about the NFL being “not as hard as you thought”.

If you don’t think that’s on the board in the Denver locker room, you’re wrong. I’ll give Tua credit that he hasn’t thrown a pick yet but he also hasn’t topped 248 passing yards or thrown more than two touchdowns in a start. He’s been fine so far but Denver is 12th in DVOA against the pass. With two of his starts under 15 DK, I don’t find myself using Tua this week with Jameis, Wentz and even Smith in this range of salary. I’d like to see more production from the rookie before playing him on the road in Denver this week against a solid-ish pass defense.

RB – If it’s the Salvon Ahmed show once again, I’m going to be tempted to a good extent. He’s under $5,000 and last week he accounted for 22 total touches. That’s insane volume for this price and Denver is down to 17th in DVOA agains the run and 23rd in rushing yards allowed per game. Just against the running backs, Denver has allowed over 1,200 scrimmage yards and eight touchdowns. Ahmed played 76% of the snaps last week and was the man in this backfield. We’ll keep an eye on Matt Breida but if he’s out, Ahmed looks pretty solid in any format.

*Update* Breida was a full participant on Thursday, making the Ahmed play a lot more unstable.

WR – The duo of DeVante Parker and Jakeem Grant were the only two receivers not he field more than 20% and they both played over 75% of the snaps last week. Parker saw seven targets and Grant saw five, with Grant having the better fantasy day with four receptions and a score. Parker is likely going to do with A.J. Bouye most of the time but Bouye’s stats look ugly. He’s only been targeted 21 times but he’s not stopping many of them, allowing 17 receptions for 205 yards and a 123.2 passer rating.

On paper, Bryce Callahan has been the better corner despite being targeted 55 times. He’s only allowed a 1.20 pPT and a 61.5 passer rating. Grant is still worth a look at the price, but if the stats for each corner showed up Sunday Parker has blowup potential.

TE – Last week saw Mike Gesicki play under 50% of the snaps and that’s happened three times now. For whatever reason, Miami doesn’t seem overly impressed with him and even though he had five targets, it’s really scary to play a fight end with the potential of so few snaps. You could actually punt Durham Smythe as a touchdown or bust candidate. In the past three weeks, two of them have been over 60% of the snaps for Smythe but there are no targets to fall back on. He only has five in those three games so this is MME only.

D/ST – If my builds allow it, this may well be the cash defense. Miami is playing extraordinarily well under Coach Brian Flores and has 22 sacks with 14 turnovers. They draw either Drew Lock who has 10 picks in seven games or a backup. Either way, Miami is set up to play well this week and the only reason I wouldn’t play them is if they don’t fit.

Cash – Ahmed, Grant, D/ST

GPP – Tua, Parker

Broncos – Pace is 3rd

QB – The expectation right now is Lock plays but we’ll see about that. Regardless of who plays the position, I can’t say that I’m interested here. Miami is eighth in DVOA against the pass although they are 19th in passing yards allowed per game. What has really helped them is the 13:8 TD:INT ratio so far and that doesn’t bode well for any Denver quarterback. Let’s check back in Friday and see where we’re at here, but I don’t expect much to change as far as who I want to play.

*Update* Lock is questionable and looks in line to suit up for the week

RB – The way to attack the Miami defense is to run the ball as much as you can. They rank 29th in DVOA against the run and 22nd in rush yards allowed per game, so it’s not exactly a secret. Now the question is can Melvin Gordon and/or Phillip Lindsay do anything against it? Over the past two weeks, they have combined for 29 carries for 89 yards. Yes, that’s both backs combined. Denver is only 19th in rushing yards per game and neither back has really distinguished themselves so far. Gordon leads in snaps at least with between 55%-60% over the past three weeks but I actually might take my shot with Lindsay. I believe him to be the more explosive player and the 5.5 YPC for Lindsay to 4.1 for Gordon is noticeable. That’s not a bible stat but it’s a big disparity.

WR – We want the player who spends the most time in the slot and that’s not Tim Patrick or Jerry Jeudy. No, that’s K.J. Hamler and he should draw the majority of Nik Needham. We’ve picked on him all season and Hamler has seen 20 targets the past two weeks. He’s also incredibly cheap. Patrick and Jeudy might have their hands full with Xavien Howard and Byron Jones towards the boundary. I would be less interested in Hamler if Lock sits but we’ll see on that front. Jeudy is likely to see Jones while Patrick gets Howard. I’d not really mess with those two situations myself, especially with quarterback questions. Needham has gotten tagged for a 60% catch rate but he’s shockingly a a 1.20 pPT. I think this is a case where the stats are a little misleading as he’s still the corner to attack

TE – There’s been injuries at play but the last month for Noah Fant doesn’t look all that great. He’s only had one game over 7.5 DK points and it’s not like he’s not getting targeted. Fant has accumulated 26 targets in that time frame and this offense is honestly a touch crowded. Patrick, Jeudy and Hamler all get their looks too and Fant only has four RZ targets and two EZ targets. I don’t love that from a tight end and if I spend up, it’s likely somewhere else this week.

D/ST – This isn’t the worst play. Tua made a few intercept-table throws last week and he’s likely due a turnover or two. Denver doesn’t have a ton of turnovers with just nine but does have 22 sacks. I still favor Atlanta but Denver is on the table.

Cash – None

GPP – Hamler, Lindsay, Jeudy, Patrick, Fant, Gordon

Jets at Chargers, O/U of 46 (Chargers -9.5)

Jets – Pace is 9th

QB – Is anyone going to be bold enough to play Joe Flacco? I tend to doubt it but the week before the bye he did account for 21 DK points against the Patriots and threw three touchdowns. The Chargers are in the middle of the road in DVOA against the pass and even though there’s still not much to write home about for Flacco, he could be a moderately interesting punt in theory. It’s just so hard to trust the Hets in any way, shape or form at this point. They are one of the worst offenses in football so even in a halfway decent matchup, I get concerned. LA only has four interceptions all year against 18 touchdown passes but I don’t think I’ll be bold enough to pull the trigger.

RB – If I knew La’Mical Perine was going to get the work, I’d be interested. However, Frank Gore won’t just go away and he got fed 14 touches to eight for Perine. The snaps were about even but that only gets you so far. Until Perine is the man in this backfield, they are an easy skip. Gore is useless for fantasy with under six DK points scored per game. The reports are Perine will see a “heavy workload” coming out of the bye but I don’t believe that in the least.

WR – I tend to think that Jamison Crowder was not healthy last game and the bye week did him a world of good. Crowder still owns a 28.2% target share on the season and that’s insanely valuable for PPR formats. He’s the WR10 on a points per game basis and I wonder if the field has kind of forgotten about that. I do wish he was slightly cheaper but running about 70% of his snaps in the slot is going to help. With Desmond King in Tennessee, Tevaughn Campbell has taken over the slot duties. He’s only been targeted 14 times but has allowed 10 receptions for a 104.2 passer rating. This spot should favor Crowder.

With Crowder only getting targets twice last game, Denzel Mims and Breshad Perriman both saw at least seven targets and Perriman went off for over 100 yards and two scores. I would still prefer Perriman as I think he fits better with Flacco and if someone loses targets to Crowder, it’s likely Mims. The rookie is also potentially going to have the tougher matchup with Casey Hayward. He has allowed the lowest catch rate in football at 44.1% thus far. Michael Davis is likely on Perriman a decent amount and has only allowed 10.8 YPR on 57 targets, inside the top 20 for corners.

TE – There is no player worth looking at in this position for the Jets.

D/ST – Typically I don’t mind them as a punt but this is not a good matchup and I’m not interested.

Cash – Crowder

GPP – Perriman, Mims, Perine

Chargers – Pace is 10th

QB – The Jets are dead last in DVOA against the pass and 29th in passing yards allowed per game. Somehow, they’ve only allowed 16 touchdown passes but they’ve still allowed the fourth-most DK points to the position. Justin Herbert has lit everyone up so far and is sixth in fantasy points, fifth in pDB, 14th in yards, eighth in touchdown passes and 10th in pass plays per game. This one is short and sweet. Play Herbert in any format you choose and he should be one of the higher scoring quarterbacks on the slate.

RB – I really don’t appreciate the fact that the Chargers are making me talk about Kalen Ballage. He logged another 23 touches this past week and scored another 15 DK points against the Dolphins. I’m not crazy about the price because he is flat-out not that talented and there’s a lot of options that are cheaper that I like better. New York is actually 10th in DVOA against the run but 19th in rushing yards allowed per game. Simply as a volume play in a good offense, Ballage has to be considered. But his range of salary of about $1,000 either way is pretty loaded.

WR – Did Keenan Allen let you down last week? Well, buckle up because he’s in line to make up for it this week. Allen has still maintained a 28.9% target share since Herbert has taken over and there’s not a soul in the Jets secondary that can stop him. I’m not having a second thought playing Allen in any lineup or format.

There’s no reason to sleep on Mike Williams this week either. We didn’t love him last week as a boundary receiver against the Dolphins but the matchup is quite different.This week it’s Bleesuan Austin and he’s let up a 1.60 pPT and a 12.4 YPR. Williams has one fewer game than Allen with Herbert but is only 83 yards behind in air yards, so we know where the ceiling is. Even Jalen Guyton is in play as a boom or bust option and by bust I mean zero.

TE – Just when I thought I was alright letting go of Hunter Henry, he scores a touchdown last week. It seems important to realize that without that score, he’s under eight DK points for the fourth straight game. The role with Herbert just hasn’t been that great. You would think 51 targets would translate to more than 32 receptions and two touchdowns but it’s not working out like that. Donald Parham and Gabe Nabers have the same amount of touchdown receptions since Herbert took over. He’s in play in Chargers stacks since the Jets have allowed six touchdowns to tight ends.

D/ST – I won’t consider the Chargers at this price. Yes, it’s the Jets but they have 16 sacks and eight turnovers in nine games. No way am I forking over $4,000 for them.

Cash – Herbert, Allen, Williams

GPP – Ballage, Henry, Guyton

Packers at Colts, O/U of 51 (Colts -2.5)

Packers – Pace is 32nd

QB – On paper, the matchups for Green Bay this week aren’t going to be great but this is as healthy as the offense has been just about all year. Perhaps the field doesn’t turn to Aaron Rodgers but it’s not often a quarterback scores 29.4 DK points and sees his salary drop by $900. Indy is fourth in DVOA against the pass and second in yards allowed per game but this is Rodgers with all his weapons intact. He’s second in pDB at 063, sixth in passing yards and second in touchdowns despite being 22nd in passing plays. I’m not sure there’s a huge need to play Rodgers in cash but he’s an elite GPP play that is badly underpriced regardless of matchup.

RB – It was a vastly disappointing day last week for Aaron Jones but he got the work we had hoped for. With 18 total touches, it’s a little tough to complain but the production wasn’t quite there. Gaining 95 scrimmage yards isn’t bad but the lack of a touchdown hurt. He’s still very affordable for his potential to go nuclear every game. Indy matches their prowess against the pass in defending the run game as well. They’re fourth in DVOA and third in rush yards allowed, not to mention under 900 scrimmage yards and seven touchdowns. Knowing Jones has 20 touch and 30+ DK point upside keeps him in play, but isn’t a primary target for me. Jamaal Williams recorded 11 touches last game but is too expensive for the second fiddle role.

WR – It’s funny to see Davante Adams score 19 DK points and walk away disappointed but that’s the standard he’s set this year. Most receivers would be pumped for an 8/66/1 line and I believe this is where Colts corner Xavier Rhodes could have a rough time. Rhodes has been amazing this year with only a 45.2% catch rate allowed and a 61.9 passer rating allowed. Just like Rodgers, if nobody wants to play him that just makes it even better. Rhodes isn’t going to scare me away from a 34.6% target share and a 38.5% air yards share.

The secondary receivers are somewhat interesting. Allen Lazard is back in action this week and should see some of Kenny Moore who’s only allowed a 1.50 pPT. That’s solid since he’s been targeted 58 times this year but he has also allowed 444 yards. They could be cautious with him since Marquez Valdes-Scantling has been playing well lately. He might also have about the best matchup on paper if he sees Rock Ya-Sin, as he’s allowed a 91.4 passer rating and nearly a 70% catch rate. MVS has two straight weeks of 19+ DK points and if Lazard is worked back in slowly, he could go off at under 5% this week.

TE – I’ll have no interest in Robert Tonyan this week. Not only is he not really involved in the offense with weapons returning, the Colts have been great against the position. They haven’t even allowed a touchdown yet and are the second-best team in DK points allowed. Tonyan is under 11% for his target share and I’d rather just play Thomas for $100 more.

D/ST – The Packers defense is an uninspiring option with only seven turnovers forced, but they do a least have 20 sacks. The Colts offense allows only a 13.4% pressure rate which blunts that aspect. I likely go elsewhere, although Philip Rivers always seems to have a chance to throw a pick or two.

Cash – Adams, Rodgers but neither are needed

GPP – Jones, MVS, Lazard

Colts – Pace is 22nd

QB – Rivers himself is coming off a 300-yard game and I still can’t get on board here. He’s come up to 19th in pass plays per game but he’s still only 25th in pDB at 0.40. Where he’s really lacking so far is touchdowns at just 11, which ranks 23rd. The Packers are 16th in DVOA against the pass and 13th in yards allowed per game. It’s not the best match for Rivers to throw for multiple touchdowns since Green Bay has only allowed 14 on the season. The one reason to play Rivers is if you believe that Green Bay will put some points on the board and force them to chase. Indy is seventh in pace of play when trailing by at least seven points.

RB – If we absolutely knew that Nyheim Hines was going to be the man in this game, I’d be in love with the price. He’s coming off a 28.5 DK point game where he touched the ball 17 times and played nearly 60% of the snaps. Hines generated 115 scrimmage yards and the matchup is excellent. Green Bay is weak against the run as the 22nd ranked DVOA along with the second-most DK points per game to the position. They are over 1,300 scrimmage yards and a total of 15 touchdowns, so someone in this backfield is likely to have a great game. The problem is Coach Frank Reich uses the hot hand approach a good bit. If Hines starts off poorly, Jonathan Taylor or Jordan Wilkins can jump in quick. Taylor seems to be in the doghouse with 17 total touches the past two weeks combined. Wilkins is less of a factor but also has 21 touches in that timeframe. I favor Hines because he’ll at least have some type of receiving floor, but he’s a dangerous pick.

WR – T.Y. Hilton continues to slide into irrelevancy and he’ll like see Jaire Alexander if the Packers corner is active. That takes him out of play pretty quickly for me as he’s under seven DK points per game this year. On the other side, Michael Pittman is really appealing. He’s squaring off against Josh Jackson who has allowed a 1.80 pPT and a 100.3 passer rating. The rookie has been over 80% of the snaps the past two weeks and has 15 targets over those two games. Last Thursday was really the breakout game and the price hasn’t come up yet. He really seems like a bargain with 34.1% of the air yards and 19.7% of the targets the past two weeks. Zach Pascal has seen fewer targets and with the prices involved, Pittman really seems like the play.

TE – The split between Trey Burton, Mo Alie-Cox and Jack Doyle (when active) is really killing every individual player for fantasy. Each of them hovers around 35%-50% of the snaps and is likely to only see 2-4 targets, so unless the situation changes I won’t be taking this route.

D/ST – The Colts defense has been incredible this season but I think they’re too expensive to play against the Packers. They’re living on five defensive touchdowns as far as fantasy scoring along with two safeties. The risk doesn’t outweigh the reward and salary.

Cash – Pittman

GPP – Hines, Rivers, Pascal, Taylor

Cowboys at Vikings, O/U of 47.5 (Vikings -7)

Cowboys – Pace is 1st

QB – Andy Dalton is on track to be back in the lineup and I wish I had the confidence to start him. Minnesota has climbed to 11th in DVOA against the pass but they are still 27th in yards allowed and have allowed 19 touchdown passes. He’s only played in one full game and parts of two others but the 0.19 pDB is frightfully bad. The passing plays per game is fantastic at 46.2 and this is a good matchup. He’s just played so poorly the it’s hard to know what you’re going to get. The weapons in the passing game are outstanding but there’s serious offensive line issues. This is a deep GPP play and nothing else.

RB – Maybe this is just me, but Ezekiel Elliott has sure looked like a guy who got paid and is just collecting the checks in a lost season. The issues aren’t all on his shoulders to be sure but he’s under 64 yards per game on the ground. That’s not something I thought we’d see from Zeke this year at all. One of the facets that somewhat saves him is being fourth in receptions and seventh in receiving yards among running backs. The matchup is average on paper with the Vikings ranking 15th in DVOA against the run but they’ve given up over 1,200 scrimmage yards. Giving up only five scores is not likely sustainable so you can argue that Zeke is a worthwhile GPP play.

WR – The trio of Amari Cooper, CeeDee Lamb and Michael Gallup are all reallllllly cheap and I can’t help but want some exposure here. In the one full game with Dalton, Cooper and Lamb were the primary focus with 10 and 11 targets each. The biggest issue with Lamb is he’s been on the field for fewer snaps since the injury to Dak Prescott. He still gets a great matchup against Jeff Gladney who has allowed a 2.00 pPT and a 109 passer rating. If Lamb got another 11 targets, he could really be a slate breaker. Cooper really isn’t that much different in the respect. Gallup only saw six targets and with his role being a little more downfield, he is the riskiest of the bunch. Seeing Kris Boyd raises the possibility of a good game as he’s allowed a 1.90 pPT and a 72.2% completion rate. My focus would be on Lamb and Cooper here.

TE – For his salary, Dalton Schultz is really not that bad of a pick this week. He’s seen 24 targets in the four games without Dak and has hit 7.5 DK in three of the four weeks. His 16.2% target share is fourth but no receiving option is over 18.9% (Lamb and Cooper) so that’s pretty respectable. It’s not ideal to see him with no RZ or EZ targets in those games but for $3,600 that’s more of a bonus than anything else. Minnesota has been a little better than average as far as DK points but the yardage given up is sixth-most.

D/ST – They’ve been a little better as of late but there’s more talented units to take chances on this week.

Cash – Lamb, Cooper, Schultz

GPP – Dalton, Zeke, Gallup

Vikings – Pace is 23rd

QB – I wanted to at least consider Kirk Cousins until I saw his price was over $6,000. He’s the butt of jokes but Cousins is actually ninth in pDB at 0.53 and 11th in touchdown passes. What can kill his production is the fact he’s 32nd in pass plays for game at 29.1. Efficiency is well and good but you have to have some type of volume to go with it. In this game, it wouldn’t be the most surprising thing to see the Vikings go up and try to pound the ball. Dallas is 18th in DVOA against the pass so the upside is evident but the downside is as well.

RB – It would be nice to fit Kamara and Dalvin Cook into our lineups together, but I’m unsure if that’s going to be possible in cash games. We’re likely going to have to make a tough choice and as of now, I have Cook by a hair just because of stability at the quarterback position. Cook is coming off a game with 34 touches and if he gets even 25 this week, he should smash the price tag. Dallas is down to 28th in DVOA against the run and have allowed the second-most rush yards to the position. We know the sky high ceiling Cook brings to the table every single week.

WR – Both the Vikings seem underpriced for the ceiling but they both have floors for the east reason we talked about with Cousins. Since Justin Jefferson really took over the second spot in Week 3, he and Adam Thielen are nearly identical. Jefferson has a 3.4% lead in the air yards share while Thielen has one more target. Jefferson has 12 more PPR points and the only reason it’s close is because Thielen is a scoring machine. He has 10 RZ and 11 EZ targets to just one of each for Jefferson. However, Jefferson has five more receptions and 310 more receiving yards. It appears that Chidobe Awuzie will be making his way back into the lineup. In his two games, he gave up a 2.90 pPT and a 115.6 passer rating. Thielen should see Anthony Brown who is only slightly better at a 1.60 pPT and a 70.3% catch rate. It’s hard to not just side with Jefferson and not have to rely on touchdowns.

TE – If Irv Smith is back, he and Kyle Rudolph don’t really interest me. They both sit between 10% and 11% for their target rates and only have seven total RZ looks. When they’re both active, the ceiling is really low and don’t be fooled by the two touchdown game for Irv before he missed last game. He ran under 10 routes that entire game and the floor for that style of attack is zero.

D/ST – I’m fine with this unit in a vacuum but they seem pretty pricey for a unit that isn’t that talented. They did put up 10 DK against a poor offense on Monday night but the Cowboys have far better pieces. Minnesota has only 18 sacks and 11 turnovers forced on the year.

Cash – Cook

GPP – Jefferson, Thielen, Cousins, D/ST

Core Four

Dalvin Cook, Diontae Johnson, Jakobi Meyers, Adrian Peterson

The Cook and Johnson plays need little explanation. With the opening of Lions value, it’s a lot easier to fit Cook even at $9,000. I’m going with Peterson unless we get word that Kerryon will get the bulk of the work. In my eyes, Peterson gets at least 50% of the carries and gets the red zone work. I normally wouldn’t be too hot on a Patriots pass catcher, but the metrics and price are a perfect fit for Meyers. For one last time, lock in Taysom on FD in cash.

Primary Game Stacks

ATL/NO – Ryan, Julio, Ridley, Thomas, Kamara, Sanders, Hurst, Cook, Hill

CIN/WAS – Smith, McLaurin, McKissic, Boyd, Higgins, Gio, Thomas, Burrow, Gibson

TEN/BAL – Lamar, Hollywood, Andrews, Davis, Henry, Brown, Snead

Secondary Game Stacks

PIT/JAX – Ben, Johnson, Claypool, JuJu, Conley, Cole, Chark

DAL/MIN – Cook, Jefferson, Lamb, Cooper, Dalton, Schultz, Cousins

GB/IND – Rodgers, Adams, Hines, Pittman, Jones

NE/HOU – Watson, Cooks, Fuller, Meyers, Duke, Cam

Let’s get after it this week 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 10. For those who haven’t read it yet, please check out the Week 10 Cash Game Checkdown for your bankroll sustaining, cash game build advice.

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*

NEW: Adjusted Expected Team Totals Rankings for Week 10

  1. Arizona Cardinals (25.13)
  2. Los Angeles Rams (24.36)
  3. Green Bay Packers (24.15)
  4. Buffalo Bills (22.33)
  5. Pittsburgh Steelers (21.98)
  6. Seattle Seahawks (21.77)

NFL DFS GPP Quarterbacks

  1. Russell Wilson – With an ownership projection around 5-7%, I’m all aboard the Wilson train. Despite a very tough matchup against the Rams and their 9th ranked defense (in terms of pass DVOA), I don’t think there’s going to be much in the way to slow down Russ.

    This is one of the lowest weeks of combined ownership for Wilson/Lockett/Metcalf and I’ll be sure to have multiple combinations of the three and run it back with a Rams’ player or two. Quite frankly, I am really only interested in getting my stack exposure to this game and with Kyler Murray/Josh Allen in that 56 point total in Arizona.
  2. Jared Goff – On the other side of Wilson, it’s wheels up for Jared Goff and this Rams’ passing attack. We pick on Seattle’s pass defense (ranked 29th in DVOA) every single week and there’s no reason to shy away now. The AETY Model has Jared Goff projected for 306 passing yards which is by far the highest on this slate. Great salary relief as well for your NFL DFS GPP lineups.

    Honorable Mention: Drew Brees, Tom Brady, Kyler Murray, Josh Allen

Running Backs

*Obviously, Aaron Jones and Alvin Kamara make a ton of sense to roster. With the weather and the savings, I prefer Aaron Jones, but we will see a bit of Jamaal Williams this week. I do not think either of these guys are “must-plays” in GPPs, but you definitely want to give them a lot of consideration in your NFL DFS GPP lineups*

  1. Chase Edmonds – If Kenyan Drake is out, Chase Edmonds becomes a very nice value play in the highest totaled game on the slate. Buffalo’s defense has really struggled against the run and despite a weak showing in Week 9, Edmonds hardly left the field… 96% snap share!

    Buffalo ranks 22nd in run defense DVOA and Arizona should have their way with the Bills on the ground as they are the 4th most efficient rushing offense in the NFL. Kyler Murray’s ownership is going to be through the roof (and rightfully so), why not pivot to Chase Edmonds at ~10% ownership?


    Moving to James Conner now that Kenyan Drake is going to suit up.
  2. Antonio Gibson – I simply love this dude’s game. I know we’ve seen a ton of JD McKissic lately (even running routes out of the slot), but I project this game to be much slower paced and offer Gibson a gamescript where he can thrive. Detroit’s run defense is allowing ~5 yards per carry to opposing running backs and rank 25th in run defense DVOA.

    At Gibson’s price, I think this is an excellent spot for him to hit 4x value at 5% ownership.
  3. Ronald Jones / Leonard Fournette – Carolina’s run defense has significantly improved over the year but they’re still bleeding yards to opposing running backs. This is going to be an absolute statement game from Tom Brady and the Bucs’ offense. I hate the timeshare, but this should be a gamescript that sets up nicely for two or three rushing touchdowns.

    I personally am leaning RoJo, but I will have a feel lineups with Fournette as well. Fournette has been taking away snaps from Jones over the past few weeks, but the Bucs seem plenty confident in riding Jones a bit more when the game is close or in their favor. That should be his role to run with in Week 10.
  4. Nick Chubb – Guess who’s back? Mr. Nick Chubb in a cakewalk matchup (with weather concerns that will make passing the ball extremely difficult) against Houston’s pathetic run defense. We’re likely going to see 40+ rush attempts from this Cleveland outside-zone run scheme and that will pay dividends to both Nick Chubb and Kareem Hunt.

    Honorable Mention: James Conner, James Robinson, D’Andre Swift, Phil Lindsay

Wide Receivers

  1. Keenan Allen – Every single week we pick on Miami slot-corner, Nik Needham. Lock in Keenan and enjoy the show.
  2. Michael Thomas – He’s simply too cheap for Michael Thomas and a nice pivot away from 25% owned Alvin Kamara chalk. I like them both, but I’m leaning Michael Thomas here in GPP lineups. Hell, make a stack with Brees/Thomas/Kamara, they’re going to put up points.
  3. Cooper Kupp / Robert Woods – With how much I love Jared Goff and the Rams’ passing attack, I obviously love Kupp and Woods this week. If I had to make a choice, I think Woods has the higher output against a Seattle secondary who will be without Shaq Griffin and Quinton Dunbar. See below for another Rams’ option.
  4. John Brown – Most of my builds cannot afford Stefon Diggs and I don’t really mind that at all. Diggs is going to be 30% owned in this shootout with Arizona. I’ll pivot down to John Brown for my Buffalo exposure in a matchup against Johnathan Joseph. Brown is going to produce big numbers as long as this game stays up-pace.
  5. Jerry Jeudy – This kid is special. We take advantage of this Raiders’ secondary on a weekly basis and won’t stop now. Jeudy should have a field day against arguably the worst trio of cornerbacks in the AFC.
  6. DK Metcalf – If everyone is afraid of shadow treatment by Jalen Ramsey, I’m going to be heavily invested in DK Metcalf. I don’t care who you are, you cannot cover DK Metcalf for 60 minutes of football. Current ownership projections show the highest ceiling wide receiver in the game under 10%… Let’s roll.
  7. Josh Reynolds / Larry Fitzgerald – If you need salary relief or an educated punt-play, Josh Reynolds and Larry Fitzgerald will be my guys. I’ll likely never have both of them in the same lineup, but this is the cheapest, viable pieces of the #1 and #2 offenses on the Adjusted Expected Team Totals model.

    Honorable Mention: DeAndre Hopkins, Jarvis Landry, Brandon Aiyuk, Curtis Samuel, Tyler Lockett

NFL DFS GPP Tight Ends

  1. TJ Hockenson – No idea how this dude isn’t projected for 15% ownership. Washington is terrible at covering the tight end and outside of COVID-19 and Travis Kelce, there really hasn’t been anything else as consistent as TJ Hockenson in 2020.
  2. Greg Olsen – Disgusting, I know. But hear me out. The Rams cannot cover tight ends, I don’t care what the numbers say. If Ramsey and the Rams’ defense can slow down Metcalf/Lockett just a bit, Greg Olsen is going to run 20+ routes in this game. Assuming that happens, Olsen is easily going to go for 4x value for your NFL DFS GPP lineup.

    He’s not going to go nuts, but at his price, he allows you to get very creative with your roster builds.

    Honorable Mention: All of the chalky tight ends (Goedert, Waller, Fant)

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 FINALLY return.

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Another great week for Week 9 NFL DFS Cash Games. Let’s get right back at it for a solid showing yet again in Week 10, which is a bit of a strange slate to say the least.

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 10, please see below for my notes on roster construction:

  • A handful of different options at the QB position including a few interesting punt plays.
  • 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: Josh Allen, Kyler Murray, Mike Davis (lock in cash), Duke Johnson, Davante Adams, and Stefon Diggs 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. Kyler Murray ($8,000 DK / $8,900 FD) – Do we need to say anything about Kyler Murray at this point in the season? No. No we do not. You know what you’re getting out of Kyler Murray and 15% or more of the field is going to roster him against Buffalo and their mediocre defense.
  2. Josh Allen ($7,500 DK / $8,700 FD) – On the other side of Kyler Murray is Mr. Josh Allen. Thank the lord we decided he was our QB1 last week and I have no problem if you go back to the well with Allen on the road as a slight underdog in a 56-point total. This game is going to be fun to watch and offer a lot of fireworks from a fantasy standpoint.

    Honorable Mention: Jared Goff, Carson Wentz, Russell Wilson

Running Backs

  1. Mike Davis ($4,000 DK / $5,400 FD) – Just use him. McCaffrey is out and Davis is clearly mis-priced. He should be 100% owned in cash games and his output doesn’t matter. It’s not an ideal matchup against the 3rd best run defense in the league, but I find it nearly impossible for him not to get to 13+ fantasy points. Take the savings and run on the Davis freesquare.
  2. Aaron Jones ($7,100 DK / $8,800 FD) – The lead running back on the team with the highest Adjusted Expected Team Total, at home, against the worst overall defense in the NFL (32nd in overall defense DVOA). My only concern with Jones is the return of Jamaal Williams who is certainly going to get plenty of snaps out of this Green Bay backfield (especially if this game gets out of hand).
  3. Duke Johnson ($5,000 DK / $5,800 FD) – Another freesquare with David Johnson ruled out with a concussion. I little bit better of a matchup than Mike Davis against Tampa Bay, but he’s also $1,000 more expensive on DraftKings (very affordable on FanDuel). If you want to use two punt running backs and pay up at QB/WR/TE, your path to victory in cash would be using Davis and Johnson together.

    I’m not sure that’s the way I want my lineup to look with Johnson being quite inefficient via the run, but the pass catching ability should alleviate any concerns we have about Johnson’s floor for cash games.

    Honorable Mention: Alvin Kamara, Antonio Gibson, Giovani Bernard, Kalen Ballage, James Robinson

Wide Receivers

  1. Davante Adams ($9,000 DK / $9,500 FD) – Davante Adams against the absolute worst pass defense in the the NFL. Check mate. Personally, I am only going to play one Packer (Jones or Adams). Right now, I’m leaning Adams.
  2. Stefon Diggs ($7,500 DK / $7,900 FD) – I love the value here on FanDuel, but he’s certainly in play on DraftKings as well… Especially when 25% of the field (if not more) is going to roster Diggs in NFL DFS cash games. Whether or not Patrick Peterson shadows should not deter you from rostering the best route runner in the NFL who owns a ~30% target share.
  3. Michael Thomas ($7,400 DK / $8,500 FD) – Just way too cheap for Michael Thomas against a completely depleted, struggling secondary in San Francisco. Thomas led the team in targets last week and will start to get back to a similar workload he had in 2019 (certainly not as high of a floor he had last year, but it’s still incredibly high).
  4. Keenan Allen ($7,100 DK / $7,800) – Is there anyone in the NFL that’s been more consistent than Keenan Allen? No. No, there isn’t. Remember just a few weeks ago when were so high on Cooper Kupp in this same matchup against Miami’s slot cornerback, Nik Needham? Yea, let’s ride. Keenan is as safe as ever to get to 2.5x value in you NFL DFS Cash Games.
  5. Jarvis Landry ($5,900 DK / $6,000 FD) – In the first game without Odell Beckham we saw Jarvis rack up 11 targets (in that gale-force wind game against Las Vegas). I’m always going to be interested in sure-handed wide receivers with a 30% target share. Pair all of that with a matchup against Houston’s Eric Murray and Vernon Hargreaves and you’re going to be happy with the result.

    Hell, Jake Luton and the Jaguars’ receiving core went nuts last week…
  6. Josh Reynolds ($3,500 DK / $5,000 FD) – Reynolds comes into the week grading out as the #1 NFL DFS value in the AETY Model for wide receivers. We all know how much of a pass funnel defense Seattle is as team’s torch them on a weekly basis. Reynolds is locked in for a minimum of 75% of the Rams’ offensive snaps assuming this game goes up-paced like Vegas and the pre-match 56 point total support.

    I’d certainly prefer Robert Woods or Cooper Kupp here, but at this price, I’ll always sign off on cheap exposure to the highest total game on the slate.

    Honorable Mention: Chris Conley, Tyler Lockett, Jakeem Grant, Michael Thomas, Robert Woods, DeVante Parker

Tight Ends

Tight end seems like an absolute wasteland this week with no Travis Kelce. I don’t have a great read on where I’m going yet, but here are my top options on the slate.

  1. Darren Waller ($5,900 DK / $7,000 FD)
  2. Evan Engram ($4,500 DK / $5,600 FD)
  3. Dallas Goedert ($4,200 DK / $5,800 FD)
  4. TJ Hockenson ($5,100 DK / $6,200 FD)
  5. Greg Olsen ($2,500 DK / $4,600 FD)

NFL DFS Cash Game Sample Lineup

QB: Kyler Murray
RB: Mike Davis
RB: Duke Johnson
WR: Davante Adams
WR: Keenan Allen
WR: Josh Reynolds
TE: Greg Olsen
FLEX: Alvin Kamara
DST: Detroit Lions

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NFL Game by Game Breakdown Week 10

Time is absolutely flying this season and we’re already over halfway through the NFL season. This slate is interesting at first glance. There’s plenty of games to like, and there’s some flat out puzzling salaries. For the first week all season, we have a back-loaded slate with six of 11 games in the 4 PM window. That should make for some fun sweats late. We’ll dive into all of those facets and more in the NFL Game by Game Breakdown Week 10 to figure out who the Core Four will be!

Washington at Lions, O/U N/A (Lions -4.5)

Washington – Pace is 15th

QB – It’s taken Dwayne Haskins getting benched and Kyle Allen suffering an injury, but Alex Smith is back as a starting quarterback. I’m fairly torn on him. On the one hand, he threw three interceptions last week and this offense is flawed to say the least. On the other hand, Smith still managed to hit 17 DK points with three turnovers because he threw for a score and 325 yards. I’m going to be slightly tempted to have some exposure with how cheap he is. Detroit is allowing the 18th most passing yards per game and they are also 18th in DVOA against the pass. Topping it off, the Lions have a 17:5 TD:INT ratio allowed this year. I don’t believe I’ll go for him in cash but I may well stack him with a very interesting option.

RB – I understand the game script was fairly awful for the Washington running game last week. Still, just nine touches for Antonio Gibson? He only gets 46% of the snaps? I will absolutely have shares of him since I don’t think the game script gets that far away this week. Additionally, the Lions have allowed the third-most rushing yards to running backs and 15 total scores. The touchdowns allowed are tied for the most in football. Sporting the 25th ranked DVOA against the run doesn’t help the case for the Lions stopping Gibson this week if he gets the touches.

The Lions have also allowed the seventh-most receiving yards, and we should not overlook J.D. McKissic. So far with Smith under center, McKissic has accounted for over 35% of the targets which is staggering. He actually played the most snaps of any back last week and saw 14 (!!) targets. Making his potential even more appealing is the fact he’s been in the slot almost 40% of the time the past two weeks. Maybe it won’t continue to be that many targets, but he’s a wonderful DK play under $5,000 in GPP’s this week. The fact we have other cheap options means he’s going to be super under the radar. He’s even a rare running back that can be stacked with the quarterback. No, I do not trust him in cash.

WR – This remains a Terry McLaurin stan zone and does not change this week. Even in a difficult matchup last week, McLaurin hung 7/115/1 on eight targets. He’s up to the WR12 in PPR and is the WR8 in salary this week. McLaurin leads the entire NFL in air yards share at 46.6% and sits eighth in target share at 28.4%. He’s projected to see some of Desmond Trufant, which should work out well. He’s battled injury this year but he’s also allowed a 2.30 pPT, 12.8 YPR (yards per reception) and a 135.7 passer rating.

There’s not really a receiver that interests me outside of McLaurin. He’s about as close to a one man show as we get in the NFL and McKissic takes up so many targets, there’s not much left for anyone else. Anything extra should likely go to Logan Thomas.

TE – I sort of liked Logan Thomas last week, at least as much as you can like a sub-$4,000 tight end option. He’s just one target behind McKissic for being second on the team in targets at a 16.9% share. Thomas is also one RZ and EZ target behind McLaurin for the team lead in that category, so his role is what we look for in a cheap tight end. He is wildly cheap and he falls into the “touchdown or bust” category. Detroit is a tough matchup as far as DK points per game. They’ve allowed the fourth-fewest receptions and second-fewest yards but five scores.

D/ST – I’m not in love with the price here. They still sit fifth in pressure rate at 25.7% and are third in sacks on the year. Detroit’s offensive line has allowed pressure 23% of the time so far and only have nine turnovers so far. That’s tied for the sixth-least in the league.

Cash – McLaurin

GPP – Smith, Gibson, McKissic, D/ST, Thomas

Lions – Pace is 8th

QB – I really don’t know what to do with Matthew Stafford. He hasn’t had more than one game over 24 DK points all season long, and he’s not in the top 10 in attempts. Considering he’s only 19th in pDB, Stafford needs the volume to make up that ground and he may not get it here. Stafford also has only 13 touchdown passes despite being seventh in RZ attempts on the season.

Not only that, but Washington is a solid defense. Granted, they didn’t show it last week as much as we thought but the stats are still in their favor. They’ve taken over as the number one passing DVOA defense on the season and lead by about 12 yards in fewer passing yards allowed per game. Stafford is under $6,000 which gives me pause but I’m not excited to play him. Add in the fact he may be down Kenny Golladay and Stafford is easy to fade.

RB – This backfield is completely miserable. All of the sudden, Kerryon Johnson ran the most routes last week. D’Andre Swift did play the most snaps but the touches got chopped 17/13/7 between Swift, Adrian Peterson and Johnson. As it has been, Swift is still the player we want. Even though Coach Matt Patricia is driving me batty with his usage, he did get 13 carries to lead the team. I don’t know why he wouldn’t have the most targets, but I digress. Washington is 17th in DVOA against the run but have held backs to under 100 yards rushing per game. A facet that doesn’t work in Swift’s favor is how Washington has played backs in the passing game. They’ve allowed the fewest receiving yards and are one of six teams to not allow a receiving score. Swift is the play to chase if you use a Detroit back.

WR – Kenny Golladay didn’t practice again on Thursday so it’s fairly safe to assume he’s out this week. That means number one duties will fall to Marvin Jones, who hasn’t exactly been good in that role this year. He’s yet to exceed 13.3 DK in games that Golladay has missed and has just one game all year with more than three four receptions. Jones also will face mostly Kendall Fuller, who has only a 1.10 pPT and 22.2 passer rating allowed. That’s a hard pass for me.

I’m scared to say it but I believe Danny Amendola is my preferred option of the receivers. Not only did he see 10 targets last week, he gets Jimmy Moreland in the slot and that’s the best corner matchup of the bunch. He’s allowed nearly a 70% catch rate and a 1.40 pPT. Amendola only needs about 12 DK to hit 3x and that’s easily in the realm here, especially if Jones is getting muted. Marvin Hall earned over 70% of the snaps last week and was targeted five times. I just feel we have much better options later in the slate against worse defenses.

*Update* Golladay is officially out, as expected

TE – T.J Hockenson is quietly having a really solid fantasy season, as far as his position goes. He’s the TE3 in PPR and has scored five times with a t least four targets in every game. Golladay has missed the majority of the past two games and that’s been a big boon for the targets for Hockenson. He’s gotten 18 targets and leads in raw targets, target share, RZ looks and EZ looks. Statistically, he’s been given the chance to be the alpha in this passing game. Defending that position has been an issue for Washington. They’ve allowed the fifth-most DK points per game and have also given up six scores. Hockenson is my overall favorite Lions player if Golladay is inactive again.

*Update* Hockenson has been dealing with a toe injury all week and I’ve cooled a little bit on him. I’ll likely just go Hooper in the majority of lineups, but Hock is still a worthy GPP play.

D/ST – Washington is fourth in turnovers this year so I suppose you can make a small case for the Lions defense? The issue is the Detroit defense only has seven turnovers forced and 11 sacks through eight games. They could be worth a shot, but I have a feeling Alex Smith might well be better with a full week of practice as the starter.

Cash – None

GPP – Hockenson, Swift, Stafford, Amendola, Jones

Jaguars at Packers, O/U of 50 (Packers -13)

Jaguars – Pace is 6th

QB – What a start for Jake Luton. I somewhat passed him over last week because I much preferred Drew Lock. That worked out but it shouldn’t be passed over that Luton played extremely well in his first NFL action. He threw it 38 times and completed 26 of them for 304 yards. He even added a rushing score and brought the Jaguars down the field to almost tie the game (a two point conversion failed). Luton is still quite inexpensive, but has really the same issues as last week. Mainly, we don’t know what he is. A one game sample doesn’t state much but this game should lead him to production. The Packers started the week as the heaviest favorite and I wouldn’t be surprised to see Luton throw 45 times or more. I don’t want to dismiss him against the 22nd ranked DVOA against the pass.

RB – The price came back down for James Robinson and I feel slightly better about playing him this week than last week. Something about that $7,000 threshold spooks me with him. He’s up to 159 total touches in eight games, which is fantastic volume. Defending the run can be a vulnerability for the Packers as they are 20th in DVOA and have allowed the sixth-most rushing yards to backs with eight games played. My main problem with Robinson this week is can he stay involved in a blowout? He has an 11.7% target share but that’s not something that is massive. He’s tied for the fourth-most targets on the team. Robinson is mostly going to be a game-script dictated pass for me, with maybe a sprinkle in GPP. A certain back in the next game is only $200 and is in a nuts spot.

WR – It hasn’t always been the case this year, but D.J. Chark was the unquestioned alpha last week with 12 targets. We weren’t especially sure how Luton would play but he fed Chark for a 7/146/1 day that was highlighted with a 73-yard touchdown. It’s notable that Houston corner Bradley Roby was out. The Packers could be in a similar situation as their top flight corner Jaire Alexander suffered a concussion last year. Playing Chark is a simple equation for me. If Alexander is in, I won’t look at Chark. If Alexander is out, wheels up for Chark who is probably playing catchup. As of Thursday, Alexander hasn’t practiced yet. Chark missed Thursday with a “non-Covid illness” so that’s not a worry to me at this point. If he gets another 10+ target game with no Jaire, he’s likely to smash his price again.

*Update* Alexander is officially doubtful and that means he is likely out since it was a concussion. It would be a serious upset to be released from the protocol at this point. I really like Chark provided the weather cooperates which could be an issue this week. Yes, I’m rolling my eyes.

The secondary receiver is tough to call. Laviska Shenault only played 10 snaps before injury prevented him from coming back. Chris Conley got the bulk of the targets behind Chark with eight. He is minimum price so if Shenault were to sit again, Conley becomes pretty interesting. He’d square up with Josh Jackson through a good bit. Jackson has allowed a 112.0 passer rating and nearly a 68% completion rate. However, Shenault is back at practice so the secondary options get murky. Viska could be a good sleeper pick since game log watchers won’t be on him.

*Update* Surprisingly, Shenault is out this week so Conley lines up as an excellent punt, and Keelan Cole is worth a look in MME formats.

TE – Along those same lines, perhaps Tyler Eifert is worth a look if Shenault misses. Luton targets him five times this past week although none came in the RZ or EZ. He did have the lowest aDOT of any receiving option this week so he’s definitely looking like a safety blanket to the sixth-round rookie. Green Bay has really done well against the position so far with just one touchdown given up so Eifert would only be a punt for GPP since 10 DK is about 4x.

D/ST – L.O.L.

Cash – Chark if no Alexander

GPP – Conley, Luton, Robinson, Cole, Eifert

Packers – Pace is 32nd

QB – Honestly, the only thing that could stop Aaron Rodgers in this game is the Packers calling off the dogs. Perhaps there’s a chance this game goes like the Dallas/Pittsburgh game last week when the Cowboys almost pulled the upset, but it’s difficult to see that path. AR12 is third in pDB, touchdown passes, ninth in yards and seventh in RZ attempts. These numbers are more impressive when you consider he’s 22nd in pass plays per game. Jacksonville is dead last in passing DVOA and is one of three teams allowing at least 25 DK points to the position per game. We don’t need to spend a ton of time here. Play Rodgers with impunity in any format.

RB – It’s Week 10 and I think we may have found the absolute height of disrespect as far as salary goes. Why in the world is Aaron Jones only $7,100 in this spot?? Yes, I understand that he’s missed two games and didn’t put up a huge score last Thursday night. However, he’s one of the best backs in all of fantasy and in a smash spot. Jacksonville is 21st in DVOA against the run and have allowed over 1,100 scrimmage yards and 10 touchdowns in eight games. Jones has a 17% target share as it is and he came out of the 49ers game healthy. He had 20 touches in that game and was playing in garbage time. I expect him to be full speed and Jones is likely my top overall play this week. He is for sure in my Core Four and I will not fade him in cash. His price is hard to not be heavy in GPP as well.

*Update* Lineman David Bakhtiari is back in the lineup, which is a big boost for the Packers in general but definitely for Jones.

WR – Something to start considering is the floor of certain receivers on DK and how they may actually be safer plays than some running backs. Case in point might well be Davante Adams. The price is astronomical, but shouldn’t it be? He’s played five full games this season (he got hurt against the Lions, so it’s not fair to count that). Adams has been over 30 DK points in four of them and over 40 in two of them. I would argue his ceiling is higher than every single running back on this slate with the exceptions of Alvin Kamara and Christian McCaffrey, who may not even play. While Adams is tied for the highest salary, I’m not sure you’re wrong to eschew a pricey back to play him this week. He’s going to destroy the Jacksonville secondary. Adams is seven PPR points away from being the WR1 and only has six starts under his belt on the year.

Allen Lazard looks like he’ll be back in the lineup and is fairly cheap himself. I don’t think he takes anything away from Adams, but he could be worth a look as well. It’ll only take a couple plays to pay off and a spot against Tre Herndon shouldn’t scare anyone. He’s allowed a 2.00 pPT and a 123.0 passer rating. If Lazard isn’t quite ready, Marquez Valdes-Scantling slides into that spot well.

TE – Robert Tonyan continues to fade back into fantasy irrelevance with Adams and Jones both healthy. He only saw one target this past week and has a total of 14 over the past four weeks. That’s equated to just a 10.5% target share and zero RZ or EZ targets. I believe even at $3,600, there are better investments, especially if Lazard is back as well.

*Update* Tonyan was DNP on Friday, which is usually not a great sign for a questionable player.

D/ST – I have a hard time finding reasons to play Green Bay’s defense at this salary. Luton is still a target, but $3,700 for a defense that has six turnovers on the year and allows almost 25 points per contest? That seems sketchy. I believe the Packers produce a pick or two with a couple sacks but the salary is really a non-starter for me. I know others may be higher on them but if they’re down the best corner, it’s not for me.

Cash – Jones, Adams, Rodgers

GPP – Lazard (if active), MVS

Texans at Browns, O/U of 49 (Browns -3.5)

Texans – Pace is 9th

QB – The beat goes on for Deshaun Watson, who racked up another game of 24+ DK points with a new coach. This was really his “worst” game since Bill O’Brien got canned, throwing for two scores, 281 yards and a 59.4% completion rate. If that’s the down game, sign me up. Watson is under $7,000 and we should send DK a fruit basket or something for that. I can’t imagine a reason why Watson should be under $7,000 the rest of the way, especially in this spot.

The Browns are 20th in DVOA against the pass and have allowed the fifth-most passing yards of teams that have played eight games. They are 24th in pass yards allowed per game, so Watson has an easier matchup based on the metrics. Now we add in that he’s seventh in pDB, eighth in points per game, seventh in pass yards and eighth in touchdowns on just the 15th most RZ attempts. There’s no reason to shy away from Watson here and if he’s not popular, even better. The ceiling is pushing 30 DK.

RB – It’s trending towards David Johnson not being active this week and that’s a huge opening for Duke Johnson (in a revenge game at that). Duke recorded 20 touches last week and scored, although the efficiency was fairly awful with a 2.6 YPC. Still, turning away from 18-20 touches in this range is difficult to say the least. Cleveland is only 18th in DVOA against the run so Duke is a solid volume play. I wonder if he goes overlooked to some extent since we have a $4,000 play that should be locked into cash later on in the article.

*Update* David Johnson is officially out and Duke is an excellent play in my eyes.

WR – It was another week that Brandin Cooks saw more targets than Will Fuller, though Fuller had the better fantasy day. It was close as Fuller went 5/100/1 and Cooks went 3/83/1 but Cooks held the advantage 8-5 in targets. That has been the story since BOB was let go, with Cooks going for a 39-30 lead in those four games. The RZ and EZ targets are identical for both at four and two respectively, and even the air yards share is right around 31-32% for each player. To me, Fuller is obviously a walking long bomb every play but when the salary difference is $1,100, Cooks makes just as much sense if not more.

The Browns don’t use Denzel Ward as a true shadow corner, but he should see more of Fuller this game and he can run with a 4.3 40-yard dash. That should help him to some extent and he only allows a 1.20 pPT. Cooks will see more of Terrance Mitchell who is up to a 13.9 YPR, 111.2 passer rating and a 1.90 pPT. I certainly don’t mind either but the salary gap is startling.

TE – The Texans were cautious with Jordan Akins in his return, as he only played 34% of the snaps to 52% for Darren Fells. However, Akins earned one more target and he’s going to be the tight end we want for fantasy. We have no evidence to suggest he won’t take back the snap lead and be the main target at the position, and is capable of a big game based on salary. Akins still leads in target share at 12.4% to 8.4% for Fells despite three fewer games. That says enough right there, especially against the Cleveland defense. They’ve allowed four scores to the position and over 400 receiving yards. Akins may turn out to be my favorite sub-$3,000 punt.

D/ST – With Baker Mayfield back in the saddle, I’m not terribly interested in Houston’s defense. They are awful against the run and are playing one of the best running teams in the league. There’s no need to go there.

Cash – Watson, Duke, Cooks, Fuller

GPP – Akins

Browns – Pace is 24th

QB – Baker is off the Covid list and active for this game but I’m not horribly interested. Mayfield has played eight games and been over 30 attempts exactly one time. He’s basically a Kirk Cousins, if Cousins was in commercials. Mayfield is 17th in pDB but 27th in yards, 13th in touchdowns and 30th in pass plays per game. If Cleveland can run the ball down Houston’s throat, they will do so and Mayfield has a very limited ceiling by projected game script and what Cleveland does well.

RB – By all accounts, Nick Chubb should be back in the Browns lineup this week and that means he’s going to be in my lineups. Chubb should not be under $7,000 very often and he draws one of the best possible matchups in his return to the field. Houston is ranked 28th in DVOA against the run and lead the entire league in rushing yards allowed despite playing only eight games. Cleveland is top five in churning out rushing yards per game, right at 150 yards per contest on the nose. Chubb had found his stride after a tough Week 1. The next two games he racked up 232 yards and four touchdowns. He was well on his way to a massive game against Dallas with 43 yards on just six carries before his injury. He was spotted with no brace on Thursday, which is great news.

A really nice pivot is Kareem Hunt, as both backs are typically involved every week no matter what. If Chubb is limited in any way, Hunt could take the bulk of the work and draws the exact same matchup. The price is going to keep most people away, is this is GPP only. If Cleveland can control the game, both backs can hit. Hunt had 24 and 14 DK points in the games Chubb went nuts before the injury and Cleveland is still eighth in rushing attempts per game. Furthermore, Hunt is more involved in the passing game (25-3, that’s not all from Chubb missing games) so he has upside there.

*Update* There is no reason to think Chubb isn’t ready for a full workload as of Friday night, meaning he is underpriced in this spot.

WR – It’s nearly impossible to get a read on this situation before the game starts. Odell Beckham is out, but the last game the Browns played the wind was a major factor. The passing game was non-existent and neither team accomplished much throwing the ball. On top of that, Austin Hooper is due back and he’s missed the last couple games as well. Rashard Higgins and Khadarel Hodge played almost identical snaps last game but combined for three targets. Jarvis Landry saw the bulk of the work with 11 targets and he’s likely still underpriced for the workload we can expect. He and Hooper are likely going to be the primary targets in this passing offense moving forward. Landry should also avoid Bradley Roby, who will be mostly on Higgins. Landry is about the only receiver I’m looking at in this offense.

TE – Salary included, Hooper might be my favorite tight end option for cash and maybe the whole slate. He was starting to jive with Baker before the appendectomy with three straight double-digit DK point games and a total of 23 targets. He had one touchdown in that time span but the price is so low, he doesn’t even need a spike to hit 3x. Since Week 4, Hooper has a 25% target share and is second in raw targets despite playing two fewer games than Landry. Houston in in the bottom 10 in DK points per game against tight ends and Hooper is an easy fit to any lineup. With no Beckham, we could really get a 4-5x game from Hooper here.

D/ST – It seems like Myles Garrett is good for a sack every week, but doing much else has been an issue with Cleveland. They do have 20 sacks overall and 14 turnovers but nearly 29 points per game is worrisome against Watson. Granted, Watson is tied for the fourth-most sacks but this play isn’t my favorite.

Cash – Chubb, Hooper, Landry

GPP – Baker, Hunt, Higgins

Eagles at Giants, O/U of 44.5 (Eagles -3)

Eagles – Pace is 4th

QB – Far be it for me to say Carson Wentz doesn’t have some flaws in his game. He’s truly not playing all that well this season, but it has to be noted that the offense around him would make a MASH unit look healthy. The good news for Wentz is reinforcements are on the way. The week before the bye, he welcomed back Jalen Reagor and Dallas Goedert. This week, he should get back Miles Sanders. Things look decidedly less bleak than two weeks ago against this very Giants team.

The good news for us is folks have been so critical of Wentz that it’s kind of obscured he’s been pretty decent in fantasy. He’s the QB6 among players that have eight or fewer games played but yet he’s under $6,000. Five rushing touchdowns have certainly helped and the Giants have fallen to 28th in DVOA against the pass. New York is up to the fourth-most total passing yards allowed and 25th in yards per game. Some in Discord might not be happy, but with the weapons back and coming out of a bye, Wentz is in the running for my cash QB at this salary.

RB – I have a feeling that Arron Jones and Nick Chubb are going to get a lot of attention, which means Sanders could fly under the radar. He could be a super interesting GPP option since he’s the cheapest of the three and has a great matchup of his own. The Giants are 11th in DVOA against the run but they’ve also given up over 1,200 scrimmage yards. A big part of that reason is they lead the league in receiving yardage given up to backs at 503. Sanders is at a 13.5% target share on the year to go with his 71 carries in five games. Only once through those five games did he not post at least 14 DK and he faced Baltimore and Pittsburgh, two of the better run defenses in football. Sanders played over 75% of the snaps in every healthy game and we shouldn’t expect much different coming out of the bye week.

WR – Travis Fulgham is the toast of the town in Philly, as he should be. He came out of nowhere in Week 4 with a game-winning touchdown. Since Week 5, he sits sixth in target share across the entire NFL which is insane. The last time these teams squared off, James Bradberry of the Giants held him mostly in check. Fulgham saw 11 targets and went 5/73/0. With additional weapons available in this game, I might not have a ton of Fulgham. He doesn’t need targets funneled to him in this spot and Bradberry is at a 9.9 YPR and a 79.8 passer rating.

Instead, Reagor stands out to me at such a cheap price. He’s $2,200 less than Fulgham and has the better matchup. I mentioned this is the Waiver article, but Reagor still has over 20% of the air yard share in this offense with just three games played. He had a rush attempt last game and was targeted six times. Facing Issac Yiadom is better than Bradberry as well, who has allowed a 14.3 YPR and runs a 4.5 compared to Reagor’s 4.47. I’ll take 6-8 targets in this spot with a player that has a 16.1 aDOT with a QB that is fourth in air yards per attempt.

*Update* Receiver Alshon Jeffery will make his season debut, and that does muddy the waters a bit. I’d be surprised if he makes a big impact and it doesn’t change how I feel about Fulgham or Reagor.

TE – I was all over Goedert in the showdown format last game and he flopped massively. The crazy part was he played 84% of the snaps and ran a route on nearly every Wentz drop back. That’s in stark contrast to his 56.9% route rate on the season. When we look at Zach Ertz, he is at 94.5% which is second in football. Since Ertz is still on IR, I expect Goedert to take that role and last game’s metrics back that up. We can hope the production now follows given extra time for Goedert to get healthy and the price is very reasonable. New York has only allowed two scores on the season from the tight ends, and Goedert could be quite sneaky on this slate with no boom games for almost the entire season.

D/ST – Philly is pricey but they should be in this spot. They are sixth in pressure rate and third in sacks on the season, which creates mistakes from the other team. The Eagles have 10 turnovers forced and Daniel Jones always has multi-turnover ability in every game. They are among the top options if spending up at defense this week.

Cash – Wentz, Reagor, Fulgham, D/ST

GPP – Sanders, Goedert

Giants – Pace is 19th

QB – The best fantasy game of the season for Jones came against this Philly defense but let’s pump the brakes. Nine of his 22 DK points came from rushing, including an 80-yard scamper that ended in an all-time blooper. He only generated 13 DK points through the air, and that remains a huge issue with Jones. He’s 32nd in pDB, 27th in passing touchdowns, 30th in points per game, 20th in yards and 32nd in yards per attempt. Jones is honestly just not a good quarterback at this stage and maybe he never will be. He’s out another 13 turnovers in nine games and it’s hard to come up with reasons why you should play Jones ahead of Alex Smith at the same price.

RB – It’s never a good sign when a player can’t finish a practice and that’s what happened to Devonta Freeman on Thursday. That’s likely to leave Wayne Gallman as the lead back again, which he has been for the past two games plus some. In the last three games (Freeman left the Philly game early), Gallman has hit double-digit carries every time and has 43 total touches. Philly is 10th in DVOA against the run and that stands out against Gallman here. The Eagles have only given up 888 scrimmage yards and seven scores. Normally, Gallman could be a prime source of value but it’s hard to play him over Duke and one we still have to talk about in the next game.

WR – Sterling Shepard remains ridiculously cheap for his role since he’s returned to the lineup. He’s seen 26 targets and 26% of the air yards, which are both second on the team. Shepard is also jus one RZ target off the team lead and leads in receptions with 20 and yards at 172. He should not be $5,000 on DK with this workload. He’s not even been in the slot very much, so he should face Nickell Roby-Coleman who is allowing a 1.60 pPT and a 76% catch rate.

Unfortunately for Darius Slayton, he has taken a (way) back seat in that same time period. He only has 13 targets although he remains an air yards darling with 25.5% in those three games. The aDOT of 12.4 is right about double Shepard, so that gives us a good idea of who is in what role. Darius Slay also looms for Slayton, which doesn’t help matter much. Not only did Slay hold him to 2/23/0 the first time, but Slay sits at a 1.30 pPT. Slayton is a fine GPP option, but it must be understood which format he suits. Shepard in cash, Slayton in GPP. Even if Golden Tate is active, I’m not interested given his usage and general unhappiness.

TE – If Shepard is only second in receiving categories, that means that Evan Engram has to be the one by default. He has 29 targets over the past three games, has played 80% of the snaps and leads in RZ targets. Running a route on 93.8% of his snaps is quite useful, as is sitting in the slot 33.1% of the time. Engram’s price really hasn’t moved enough yet and the Eagles have gotten blasted by tight ends all season long. They are tied for the third-most touchdowns allowed and in the bottom five of DK points allowed per game. Engram should be eager to make up for his game-killing drop from the last Philly matchup as well.

D/ST – The Giants are at the exact same price they were last week and they’re in play just like last week as well. With Wentz leading the league in interceptions, New York has a shot at 8-10 DK points and that’s what we look for in a cheap defense. They generate an above average pressure rate and have 15 turnovers already. They rank 22nd in overall DVOA but the salary and matchup keeps them in the running.

Cash – Shepard, Engram, D/ST

GPP – Slayton, Gallman

Buccaneers at Panthers, O/U of 50.5 (Buccaneers -6)

Buccaneers – Pace is 12th

QB – Tom Brady and the Bucs got humbled the old country way (Iron Sheik joke, he’s a funny follow on Twitter) and they’re looking to get right here. Brady is a bit of an oddball with some of his metrics. He’s only 15th in pDB and 12th in points per game. Yet, he sits fourth in touchdowns with 20, sixth in passing yards and third in RZ attempts. You would think he’d be a bit better on a drop back basis. He really can’t ask for more weapons in this offense and the price is about as low as it’s been all season. You can play the narrative of a ticked off Brady against a pass defense that ranks 21st in DVOA. They have only given up 13 touchdown passes, which is impressive at this point. Part of that is how bad they’ve played against the run but still. I think I’d only play Brady in game stacks this week.

RB – This situation is ugly, and I mean real ugly. The past three weeks have seen Leonard Fournette play far more snaps that Ronald Jones, to the tune of about a 2-1 ratio. He’s had four more carries and nine more targets. This all sounds like we should know Fournette is the target right? Well, maybe. All three of these games featured either a blowout in one direction or Tampa playing catchup. What happens if the game is close? Is it still Fournette, or does Jones get more run? I really want to play one of these players since Carolina is 24th in DVOA against the run and have allowed 1,305 scrimmage yards with 11 scores. We’ll see how the week develops but if we get a bead on which player is the lead back, we could be in business.

WR – If the backfield was a mess, the receiving corps might be even worse. All of Mike Evans, Chris Godwin and Antonio Brown played at least 78% of the snaps on Sunday night. Evans and Godwin had six targets and AB had five. That’s really going to make them tough to peg moving forward, if they even all play that much consistently. With the Bucs being down 20+ points in the blink of an eye, it’s hard to tell if this is the real usage or game script dictated. I don’t think I’ll be making a heavy investment in any of them.

I would caution about translating the big game for Evans the first Carolina matchup to this game. Godwin was out, AB was suspended, and Gronk was still resurrecting himself to a football player. Evans does have the toughest matchup in Rasul Douglas as well. Brady has shown the tendency to just not throw to Evans if he doesn’t have to. Brown and Godwin have the easier matchups and if playing anyone, Godwin is the favorite here.

TE – We saw Rob Gronkowski’s production take a big hit Sunday as well with his worst game since Week 2 against Carolina. It broke a string of three straight games over 14 DK for Gronkowski and now might be the best time to remember that there’s only one football. He still got six looks but it’s going to be difficult to asses if that’s stable or not. Having four big name targets might be great for the Bucs but in fantasy this is not going to be a fun time. The Panthers have only allowed three touchdowns so I do prefer a couple cheaper options at this position.

D/ST – It feels hard to justify playing the Bucs defense here. I don’t want to be a prisoner to the moment too much but they have a combined 14 DK points in their last three games. This is still a good unit. They still rank first in overall DVOA, have 16 turnovers forced and 29 sacks. Only the Steelers have ah higher pressure rate. Carolina has played sound football with only nine giveaways in nine games and 18 sacks allowed. This is a buy-low opportunity, but one I would reserve for GPP.

Cash – Possibly Fournette or Jones

GPP – Brady, Godwin, AB, D/ST, Gronkowski, Evans

Panthers – Pace is 30th

QB – On paper, no position is in a good spot for this week for the Panthers. The Bucs number one DVOA rank is backed up by being second against the pass and third against the run. Teddy Bridgewater has been matchup sensitive so far this year. His worst games have come against Chicago and Tampa, both in the top four in DVOA against the pass. He did have a poor outing against the Falcons, but getting banged up and weather mitigated that game.

Bridgewater is only 19th in pDB and 20th in points per game, and the lack of touchdowns remains an issue. He’s only thrown 11 on the season and that’s not even in the top 20. The flip side is he’s fifth in passing yards so the offense can move the ball. It also should be pointed out that Teddy B did have 30+ DK points against the Chiefs last week, who are the sixth best DVOA against the pass. I don’t trust him in cash but perhaps in game stacks I can get on board.

RB – Christian McCaffrey is all but ruled out this week, so it’s time to lock in Mike Davis. I know what folks are saying in the Discord. It’s the Bucs defense who just got embarrassed and they are angry. You’re not wrong, and the Bucs still rank first in rush yards allowed per game and third in DVOA. However, they allow the second-most receptions and sixth-most receiving yards to backs. Davis hit 15.5 DK points on 33 snaps the first meeting. Past success does not truly indicate future success, but I have to stress Davis could hit 4x at this price without gaining a single rushing yard. If he happened to go 8/80 receiving (and he went 8/74 the first time), he’s at 16 DK. He could go 5/50 and score, and still get to 4x. That’s without a rushing yard. The Carolina offense is geared towards backs catching passes, the glaring weakness for Tampa. I will have plenty of Davis and if he happens to score and have just 30-40 rushing yards, you could be talking 20+ DK in a hurry.

*Update* CMC is officially ruled out

WR – The receivers for Carolina are likely priced right about where they should be this week with Robby Anderson leading the group. He’s the clear leader in target share at 27.1% and has the air yards share lead as well at 38.6%. He’s a top 10 receiver in PPR formats despite scoring just one touchdown on the season and the matchup didn’t stop him the first time around. He went for 9/109/0 on 10 targets and has that style of outcome here again. He gets Jamel Dean who has been solid with a 1.60 pPT. Still, Dean does allow a 64.8% catch rate so we can see why Anderson was good the first time around.

What to do with D.J. Moore and Curtis Samuel is a lot less clear. Out of nine games this year, Moore has just three games with more than six targets and the past three weeks have totaled just 14 total. On the other side, Samuel has 20 and seven rushing attempts to go with it. Samuel is still scary since he’s under 68% of the snaps and could disappear pretty much any game. Still, it’s not like Moore brings any safety either. I am more content with playing Samuel ahead of Moore now that CMC is likely out. Samuel also benefits in the matchup with Sean Murphy-Bunting ahead of Moore’s spot against Carlton Davis.

*Update* Davis is questionable for the Bucs, which would be a hit to their secondary.

TE – Ian Thomas is under a 6% target share and is not a part of the offense in any significant fashion.

D/ST – I know we just saw the Bucs get whooped on Sunday night, but the Panthers don’t have the same talent. They only have nine sacks on the season and have the third-lowest pressure rate in the league.

Cash – Davis, Anderson

GPP – Bridgewater, Samuel, Moore

Broncos at Raiders, O/U of 50.5 (Raiders -4)

Broncos – Pace is 5th

QB – I expected Drew Lock to be more expensive since he was coming of a 30+ DK game but he is still super affordable. Lock is still hard to gauge. He’s put together his two best games of the season but that’s about all we have to go on. Last week was somewhat lucky as well since his completion rate was under 53% but he kicked in 47 rushing yards and a score. This is another great matchup for him. Vegas ranks 26th in DVOA against the pass and have a matching 26th rank for passing yards allowed per game. Looking just at Lock isn’t inspiring. He’s 29th in pDB on the year and 28th in points per game. That is skewed by leaving early but still, it’s not ideal. It’s also important to remember that he looked even worse last week. I’m wasn’t thinking I’d use him in cash again, but it’s possible.

RB – It was some mighty bad production from the duo of Melvin Gordon and Phillip Lindsay last week. They combined for 14 carries for 41 yards and only one reception. However, the matchup gets an awful lot better. Atlanta is eighth in run DVOA and we talk about how they are quietly stout against the run. Vegas ranks 32nd in DVOA and they have given up 1,195 scrimmage yards with 11 touchdowns. Even though the Broncos trailed through most of this game, Gordon still saw over 60% of the snaps and he would be my preferred play in this backfield. The fact this is a split does lower my overall interest though.

WR – It might not be a coincidence that Jerry Jeudy has had his two best games in the past two weeks. He’s started to play more on the boundary instead of the slot, which is maybe just where he’s comfortable. He’s always been a fantastic route runner and he’s totaled 24 targets the past two weeks, combining for 11/198/1. His price jumped almost $1,000 but he’s still cheaper than he should be at this target share (28.9% in those two weeks). The individual matchup is against second year corner Trayvon Mullen, who has allowed a 113.3 passer rating and a 1.90 pPT.

*Update* Coach Vic Fangio said he’s “confident” Jeudy will play, which is a little bit scary. I’d likely avoid in cash with that line from the coach.

Don’t overlook Tim Patrick or K.J. Hamler either. Patrick returned to the lineup and saw nine targets and scored, while Hamler saw 10 and went for 15 DK. The game script might not be as bad as last week but this one could well shoot out. Patrick gets Nevin Lawson who is almost the exact carbon copy of Mullen. Hamler should man the slot a good bit which means LaMarcus Joyner and he only runs a 4.5 40-yard dash. That means Hamler could torch him deep on any given play.

TE – It’s a shame that Noah Fant has had injury issues seemingly all year. He aggravated the ankle again this past week according to Coach Vic Fangio, but at least he returned to the game. We’ll see if he’s able to practice all week but the price is still solid. Fant is under $5,000 and may only be running the 17th most routes, but he still has upside. The Raiders have been good against the position so far with only three scores allowed but Fant is not that matchup sensitive to cast aside.

D/ST – Vegas has only allowed 14 sacks and they have nine turnovers, so they don’t check my boxes for offenses to attack. Denver is ninth in overall DVOA and have generated 22 sacks, but don’t have a massive strength to fall back on. At least they aren’t expensive but I prefer a play like the Giants.

Cash – Lock

GPP – Jeudy, Patrick, Hamler, Gordon, Lindsay, Fant

Raiders – Pace is 25th

QB – Playing Lock over Derek Carr likely saved me to a big extent in cash last week as Lock more than doubled him up in points. Carr did maintain his penchant for throwing two touchdowns, but the 165 yards was fairly disappointing. Even with some bumps in the road, Carr is still at a 16:2 TD:INT ratio on the season. Looking at the metrics, Carr is right about average across the board. He sits 16th in yards, 11th in touchdowns, 15th in pDB and 12th in RZ attempts. His deep ball still remains a good weapon with a 46.7% completion rate, good for 11th in the league. Denver is 17th in passing yards allowed per game and 12th in DVOA, so I don’t have any pressing need to play Carr this week.

RB – It was a little jarring to see Josh Jacobs only have 14 carries and perhaps he was nursing that knee injury more than we thought. We’ll need to keep an eye on the practice reports, but Denver is 13th in DVOA against the run. That’s mostly shown up in the production as well with only 737 rushing yards allowed through eight games. They’ve also allowed only four scores and 279 receiving yards, so there’s not a glaring weakness to attack. With Chubb, Sanders and even Jones sitting within $600 of Jacobs, I know where I’m heading.

WR – When Carr only throws for 165 yards, there’s not going to be a receiver that stands out. Nelson Agholor continues to live his best life with 55 yards and another score on just three targets. That’s better than Henry Ruggs who did not record a reception this past week. Ruggs has yet to record more than three receptions and has two or fewer in every game but one. He is the textbook definition of a boom or bust play, and he only has one boom game on his resume thus far. That doesn’t mean he’s incapable, it’s just what he’s put on the field to this point.

Agholor should face A.J. Bouye and that’s not great for Agholor. He’s battle injuries and I think he’s a lot better than the 2.10 pPT allowed to this point. Ruggs get Michael Ojemudia and has a significant speed advantage. It’s not often a corner runs 4.45 and is 0.2 seconds slower than the receiver they face. Even Hunter Renfrow has a tougher matchup with Bryce Callahan, who has a 1.20 pPT and 62.9 passer rating on 50 targets.

TE – There’s never really a doubt of who to stack Carr with if that’s the route you want to take. It’s Darren Waller, who leads in target share at 28.5%, RZ targets at 12 and EZ targets at five. No other player has more than four RZ targets (Renfrow) and only Agholor has more than two EZ targets (four). Waller leads the team in receiving yards, although that’s much closer and is the TE2 in PPR settings this season. Here’s my issue with him – he’s really pricey at $5,900.

Waller has had one game so far this year where he would have hit 3x at this salary. The price came up after 13.2 DK last week, which makes little sense. Being the most expensive option at the position does him no favors in my eyes, as he hasn’t shown the ceiling to be worth it. The one facet Waller has going for him is the Chargers have struggled a bit with tight ends without safety Derwin James. They’ve given up the ninth-most DK points per game to the position and six scores already. The only way I’m paying for Waller is game stacks.

D/ST – I’m tempted since Lock is still very much a question, but the nine sacks and five turnovers forced through eight games isn’t very redeeming for Vegas. Perhaps if I love the rest of my lineup and only have $2,500 left in GPP.

Cash – None, Carr is closest

GPP – Waller, Jacobs, Ruggs, Agholor

Bills at Cardinals, O/U of 56.5 (Cardinals -2.5)

Bills – Pace is 23rd

QB – Not that I was out on a limb or anything, but it was nice to say Josh Allen was about my favorite quarterback last week and see him smash. He almost hit 40 DK points, throwing three touchdowns and running one in for good measure. Yes, Seattle is really that bad on defense. This matchup is a good bit different as Arizona is 11th in DVOA against the pass and are 19th in passing yards allowed per game.

Lest we think Allen can only get it done in great matchups, he has two huge games against the Dolphins and Rams, who are top 10 in DVOA against the pass. He’s seventh in pDB, sixth in points per game and fifth in passing touchdowns. Adding five rushing scores doesn’t hurt and Allen is still a prime candidate in any format. Of the top five QB’s in salary this week, I’d rank him about fourth behind only Kyler Murray, Aaron Rodgers and then it’s tough with Russell Wilson and Watson. Still, you can’t go wrong with Allen.

RB – This backfield is a pain but we also have to remember Buffalo barely made an effort to run the ball last week against Seattle. Memo to Pete Carroll – other teams know that your weakness is against the pass. You may want to expect it from now on. Anywho, back to the task at hand. Zack Moss out-snapped Devin Singletary for the second straight week and had nine carries to two for Singletary. The targets and receptions were in favor of Singletary…by one each. It really seems like Moss is who we want to play, but I’m not overly pumped with the price for a split backfield. The Cards are just a mediocre 16th in DVOA against the run so this spot isn’t anything the we have to chase like crazy. They have allowed over 1,100 scrimmage yards so if you take this route, Moss is the guy.

WR – Stefon Diggs has been one of my favorite receivers in football for a while now and I love seeing him thrive. However, I want to urge just a hair of caution here. This is the highest price he’s been all season long. At this salary, he needs 22.5 DK to hit 3x. Out of the eight games played so far, he’s gone over that mark three times and two of them were 23 points. That isn’t to say he can’t, especially in a shoot out style game. After all, he sits ninth in air yards share in the NFL and is third in target share at 29.3%. I still have every intention playing him in any format because I do think the ceiling is in play here. Patrick Peterson has allowed a 115.7 passer rating and a 71.4% catch rate this season on 56 targets.

Can I interest you in a John Brown revenge game? I’m really only kidding, but the ex-Cardinal is a significant part of this passing game. He was healthy this past game for the first time since around Week 2 or 3 and he went for 8/99/0 on 11 targets. His 17.78 target share actually edges out Cole Beasley and ha’s in fewer games and playing while hurt. I prefer Brown as the second receiver and if you take the route of stacking with Allen, it’s these two first and foremost. Brown gets Dre Kirkpatrick who has been dreadful this season. He’s over a 70% catch rate and an 11.2 YPR.

*Update* Safety Budda Baker is questionable, which would be a massive loss for Arizona.

TE – Yes, I know Tyler Kroft caught a touchdown last week but this offense doesn’t use that position. None of them have a target share over 6.2% and that’s for Dawson Knox. Kroft has five RZ targets but that’s not enough to get me to play him this week.

D/ST – I’m not really looking to play either defense in this game and Buffalo is down to 17th in overall DVOA. They have gotten home often with 24 sacks but they’re not even super cheap to make a case for them.

Cash – Allen, Diggs, Brown

GPP – Moss, Beasley

Cardinals – Pace is 3rd

QB – Remember when Kyler Murray might have gone to play baseball? Yeah, good thing that didn’t happen. He is going berserk right now and is the 2020 answer to Lamar Jackson, only he has better passing upside. Murray would be eighth in rushing yards among running backs, let alone any passing production. He’s on pace to set the NFL record for rushing touchdowns by the position with 16. Oh by the way, he’s racked up 2,130 passing yards, 16 passing touchdowns and has cut down on the sacks this year as well. He’s taken over as the QB1 on the slate and with no Mahomes, he is a worthy player to be the most expensive option. He needs to hit 24 DK to hit 3x and that is his floor this year. He’s not been lower than that mark and has four games over 30 DK, two over 40. There’s zero reason to shy away from the salary and he’s in play in all formats, stacked or not.

RB – Well, Chase Edmonds flopped pretty hard and that much I could handle. My frustration came from he got the exact workload I thought he would. When a back gets 28 touches, it’s hard to argue that you shouldn’t have played him. It just didn’t work out. I’m going to be tempted to go right back to the well if Kenyan Drake is out again as well. Buffalo is 22nd in DVOA against the run and have allowed the sixth-most rushing yards to backs. For all of Kyler’s touchdown prowess, he only has 15 RZ attempts to 22 for Drake and seven for Edmonds. Kyler is always a three to run it in, but it might be a little exaggerated since he has 84 rushing yards on those 15 attempts. He’s had goal line carries for sure but he’s also had some from just inside the 20. Drake was limited Thursday so let’s see what Friday brings.

*Update* Drake is questionable, and with six games in this window you can take the risk he plays with other pivots. I’m interested either way, whether he plays or it’s Edmonds again.

WR – DeAndre Hopkins has fallen to eighth in raw targets across the league, although he is still top five in target share. This is going to be interesting. Over the last three weeks, Christian Kirk has been a monster, posting three consecutive games over 20 DK and scoring five touchdowns. That’s come off 19 targets to 23 for Hopkins. Kirk also has the RZ and EZ target lead and I wonder if everyone just flocks to Kirk. He’s $2,000 cheaper and doesn’t face Bills corner Tre White. Kirk faces Levi Wallace who statistically hasn’t been too shabby. He’s at a 74.2 passer rating allowed and only a 1.40 pPT.

Nuk has paid off his current price tag four of eight games but if he’s not going to be popular, I might wind up preferring him to Kirk in GPP. I’m not sure I feel comfortable playing other in cash right now. Kirk just seems too good to be true. With Nuk, White has really struggled this year with a 2.60 pPT and a 16.2 YPR allowed. It’s only been 31 targets but yikes. He could be really interesting leverage if Kirk is more popular.

*Update* Safety Micah Hyde is questionable and just like Baker for the Cards, it would be a massive loss for the Buffalo defense that is beleaguered as it is.

TE – The tight end isn’t utilized in this offense and we can pass on it quickly.

D/ST – The only reason you’re playing this defense is hoping that Allen makes a mistake or two in a pass heavy script. He could fumble as well, but Arizona scuffled against a rookie quarterback in his second start last week. I don’t love them here either.

Cash – Kyler, Edmonds if Drake is out

GPP – Nuk, Kirk

Chargers at Dolphins, O/U of 48.5 (Dolphins -1.5)

Chargers – Pace is 11th

QB – It appears that Justin Herbert has been put on this Earth to play quarterback and chew bubblegum, and this dude is all out of bubblegum. He had no fewer than three different touchdown passes dropped last week (two consecutive plays to end the game) but Herbert put the ball in the right spot each time. He’s averaging 26.9 DK points and that’s fifth in the league. The rookie trails only Russ in yards per game at over 306 and just seems to come through each and every week. The Dolphins are no walk in the park, as they are eighth in DVOA against the pass but 21st in yards allowed per game. The facet keeping them afloat is the “bend but don’t break” philosophy. Miami has only given up 11 touchdowns through the air, tied for the third-least. If Herbert gets looked over for the upper tier, he makes for a dynamite GPP play with 30 point upside.

RB – Do you absolutely hate the idea of Mike Davis? Can I interest you in Troymaine Pope? I will be much heavier on Davis, but Pope could line up to be a gutsy pivot. Justin Jackson is supposed to be rested this week, leaving Pope, Kalen Ballage and Joshua Kelley as the active backs. Ballage got 16 touches while Kelley got 14, but neither did a ton with it. Ballage scored but past that, the scores were about the same. Pope came out of nowhere two weeks ago for 15 touches on just 15 snaps. This backfield is a mess, but if playing anyone you may as well take a show at the player who’s the exact price of Davis and saw seven targets in his last active game.

*Update* Ballage was called back up from the practice squad but I’ll stand firm as ranking the backfield Pope>Ballage>Kelley.

WR – We just talked about Keenan Allen being in play every single week and he still is. However, if there was a week where I might hedge a bit it could be this one. Allen is playing under 45% of his snaps from the slot, which isa bit low for him. When he’s on the outside, facing either Byron Jones and Xavien Howard is no picnic. He’d likely face more Jones than anyone, but if LAC is smart they just leave Allen in the slot 100% of the time. Neither corner is over an 8% slot rate and they will not be comfortable in that alignment. I think Allen is still a cash play, but this is as “unsafe” as he’s been with Herbert in my eyes.

Mike Williams was among the most tilting plays of the weekend (must be something about wearing a Chargers uniform) as he dropped two touchdowns. I’m not particularly on him in this spot, though he does have the ability to just high point the ball over about any corner in football. He should see more Howard who has only allowed a 55.0 passer rating and a 1.50 pPT. The “easiest” corner matchup is Jalen Guyton on Nik Needham. We can even play the Brian Tulloch angle since Brian played him last week and needed that 70-yard bomb. He’s wholly unstable but has a 14 and 16 point DK game. It takes just one play.

TE – It continues to just be frustration after frustration for Hunter Henry. He’s yet to exceed 14 DK with Herbert and he’s only broken double-digits twice. It would be easy to stop playing him if he wasn’t getting targeted but he is, and a good bit at that. The 17.4% target share is second on the team under Herbert and he still ranks 29th in catchable passes. The 33 receptions are good for ninth at the position but Henry just always seems to flop. It’s wise to have a share or two if you play multiple lineups, because he could be due a multi-touchdown game. It’s just hard to tell when that’s coming.

D/ST – LA is not really a defense that I want to target. They give up about 27 points per game, have only seven turnovers forced and only have two sacks per game. The pressure rate is in the top half of the league but they just can’t get home.

*Update* They are down Joey Bosa now as well, so no real interest here.

Cash – Herbert, Allen

GPP – Pope, Kelley, Williams, Henry

Dolphins – Pace is 31st

QB – We got to see a little more of what Tua Tagovailoa is going to look like in the NFL and it wasn’t too shabby. He probably should’ve thrown a pick or two and got a little lucky, but settled in as the game went on. Tua wound up going 20-28 with two passing touchdowns and scampered around for 35 yards rushing. He only has one turnover so far in two games, which is a credit to him. In the early going, he has a 0.42 pDB and that’s right about in line with Matthew Stafford. That’s nothing spectacular but I could be far worse this early. His completion rate under pressure stands out as well at 54.5%. The Chargers are 14th in DVOA against the pass so it’s an average matchup. I don’t feel the need to play Tua but maybe a sprinkle in MME wouldn’t hurt. I do prefer other options under $6,000.

RB – Holy smokes this is rough. Matt Breida was limited Thursday but missed last week. Jordan Howard is dust. DeAndre Washington should be active after coming over from KC, but they could be mixed into a three man RBBC. I want to see what Friday dictates before making any decisions, but I’m not psyched about this backfield in the least.

*Update* Friday Brough no real clarity and there’s just so many other options this week.

WR – This is an interesting spot. DeVante Parker is sure to get attention since Preston Williams is on the IR. The price is very cheap and so far with Tua under center, Parker is second in targets behind Williams. It’s important to remember that the Rams matchup was weird and Tua only attempted 24 throws. I don’t think we can conclude that he won’t throw to Parker since he had seven targets this past game. Michael Davis should draw most of the assignment and has played well this year, with a 78.8 passer rating and a 10.6 YPR on 52 targets.

Jakeem Grant enters into the punt conversation as well. He only played 48% of the snaps but he saw most of his work after Williams left. Grant is likely cast in the slot and he does have some big-play ability. He’s the kind of receiver that can take a 5-yard slant to the house as he’s shown in the return game a little bit. At bare minimum and with Desmond King now in Tennessee, he does make sense as a punt. My fear is he could see some Casey Hayward but at the minimum, it’s a fine chance to take because Hayward isn’t going full shadow on Grant.

TE – It has been a very slow season for Mike Gesicki. The hope had been that Tua starting could jumpstart his season but so far, that’s not happened. Gesicki is fourth in targets and receptions with Tua and it’s harder every week to recommend playing him. It’s especially annoying to look at his metrics. He has the third-highest slot rate among tight ends, sixth-highest route rate and eight RZ targets. Yet, he’s the TE21. He’s not even really cheap, so I’ll likely find other options and weep when he has a big game.

*Update* Durham Smythe is questionable so that could lead to more snaps for Gesicki.

D/ST – The Chargers offense is good but I feel like we shouldn’t sleep on the Dolphins here. They struggle to defend the run at 29th in DVOA, but they are eighth against the pass. Coach Brian Flores has coaxed 20 sacks and 13 turnovers out of this unit so far while only giving up 20 points per contest. It’s a strength on strength matchup but anytime Miami is under $3,000, they are in play.

Cash – D/ST, Parker is close

GPP – Grant, Tua, Gesicki

49ers at Saints, O/U of 49 (Saints -9.5)

49ers – Pace is 28th

QB – I don’t believe I want to get too involved with this situation. Nick Mullens had another two turnovers last game and has six to five touchdown passes. He’s already been yanked mid-game once and that is always on the table. You can build the argument the this is a let-down spot for the Saints (it is after an emotional win Sunday night) but I’m not sure Mullens can do much here. His pDB is only 0.39 and he would need to produce a ton in garbage time like he did last week. Since he’s priced among some more accomplished quarterbacks, I’m likely going other directions.

RB – Oh Kyle Shanahan how I despise you somedays. After reports of JaMycal Hasty being the main back and Jerick McKinnon nursing “tired legs”, McKinnon was the one who got all the work last Thursday night. His legs were tired but he was in there when the game was over a 25 point difference. Okay, Kyle. We see you. He played 74% of the snaps while Hasty got 26% and the touches were skewed that bad as well. McKinnon had 15 touches to just six for Hasty and the problem now is we can’ be sure who’s the lead back. The game before, Hasty had 12 carries to three for McKinnon. If you pick wrong here, you’re likely dead in the water. On top of that, New Orleans is fifth in DVOA against the run and have only allowed 802 scrimmage yards and five touchdowns so far. I’ll let someone else mess with this backfield.

WR – So I don’t think we can project Richie James to score 36.4 DK again, possibly ever in the history of the league. He had all of 23 total snaps on the season before that explosion and he may not even be on the roster this week, but we’ll see. Even if he is, I don’t think I’d want to play him again. San Francisco should welcome back the duo of Brandon Aiyuk and Kendrick Bourne.

Aiyuk is very cheap and the 49ers should be chasing points here. Aiyuk is the active target leader on this team with George Kittle out for the foreseeable future. He’s put together two strong games back-to-back before the Covid diagnosis. Aiyuk combined for a 14/206/1 in those games and is a nice value, regardless of Marshon Lattimore. He only seems to play well against Mike Evans anymore and is up to a 2.20 pPT and a 120.5 passer rating allowed. Bourne typically plays at least 70% of the snaps if Deebo is inactive and has a 14.9% target rate on his own with 21.4% of the air yards. The air yards is third on the team and target share is third among active players so don’t forget about him.

TE – The snap share was heavily in favor of Ross Dwelley over Jordan Reed last week to about a 75%-25% rate. I do have to wonder if a longer week helps Reed get onto the field more this time around. It kind of feels like Reed gutted through not being healthy yet to try and help the team. We know that Reed has some big upside at this salary with a 24 DK point DK game this season. Granted, that was against the Jets but New Orleans has been a bottom 10 team to tight ends this year for DK points allowed. The six touchdowns allowed is tied for third-most. With them being about the same price, I’d prefer to gamble with Reed.

D/ST – They’re in the dome and the Saints are at full strength on offense for the first time in a long time. I’ll pass here.

Cash – Aiyuk

GPP – Mullens, Reed, Bourne

Saints – Pace is 26th

QB – Drew Brees might be picking up some steam here. He’s been over 23 DK in three of the past four games, and the 19 DK in Chicago is fairy impressive as well. In those four games, Brees has gone for nine touchdowns which is over half his season total. The yardage hasn’t been crazy high but at his current salary, 22-24 DK would be right about a 4x return. The veteran is still lagging far behind the pack in deep throws with just nine on the year and that does cap the yardage to some extent. Still, the 0.51 pDB is up to 13th and he has his full offense back. Brees seems fairly cheap given he’s in New Orleans and I wonder if he flies under the radar here.

RB – Alvin Kamara might be outside of the top 15 backs in carries, but the 72 targets more than makes up for everything else. This isn’t the easiest matchup with San Francisco ranking sixth in DVOA against the run but they are about average as far as defending receiving backs. Kamara is more or less matchup proof. He doesn’t have the huge games the past few weeks that will catch people’s eyes either. Kamara only had 14 touches last week and really wasn’t needed that much. If 14 touches and 15.9 DK is the floor, that tells you where the ceiling is on any given day. Most will flock to the cheaper backs leaving Kamara as an excellent GPP play.

Latavius Murray continues to get a good chunk of carries (he’s actually 27th in the league with 81) and if this game goes sideways, he may approach the 12 touches he had last week. If he scores a TD, he would have a shot at a 3x return and with Mike Davis at the same price, nobody is playing him. This would be an MME only play for me.

WR – Michael Thomas made his return to the lineup but only played 55% of the snaps. That’s not something I’m very worried about as the Saints had zero incentive to push him with a 21 point lead so early. We just saw the 49ers get dominated by Davante Adams and while Adams>Thomas, MT is still very cheap for his typical production. He only has a 17.7% target share on the year but I can’t get past the price here. Even the matchup against Jason Verrett isn’t enough to completely leave me off Thomas. I will have some exposure without any question and he could be a great pivot off the Rams receiving options we’ll talk about next game.

Emmanuel Sanders and Tre’Quan Smith both caught touchdowns but Sanders remains the primary target in the corps. He had five targets to just two for Smith, and most games won’t go like Sunday night. Sanders draws Emmanuel Moseley, who has been targeted 48 times and has a 1.90 pPT allowed. Kamara, Thomas and Sanders will be the main three cogs in the passing game. Sanders is fairly cheap and has a 20.3% target share with nine RZ targets, most on the team. He’s worth looking at in game stacks, especially a Brees/MT/Sanders style play.

TE – It was not a good game for Jared Cook Sunday night, with only three targets and a fumble. He’s down under a 13% target share on the season though he does have eight RZ and five EZ targets. You have to wonder how much of that he retains with Thomas back, just like Sanders. His price is not all that appealing to me and San Francisco has only allowed two touchdowns so far. It really seems like he’s going to be the fourth option in this passing game and a pricey one for the position he plays.

D/ST – The Saints are likely my favorite mid-range defense on this slate. The price is affordable and they are in the top half of the league in pressure rate, generating 22 sacks so far. The turnovers forced have been average at just nine, but Mullens should help that rate a little bit this week.

Cash – Brees, Thomas, Kamara, D/ST

GPP – Sanders, Cook, Murray

Seahawks at Rams, O/U of 54.5 (Rams -1.5)

Seahawks – Pace is 18th

QB – It was a pretty humbling loss for the Seahawks this past week. In the past three games for Russell Wilson, he has a total of seven turnovers. You’ll likely hear that a good bit in any MVP discussion but his DK point totals in those three games are still excellent at 35.9, 28.7 and 29.1. He still leads the league in touchdowns, is fourth in yards, second in pDB and second in points per game. The biggest fear in my eyes is the mismatch in the trenches. Wilson is under the fifth-highest pressure rate in the league and some of that is Wilson’s fault as well. He’s tied for the third-longest pocket time. The Rams have generated 25 sacks already and Aaron Donald looms large. Russ has the third-highest completion rate at 53.1% but there is some danger here. Having said all that, Wilson is still cheap and well in play here.

RB – We still need some clarity here as Chris Carson is not practicing yet. The trio of Travis Homer, DeeJay Dallas and Alex Collins all split snaps last week, with Homer playing the most at 48%. He and Dallas had nine touches each and Homer had more targets, which is likely the most valuable of what we need. This game should shoot out so Homer is the pick if Carson can’t go, but I don’t like any player a ton. Collins only got two touches so I wouldn’t take that route at all.

*Update* Carson remains questionable. Just like Drake, we have enough options you can pivot to him once we know if he’s active, but we really won’t know until Sunday.

WR – This might be about the weirdest season ever for Tyler Lockett. He’s WR5 in PPR settings but yet of the eight games he’s played, four have been under 10 DK points. Six have been under 20 and then two have been over 40! When he’s hit, Lockett has been close to a slate breaker but the he hasn’t, he’s sunk your lineup. D.K. Metcalf has drawn the tougher matchups but has been far more consistent. Seven of his eight games have been over 17 DK and four have been well over 20. Metcalf has 10 fewer receptions than Locket but almost 200 more yards and one more touchdown.

We’ll be putting that theory to test again this week because Metcalf could get Jalen Ramsey this week. Myself and Ghost seem to think he could face Lockett more. Ramsey has played plenty of slot so they might opt to have Ramsey shut Lockett down and turn Seattle into just one receiver. Even if Metcalf gets Ramsey, I don’t care much. Metcalf has already burned Stephon Gilmore and Tre White, elite players at the position. David Moore could be a very deep punt in this game, with nine targets over the past two weeks. If Metcalf or Lockett has a slow game again, Moore could pick up a little slack.

*Update* Ramsey himself said he won’t shadow Metcalf. Game on.

TE – The tight end spot has evolved into a messy situation. Jacob Hollister, Will Dissly and Greg Olsen are all under 50% of the snaps but Hollister might be the best option here. He played the most snaps last week and drew seven targets. I don’t think that repeats very often but if you wanted a tight end punt, Hollister works to some extent.

D/ST – This unit has actually made some splash plays with 14 turnovers forced and that’s tied for third-most. The sacks are only at 19 but I don’t like the idea of playing them against the Rams coming out of a bye. I have to expect Rams Coach Sean McVay has a plan to exploit these weaknesses.

Cash – Russ, Metcalf

GPP – Lockett, Moore, Hollister

Rams – Pace is 16th

QB – Seattle has faced the most passing attempts on the season, but I’m not sure that’s an excuse to be giving up 362 passing yards per game. Atlanta is still second at 310, a 52 yard difference. To their small credit, Seattle has only allowed 16 touchdown passes but I still want a piece of Jared Goff. He only ranks 20th in pass plays per game and 19th in pDB but the matchup is just too good. Time after time, Seattle has gotten ripped in the passing game. Typically, Goff would have to be crazy efficient for a ceiling game because the Rams are fifth in rush attempts per game. If Goff and McVay don’t throw the ball here against the 29th ranked DVOA against the pass, I have to question just how smart McVay actually is.

RB – One of the reasons Seattle has faced the most passing attempts is because they’re ninth in DVOA against the run and fourth in yards allowed per game. That’s not a great mix for a potential RBBC with Darrell Henderson, Malcolm Brown and possibly Cam Akers. Henderson is supposed to play but with it being a split backfield in a bad matchup on paper, I’m not interested to any real capacity. I would lean Henderson over anyone else.

WR – We should love all three of the main receivers this week and yes, I did say three. Cooper Kupp is still my favorite even though he’s the most expensive. Kupp has been in the slot the eighth-most this season at 53.9% and the Seahawks have no player to cover him in that alignment. He’s been banged up this week so we need to monitor that closely. D.J. Reed isn’t going to stop him so the only thing that could is injury.

Robert Woods is slightly cheaper and is just as good a play and I will have shares of both in game stacks. Woods is averaging two rushing attempts per game and has two rushing touchdowns, raising his floor just a little bit. Only Curtis Samuel has more rushing attempts from the receiver position (no I’m not counting Cordarrelle Patterson and you can’t make me). Woods should get some Quinton Dunbar but that matters little. He played clearly hurt last week and that could be the same story this week.

My favorite wide receiver punt on the slate is Josh Reynolds. He has a respectable 13.9% target share, is one air yard off the team lead behind Kupp and leads in RZ targets. Reynolds also has the second-most EZ targets and the highest aDOT on the team. In a high scoring game, Reynolds could see the eight or nine targets he saw the previous two games and is in a smash matchup.

*Update* Dunbar and Shaq Griffin are both out for the Seahawks and the receivers really should have a field day here.

TE – Tyler Higbee made it back into the lineup before the bye week, but he’s still a tough sell for me. His 51.4% route rate is only 30th among tight ends and he’s fourth on his team in target rate at 10.4%. What’s worse is he’s only got three RZ targets all season. Outside of his three touchdown game against the Eagles, Higbee doesn’t have a game over 8.6 DK all season.

D/ST – I actually really don’t mind the Rams as a punt defense. We talked earlier about the mismatch along the lines and that could cause sacks and turnovers. Wilson has been sacked the third-most times and even if the Rams give up a lot of points, they can still score 6-8 DK which is more than fine at the salary.

Cash – Goff, Kupp, Woods

GPP – Reynolds, D/ST

Bengals at Steelers, O/U of 46.5 (Steelers -7)

Bengals – Pace is 14th

QB – This is among the toughest matchups that Joe Burrow has faced and he has been somewhat matchup sensitive. His worst game so far has come against Baltimore, who are seventh in DVOA against the pass. He managed to hit 20 DK against the Colts but scored a rushing touchdown. The Steelers represent the best passing DVOA he has faced so far at third. Burrow does have volume in his favor, as he’s second in attempts per game and he sits eighth in passing yards. Pittsburgh has only allowed the fifth-least passing yards per game and even with the volume built in, I don’t love Burrow here. The completion rate under pressure rate is 32nd at 28.6% and the Steelers have the highest pressure rate in football.

RB – We may as well assume that Joe Mixon will not be active this week since he’s still not practicing after the bye week. That’s going to leave Gio Bernard as the lead back and he’s had 18 touches in each game without Mixon. The Steelers have been a bit rough against the run lately, with over 140 yards allowed in each of the past two games. Gio is going to be under the radar with Duke Johnson and Mike Davis cheaper, at the least. Still, I’m not sure this a risk worth taking. Pittsburgh is still fourth in DVOA against the run and they still rank in the top 10 in rushing yards allowed per game. Gio will mostly be a pass for me.

WR – I think even though he’s priced the highest, Tyler Boyd has to be the first play out of these receivers. He not only leads the Bengals in target share at 221.2% but he draws perhaps the softest matchup of the group as well. Mike Hilton is in line to return for Pittsburgh but he’s allowed a 71.4% catch rate and a 115.0 passer rating so far. Boyd’s aDOT is the lowest of the receivers and Burrow is going to have to get the ball out quick. If Pittsburgh is foolish enough to play base defense and leave a guy like T.J. Watt on Boyd like they did with CeeDee Lamb last week, Boyd will score.

*Update* Not that he scared me, but Hilton is questionable. That would be an ever bigger reason to like Boyd.

The projection is that Joe Haden will mostly see Tee Higgins and that’s going to be a tougher task for the rookie. Haden is down to a 1.20 pPT and only a 73.2 passer rating allowed. In fairness, he has been fairly consistent after he started to get on the field Week 3 with no games under 10.2 DK points. I just don’t prefer him in this spot. Also, I’m not really looking at A.J. Green. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me six times, that just makes me an idiot.

TE -Drew Sample really isn’t part of the offense in any major way and has just 14.4 DK points in the last four games. Two of those games were goose egg performances, so the floor is legitimately zero. With a route rate of only 64.7%, he could block an awful lot this week.

D/ST – Check back with me if Ben Roethlisberger is out.

Cash – Boyd is closest

GPP – Burrow, Higgins, Gio

Steelers – Pace is 27th

QB – As a note, this is written as if Big Ben is going to play in Sunday. He hasn’t tested positive, so he still does have a legitimate shot to suit up. If he does, his price is super low and he finally flashed his ceiling last week. Of course, it did me no good since I wasn’t on him as a 14 point favorite but we know the veteran still does have it. He’s still just 18th in pDB but he’s also seventh in touchdowns. Cincinnati is 25th in DVOA against the pass and 23rd in passing yards allowed per game. They are also tied for the fifth-most touchdown passes allowed, so this is a good spot and Roethlisberger is at a very low price. With the defense showing some cracks the past two weeks, it’s possible this turns into a shoot out.

RB – The game script was in Bizarro World last week, but it’s still tough not to notice how James Conner was under a 50% snap rate. He still had 11 touches but Anthony McFarland and Benny Snell were on the field a lot last week. I don’t think it’s anything to worry about at this juncture and Conner should be back to workhorse duties this week. The Bengals represent a great bounciest back spot, as they are 25th against the run in DVOA and have allowed the third-most rushing yards among teams with eight games. I really don’t care for the price, as it didn’t move after a four point DK game. He has only hit 3x at this salary three times so far this year and I could see him being a little disappointing.

WR – In every game that Diontae Johnson hasn’t either left with injury or been evaluated for injury, he’s had double-digit targets. I’m hard pressed to see why that stops this week and he leads in target share at 20.2%. The air yards are about 8% higher than JuJu Smith-Schuster, but with Ben having issues with his deep ball I’m not sure that’s anything of note. Pittsburgh plays in 11 personnel over 60% of the time, and Johnson should see some of LeShaun Sims. That’s advantage Johnson since Sims has a 2.20 pPT so far this year.

Smith-Schuster is in the slot about 80% of the time this season and Bengals corner Mackensie Alexander, who sports a 70.6% completion rate and 1.60 pPT. These two will be my main targets this week and Chase Claypool is more the boom or bust receiver. He did see 13 (!) targets last week, a career high. I don’t expect Ben to throw quite as much and in honesty, Claypool did not have a great game. A couple really bad drops kept him away from a huge line. I do fear the staff dials him back from 80% of the snaps to somewhere closer to 55%-60%. William Jackson has played fairly well with a catch rate under 58% but Claypool seems to flash almost every week.

TE – With Eric Ebron already over 80% of the snaps, I don’t believe the loss of Vance McDonald changes much here. Cincy is tied for the third-most touchdowns allowed and second-most DK per game to the position. Ebron has also seen 23 targets over the past four weeks, showing his involvement in the offense is here to stay. There’s still some floor but he’s in double-digits for three straight games. I think we can ride the hot streak and the ball is spread around enough for him to still pay off.

D/ST – Not to be a jerk, but I do feel vindicated saying to not pay so much for the Steelers defense last week because they weren’t worth it. This is another great spot for them since the Bengals are tied for the second-most sacks given up and have a high pressure rate allowed. It’s still the same story for me though. Pittsburgh needs to score over 13 DK to hit 3x at this salary. That’s a LOT for a defense and I’ll just spend less looking for more upside relative to price.

Cash – Johnson, JuJu, Conner

GPP – Ben, Claypool, Ebron

Core Four

Aaron Jones, Mike Davis, Kyler Murray, Stefon Diggs

Jones and Davis are just plug and play options. We’re paying $11,100 for a potential 50 DK points if they hit their ceilings, and the respective floors are awfully safe. I maintain that Jones is at least $1,000 too cheap. Kupp follows the flow chart of picking on the Seattle defense that is missing two corners now on top of everything else. If you need the couple hundred in savings, I have no issue playing Woods but absolutely prefer Kupp with no injury designation. Lastly, I do like Chubb if he’s 100% cleared. That is not a definite as of this writing and if there’s any questions, pivoting down to Duke is quite simple.

*SATURDAY UPDATE*

I’m moving Chubb out of the Core Four. While I still have a nice dose of him in GPP, it’s just easier to fit other elements without Chubb. I do think if there was ever a week to go four WR in cash, this could be it with so many excellent receiving plays up top and not a ton of backs. It’s a rare week that I will put a QB in the core, but Murray’s floor has been 3x and that game is the highest O/U on the slate. Using a cheap Josh Reynolds and cheap TE still leaves you an easy path to spend up on Kyler, Diggs and Jones. Full credit to Stix for brainstorming with me and getting me on this particular path.

Primary Game Stacks

BUF/ARI – Kyler, Diggs, Nuk, Brown, Kirk, Cards RB, Allen, Beasley

SEA/LAR – Goff, Kupp, Woods, Metcalf, Reynolds, Lockett, Russ, Moore

JAX/GB – Jones, Rodgers, Adams, Chark, Conley, Eifert, Lazard, Luton, Robinson

Secondary Game Stacks

HOU/CLE – Watson, Cooks, Duke, Fuller, Chubb, Landry, Hooper, Hunt

SF/NO – Brees, Thomas, Kamara, Bourne, Aiyuk, Sanders, Reed, McKinnon

CIN/PIT – Big Ben, Diontae, Claypool, Boyd, Higgins, Conner, JuJu, Gio, Burrow

TB/CAR – Brady, Godwin, Davis, Anderson, Samuel, Evans, AB

Let’s get after it this week my friends! 

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NFL Game by Game Breakdown Week 9

After a not-so-great Week 8, it’s time to get back on the horse and get ready for Week 9! We have a bunch of injuries that are looming and some great spots to sift through, along with some plays that have a crazy price. Let’s get into all that and plenty more in NFL Game by Game Breakdown Week 9 and find those green screens!

Panthers at Chiefs, O/U of 52.5 (Chiefs -10.5)

Panthers – Pace of 28th

QB – It was a pretty disappointing day for Teddy Bridgewater in the rain last Thursday and on paper this matchup is far worse. Kansas City is inside the top five in DVOA against the pass and have only given up a 9:9 TD:INT ratio on the season. Only the Bears and the Dolphins have given up fewer touchdown passes so far and KC is third-best as far as giving up passing yards at just 201 yards per contest. Bridgewater doesn’t have a ton going for him as he sits 24th in fpDB (fantasy points per drop back) and 24th in points per game. We’ve talked all year how he was mostly just missing touchdowns since he’s fifth in yardage. That’s impressive since Carolina is only 24th in passing plays per game but this doesn’t scream out as a spot he can throw 2-3 touchdowns, so I’ll likely go elsewhere.

RB – It sure looks like Christian McCaffrey will be back for this game and I find it being a tough decision. On the one hand, he is wildly cheap. CMC has been in the $10,000 range for the better part of a full season, going back to last year. You have to believe if the Panthers bring him back, he’s ready to go full tilt and they’re not going to force it. If he’s active I expect a full workload and $8,500 would be cheap. Kansas City is a great matchup on the ground as well, since they rank 28th in DVOA against the run and 29th in rushing yards allowed per game. The Chiefs have given up over 1,200 scrimmage yards but just four touchdowns. The fear is KC pulls so far ahead that CMC doesn’t get a full run.

WR – Since it was a down day for Teddy B, no receiver did much other than Curtis Samuel. He scored twice on a total of seven touches (four receptions and three rush attempts) so I think we can safely say that was a bit flukey. Samuel hauled in a 29-yard touchdown and finished with 31 receiving yards. Do the math on that one. Robby Anderson had his quietest days of the season with just 9.8 DK points. He would mostly draw Charvarius Ward, although Ward is right around 52% snap rate. Ward has allowed a catch rate over 63% so far but I don’t feel Anderson is needed and would be more a game stack option.

D.J. Moore was silent for about 57 minutes of game time before he charged back for two big catches late. He still holds the air yards lead over Anderson at a 40.1% rate to 38% for Anderson so he big play is definitely in his repertoire. Both receivers have four EZ targets as well so the pricing should likely be just a little closer. Moore gets to face Bashaud Breeland who is at about a 60% snap rate but only allows a 0.80 pPT (points per target).

TE – Thursday was only the second time Ian Thomas has been over five DK points all season and he’s still under a 6% target share. Even at a punt price, it’s hard to find a reason for the targets being so low and only being on the field 66.2% of the time.

D/ST – The Chiefs only have five turnovers, have only given up 10 sacks and score the second-most points per game. There’s no redeeming factor here for Carolina.

Cash – CMC

GPP – Moore, Anderson, Bridgewater

Chiefs – Pace is 17th

QB – Patrick Mahomes is the most expensive player on the slate and why shouldn’t he be, coming off a five touchdown game? Despite the Chiefs only being 19th in pass plays per game, Mahomes is fourth in fpDB at 0.59 and in touchdown passes at 16. He’s up to seventh in passing yards and RZ attempts, not to mention inside the top 12 in deep attempts. Carolina is only average in DVOA against the pass but unless it’s the most difficult matchup, Mahomes is at the stage where you can play him without a second thought. Carolina could be without rookie safety Jeremy Chin, which would be a big blow as well.

RB – I’d love to know what the actual plan here is for the Chiefs and the running backs, since both games with Clyde Edwards-Helaire and Le’Veon Bell in the backfield have been blowouts. CEH has definitely out-snapped Bell so far at a 51.3% rate to 29.1%. The attempts are close with 14 to CEH and 12 to Bell while CEH has seven targets to three for Bell. I’m still leaning playing CEH this week since Carolina is so weak against the run. I’m not sure Bell should be over $5,000 and CEH is just barely over $6,000 himself. I’d rather take the snaps, targets and a slight edge in attempts for this matchup. Carolina has allowed the most receptions to backs, second-most receiving yards, the sixth-most yards and 10 total touchdowns. Using that production and seeing the 28th ranked DVOA against the run makes this a beautiful matchup.

WR – In the three weeks without Sammy Watkins, the receiver position has been a little tough to figure. Sure, Tyreek Hill is the same as ever with a 19.6% target share and being the only player with an air yards share over 20% at 32.2%. Even with Panthers corner Rasul Douglas back in the lineup, he ran a 4.59 40-yard dash. That won’t cut it against Cheetah.

The secondary options have been the roller coaster. Both Demarcus Robinson and Mecole Hardman have had their games in the sun. Over the three week period, Robinson holds the snap edge at 73.2% to 50.5% over Hardman. The targets are dead even at 12 each, neither player has a RZ target but both players have one touchdown and Hardman has the edge at 153 yards to 136. However, Watkins is practicing in limited fashion. If Watkins is back, he’s the secondary receiver we want.

TE – Travis Kelce had a down week in Denver but came back with a vengeance last week. In this same three week period without Watkins, Kelce leads the team in targets at 22, RZ targets at four and receiving yards at 205. He and Hill both have three touchdowns as well and Kelce is the TE1 in PPR settings by almost 45 points. Much like Mahomes, Kelce is an option in all formats if you can afford him and is not really matchup sensitive at all.

D/ST – Kansas City has the second-highest pressure rate in football but so far has 17 sacks to show for it. Where they have shined is the turnover department as they are tied for first with 14. They also rank third in points allowed per game so the price is justified, but I do prefer one that is cheaper this week.

Cash – Mahomes, Kelce, Hill, D/ST

GPP – CEH, Bell, secondary WR is TBD

Seahawks at Bills, O/U of 54.5 (Seahawks -3)

Seahawks – Pace is 21st

QB – If this was last year, this could be a scary matchup for Russell Wilson. Buffalo was a nasty defense last year but they rank 19th in DVOA against the pass this season. Russ has been in another stratosphere and ranks first in fpDB, points per game, passing touchdowns, true passer rating and eighth in passing yards. He’s under $8,000 and there’s no reason for him to be at such a price. There’s also no real reason to be the third quarterback in salary as well. This is being written on Tuesday so about the only reason I would back off of Wilson being a smash play in all formats is weather. Past that, Russ has among the highest ceilings on the slate and certainly at the position.

RB – We’re trending to see DeeJay Dallas again this week and it might be a very similar spot as it was last week. Carlos Hyde is already out for the week and Chris Carson has still not practiced this week after missing last. The good news is this week we don’t have Dallas on a late kickoff and we’ll know before the slate starts what the situation is. If it’s Dallas in the scenario of last week, he’s still too cheap. It’s a better matchup than last week as Buffalo is 22nd in DVOA against the run and 26th in rush yards allowed per game. Dallas was not efficient at all last week with just a 2.3 yards per carry, but he got 23 touches including five receptions. He also had a whopping eight RZ attempts. Dallas would be a cash lock pending who’s active.

*Update* Carson and Hyde are out and Dallas is just too easy to play in cash.

WR – Is ti weird to say it’s hard to peg the Seattle receivers? D.K. Metcalf and Tyler Lockett have traded monster games the past three weeks, with Metcalf holding a 2-1 advantage. So that makes it #LockettWeek, right? Well, maybe because it’s been a pain lately. What Metcalf has going for him is he’s just a freak physical specimen and I’m not sure there’s a corner that could actually stop him if he got 10 targets every single game. These two receivers are accounting for about 50% of the targets overall and Metcalf holds the air yards advantage at 41% to 30.6%. Lockett only has four more targets on the season and is two points ahead as the number one PPR receiver. Metcalf is third, so here hasn’t been a big separation overall.

Metcalf will have one of the tougher matchups he can and one I typically shy away from in Tre White. However, the Bills corner has seen his play slip a bit. He’s only been targeted 25 times but has allowed 18 receptions for a 141 passer rating and 2.40 pPT. Metcalf also has a massive height and weight advantage (shocking, I know) but White can run with him. Lockett is in the slot so he faces Taron Johnson, who has gotten smacked for a 1.80 pPT and a 107.3 passer rating. Lockett is the cash player for me this week but if folks just use White’s reputation, Metcalf can go nuclear under 10% again.

TE – No tight end has a target share over 10.6% in this offense and Greg Olsen only averages about 5.5 DK points per game. He’s coming off a goose egg performance but he is third in RZ targets and third in EZ targets. Olsen is a touchdown or bust player and you saw the floor last week, so he’s not someone I want to chase. Will Dissly played more snaps than Olsen last week, but only garnered one target.

D/ST – If the Seahawks were a little cheaper, I could maybe get on board. Jamal Adams is in line to return. Seattle also welcomes in Carlos Dunlap into the fold, but still. They do have 14 turnovers but only 12 sacks. Since they give up 27 points per game, you’re relying on some splash plays and I think we can find better options.

Cash – Russ, Lockett, potentially Dallas

GPP – Metcalf, D/ST

Bills – Pace is 23rd

QB – This has to be the bounce-back spot for Josh Allen. It’s been about a month since Allen has had a big game but the spot doesn’t get any better. Seattle ranks 30th in DVOA against the pass and dead last in pass yards allowed per game by almost 50 yards. No team allows more DK points per game to the position and even with some rough weeks lately, Allen is still ninth in fpDB. He’s also still sixth in points per game, fifth in passing yards and sixth in passing touchdowns. That says nothing of his four rushing scores and 227 rushing yards (sixth among quarterbacks). I’d play him in any format and he’s really a smash play.

RB – One of my regrets from last week was not playing more Zack Moss. Maybe he won’t take over the backfield in a huge way, but this past week represented the first week since returning from injury he played more snaps than Devin Singletary. Moss holds a 6-2 advantage on RZ carries the past three weeks while Singletary has a 8-4 advantage on targets. I’d rather play for the RZ chances, even though Allen has five himself in that same time frame. Seattle has been strong against the run at the sixth-best DVOA and ninth in yards allowed per game. If playing one, I’d side with Moss but generally the most profitable way to attack Seattle remains through the air.

WR – Hello Stefon Diggs. When we can play the WR6 in PPR formats against one of the worst pass defenses in football, you better believe I’m in. Diggs isn’t going to come cheap and he shouldn’t as he owns a 28.9% target share and a 36.9% share of the air yards so far for Buffalo. Quinton Dunbar shouldn’t pose much of an issue with a 1.90 pPT and a 106.5 passer rating.

*Update* Dunbar is out so Diggs might well be unstoppable.

Cole Beasley is the safe, cash style play although he does have some upside in certain spots. He has an 18.7% target share on the season and is tied for the most RZ targets on the team at seven. The GPP play outside of Diggs is John Brown. He was on the field for 81% of the snaps last week and should be fully healthy coming into this week. Despite only having 29 targets on the season, he still has over 24% of the air yards share in the Buffalo offense. A double stack with Diggs and Brown is well within play. We know the drill with the Seattle secondary.

TE – This position just hasn’t been utilized in the offense, with Dawson Knox having the highest target share at 7.6%. Considering he hasn’t played since Week 5 with Covid, that tells us what we need to know.

D/ST – There’s no factor to like since Buffalo is facing the highest-scoring offense in football. The 19 sacks and 10 turnovers are respectable, but they rank 23rd in overall DVOA and I don’t go against Russ.

Cash – Allen, Diggs, Beasley

GPP – Brown, Moss, Singletary

Broncos at Falcons, O/U of 50 (Falcons -4)

Broncos – Pace is 11th

QB – There’s a lot of players that are expensive that are going to catch our eye this week and one route to get to them – Drew Lock. Atlanta has shown some life since Dan Quinn has been fired but still rank 29th in DVOA against the pass this year. No team has allowed more touchdown passes so far and only Seattle allows more passing yards per game. Lock is still on the wrong end of a 4:5 TD:INT ratio on the season but he is coming off his best outing, 20.8 DK against the Chargers. Most of his stats aren’t going to look good because he hasn’t played well for basically the entire year when he’s been on the field. The fpDB ranks 32nd and the points per game is 34th. This is strictly a salary-saver in a glorious matchup that could match a game script like last week. I’d prefer not to go this low for cash as things stand although the pace of this game is enticing.

*Update* I’m coming around on Lock in cash. Atlanta will be without Takk McKinley and Dante Fowler, two of their most important pass rushers. That’s a big blow to the Falcons defense.

RB – Even if it wasn’t a near even split of the snaps for Melvin Gordon and Phillip Lindsay, this matchup is quietly poor on the ground. The Falcons are inside the top 10 in DVOA against the run and that tracks with them giving up the sixth-fewest rushing yards per game. They are a monster pass funnel defense, so neither back is going to be specifically appealing. Where Atlanta gets ripped up is by receiving backs, as they have allowed the sixth-most receiving yards and the second-most receptions. Gordon has seen 26 targets this season while Lindsay is just at four through four games (partial games as well) so I don’t think either is a must play. Just like the Seahawks, the way to attack Atlanta is the passing game.

WR – This is where I’m most interested. I’m hopeful that Tim Patrick can make it back and be healthy here, because he’s been the number one since Courtland Sutton has been injured. Patrick still has the air yards advantage over Jerry Jeudy at 31.7% with a 17.9% target share. Before the Kansas City game where he got hurt, Patrick had three straight games with a touchdown or 100 yards receiving. This would be a great time to start a new streak but we’ll see if he can play.

That’s not to say I don’t want to play Jeudy as well. He leads the team in raw targets since the Sutton injury. Even though we’re still waiting on a true breakout game, last week he did produce a career-high 73 receiving yards. It shapes up to be a rookie showdown as corner A.J. Terrell waits on the other side. Terrell has allowed a 2.4 pPT and a 128 passer rating. Jeudy is also second on the team in EZ targets and receiving yards over that time span despite some very iffy quarterback play. K.J. Hamler is a speed demon, but only has a 7.8% target share so far so tread carefully there.

TE – Noah Fant is in the early running as my cash game tight end since he’s under $5,000 and really shouldn’t be. He owns the target share lead since Sutton was lost and has played one fewer game than Jeudy, so that tells us how involved he’s been in the offense. Fant has been held scoreless and under 170 yards, but this past week we started to see him come around with a 7/47/0 line. That’s not spectacular but if he’s starting to get healthier it could be just the start. Fant runs a route over 71% of the time and the Falcons have allowed the most touchdowns to tight ends at eight, along with the most receptions and second-most yards.

D/ST – The Broncos do generate pressure over 25% of the time and have 20 sacks to go with eight turnovers. If this game were in Denver, I might be more interested. As it stands, I think they’re fine but not spectacular. Atlanta is only 14th in pressure rate allowed and have just seven giveaways.

Cash – Fant, Patrick (if active), Jeudy

GPP – Lock, D/ST, Lindsay, Gordon

Falcons – Pace is 6th

QB – Fantasy football can be quite tilting to analyze because on any given game, you can get weirdness that makes no sense. Case in point, Matt Ryan had a 13 yard rushing score last week. Matt. Ryan. He also did not throw a touchdown for the third time this year already. Ryan has been an absolute dart throw on production. In five of his eight games, he has zero or one touchdown pass. In the other three, he has scores of 27.9, 28.5 and 34.6 DK.

This would shape up to be a down game as the Broncos are 10th in DVOA against the pass and only allow 136 passing yards per game, 16th in the league. Ryan leads the league in passing yards but is only 23rd in fpDB at 0.43. He’s also just 17th in points per game and touchdowns, so it’s easy to pinpoint where the issues are. The Falcons are fifth in pass attempts per game so the volume is certainly there. It’s just a matter of finding the end zone and the Broncos have only allowed 11 passing scores so far.

RB – I’m not sure I’m exactly scared of Brian Hill taking a ton of work from Todd Gurley, but it was odd last game. Hill got 13 touches and closed in on 40% of the snaps. Gurley still had 18 attempts but was not targets in the passing game. The only facet that saved Gurley was the rushing touchdown. Denver is right abut average as far as rushing DVOA and allow under 100 rushing yards per game to the backs. I’d tend to believe Hill played so much because of the short week, but I’m not particularly happy to play either this week.

WR – Julio Jones has really been a monster since he’s come back from injury, with a 23/371/2 in those three games. His price has reflected that production but only slightly, as he’s only $500 more expensive than Week 6. He’s played two fewer games than Calvin Ridley but is only 73 behind the yardage lead on the team. He’s also only about 1.5% away from the target share lead. Ridley hasn’t practiced yet, but the team seems to believe that he will be ready for Sunday.

Not that it particularly matters for Julio but he’ll see a good chunk of Michael Ojemudia. He’s been targeted 46 times and has allowed 103.4 for a passer rating and a 1.70 pPT. That’s not really anything to be scared of, let alone with Julio. Let’s check back on Friday to see what Ridley’s situation is.

*Update* Ridley is still questionable so that will be monitored in Discord and on the live stream Sunday morning. The Broncos are definitely short corner A.J. Bouye, which helps whoever suits up for Atlanta.

TE – It’s been three straight weeks of double-digit DK points for Hayden Hurst but I don’t see that being the new normal exactly. The target rate is under 15% which isn’t terrible but he’s fourth in RZ share and EZ share. That hurts an awful lot when you’re on a team with two alpha receivers. Denver has only given up 11.5 DK points per game to the position and only two scores through seven games. This isn’t a priority play for me, unless maybe if Ridley were to be out.

D/ST – The Broncos are tied for the third-most turnovers on the season and Atlanta does have nine takeaways. This could be a reasonable buy-low chance if they really are playing a bit better without Quinn as coach. It’s certainly not a cash option.

Cash – Julio, possibly Ridley

GPP – Ryan, Hurst, D/ST, Gurley

Ravens at Colts, O/U of 48 (Ravens -1.5)

Ravens – Pace is 26th

QB – This could be a slow-paced slugfest, but if that happens we could see Lamar Jackson run a little more. It’s more than a little weird to see him over 400 rushing yards and second behind only Kyler Murray and yet he’s the QB14. The passing work has gone down by almost 20 yards per game from 2019 and the 14 total touchdowns through seven games is off his 2019 pace as well. He was close to three per game last year with 43 in 15 so it’s easy to see what some of the issues are.

Yet, with all of that said, Lamar is ninth in fpDB at 0.53 and 11th in points per game. Indy is fourth in DVOA against the pass but under $7,000 feels way too cheap for a player that has 100+ yard rushing upside at the position. He’s a spectacular GPP option this week but I would not likely spend on him in cash. The Colts have given up the second-fewest points to the position so far and still have more picks than touchdowns allowed.

RB – It does not appear that Mark Ingram is going to be active here so J.K. Dobbins is likely going to take center stage. When it comes down to Dobbins or Dallas, I would lean Dallas for cash for sure. However, Dobbins flashed in a big way last week in a tough matchup. This week is not different since the Colts are fourth in DVOA against the run. Baltimore’s run game is built differently and Dobbins has the ability to pay off for sure. He was over 60% of the snaps and had 16 touches last week. Racking up 16 DK with no touchdowns is impressive. You can play Gus Edwards for the same reasons here since he had 17 touches. Edwards had a 2-1 RZ attempt advantage but Jackson also had seven.

WR – Receiver Marquise Brown made his feelings known on Twitter about his role in the offense and he was not thrilled, to say the least. It’s hard to blame him that much considering he was targeted just twice this past week. For the season, he does have the team lead in target share at 23.8% and the air yards at 39.4%. However, he only has 379 receiving yards and two touchdowns. You could get the squeaky wheel game where he gets fed targets to keep him happy. He does shape up to see Rock Ya-Sin, the easier of the matchups against the Colts. Ya-Sin has allowed a 1.70 pPT and a 91.3 passer rating on 35 targets.

Willie Snead had a big game last week instead of Brown but I’d not treat that as a new normal. Snead’s target share is under 12% on the season and he’s barely averaging three targets per contest.

TE – It’s been a minute since Mark Andrews has had a big game but being under $5,000 is maybe a bit too cheap to not take a look at. On paper, the spot does not get worse. Indy has only allowed 6.7 DK points per game, 222 receiving yards on 25 receptions and zero touchdowns. Still, Andrews has double touchdown upside every single time he takes the field. He leads the team in RZ targets at seven and has six EZ targets to go with his 21.1% target rate. I don’t believe I’ll go here for cash with Fant sitting right there, but much like Jackson the GPP is immense, as is the double stack with Jackson.

D/ST – They’re in play every single game and this week is no different. They do have 24 sacks on the year and while the Colts only allow a 14.6% pressure rate, they don’t face a defense like this every week. Baltimore also has 12 turnovers and that’s always appealing.

Cash – Dobbins is the closes but no over Dallas, D/ST

GPP – Jackson, Brown, Andrews, Edwards

Colts – Pace is 27th

*Note* I’m writing this as if the Ravens will have full health on defense for this game. If they do not, it will be updated.

QB – Philip Rivers remains cheap and has been playing a little better the pas two games. He’s hit at least 22 DK in each game since he’s thrown three touchdowns in each but I’m cautious here. Baltimore ranks eighth in DVOA against the pass and has only given up 10 touchdown passes on the season. Rivers is only 23rd in fpDB but one facet he does have going for him – completion rate under pressure. He ranks sixth across the league at 50% and that’s a great tool to have against the Ravens defense.

The Colts are only 25th in pass attempts per game so if Rivers isn’t efficient it’s going to be tough for him. It’s also possible that Baltimore’s offense can score enough to get Indy out of their shell, but I’m not particularly going to bet on that. I’d rather play Lock at a cheaper price.

RB – Ugh, do I have to talk about this situation? I mean, only in Indy does Nyheim Hines see 16 snaps and turn that into eight touches for two touchdowns. Only in Indy does Jordan Wilkins go from not being in the game plan to playing over 50% of the snaps and 21 touches. My fears are Jonathan Taylor is still way too expensive to take a chance on and Indy doesn’t know who’s getting the work until they get into the game. On top of a highly volatile three man RBBC that we can’t predict, Baltimore is the number one unit in DVOA against the run. I’m not really getting involved in this mess and don’t see the same sort of upside. The Ravens are a polar opposite of the Lions run defense.

WR – This is not really a situation that I want to go after. T.Y Hilton is trending towards out and at least we would know he won’t put up points instead of waiting for them every Sunday and points not coming. Do we want any of Zach Pascal, Michael Pittman or Marcus Johnson against a Ravens team that allows the eighth-fewest DK points per game to receivers and the 10th fewest passing yards per game? Not particularly. No individual matchup stands out as is, though that could change and would be re-visited.

TE – Maybe Trey Burton reads the Game by Game, because I said he might never score a rushing TD again and sure enough that’s what he did this past week. That’s two straight games he’s found pay dirt, but take a step back. If not for that rushing score, Burton was under five DK points. So far, he’s been under the 3x mark for his current salary in every game but one. He is only three targets off the team lead in his active games, but there’s a lower floor than it may look right now.

D/ST – I can’t help but think Indy continues to play over their head. They have some good players but ranking third in overall DVOA, fifth in points allowed per game and racking up 12 turnovers already just seems weird when looking at that roster. They do have the eighth-highest pressure rate in football and that’s been a weak spot for Jackson, but I don’t love the price here.

Cash – None

GPP – Rivers, Burton, D/ST

Texans at Jaguars, O/U of 50.5 (Texans -6.5)

Texans – Pace is 9th

QB – If the three games before the bye week were any indication, Deshaun Watson has all the ceiling of the other quarterbacks priced around him. He hit at least 27 DK in all three games and seems to be pretty content with a new coaching staff. Now he gets to pick on the Jaguars again who he hung 29 DK on the last time he saw them. Jacksonville is dead last in DVOA against the pass and are 28th in passing yards allowed per game. Of the teams that have played only seven games, the Jags are tied for the third-most touchdown passes allowed.

Even through some issues this year, Watson is still seventh in fpDB, touchdown passes and points per game. He’s still inside the top 10 in passing yards and fourth in true passer rating. Don’t forget the stud Watson is because he was on a bye week.

RB – I swear every week, I almost kinda-sorta-maybe think abut playing David Johnson. Among backs that have played seven games, he ranks sixth in carries and has handled almost 67% of the team’s rushing attempts. He easily leads in RZ attempt at 13 and has three RZ targets as well. He’s not as big a part of the passing game as he used to be with just about three and a half targets per game, but this is a game the Texans should win handily. Getting nearly 20 touches at this price point is hard to find, especially against the 23rd ranked run DVOA. Jacksonville has coughed up seven scores total to the backs and Johnson fell just short of bonuses last game at 96 rushing yards.

WR – Will Fuller is staying in Houston but I wonder if he’s exactly thrilled at that. He does lead this team in air yards but an interesting shift has happened in the Texans passing game and it’s involved Brandon Cooks taking over the lead in targets. Since the coaching change, Cooks has 30 targets to 25 for Fuller and they are tied in RZ targets at four and EZ targets at two each. Cooks also has the yardage lead at 289 to 216 and that $1,300 is a big savings. Jacksonville had zero answers for Cooks the first time around as he posted an 8/161/1 line. When you have this bad of a pass defense, individual matchups are far less important.

TE – The Texans are under Covid rules but they estimated Jordan Akins was a full participant in practice. I want some exposure in GPP since he was out-snapping Darren Fells before the injury and Akins still has a 12.2% target share on the season. The Jags are the sixth-worst team against the position with over 16 DK points per game allowed. Akins had played at least 68% of the snaps when healthy and Fells put up a 13.7 DK game he first time around.

D/ST – The reason you play the Texans defense is really just because the Jaguars are starting a rookie quarterback this week. Nothing in their 16 sacks, four turnovers and allowing 30.1 points stands out on their own. In a normal circumstance, $3,100 would be egregious pricing.

Cash – Watson, Cooks, Fuller

GPP – Johnson, D/ST, Akins

Jaguars – Pace is 4th

QB – Welcome to the NFL, Jake Luton. He totaled 42 touchdown passes at Oregon State over the course of 23 games. Most scouts seemed to think that arm strength and lower-half mechanics would be his biggest issues in the NFL but Gardner Minshew was only 21st in intended air yards per attempts. Luton might be able to hide weaknesses for a game or two in Jay Gruden’s system. Houston is 23rd in DVOA against the pass but Luton is a sixth-round rookie. I’m not sure you need to even look here unless you play a ton of lineups with the range of outcomes so wide.

RB – This offense is really going to be GPP only for me because the quarterback play can tank everything around him. On paper, this is a dynamite spot for James Robinson. That was the case last time when Robinson disappointed with 11 DK points, his second-lowest score of the season. This is tough. Houston is ranked 27th in DVOA against the run and only the Cowboys have given up more rushing yards. Only the Packers and the Lions have given up more DK points per game to this juncture. There’s a lot of facets that say Robinson should smash. However, the price is quite high. There’s only two or three (pending CMC) backs more expensive than Robinson. He’s coming off 34 DK points before the bye and if Minshew was still there, maybe I’d be more interested. As it stands, I greatly prefer a back $100 cheaper and would try to find money for Dalvin Cook.

WR – I feel like DK is begging me to play D.J. Chark at just $5,200 but it could also blow up in my face spectacularly. Chark has fallen under 15 DK points in five of his six games so far and been in single digits in two of them. Only once did he go off, on the back of nine receptions and two touchdowns.Chark does get Bradley Roby who has been a bit up and down. The pPT is 2.00 but he’s allowed some massive games to good receivers. Chark isn’t quite at that level of those other receivers and has a rookie quarterback as well.

Part of the issue is Chark, Keelan Cole, Laviska Shenault and Robinson all sit between a 19.4% target share (Chark) and 12.7% (Robinson). This offense spreads the ball out and doesn’t exactly hone in on jus one player. Shenault gets Vernon Hargreaves and that has been a boon for receivers so far. He’s allowed a 1.90 pPT and a huge 114.4 passer rating. Without knowing Luton’s tendencies, it’s hard to speculate going into this game which receiver has the most value.

*Update* Texans corner Bradley Roby is out, which bumps up Chark pretty nicely. If you’re stacking Texans, Chark becomes my preferred run back option now.

TE – It appears that Tyler Eifert should be back in the lineup this week, but that’s not overly important for DFS. His target share is barely over 10% and he’s yet to record a game over five DK points unless he scored a touchdown.

D/ST – There’s not particularly a redeeming factor for the Jaguars defense. Watson has been sacked the fourth-most times in the league but the Jaguars have only produced six sacks on the year and only have six interceptions.

Cash – None

GPP – Robinson, Shenault, Chark, Cole

Lions at Vikings, O/U is N/A yet

Lions – Pace is 10th

QB – I’ve not played Matthew Stafford much this year but he did back his way into a big day last week against a good defense. The Lions are up to 12th in pass attempts per game and Stafford has also crawled into the top 12 in yards and touchdowns. Additionally, he’s out of the 20’s in fpDB. Granted, he’s 19th but baby steps. The price isn’t unreasonable for Stafford bu he will be down his number one receiver in this game, which could be an issue.

Minnesota is 18th in DVOA against the pass which honestly could be a lot worse. The cornerbacks have been a disaster for them but they’re still relatively hanging strong. Now, they still have allowed the seventh-most passing yards and have only a 17:3 TD:INT ratio but I’d feel better about Stafford if Kenny Golladay was healthy.

*Update* Stafford is in the Covid protocol, but could still play if he continues to test negative. We’ll see what happens here.

RB – Since his breakout game, D’Andre Swift has seen his snaps go up all the way to 62%. That’s great until you look at the touches. Snaps are the first step but his touches have gone down in each game as well. He didn’t even hit double-digits last week with just nine total. At least Adrian Peterson only had six so it does seem like Swift is “taking over” this backfield. Now that doesn’t mean Swift is going to be a traditional workhorse but he’s not priced like one either. The Vikings are 19th in DVOA against the run and they allow over 100 yards on the ground to running backs. With Swift holding the edge in RZ attempts at 7-3 over the past three games, he’s still the back to play.

WR – If there was ever a time to play Marvin Jones, this pretty much has to be it. He was inefficient last week but still came down with two scores and has eight RZ targets to go with six EZ targets. Since the Minnesota defense just has been battered in their cornerback room, Jones has a great spot in the individual matchup. Kris Boyd doesn’t pose a threat by the numbers with a 2.5 pPT and a 71.4% completion rate allowed. If Stafford is in, Jones can be fired up with as much confidence as we’ve had this year.

Jones virtually never left the field last week while Marvin Hall and Danny Amendola played about 70% each. I wonder if folks chase Hall. He’s still super cheap but 73 of his 113 yards came on just one reception. It’s hard to really harp on him at that price, but I’d prefer to leave him in GPP. Amendola is at least on the board but the target share is under 14%. His matchup is spectacular against Jeff Gladney who has allowed over 480 yards and a 2.20 pPT. I tend to want shares of both in GPP because I could see either having a bigger game, but my focus would be on Jones.

TE – To go right along with Noah Fant, T.J. Hockenson is among my cash tight end pool as of now. He’s been fairly consistent this season with a least 9.2 DK in every single game and he leads in RZ targets. The Lions have Hockenson running a route nearly 80% of the time and he’s seventh among tight ends in receptions and yards. With Golladay out for a good part of last week, Hockenson saw 10 targets. That was a season high and it could very well come close to replicating this week. The Vikings has allowed just two touchdowns to the position but the fourth-most yards.

D/ST – The Lions can’t stop the run, give up nearly 28 points per contest and only have 10 sacks. You’re banking on a bad game from Minnesota if you’re playing them.

Cash – Jones, Hockenson

GPP – Swift, Stafford, Hall, Amendola

Vikings – Pace is 20th

QB – The reason why I’m always lukewarm on Kirk Cousins was on full display last week and it was because he threw the ball a whopping 14 times. He’s actually solid in fpDB at 14th in the league but yet he’s 25th in points per game and Minnesota is 32nd in passing attempts per game. That’s a huge issue that nobody can really overcome for fantasy and he remains one of the more dangerous options. If the game script goes the way of the Vikings, Cousins will throw the ball under 20 times. Detroit is right at the mid-point in DVOA against the pass at 16th so if you play him, you’re hoping for a shootout.

RB – I whiffed on Dalvin Cook in Week 8. Flat out whiffed badly. Credit to Ghost and others on the staff that didn’t flinch when he got listed as questionable late in the week. This week is a new week and I’m all in. He came out of that game with four touchdowns and a clean bill of health. He has one of the best matchups we can ask for with the Lions 21st in DVOA against the run and the eighth-most rushing yards to the backs. That’s not even talking about the 12 total touchdowns and 345 receiving yards. As we sit on Tuesday night, Cook is one of the best plays on the slate and likely a building block for cash.

WR – When the quarterback throws 14 times, the receivers are not likely to have a very good day. Both Justin Jefferson and Adam Thielen felt the pain on Sunday as neither crossed six DK points. They were virtually identical yet again with three receptions, four targets and 27-26 yard advantage to Thielen. Jefferson will mostly square up with Amani Oruwariye and that should be advantage Jefferson. Oruwariye has allowed an 88.0 passer rating and a 1.60 pPT. Thielen should be able to pick on rookie Jeff Okudah. The rookie has had some solid games but is still at a 91.3 passer rating and a 68% catch rate. Provided Detroit has their starting quarterback to keep this game competitive, I favor Thielen against a rookie. If Detroit can’t start Stafford, I’ll likely pass on the air attack since Cousins could throw under 20 times again.

TE – I though Irv Smith was a solid punt last week since I figured the game script would favor him. That didn’t work out at all as he saw 79% of the snaps but only one target. I still prefer him to Kyle Rudolph but the floor is still low for both these players. The Vikings want to run firs, second and third. Then they have Jefferson and Thielen, so there’s not a lot of meat on this bone.

D/ST – Minnesota is cheap but there’s a reason for that. With only six turnovers forced and just 14 sacks, they haven’t done a whole lot this year to want to play them.

Cash – Cook

GPP – Thielen, Jefferson, Cousins

Giants at Washington, O/U of 42.5 (Washington -2.5)

Giants – Pace is 18th

QB – I said this in Discord, but in case you missed it here’s the best way I can sum up Daniel Jones – he’s just good enough to make a play or two and keep the Giants from taking a new (and potential franchise) quarterback in the draft. This was in full effect Monday night. He threw two picks to help get them behind the eight ball, made a gorgeous throw to get it within two points, and then ruined the two point conversion with a late read. Now he gets to face off against the Washington defense, who are actually quite good. They rank fourth in overall DVOA, third in DVOA against the pass and give up the lowest yardage per game through the air. I have no real interest in Jones on this slate.

RB – This backfield is a bit unsettled right now. Devonta Freeman practiced on Thursday in a limited fashion, which leaves the door open for Wayne Gallman to be the starter again. We were on Gallman on the showdown slate for Monday but this is quite a different slate. You don’t need his 13 touches with other options on the board and Washington is a stout run defense in some ways. They are 17th in rushing yards allowed per game but second in DVOA against the run. To the running backs, Washington is under 100 yards per game and have only allowed six scores. Be it Freeman or Gallman, I’m not terribly interested.

*Update* Gallman is going to be the lead back once again since Freeman has been ruled out. I do feel there are much better values on the board for the week, including Dallas and Jackson.

WR – In the two games since Sterling Shepard has gotten back, there’s really only been two receivers to play on this team. Golden Tate has totally disappeared with just five targets and even with two touchdowns, it’s very thin to play him. It’s been the Shepard and Darius Slayton show, as they have combined for 30 targets (18 for Shepard) and about 63% of the air yards. Shepard should pull Ronald Darby, who’s numbers would suggest that he’s played passable this year. He’s boom or bust with just a 54.3% catch rate but with a 19.4 yards per reception. I prefer playing Shepard because Slayton should see mostly Kendall Fuller who has only allowed 1.00 pPT and 129 yards allowed on 25 targets.

TE – Another player that has done well with Shepard back? Evan Engram. He’s accounted for 19 targets and while he hasn’t had a blowup game, back-to-back games of double-digit DK points is a pretty solid step. There’s definitely a chance that if Washington is shutting down the receivers that Engram could have another solid game and he is still quite cheap. Engram isn’t my favorite play on the board but he could be pretty sneaky. It’s been a slight issue for this defense with five scores given up and over 400 yards receiving so far.

D/ST – For all their issues, the Giants defense hasn’t been all that bad. They’re under 25 points given up per game and have 20 sacks, tied for sixth-most. Additionally, the 10 turnovers forced is a solid number. They’re cheap enough to be in consideration with Washington giving up pressure over 22% of the time.

Cash – None

GPP – Engram, D/ST, Shepard, Slayton

Washington – Pace is 13th

QB – The main question with Kyle Allen is if there’s a reason to play him over Drew Lock for $100 more. My answer is I simply don’t think so in GPP. Allen has had a better floor than Lock this year, scoring at least 16 DK points in both games he finished. Even the one he was knocked out of with injury, he put up almost 10 DK. Washington does sit 10th in pass attempts per game so the volume really isn’t that bad for Allen. There just hasn’t been much of a ceiling so far and the pass catching corps is not exactly the greatest. If we’re in this range, I prefer Lock and may even take a shot at Luton (doubtful though).

RB – Can we please let Antonio Gibson off the leash? He logged a career-high 20 carries against the Cowboys and gouged them for 128 yards on the ground and a touchdown. He still split snaps with J.D. McKissic almost equally, but this was the breakout game we had been waiting for. The matchup isn’t quite as good as the Cowboys game since the Giants are ninth in DVOA against the run. That lines up with only 680 yards on the ground given up to running backs through eight games. They have been extremely vulnerable through the air with the third-most yards given up and the seventh-most receptions. That not only leaves an avenue for Gibson, but McKissic is a punt option. He has a 14.2% target share and is third on the team in targets.

*Update* Tackle Geron Christian is out and anytime an offense loses a starting lineman, it hurts. Gibson is still on the board but I’m not totally enamored with him.

WR – We’ve talked about it before, but since Kyle Allen has taken over Terry McLaurin has seen just a monster share of the passing game. He’s still over 33.7% of the target share and 58.6% of the air yard share in this offense. The first game against the Giants, McLaurin saw 12 targets and had a 14.4 DK point day. We’ve talked all season about James Bradberry having a really great season so far and usually mostly avoid him. This is generally how I feel this week. It’s not because McLaurin isn’t talented and can’t get it done. This is mostly about the salary involved. There’s a plethora of options within $800 that I prefer simply due to the matchup. I’m not really interested in other Washington receivers with how this offense is running right now.

TE – If we look at the same time frame of Allen starting, Logan Thomas has been better off as well. The volume isn’t near what McLaurin has experienced as Thomas is tied for third in targets (McKissisc is second). However, Thomas has found the end zone twice and is over 100 yards receiving. He’s still under $4,000 and that doesn’t make a ton of sense to me. Thomas isn’t a volume machine and likely will need a score to hit 3x but he’s too cheap for how he’s been playing with Allen. New York has been solid against the position with just 10.9 DK points per game given up. Still, Thomas is in play for me as he’s running the third-most routes among tight ends.

D/ST – Washington is one of my primary defensive targets this week. Daniel Jones has 13 turnovers on his own and Washington has nine. They only allow 22.7 points per game, have 22 sacks, a top 10 pressure rate and a top five ranking overall in DVOA. They are significantly cheaper than another defense that has the best matchup on the board.

Cash – D/ST, Thomas, Allen

GPP – McLaurin, Gibson

Bears at Titans, O/U of 46.5 (Titans -6.5)

Bears – Pace is 16th

QB – I suppose that Nick Foles is on the board as a cheap QB option. I can’t say I would be super happy about playing him with just an 8:7 TD:INT ratio. Three of those touchdowns came in relief against Atlanta, so he only has one game with more than one or zero touchdown passes thus far. Tennessee is 24th in passing DVOA and have given up the fourth-most passing yards among teams that have played just seven games. Likewise, they are tied for second in touchdown passes allowed among seven game teams so the matchup is actually quite good. Still, Foles is 30th in fpDB and 27th in points per game. He’s not my favorite and I would still likely go Lock over Foles in GPP.

RB – It really seems David Montgomery is doing just about everything but finding the end zone. Since the start of Week 4, he has 95 total touches but he has just a single touchdown, which has kept his DK scores down low. He’s still a question mark as far as talent on the NFL level but the Titans are 17th against the run in DVOA. They’ve also given up 10 total touchdowns and have allowed 940 scrimmage yards through seven games. Monty is an uninspiring choice if you just look at box scores but he remains cheap and a little touchdown luck would put him in line for a massive game.

WR – We can discuss how good Foles is versus Mitchell Trubisky but one person who benefits has been Allen Robinson. He has 46 targets in five games since the switch, not counting what he did in the Atlanta game. Robinson does have two games of just 10 and 11 DK, but the other three have all been at least 19 DK points. With a 23% target share and a 29.1% air yards share, A-Rob seems cheap. Malcolm Butler waits on the other side but that shouldn’t worry us. He’s been targeted 53 times already and has allowed a 1.50 pPT.

What I’m not sure what to do with is Anthony Miller. He’s been an afterthought in the offense lately until his past week. He saw more snaps, perhaps because Javon Wims got himself kicked out of the game. Miller also saw 11 targets despite totaling 14 the previous four weeks. Darnell Mooney is still the air yards king at 32.9% with Foles and he finally had a big game last week with a touchdown and five receptions. I still feel like Mooney is the play because if you play a cheap Bears receiver, you want the ceiling outcome. Miller would likely square off with Desmond King, newly of the Titans and there could be some miscommunications with a new corner.

TE – Jimmy Graham falls sort of into the same tier that Logan Thomas does for me. He’s getting targets, but likely needs to find the paint to pay off completely. He has seen at least five targets in every game with Foles under center but has yet to exceed 12.3 DK points. Graham sits 12th in routes run for tight ends and does play about a third of his snaps in the slot, seventh among his position. The Titans are a middle of the road matchup as far as production given up with 13.4 DK points per game. He’s a fine play but I might actually prefer Thomas since the Bears have a better receiving corps overall.

D/ST – Chicago is a good defense, ranked sixth in overall DVOA and they have generated 17 sacks and nine turnovers. However, Tennessee has only allowed eight sacks on the year and only has four turnovers, second-fewest in the league. The Bears defense just doesn’t seem like a good upside spend on the road.

Cash – Monty, Robinson

GPP – Foles, Mooney, Miller, Graham

Titans – Pace is 2nd

QB – It’s really not a strong matchup for Ryan Tannehill and I don’t feel like he needs to be played. He is fifth in fpDB and 10th in fantasy points per game, which are both very solid marks for his salary involved. He is sort of living on the touchdowns, as he’s fifth with 17. That doesn’t exactly jive with sitting at 19th in passing yards but that’s sort of been the Tannehill experience. When he’s kept clean, he’s completing over 79% of his attempts and normally is a fine option. I’m not a huge fan this week but the path is the Bears stuffing the run game and making Tannehill throw. I just don’t expect that path against the fifth best DVOA against the pass.

RB – The Bears are a little bit of an odd bird as far as rushing defense goes. They are 16th in rushing yards given up per game at 120 yards but sixth in DVOA against the run. That means Derrick Henry could be in what is quietly a really good spot. He’s not a cash priority for me this week but the RB4 on the season is under $8,000. That’s not going to happen very often. He leads the league in rushing yards by over 100 although Dalvin Cook would be right there if they had the same amount of games. Henry is also tied for the second-most touchdowns and leads in carries, so there’s nothing wrong with playing Henry. I just wouldn’t do it in cash.

WR – A.J. Brown has played five game so far and in four of them, he’s recorded 100 yards or at least one touchdown. Only in the opening game of the year did he not hit one of these benchmarks, so he’s been fairly consistent. The price is fair since he has a 23.2% target share and a 28.6% air yards share in the offense. Brown should be looking at Jaylon Johnson who has been good so far. He’s only allowed a 49.2% catch rate and a 77.5 passer rating, so I’m not going to be heavy on Brown.

It seems weird but Corey Davis actually has a slight lead in target share over Brown by about 2%. He’s getting up there in price but he does deserve to be there. The air yards share is in the favor of Davis by about of 1% and they are tied with four EZ targets (Brown has a 7-3 lead in RZ targets). It doesn’t get easier for Davis as he faces Kyle Fuller. He’s only allowing a 1.40 pPT and a catch rate under 57%. If paying for one, I’d go with Brown.

TE – Jonnu Smith has been invisible through the last three weeks but perhaps we could have seen this coming. He’s only running a route 55.6% of the time, which is 26th in the NFL. The 15.4% target share isn’t bad at all, nor is the seven RZ targets and a team-leading five EZ targets. The flip side is that he will live on touchdowns and they haven’t been coming lately. The Bears have given up five touchdowns to the position and could be a bit more vulnerable to Smith scoring.

*Update* With Adam Humphries out, Smith might have a little bit better floor than we’ve seen lately.

D/ST – The Titans are really quite expensive for just totaling seven sacks so far this year. I’ll give them credit for the 12 turnovers but with a bottom 10 pressure rate, I can’t justify the spend here.

Cash – Brown is the closest

GPP – Henry, Davis, Smith, Tannehill

Raiders at Chargers, O/U 51.5 (Chargers -1)

Raiders – Pace is 25th

QB – Weather kept me away from Derek Carr last week but that’s not happening this week. Yes, the Chargers are 12th in DVOA against the pass but they are 21st in passing yards allowed per game. They also give up an average of two touchdowns per game with just four interceptions so far. Carr’s stats took a hit last week overall but that’s simply not fair to put weight into it with the weather. He’s 17th in fpDB and 20th in points per game, but four of his seven starts have exceeded 20 DK points. This spot should shootout, has a high total and I’m pretty sure Carr will be my cash option and part of stacks of this game.

RB – I doubt Josh Jacobs will touch the ball 31 times like he did last week but maybe he doesn’t need to in order to have a good game. His price is still very affordable for a player that sits second in carries and tied for 22nd in receptions (12th among backs with seven games played). The Chargers fall to 18th in DVOA against the run and 12th in rushing yards allowed per game. LA has been lucky so far to only give up five total scores to the position and if everyone focuses on the passing games, Jacobs is an excellent GPP target to leverage off that facet of the game.

*Update* Jacobs is questionable with an illness but does not seem in danger of missing the game as of now.

WR – All the Raiders wideouts are still under $5,000 since they were the victims of poor weather as well last week. Henry Ruggs remains my favorite for GPP. He’s played two fewer full games than anyone else but still has the most air yards on the team and the highest share. The target share is a bit discouraging overall at under 12% and he’s only seen one RZ and EZ target all year. So far, you know what he is. He’s a boom or bust player that likely makes or breaks the lineup. Ruggs has to deal with Michael Davis who has only allowed a 10.8 yards per reception and 1.40 pPT.

Deciding whether Nelson Agholor is a secondary receiver or a big part of the offense is important as well. He had a three week stretch where he scored at least 14 DK but two of those games he saw a combined six targets. I believe him to be more dangerous than he may look with a low floor. Also, he has Casey Hayward and that’s not something that I love. He’s allowing under a 47% completion rate and only a 1.50 pPT. Hunter Renfrow is in the running but has exactly one game over 12 DK so far. The ceiling is hard to find.

TE – I’ll be honest, I don’t love that Darren Waller saw his price rise after a 7.8 DK point game last week. I suppose I can’t argue too much because Waller still leads in target share at 27% and RZ target share at 31%. He’s the TE2 in PPR formats and that’s always been his best format. He runs the fifth most routes of any tight end and is on the field the third most at 92.4%. Waller owns the highest target share at his position and has the second-most receptions and third-most yards. The Chargers are bottom 10 against tight ends with 14.8 DK allowed and five touchdowns.

D/ST – The Raiders average one sack per game and have just four turnovers forced, tied for the least in the league. That doesn’t seem like a defense we should be too interested in.

Cash – Carr, Jacobs, Waller

GPP – Ruggs, Agholor

Chargers – Pace is 8th

QB – Justin Herbert continues to be an absolute fantasy stud in his young career and there’s very little reason to think that stops this week. Vegas is 27th in DVOA against the pass and 25th in passing yards per game. The Raiders have only given up 11 touchdown passes so far but that’s not a factor that worries me even a bit here. Herbert remains sixth in fpDB and fifth in points per game. Despite playing in just six games, he’s thrown 15 touchdowns already and is sixth in deep ball attempts. The 42.4% completion rate on those passes is just average but average is fine with the volume he’s throwing them at. The rookie is only four yards behind Matt Ryan per game for the league lead and he likely shouldn’t be under $7,000. If you spend up at QB in any format, Herbert is a very strong option and might well be my spend up choice in cash.

RB – I’m not here to tell you that the Chargers backfield is a barrel of fun, but I am here to tell you Justin Jackson looks like a strong play. He was off the injury report this past week and that seemed to make a big difference. He went from 10 touches and 38% of the snaps in Week 7 to 20 touches and 49% this past week. Anytime you can get a back with potential for 20 touches under $5,000, you had better pay attention. It’s a dynamite matchup on top of everything else. The Raiders are 31st in DVOA against the run and have given up over 1,000 scrimmage yards and nine touchdowns. Given he has an 11.2% target share, he’s actually a stackable option with the passing game.

Joshua Kelley surprisingly fell to third in snaps behind Troymaine Pope, who is at least on the board in GPP. He’s RB-minimum and produced 14 DK points last week without a score. He had seven targets as well, and Herbert typically is throwing to the backs, Hunter Henry or Keenan Allen.

*Update* Pope is out, which should help the floor of both Kelley and especially Jackson.

WR – We’ve talked about every week but man, Allen has been a terror with Herbert. He’s rocking a 30.3% target share and a 31.0% share of the air yards since Week 2 and he barely played in one of those games. Allen leads in RZ and EZ targets in that time frame and he’s finally priced appropriately at $7,000. Allen is in the slot 43.7% of the time and that leaves him on LaMarcus Joyner. Advantage Allen, as Joyner has allowed an 80.9 passer rating and two touchdowns. While Joyner hasn’t played terribly by the stats, he’s not as good as Allen.

Mike Williams finally had a good game with Allen, the first time with Herbert as a starter. Williams is up to a 12.4% target share since Week two but that is getting better as of late. Nevin Lawson has allowed a 1.90 pPT so far but Williams remains a very boom or bust option. I likely would only use him in Herbert stacks with Allen.

TE – Williams having a good game did have a bit of a negative effect on Henry. He only saw four targets, tied for the lowest with Herbet. He caught all four and remains in the top eight in routes run for a tight end. One nitpick for Henry is the RZ and EZ targets. He only has two of each and the EZ targets are fourth among Chargers. We typically would like a bit of higher touchdown equity, but Henry is due a blowup game. He’s easily had the second-most targets with Herbert and he can’t keep having poor production. If you use Herbert and Allen, the second pick is likely Henry or Williams. Jackson would be a unique addition to a three man stack, but everyone is in play.

D/ST – With Carr not turning over the football and the Raiders only giving up 13 sacks, I can’t see a reason to play the Chargers here. That’s especially true with Joey Bosa out.

Cash – Herbert, Jackson, Allen

GPP – Williams, Henry

Dolphins at Cardinals, O/U of 49.5 (Cardinals -4)

Dolphins – Pace is 30th

QB – It was a bit of a tough game to get a read on Tua Tagovailoa. The Dolphins scored multiple defensive and special teams touchdowns so Tua only threw the ball 22 times. He…didn’t look spectacular, completing just 12 attempts for 93 yards. Arizona is 11h in DVOA against the pass so the matchup isn’t exactly great. Also, we have exactly 24 throws from Tua to go on here. It’s not to shortchange a play, but I’m not really on Tua this week. You can go down to Lock or up to Carr and you would feel much more comfortable. The only way you play Tua is if you’re playing a bunch of lineups and banking on a shootout.

RB – This situation turned into a nightmare pretty quickly. We know that Myles Gaskin is out with a knee injury. The preferred play looked like it was likely Matt Breida but he missed practice on Wednesday with a hammy injury. Assuming they are both out, Miami could be down to Jordan Howard. He was inactive last week, but he would have to hold some appeal if he’s one of the only backs that could go, similar to DeeJay Dallas last week. Let’s revisit this when we have some more clarity.

*Update* Breida is out and I like all the other value backs far better than messing with Howard or even Patrick Laird.

WR – Trading Isaiah Ford to New England might seem like a nothing-burger but he did have a role in this offense. His target share of 13.3% and the air yards of 14% isn’t that small. In the small sample with Tua, Preston Williams held an advantage over DeVante Parker of 5-2 in targets. Parker looks to draw Dre Kirkpatrick, who is a corner to pick on in this defense. He’s allowed a 71.1% completion rate and a 92.5 passer rating. By the numbers, Patrick Peterson has seen his best days. He’s giving up a 2.10 pPT and a whopping 118.5 passer rating. Much like Tua, you’re playing these players if you suspect this game is a shoot-out. That’s not the worst path to take, since the Cardinals are ninth in points scored per game. They are cheap run back options at worst if you stack Cardinals.

*Update* Kirkpatrick is out for the Cards.

TE – I hate to say it, but I’m about to give up on Mike Gesicki this season. I don’t particularly get it. His target share is under 15% and what’s really hurting him is he’s not even on the field 60% of the time right now. His route rate is strong at 86%, seventh among the position. However, the total routes is 190 which is just 14th. Gesicki has eight RZ targets, inside the top 10 but he’s only scored twice. Arizona has only allowed two scores and 329 yards to the position, so Gesicki is not a priority for me.

D/ST – Miami has a pretty strong defense, overall. They only allow 18.6 points per game, they have 19 sacks to go with their 21.4% pressure rate and they have 12 turnovers. Even the total DVOA is inside the top 12, but I have no real interest playing them against the Cardinals.

Cash – None if Breida is out

GPP – Parker, Williams, Tua, Gesicki

Cardinals – Pace is 3rd

QB – I’m sort of out of adjectives to describe Kyler Murray. He has among the safest (if not the safest) floors in fantasy with the rushing yards. Murray has also accounted for 20 total touchdowns already, almost three per game. When I say he’s resembling 2019 Lamar Jackson, that’s not an exaggeration. Murray actually has even more passing yards than Jackson did, so the rushing yards don’t need to be quite as high. Miami is a strong passing defense with ranking third in DVOA against the pass but they are also 20th in passing yards allowed. The big facet that the Dolphins have going for them is an 8:7 TD:INT ratio allowed. Murray is a perfectly fine target, but I do prefer both Josh Allen and Russell Wilson just a bit.

RB – The top six running backs in salary is quite crowded this week. Chase Edmonds is among those players since Kenyan Drake is likely out. The Dolphins are dead last in DVOA against the run and has given up over 1,000 scrimmage yards with seven scores total. The bonus with Edmonds is we already know that he’s the passing back, so his path to paying off his (admittedly) steep price is there. When a back can put up 21.5 DK without a score like Edmonds did last game, you know the talent level is there and the offense really helps him as well. Also, this is quite the surprise – Edmonds leads the team in RZ targets (and is tied for third in targets overall). I believe that if a certain running back in the next game is chalk, Edmonds is a fantastic pivot off of him.

WR – I’m not sure there’s a matchup that scares me off DeAndre Hopkins in total, but we can’t pretend he doesn’t have his hands full this week. Byron Jones is the number one corner in pPT at 0.90 and that’s through 36 times he’s been thrown at. He’s yet to allow a touchdown, the completion rate is under 42% and the passer rating is 55.4. Among players that have seven games, only Keenan Allen has more targets than Nuk and that’s just by two. Hopkins is over 30% in target and air yards share, and leads the league in receiving yards. If he’s not popular, he’s a great GPP option.

Christian Kirk doesn’t have a much easier spot. Xavien Howard has only allowed a 54.0 passer rating and a 51% catch rate so the price might be a little too high for my taste. The place to attack the Dolphins is in the slot but Larry Fitzgerald is not a good fantasy option anymore. He’s 34th in receptions and 85th in points per game, so I’m not exactly going after that either. I think the options are play Murray alone or stack with Nuk and hope that combo is low on the pecking order for everyone else.

TE – No tight end for the Cards has a target share above the 6.4% for Dan Arnold, so we can skip this spot.

D/ST – If you don’t care for the Washington defense or simply can’t afford them, Arizona is not the worst fall-back option. We’re looking at an offense that is starting a rookie QB in his second start and is missing their staring running back. The Cards are 10th in overall DVOA, have 10 turnovers and 19 sacks even with the loss of Chandler Jones.

Cash – Murray, Edmonds

GPP – Hopkins, D/ST

Steelers at Cowboys, O/U 41.5 (Steelers -14)

Steelers – Pace is 31st

QB – Here’s the deal with this game – it’s not likely to be competitive. Dallas is on their fourth quarterback of the season already. It’s a mismatch almost all the way across the board. Ben Roethlisberger is a great GPP option, but I won’t be playing him in cash. Why? Well, there’s a solid chance he doesn’t throw the ball that much in this game. Look at the game they blew the doors off Cleveland. Big Ben only threw it 22 times and the Steelers just ran it and got out with a win. That’s entirely within the realm of possibility here.

IF he does throw a bunch, he’s likely to have his first explosion game of the season. Dallas has climbed to 15th in DVOA against the pass but they have still allowed 17 touchdown passes, tied for third-most in football. They only rank the eighth-fewest yards per game but they’ve also only faced the 11th fewest pass attempts. It makes sense since the winning team typically runs late, and that’s the only snag when talking about Big Ben here.

RB – If (and it’s a large if right now) I can fit everyone, my plan for cash is to play CMC, Cook and James Conner. After Week 1, Conner has not dipped below 18 touches in any game. His low-water mark is 14 DK points, he’s the RB12 in PPR settings and the matchup simply does not get much better. Dallas is 29th in DVOA against the run, allow the most rushing yards per game and they are the only team that has allowed over 1,100 rushing yards to running backs. This is beyond a smash spot for Conner and if he gets 18 touches here, I will be shocked if he’s not around 20 DK points. I tend to still prefer him over Edmonds in any format, but let’s check ownership closer to kickoff.

WR – The Steelers receivers should have a field day in this one if they are allowed. Maybe I’m a sucker, but I can’t stop going back to Diontae Johnson. Yes, he’s been a wild ride so far but other than injuries, he’s had one bad game and that came against the Ravens. Despite missing what amounts to three games, Johnson is only six targets off the team lead and is tied for the air yards share. Don’t get things twisted – if Johnson is healthy, he is the one in this offense. Cowboys corner Trevon Diggs has allowed five touchdowns and 15.2 yards per reception.

I’m not 100% sure what to do after that. JuJu Smith-Schuster has come on a bit the past two games with 22 total targets and at least 13.7 DK points. He does have the target lead and runs in the slot about 80% of the time. Chase Claypool has the higher ceiling and big play ability that JuJu hasn’t had a lot of this season. Mapletron hasn’t been under 65% of the snaps since Week 1 and gets a mouth-watering matchup with Anthony Brown. Claypool has about five inches and 40 pounds on Brown and the highest aDOT on the team at 12.3. I rank these options in the reverse of their salary – Johnson, Claypool and then JuJu.

TE – Any offensive player is on the board against the Cowboys and Eric Ebron is no exception. Since Week 2, he’s been more involved in the offense with no fewer than four targets in every game. He’s not running a ton of routes at just 77.3% and is not exactly dominating with his targets. Dallas has allowed four touchdowns and 362 yards to the position, but I prefer to go with the receivers in this spot.

D/ST – There is no question in my mind that the Steelers defense is going to dominate this game. They are an elite unit in real life and fantasy, and they are not pleased about how they played last week. They’re angry and facing a fourth-stringer at quarterback. However, they are also the most expensive defense in DK history. I just can’t get on board with that very much. Johnson has 20 point upside much more in his range of outcomes for $100 more. If I build a lineup that I love and have $4,900 left, great. Past that, I’m not jamming Pittsburgh in.

Cash – Conner, Johnson

GPP – Claypool, Big Ben, JuJu, D/ST

Cowboys – Pace is 1st

QB – We pride ourselves on going over every play, but there is a 0% chance I’m even looking twice at Garrett Gilbert or Cooper Rush. Lock is $400 more and Luton is $100 more. There’s no point to getting cute with Dallas quarterbacks when we have viable options in better spots. Pittsburgh ranks second in DVOA overall and sixth in DVOA against the pass.

RB – I never thought I’d see the day that Ezekiel Elliot was $6,600 on DK and I had virtually no interest. Regardless of it’s offensive line, lack of QB play, getting paid and maybe not caring as much anymore in a lots season…Zeke just doesn’t look up to snuff. He’s averaging 65 yards on the ground and the Steelers are angry how they played the run last week. It’s been a point of emphasis all week. Zeke will get his touches as he did last week, when he had 20. The quarterback play doomed him as he only totaled 73 yards with no scores. I feel like the same style of game is on tap and can’t see much of a reason other than “it’s the NFL” to play Zeke ahead of Edmonds.

*Update* Zeke is fighting a hamstring injury, so now I’m really off of him.

WR – This receiving corps went from “I want to play all of them” to “I don’t care about any of them” with frightening speed. With a new quarterback again, it’s hard to know who he focuses on. Michael Gallup was the man last week with 12 targets, though he only turned those into 13.1 DK points. Amari Cooper had all of one catch and CeeDee Lamb went four for 27. I mean, this is uninspiring to say the least. Cooper likely sees Joe Haden who has had some bad moments but is still at just a 1.30 pPT and a 50% catch rate allowed. As it stands, Lamb would face Cameron Sutton and in limited snaps, he’s allowing a 1.70 pPT and over a 63% catch rate. Lamb is my favorite here but that’s faint praise.

TE – Dalton Schultz could wind up being a type of security blanket and he does have 12 total targets the past two weeks. He’s been able to maintain a 14.1% target share and five RZ targets, even though that might not matter in this game. I don’t mind him per se, but he’s not going to be a target. This Dallas offense certainly won’t attract a lot of attention, but they really shouldn’t with a fourth or fifth string QB.

D/ST – Nope.

Cash – None

GPP – Lamb, Zeke, Schultz, Cooper

Core Four

Dalvin Cook, Chase Edmonds, Marvin Jones, Justin Jackson

SUNDAY UPDATE

We’ve had plenty of news break the past 36 hours. Firstly, Seattle looks like they’re going to use RB Alex Collins today and with three backs active, that’s enough to get me off DeeJay Dallas. Replacing him is Jackson, who was basically the first man out of the core as it was.

Secondly, we could have other big news for the Chargers. Keenan Allen has to clear Covid protocol today at minimum to play. If we get news that he is out before 1 PM kickoff, Mike Williams replaces Marvin Jones as a Core Play. Williams has shown his upside without Allen once already and is one of the best values of the entire slate if Allen is out. I have no problems at all playing Jackson and Williams together in cash even without Herbert.

Lastly, we’re trending towards Ezekiel Elliott being out today. That has some folks looking towards Tony Pollard at running back minimum price. I would be fine taking a shot or two in GPP, but Pollard is not a cash play for me. The offensive line is battered, Dallas is on they’re fifth-string QB…it’s ugly. Also, I can’t stress enough how much the Steelers have talked this week about stopping the run. They are furious after they got rocked last week on the ground. I will not have Pollard in any of my cash games.

Game Stacks

SEA/BUF – Russ, Lockett, Diggs, Metcalf, Brown, Dallas, Allen, Beasley

LV/LAC – Herbert, Allen, Jackson, Waller, Ruggs, Jacobs, Henry, Agholor, Carr

DEN/ATL – Lock, Fant, Jeudy, Julio, Ridley (if active), Patrick, Hurst, Ryan

Team Stacks

Chiefs – Mahomes, Kelce, Hill, CEH – Run back with CMC, Anderson or Moore

Texans – Watson, Cooks, Fuller, Akins, DJ – Run back with Jacksonville receiver of choice

Vikings – Cook and Marvin Jones mini stack

Steelers – Roethlisberger, Johnson, Conner, Claypool, JuJu – Run back with Lamb or Schultz

Cardinals – Kyler, Edmonds, Nuk – Run back with Parker or Williams

Ravens – Jackson, Brown, Andrews – Run back with Burton or Pascal (gross)

Let’s get after it this week 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 stay hot. It was a strange week of scoring in Week 7 for NFL DFS GPP lineups but we can right the ship this Sunday. 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.

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, for the stack options, you obviously do not need to use everyone listed. You can always just use one or two of those players if that fits your build more appropriately*

NEW: Adjusted Expected Team Totals Rankings for Week 8
1. Kansas City Chiefs – 25.67
2. Green Bay Packers – 23.60
3. Seattle Seahawks – 23.45
4. San Francisco 49ers – 23.33
5. Los Angeles Rams – 22.28

*Great tool for evaluating DFS stacks and what offenses are likely to score the most via touchdowns (no special teams included)*

NFL DFS GPP Quarterbacks

  1. Russell Wilson – There are a ton of weather concerns this week, so I’ll likely be avoiding most of those games as a whole. I’m going to be heavily invested in this afternoon hammer when the 49ers go into Seattle to face Wilson and the boys.

    This game has the highest total on the board (by far) and zero weather concerns at the moment. Wilson is the #1 quarterback in the AETY Model as well. There are so many ways to stack this game up and you know where all of the production is going.

    On the other side, Jimmy Garoppolo is also a great play (and likely to be the chalkiest QB on the slate). I don’t care what ownership is for this game, I’ll be overweight in every possible way. Play Wilson naked, play him with Metcalf, play him with Lockett, or play him with both.

    Potential Stack(s):
    Metcalf/Lockett
    Metcalf/Lockett/Aiyuk
    Metcalf/Lockett/Kittle/Aiyuk
    Metcalf/Lockett/Aiyuk/Bourne
    Metcalf/Lockett/Kittle/Bourne


    *Don’t forget, Tevin Coleman is active. Feel free to toss him into your west coast game stacks as well if you need the savings.
  2. Patrick Mahomes – The best quarterback in the NFL against the worst defense in the NFL. Yes, the spread in this game is out of control and likely leads to a Kansas City blowout, but I trust Mahomes and this offense so much that I’m fine with stacking them (if we only get to see them for three quarters) before the second string comes in.

    There are plenty of cheap options on the other side to run it back with, but I’m not sure you want to have a lot of KC/NYJ game stacks out there. A sub-10% owned Mahomes on a weird slate is something that just seems right.

    Like Russ, you can play Mahomes naked, single stacked, double stacked, and game stacked. Kelce is probably my favorite pairing with Mahomes as these Jets’ linebackers and safeties give generous cushions in coverage on a weekly basis.

    Potential Stack(s):
    Hill/Kelce
    Kelce/Hardman
    Kelce/Hill/Mims
    Kelce/Hill/Mims/Perine
    Etc. etc. etc… you know what to do

  3. Jared Goff – It wouldn’t be a NFL DFS GPP article without mentioning a player that is going to be 0% owned. Jared Goff is that guy for me this week. On paper, the Miami defense looks strong, but they’ve played nobody. In the two games they faced a top-10 offense in passing efficiency, they have given up an average of 387.5 passing yards (Seattle and Buffalo… both games in Miami).

    The Rams come into this matchup ranked 9th in offensive pass efficiency… this is a low-key recipe for a blow-up game as the Rams really need a victory with a guaranteed loss coming for either Seattle or San Francisco, and Arizona on a bye.

    I love what I’ve been seeing out of McVay and the rest of this Rams offense and I truly believe they’ll have no issues scoring 35+ points in this matchup.

    Potential Stack(s):
    Kupp/Woods
    Kupp/Reynolds
    Kupp/Everett
    Kupp/Henderson
    Kupp/Henderson/Gesicki


    Honorable Mention: Aaron Rodgers, Joe Burrow, Ryan Tannehill, Jimmy Garoppolo

Running Backs

  1. Derrick Henry – He’s #1 on the AETY Model in terms of total rushing yards by a WIDE margin. Last time that happened, it was Week 6… which was the best DFS weekend of my life and likely Win Daily’s (screenshots galore). Henry is easily the top dog running back on this slate with a rushing projection over 110 yards and Vegas odds of (-250) to score. That all checks out as the Bengals’ rush defense is non-existent.

    The issue with Henry is that it’s hard as hell to fit him in if you’re heavily invested in that afternoon game. There’s a lot of condensed value on this slate and likely everyone in the field that uses Henry is going to use the same players for salary relief (Mims or Bourne). When playing Henry, find a way to get different this week.
  2. Kareem Hunt – I was all in last week and was disappointed a bit but I’ll go right back to the well this week against the Raiders’ 29th ranked defense, in terms of DVOA. The weather will be a mess in Cleveland and the tight spread leads me to believe Hunt will be heavily utilized all game long.
  3. Jonathan Taylor – Rookie running backs after the bye week… I still don’t trust Frank Reich to fully unleash Jonathan Taylor, but if there was ever a matchup to free Jon Taylor, it’s this week against Detroit’s run defense. Outside of the timeshare, the only other downside is that Indianapolis has not been that effective of late when rushing the football.

    The offensive line should be 100% healthy for the first time in over a month and that should lead to plenty of wide gaps for Taylor to bust through. If you’re looking to pivot off of Kareem Hunt chalk, Taylor would be my guy.
  4. Darrell Henderson Jr. – Miami is dead last in run defense DVOA and the Rams are top-5 on the Adjusted Expected Team Totals tool (and very efficient when running the football). This is an absolute smash spot for Henderson (if and only if McVay lets him loose). We know we’re going to see some Malcolm Brown and Cam Akers, but there’s no doubt in my mind that Henderson earned a much more significant role in the offense over the past few weeks.

    I’d lock-button Henderson if he were priced down a bit more, but having said that, I’ll have still have ton of Henderson shares tomorrow as he’s likely to be ~5% owned while the field flocks to Gio Bernard at a similar price-point.
  5. Le’Veon Bell – at $4,600 on DraftKings and a favorable running gamescript, Le’Veon Bell should absolutely put on a show when he’s on the field this Sunday. His touchdown odds throughout the week have plummeted (in favor of him scoring) and he has a solid rushing prop of 42 rushing yards.

    If he can get some work in the passing game and find a way into the end-zone (you have to think Andy Reid is going to give Bell every chance he can to score a touchdown against Adam Gase), Bell should walk backwards into 3x value on this low salary.
  6. La’Mical Perine – It’s gross, but I’m in. The only way you can really attack this 2020 Kansas City Chiefs’ defense is via the run game. The Jets are a god-awful football team, so there’s nothing sexy about this play at all. But as everyone and their brother punts down to Denzel Mims, I want to pivot up to La’Mical Perine. The AETY Model has Perine projected for 60 rushing yards, which clearly is a bit much, but I’m going to trust it and ride the young running back at 1% ownership.

    Honorable Mention: Dalvin Cook, Josh Jacobs, Tevin Coleman

Wide Receivers

  1. DK Metcalf / Tyler Lockett – Again, just getting a ton of exposure to this afternoon game with the highest expected total on the slate. It’s been very difficult to run on this 49ers’ defense and Seattle has been incredibly efficient on offense by moving the ball through the air. They’re going to pass and pass a lot. I give a slight edge to Metcalf this week, but I’m very interested in both in Week 8.
  2. Kenny Golladay – I’m done with stacking the Detroit Lions, but I’ll always play a sub $7K Kenny Golladay in a plus matchup against Rock Ya Sin and a washed-up Xavier Rhodes.
  3. Tyler Boyd – On Monday, I was all-in on Bengals’ stacks featured by Tyler Boyd and his cakewalk matchup against Titans’ rookie slot cornerback, Chris Jackson, but the weather got me off this game a bit. I will still have a ton of Boyd on Sunday as I don’t think the weather really impacts the routes that Boyd runs on a weekly basis.

    In addition, this Bengals’ offensive line (which was terrible to begin with) is likely out three starters. Burrow is going to have to get rid of the ball quick and I really only see that having a positive impact on Tyler Boyd and Gio Bernard.
  4. Cooper Kupp – Kupp is my favorite WR on the slate this weekend. Nik Needham is arguably the worst cover corner in the NFL and Sean McVay sure as hell knows that. I love Jared Goff this weekend and I adore pairing him up with Cooper Kupp. Slot wide receivers absolutely torch Miami on a weekly basis and they’ve yet to see one as skilled and more importantly, as heavy of a focus in their offense as Cooper Kupp.
  5. TY Hilton – He’s $4,900 on DraftKings. This is simply one of my favorite value plays on the slate. He may be washed-up, but the air yards are there on a consistent basis and the matchup is one of the best he’s seen this season.

    Honorable Mention: Tyreek Hill, Justin Jefferson, AJ Brown, Marquise Brown, Brandon Aiyuk, Jarvis Landry, Marvin Jones

NFL DFS GPP Tight Ends

  1. Travis Kelce – See Mahomes’ write-up.
  2. Mike Gesicki – With how much I love the Rams’ offense this week, I need to run it back with someone on the Dolphins. That someone is going to be Mike Gesicki. I’ve watched plenty of tape on this Rams’ linebacking core and they simply struggle with inside receivers and tight ends. Mike Gesicki is part slot receiver and part tight end.

    I’m a bit nervous to see how Tua utilizes Gesicki, but I’m diving head first into rostering Gesicki on the other side of my Rams’ stacks. If I’m not fully stacking the Rams, I’ll have a lot one mini stacks of either Henderson or Kupp with Gesicki on the other side.
  3. Hunter Henry – He’s simply too cheap for the expected target share. It was a weird week for Henry last week (as two backup tight ends scored touchdowns), but I have no problem going back to Hunter Henry who’s projected for 5 catches for 53 yards. If he can get into the end-zone, he’s going to be a smash value on Sunday afternoon.

    Honorable Mention: George Kittle, Darren Waller, Jonnu Smith, Noah Fant, Gerald Everett (if Higbee is out)

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 FINALLY return.

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Week 7 was an absolutely wild weekend full of insane scoring and all of the chalk players breaking the slate. I believe the NFL DFS Cash Game pay-lines on DraftKings were damn near 195 points! Wild times. Let’s get right to it for what should hopefully be a semi-normal week of DFS.

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 8, please see below for my notes on roster construction:

  • Looks like the whole field is either going with Wilson or Garoppolo for cash. I’m leaning Garoppolo for the savings.
  • 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: Kareem Hunt, Derrick Henry, Alvin Kamara, and Keenan Allen all project for over 25% in ownership. I think we’ll likely want to lock in at least two of them in our cash games.
    UPDATE: Denzel Mims is > 20% as well.
  • 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 Cash Game Quarterbacks

  1. Russell Wilson ($7,800 DK / $8,700) – Quite expensive, but is there anyone safer at the quarterback position this season than Wilson? Russ is cooking and is playing in the highest total game on this slate against a banged up San Francisco defense who plays a lot of man-to-man (which should open up some rushing upside yet again for Wilson).
    AETY Projection: 24.48 points
  2. Jimmy Garoppolo ($5,400 DK / $6,600 FD) – Probably the best pay-down option on this slate as a whole. This is the best matchup for opposing quarterbacks (Seattle ranks 30th in passing defense DVOA)… the gamescript that likely leads the 49ers in an up-paced shootout, and Seattle’s defense is giving up an adjusted expected 350 passing yards per game. Yikes.
    AETY Projection: 19.36 points

    Honorable Mention: Aaron Rodgers, Ryan Tannehill, Patrick Mahomes

Running Backs

  1. Alvin Kamara ($8,200 DK / $9,000 FD) & Derrick Henry ($8,000 DK / $9,500) – You likely cannot roster both of the high-end studs in your cash game lineup, but you’re going to want at least one of them. At the moment, I’m leaning Henry on FanDuel and Kamara on DraftKings. It’s hard not to love them both for cash as they both have juicy matchups on the road.
    Kamara AETY Projection: 22.70 DK / 19.56 FD
    Henry AETY Projection: 21.75 DK / 20.79 FD
  2. Kareem Hunt ($6,900 DK / $8,200 FD) – Hunt looks like he’s in another smash spot (Las Vegas is 29th in run defense DVOA) this week after a bit of a letdown in Week 7. I trust the AETY Model and I trust the new matchup rating tool; where Hunt and the Cleveland Browns rank #1 in overall run efficiency on this slate against the #2 run matchup with the Raiders (launching on the site soon).
    AETY Projection: 23.16 DK / 21.58 FD
  3. Jamaal Williams ($6,100 DK / $7,000 FD) – Aaron Jones is out again, wheels up, Jamaal Williams. This price is still way too low for the starting running back on one of the best offenses in the NFL. This game should be a Packers’ blowout with a lot of running the ball in the second half. Williams will hit 3x value again at this low price-point.
    AETY Projection: 19.84 DK / 18.13 FD
  4. Darrell Henderson ($5,900 DK / $6,100 FD) – I wish he were a lot more active in the passing game, but Henderson grades out well this week as he’s entering the #1 ranked matchup for opposing running backs. Miami’s defense ranks dead last in run defense DVOA and the Rams grade out #1 in run offense DVOA. My only concern here is McVay getting cute with his timeshare backfield.

    It’s probably best to use Henderson in GPPs, but he grades out as cash viable in my model.
    AETY Projection: 13.25 DK / 12.43 FD
  5. Value Running Back (TBD) – Keep an eye on this throughout the weekend. We currently have a few spots to watch for potential value running backs to pop up:
    – Seattle (DeeJay Dallas)
    – San Francisco (Hasty/Coleman)
    – Denver (Melvin Gordon)


    I’ll update this spot as soon as I have a better read on these situations.

    Honorable Mention: Gio Bernard, Myles Gaskin, Jonathan Taylor, La’Mical Perine

Wide Receivers

  1. Davante Adams ($8,800 DK / $9,100 FD) – Do we need to say anything about Davante Adams against Minnesota’s minor league secondary? No, no we don’t.
    AETY Projection: 23.72 DK / 19.57 FD
  2. Tyler Lockett ($7,100 DK / $7,200 FD) & DK Metcalf ($7,500 DK / $7,800 FD) – Your weekly edition of what Seahawk wideout do you want to play. They’re quite expensive this week and I prefer to stack them both in a NFL DFS GPP lineup, but it’s hard not to want to jam one of these guys in for your cash lineup.

    I think the matchup is advantage Metcalf here who will most likely spend a lot of time burning Emmanuel Moseley in coverage all day long, but you can’t go wrong with Lockett either.

    I don’t think you have to have one of these guys in your cash lineup if you make it a priority to get Adams.
    Lockett AETY Projection: 19.51 DK / 16.34 FD
    Metcalf AETY Projection: 19.60 DK / 16.67 FD

  3. Keenan Allen ($6,200 DK / $7,400 FD) – No idea why DraftKings hasn’t raised his price yet. The dude is seeing over a 30% target share and should be priced near $7K in PPR formats like DraftKings. I don’t love this matchup for Keenan Allen at all this week, but he’s such a special route runner and everyone is going to roster Allen in NFL DFS Cash Games this week.

    I’ll likely fade him in GPP lineups and eat the chalk in cash games.
    AETY Projection: 17.74 DK / 14.26 FD
  4. Tyler Boyd ($6,600 DK / $6,400 FD) – Same story as Keenan Allen except this is a matchup I want to take advantage of against slot cornerback Chris Jackson. The Titans absolutely bleed fantasy points to opposing slot receivers.

    The Bengals o-line is in shambles, so we know Burrow is going to need to get the ball out quickly. Advantage Tyler Boyd. With or without the heavy winds, this game should shoot out and keep Boyd heavily involved all day long.
    AETY Projection: 16.35 DK / 13.18 FD
  5. Brandon Aiyuk ($5,800 DK / $5,900 FD) – With Deebo Samuel out, Aiyuk is the clear-cut #1 wideout for the 49ers. We will see a ton of Kittle and some Kendrick Bourne as well, but at ~20% ownership we likely need to ride with Aiyuk here for some exposure to this afternoon hammer of a shootout.

    Seattle’s secondary is brutal and Aiyuk is a freak talent. I’m genuinely excited to see him shine in this matchup.
    AETY Projection: 14.76 DK / 11.96 FD
  6. Jarvis Landry ($5,600 DK / $5,800 FD) – If you’re not using Hunt, use Landry without Odell Beckham in the lineup for the rest of the season. We will pick on Lamarcus Joyner all year long.
    AETY Projection: 14.01 DK / 11.19 FD
  7. TY Hilton ($4,900 DK / $5,500 FD) – Probably not a safe cash play, but the targets are coming in the boatloads for Hilton as of late. This is likely the lowest we will ever see his price. He’s currently sitting on most sportsbooks with a 4.5 catch prop for 50 yards.

    That’s not quite going to get him to 2.5x value in NFL DFS cash games, but the AETY Model has Hilton for around 60 receiving yards this week against a brutal Detroit secondary.
    AETY Projection: 12.88 DK / 10.42 FD

    PUNTS – IF YOU NEED SOME PUNT PLAYS TO JAM IN TOP TIER CASH PLAYS, HERE’S A LIST OF GUYS I WOULD CONSIDER… DO NOT EXPECT MUCH FROM THEM, YOU’RE JUST HOPING THEY CAN GET CLOSE TO 10 POINTS.

    UPDATE: Denzel Mims ($3,200 DK / $4,900 FD) – Locking in Mims for my cash game lineups. He’s now projected for over 20% ownership. We don’t need much out of him to hit value. Use him and it opens up so much for your build.

    Honorable Mention: Kenny Golladay, AJ Brown, AJ Green, Justin Jefferson

Tight Ends

  1. George Kittle ($7,000 DK / $7,700 FD) – Expensive, but easily the best play for me at the tight end position in NFL DFS this weekend… especially if Jamal Adams misses this game (currently a game time decision).
    AETY Projection: 17.93 DK / 14.87 FD
  2. Darren Waller ($5,600 / $6,800 FD) – Way too cheap on DraftKings. Load him up if you cannot afford Kittle. This matchup is sexy as hell against a banged up Cleveland defense in a game where there will be plenty of scoring and plenty of wind. The wind should not affect Waller whatsoever.

    With his target share, he needs to be priced over $6K on DraftKings.
    AETY Projection: 16.28 DK / 13.20 FD

    Honorable Mention: Hunter Henry, Jonnu Smith, Travis Kelce

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. Kansas City Chiefs
  2. New Orleans Saints
  3. Baltimore Ravens
  4. Green Bay Packers
  5. Chicago Bears
  6. Detroit Lions

NFL DFS Cash Game Sample Lineup

QB: Jimmy Garoppolo
RB: Jamaal Williams
RB: Kareem Hunt
WR: Davante Adams
WR: Keenan Allen
WR: Denzel Mims
TE: Darren Waller
FLEX: Myles Gaskin
DST: Detroit Lions

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Week 6 was personally the best week of DFS of my life and what made it even better were all of the screenshots from the Win Daily members. Nothing gets me more fired up than seeing our team absolutely crush a NFL DFS slate. Let’s run it back again in Week 7.

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 7, please see below for my notes on roster construction:

  • The player pool is HUGE. I personally am not a fan of DraftKings moving an 11-game slate up to a 12-gamer, but oh well. So many great options and value everywhere.
  • Quarterback seems a bit slim for me. Kyler and Russ are going to draw a ton of ownership and it’s just tough to fade that game in general
  • Gio Bernard and Alvin Kamara chalk week. You likely HAVE to lock in both in your cash game builds.
  • Tons of good WRs for cash games this week.
  • 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 Cash Game Quarterbacks

  1. Kyler Murray ($7,100 DK / $8,400 FD) – Seattle’s pass defense has been torched on a weekly basis, ranking 29th in pass defense DVOA. We don’t need to look into this matchup too much, lol. Kyler Murray’s rushing floor is second to nobody on this slate and a 55-point total clearly states this game is going to be up-pace and high scoring.

    Kyler is going to be the highest owned QB on this slate and it’s an easy decision to go with the public and ride Murray as your cash game quarterback here at home against Seattle.
    AETY Projection: 25.29 points

    2. Aaron Rodgers ($7,000 DK / $8,100 FD) – Assuming Aaron Jones is still highly questionable to suit up for the early matchup of Green Bay @ Houston, Aaron Rodgers should be heavily leaned on in a much needed bounce-back victory after completely laying an egg last week in Tampa Bay.

    Houston’s defense overall is terrible and the pace of this game should be one of the higher ones on the slate. If Aaron Jones plays, I’m not as interested in Rodgers, but if he’s out, I absolutely love Rodgers with a plus matchup on the road in the dome.

    Green Bay is simply way too efficient when they lean on Rodgers and this pass game. This is a great spot for Rodgers and this Packers’ offense as a whole.
    AETY Projection: 22.08 points

    3. Matt Stafford ($6,500 DK / $7,300 FD) – If you want to pay down a bit at QB, there’s never a better matchup on the board than a QB against Atlanta (30th in pass defense DVOA). Hell, Kirk Cousins threw three interceptions and still had a season-best fantasy performance. You know the drill at this point in the season: use quarterbacks against Atlanta.
    AETY Projection: 21.36 points

    Honorable Mention: Russell Wilson, DeShaun Watson, Joe Burrow

Running Backs

  1. Alvin Kamara ($7,900 DK / $9,300 FD) – No Michael Thomas. No Emmanuel Sanders. Carolina’s run defense (or lack thereof)… Wheels up for Alvin Kamara (-250 to score on most sports-books… sexy). Lock him in for your cash game lineups!
    AETY Projection: 25.05 DK / 21.64 FD
  2. Kareem Hunt ($6,800 DK / $7,100 FD) – Kareem Hunt’s ownership is likely to be through the roof this week (as will Kamara’s and Bernard’s). It’s hard for me to get off of Hunt in my cash game lineups (and most lineups for that matter) because this matchup is too juicy for me to turn my back on.

    The Bengals are giving up over five yards per carry to opposing running backs and have been rather loose with pass catching running backs. Hunt is a pure three-down running back behind one of the best offensive lines in football. At this price, he’s likely a must-play in most DFS formats this weekend.
    AETY Projection: 21.73 DK / 20.22 FD
  3. Chris Carson ($6,400 DK / $7,600 FD – Simply way too cheap for a top-tier, three-down running back who is playing in the chalkiest game on the slate. Arizona’s run defense is slightly above average, but I’m not afraid of the matchup at all with how active Carson is in the Seattle passing attack. His floor is 4 catches in this matchup and should have plenty of opportunities to get into the end-zone.
    AETY Projection: 18.75 DK / 17.10 FD
  4. Giovanni Bernard ($4,500 DK / $4,800 FD) – With Joe Mixon out, Gio Bernard is the easy, free-square play in Week 7. Use him in cash games.
    AETY Projection: 15.94 DK / 14.03 FD
  5. Antonio Gibson ($5,000 DK / $5,700 FD) – If you need another salary saver in addition to Bernard, Antonio Gibson should be that guy for you again this week. He never really does anything special, but this is the best matchup Gibson has had in quite some time. Dallas currently ranks 29th in run defense DVOA and literally get destroyed by opposing backs on a weekly basis.

    I hate how much JD McKissic we see for Washington each week, but Gibson is the more talented player and finally has low odds to score a touchdown this week (-105). Yea, that’s nothing special, but Vegas hasn’t shown Gibson that type of love all season. If you need the savings, ride Gibson.
    AETY Projection: 15.31 DK / 13.78 FD

    **Jamaal Williams is in play IF Aaron Jones is OUT

    Honorable Mention: Mike Davis, James Conner, D’Andre Swift

Wide Receivers

  1. Davante Adams ($7,900 DK / $8,900 FD) – If Aaron Jones is out, I want to do everything in my power to lock in Adams in my cash lineups. He’s going to be the heaviest owned WR on this slate and is matchup proof. I likely won’t make my decision on Adams until Sunday morning, but I know I really, really want him to fit in my cash lineup.
    AETY Projection: 21.25 DK / 17.61 FD
  2. Kenny Golladay ($6,700 DK / $7,600 FD) – #1 Wide Receiver against Atlanta. Do we need to say more? Lock in Golladay. He needs to priced up around $7,200 in this matchup on DraftKings.
    AETY Projection: 19.41 DK / 16.22 FD
  3. Tyler Lockett ($6,600 DK / $7,400 FD) – Classic case of me and the Seahawks wide receivers in cash games. On FanDuel, DK Metcalf is cheaper, use him. On DraftKings, Lockett is cheaper… so I’m using him.

    If you’re not playing Wilson or Carson in cash, you’re going to want one of these Seahawks’ pass catchers. We can’t fade this game.
    AETY Projection: 17.66 DK / 14.58 FD
  4. Keenan Allen ($6,200 DK / $7,000 FD) – Jacksonville is dead last in pass defense DVOA and Keenan Allen is an absolute target monster for Justin Herbert. The AETY model has Allen’s projected target share for 30% this week and that’s something to note in itself for your NFL DFS cash games.

    Vegas props on Allen are also through the roof with a 6.5 receptions player prop (juice is on the over). That’s wild.
    AETY Projection: 18.30 DK / 14.91 FD
  5. Terry McLaurin ($5,800 DK / $7,100 FD) – I have no idea what DraftKings is doing with McLaurin’s price-tag. This guy just puts up points on a weekly basis and gets a juicy matchup against Trevon Diggs from the Cowboys. That’s a top-five matchup on this slate. Lock him in.
    AETY Projection: 18.21 DK / 14.80 FD
  6. Diontae Johnson ($4,200 DK / $5,800 FD) – We’ll likely need another salary saver at the wide receiver position, so welcome back, Diontae Johnson. I don’t love this matchup as much now that Adoree Jackson is likely back for the Titans, but he’s too cheap to not consider in NFL DFS cash games.

    Adoree Jackson is out. Much more confident in Diontae.
    AETY Projection: 11.15 DK / 8.91 FD

    Honorable Mention: Calvin Ridley, Stefon Diggs, CeeDee Lamb, Chase Claypool, DJ Moore, Brandin Cooks, AJ Green, Dontrelle Inman

Tight Ends

  1. Travis Kelce ($6,300 DK / $7,900 FD) – Clearly the top tight end on this slate. I hate paying down at tight-end, but this week I’ll likely have to. If you can find a way to build around Kelce, do it.
  2. Hunter Henry ($4,500 DK / $5,800 FD) – Henry is averaging 7 targets per game but is priced in the mid $4K’s… This is a lay-up on DraftKings and a free-throw on FanDuel (I’m not sure what that means but wanted to stay on theme with basketball). Henry is by far the #1 value at the tight end position in the AETY Model.
    AETY Projection: 13.93 DK / 11.48 FD
  3. David Njoku ($3,000 DK / $4,500 FD) – I personally think Harrison Bryant is a much more talented player than Njoku, but with Hooper out, Bryant is going to be leaned on for blocking first, running routes second. Njoku is an awful blocker but a quality route runner. He’s going to be extremely popular in DFS this week due to the price tag and I’m fine if you want to eat that chalk for the savings in NFL DFS cash games.
    AETY Projection: 8.39 DK / 6.77 FD

    Honorable Mention: Darren Waller, TJ Hockenson, Jared Cook, Dalton Schultz, Logan Thomas

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. Buffalo Bills
  2. Pittsburgh Steelers
  3. Tampa Bay Bucs
  4. Los Angeles Chargers
  5. Washington Football Team

NFL DFS Cash Game Sample Lineup

QB: Kyler Murray
RB: Alvin Kamara
RB: Gio Bernard
WR: Kenny Golladay
WR: Terry McLaurin
WR: Diontae Johnson
TE: Hunter Henry
FLEX: Kareem Hunt
DST: Washington

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