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Before reading this NFL GPP article, I highly suggest reading Adam’s Game by Game Breakdown to get ahead of the curve. The plays listed here will be the ones that we aim to hit on for ceiling games – the ones that can win us an NFL DFS GPP tournament. As usual, players identified as cash plays in the GxG are certainly viable, but we’ll be focusing on players that will be both low-owned and that offer a higher ceiling than a high-owned player in the same salary range at their respective position. Chalk players will be omitted unless I love them for GPP as well, but this does not mean they are not viable. Week 17 is a different beast, so it is crucial to not only identify which games we want to target, but also to make sure we are playing as many guys that have something to play for.

While this will not be a strategy article for NFL DFS as Stix’s NFL DFS Bible is, it’s important to note the process we follow for GPPs nonetheless without getting into immense detail; before getting into individual plays, it’s crucial to identify which games we want to target for full game stacks, which games we need a piece of – potentially in every lineup – and which games we can eliminate from the slate altogether. As such, my top stacks are as followed:

1) Tennessee Titans

Death, taxes, and Tennessee stacks after Thanksgiving. You may have heard me say this since the month of November, but it’s something I truly live by in NFL DFS and certainly in my GPP lineups. Coming in with the highest implied team total on the slate at 32.0, the Titans have a plethora of options in multiple price ranges to take our lineups to the top of the leaderboards.

2) Green Bay Packers

27.5 implied team total for A-Aron & Co. and they need this win to secure the #1 seed and consequently, their first-round bye in the NFC.

3) Indianapolis Colts

Massive 31.5 implied team total for Noodle SZN and the Colts offense here versus a terrible Jaguars defense; they need this win to make the playoffs and have a ton on the line.

4) Baltimore Ravens

A 28.5 implied team total for the reigning NFL MVP – win and they’re in? Yeah, I’ll have a ton of Ravens exposure.

5) Seattle Seahawks

They hold their fate in their own hands and should the Packers lose, Seattle can get the #1 seed in the NFC with a win behind their 26.25 implied team total.

NFL GPP DFS: Week 17 Quarterbacks

1) Ryan Tannehill ($7,000 DK / $8,200 FD)

He’s leading the charge of our top stack, so obviously he’s going to be a top option at the QB position. You need exposure to this Titans offense, and if it’s not your main stack, you can run Tannehill’s weapons if the price scares you off him.

2) Aaron Rodgers ($7,400 DK / 8,500 FD)

A-Aron chasing a #1 seed in the NFC and looking to close out an MVP season in style; the Packers signal caller is in a prime spot versus a Bears defense that will be without the majority of their secondary.

3) Lamar Jackson ($8,000 DK / $9,000 FD)

He’s rushing again and that is a scary sight for DFS players that fade the reigning NFL MVP. Does he have to go nuclear for them to win this matchup? No, absolutely not. But the Ravens need to win to get in the playoffs regardless, and Lamar has the ability to score 20+ points on the ground alone.

Also Consider:

  • Deshaun Watson ($7,700 DK / $8,700 FD)
  • Baker Mayfield ($5,500 DK / $7,000 FD)
  • Russell Wilson ($7,300 DK / $7,500 FD)
  • Kirk Cousins ($6,300 DK / $7,700 FD)

NFL GPP DFS: Week 17 Running Backs

1) Derrick Henry ($9,400 DK / $10,200 FD)

He’s chasing a ton of milestones, facing a Houston “defense” – or lack thereof – and they have the highest team total on the slate. I shouldn’t have to tell you why to play him today.

2) Jonathan Taylor ($7,400 DK / $8,400 FD)

Any Frank Reich backfield is scary, but JT is in a smash spot versus a Jacksonville who have ranked 30th or worse every week versus the run DVOA. Averaging 18 carries per game in the past three weeks, Taylor looks to have finally earned a stranglehold on the majority of the Colts backfield touches.

3) Nick Chubb ($7,600 DK / $8,100 FD)

Should the Steelers be playing their entire defensive unit, this spot would be worthy of a fade – but they are not. Given the fact that the yellow and gold have already lost edge rusher Bud Dupree to a season-ending injury, they are playing it safe by sitting out the majority of their starters, and this bodes well for Chubb to carry the ball a ton in a must-win situation.

Others to Consider:

All the punt RBs – above is the cream of the crop in terms of pay up options

NFL GPP DFS: Week 17 Wide Receivers

1) Davante Adams ($9,200 DK / $9,300 FD)

It’s the best WR in the league, in a must-win for the #1 seed for the NFC, playing against third-string cornerbacks. Need I say more?

2) DK Metcalf ($7,300 DK / $7,600 FD)

Such a smash spot for the athletic sophomore yet he’s coming in under 10% owned on both sites. With both Richard Sherman and K’Wuan Williams out for the 49ers, Metcalf will torch whoever seems him the most between Emmanuel Moseley and Ahkello Witherspoon, who he burned for 12-161-2 on 15 targets back in Week 8.

3) AJ Brown ($7,200 DK / $8,400 FD)

The #1 target for one of our top quarterback targets needs to obviously be considered here. Coming in with a 60-922-10 stat line on 95 targets, AJB has 15.4 yards per reception, 9.7 yards per target, and a matchup versus Vernon Hargreaves. Giddy up!

4) Deandre Hopkins ($7,900 DK / $8,200 FD)

With everyone flocking to Davante Adams, Hopkins in another elite receiver that is coming under 10% owned on this slate – under 5% to be exact. With Christian Kirk out and Hopkins’ 29% target share, good for third-highest in the NFL, Nuk and Kyler will get it done versus Jalen Ramsey to secure a playoff berth.

Punt: Richie James ($3,100 DK / $4,600 FD)

NFL GPP DFS: Week 17 Tight Ends

1) George Kittle ($6,000 DK / $6,800 FD)

2) Mark Andrews ($5,800 DK / $7,200 FD)

3) TJ Hockenson ($4,600 DK / $5,800 FD)

4) Noah Fant ($4,400 DK / $5,700 FD)

Others to Consider:

  • Irv Smith Jr. ($3,900 DK / $5,600 FD)
  • Jonnu Smith ($3,800 DK / $5,300 FD)

NFL GPP DFS: Week 17 DSTs

I typically try to narrow this down to a handful of options but can offer one piece of advice regarding DSTs: do not get cute with it by playing a DST versus the Chiefs simply because they’re minimum price (with the exception of this week since nobody is playing for them). Do not change a skill-position player, and certainly not a component of your NFL GPP stack just to fit in a DST. Slot in a team that you are comfortable with and remember, a DST selection is like a car; as you drive it off the lot, it begins to lose value; the moment the game begins, your DST is at risk of losing points. Play it smart, but don’t overthink it either.

  1. Baltimore Ravens ($4,200 DK / $4,900 FD)
  2. Cleveland Browns ($2,500 DK / $4,100 FD)
  3. Carolina Panthers ($2,600 DK / $3,300 FD)

Others to consider

  • NY Jets ($2,300 DK / $3,500 FD)
  • LA Chargers ($2,800 DK / $3,500 FD)

Make sure to check out @StixPicks’s AETY projection model here and our cheat sheet for both DraftKings and FanDuel as well. You can find me on the livestream tomorrow morning at 11am EST and in Discord, as well as on Twitter @DFS_Ghost

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NFL Game By Game Breakdown Week 17

It’s Sunday and you know what that means…Rest In Power Mr. Brodie Lee.

We have the biggest NFL slate of the season ahead of us and this one is a different animal. We’re not only parsing through the matchups and stats like normal, but we’re deciding what backups could be worth playing. Some teams are resting starters, some could rest them mid-game and others are full go. This is a difficult slate in my eyes, as the volatility is cranked to 11. Those factors are very important this week so let’s get right into the work and figure out the paths to take for NFL Game by Game Breakdown Week 17.

Jets at Patriots, O/U of 40 (Patriots -3)

Jets

QB – Sam Darnold is under $5,000 but man is it hard to take him seriously. We have 30 quarterbacks on the slate and can only play one. With an 8:9 TD:INT ratio through 11 games, I’m not sure I can find much of a reason. I suppose I get the logic of just 15 DK points is 3x and the Patriots are 19th in DVOA, but still. I’d almost rather play a backup. That’s not an indictment on Darnold, it’s hating Adam Gase. The 0.32 pDB is 34th in the league and he’s averaging under 12 points per game. There’s some risk here even at the lowest price we can imagine.

RB – We always like some cheap running backs and the fact Frank Gore will miss this game means we have the door open for La’Mical Perine. He had 10 touches in his first game back and that was with Gore hogging 15 touches on his own. New England has fallen all the way to dead last in DVOA against the run so there’s room for Perine to pay off. It would just be very “Jets 2020” to play Perine and see Ty Johnson get the work. Just get Perine 15-20 touches to see what you have.

Well, there’s going to be some text with strikethrough in this article. Perine is now on the Covid list, so Ty Johnson, come on down! You’re the next contestant on “Jets Feature Back Roulette”! In all honesty, Johnson may not be a terrible play. In the one game he got touches, he produced 22 DK. With the Patriots last in DVOA against the run, I can honestly see him being a nice combo with high-priced studs. Josh Adams should serve as the backup, but hasn’t recorded a touch in the past two weeks.

WR – It looks like the Darnold to Jamison Crowder connection is back. This really isn’t just chasing his monster game, Crowder is not nearly expensive enough if he’s getting nine targets a game. In three of the past four, he’s had at least seven and the Patriots defense is not anything super scary. Granted, neither is the Jets offense but Crowder functions extremely well within it. We know he rolls in the slot, about 70% of the time. That leaves him on Jonathan Jones, who has allowed a 68.2% catch rate and a 102.1 passer rating. He’s still pretty cheap after a blowup game last week.

Breshad Perriman didn’t catch one of his six targets and Denzel Mims seems to fade when Darnold plays. I’ll pass on both of them this week. It’s hard enough to play Jets and they are still the worst offense in football.

TE – New York seemed to have remembered that Chris Herndon is on the team as he’s had four targets in each of the last two weeks. It’s too little, too late because there’s no way you can trust his seasonal target share which is still under 8.5%.

D/ST – $2,300 against the Patriots terrible offense? Sign me up. They are a premier punt and have forced 19 turnovers to go with 28 sacks. New England is 28th in points per game and are under 20 per contest.

Cash – Crowder, D/ST, Johnson

GPP – None

Patriots

QB – We’re probably going to see a mix of Cam Newton and Jarret Stidham this week and….I can’t. Cam is only going to be valuable if he scores on the ground mostly and he has a 5:10 TD:INT ratio through 14 games. That is unfathomable in today’s NFL. If he gets yanked, Stidham has been roundly terrible in all of his limited action and the Patriots are not built to pass the ball. Before pitching a quarter of relief, Stidham had 37 career attempts with a 2:3 TD:INT ratio and a completion rate barely above 54%. This situation is gross, no matter who the opponent is.

RB – It appears that Damien Harris could make it back for this game, and he’ll likely be the lead back as he’s rushed 137 times on the season through 10 games. However, the Jets are in the top 10 in DVOA against the run. Harris also only has 19 RZ attempts to 41 for Cam, so the odds of touchdowns are pretty low. If he was to be out, Sony Michel and James White have done little to nothing all season long and I wouldn’t bank on that changing this week.

*Update* Harris has been ruled out for this game.

WR – There’s no receiver worth playing here past maybe a flier on Jakobi Meyers in deep GPP. He does lead the team in target share at 22.6% and air yards share at 34.8% but that’s about where the good metrics stop. He’s only hit 3x at this salary once since Week 10 and his quarterback situation is one of the worst in the league. Meyers will likely spend most of his day against Arthur Maulet who has allowed a 1.70 pPT on 33 targets. Meyers is the preferred option of the passing game but he’s not super appealing.

Damiere Byrd could be on the radar on a smaller slate, but as of now there’s no reason for him. Neither receiver is used in the RZ as they’ve combined for seven targets across 18 combined games. If we felt confident the Pats would trail, maybe there’s an argument. There’s other options even in this price range that are more intriguing.

TE – Devin Asiasi has yet to record a reception and Dalton Keane has three games under his belt this year. Even though the Jets are the stone worst team agains tight ends, the Patriots don’t seem to have anyone to exploit it.

D/ST – They’re on the board because Jets but they’re really expensive. I can’ see myself using them, although they have 20 turnovers forced. The 21 sacks speak loudly and so does the depth they are missing on this side of the ball.

Cash – None

GPP – Meyers, D/ST

Vikings at Lions, O/U of 53.5 (Vikings -6.5)

Vikings

QB – The Vikings can’t make the playoffs but this team is fighting for who has a job there the next season. We should expect full effort and Kirk Cousins has to have our attention. The Lions are putrid at every level of defense and Cousins should be able to do whatever he wants. The only small concern is volume, but if the Vikes can put the boots to this team they’re going to. We’ve talked all year about Cousins having some efficiency with his 0.51 pDB and sitting eighth in touchdowns despite the 17th most passing attempts. For his salary, this is the spot we want to target. Even if he throws 25-28 times, he should hit 3x without much of a fuss. Detroit is dead last in DVOA against the pass.

RB – Talk about doing whatever you want, Dalvin Cook closes the season in the smash spots of smash spots. We don’t have any reason to think he gets under 20 touches in this contest and he destroyed them for 42 DK the first time around. That style of outcome is well in play this week, as Detroit is just 26th in DVOA against the run. They’ve allowed the fifth-most rushing yards to backs and the only argument here is Dalvin gets pulled early. I don’t really expect that so I’m happy to play him.

Very sadly, Cook will not be with the team after a death in the family. Alexander Mattison is still not totally cleared of a concussion so he’s not a lock to play. We could be looking at Mike Boone as a lead back against the Lions at minimum priced and I could be interested at that point. He’ll be in the main Vikings offense and the Lions defense couldn’t stop a college team right now I don’t think.

*Update* Mattison is cleared and ready to go for Sunday. Maybe he’ll be chalk but I’m not sure I want to go after it. We have at least one other back that is cheaper and will have the backfield to himself.

WR – If you don’t think Minnesota has to throw all that much, I’d probably lean Adam Thielen over Justin Jefferson. Neither is a bad play at all but Thielen has every chance to catch at least his 15th touchdown of the year, if not more. They continue to be identical by most metrics. The air yards and targets shares are within 1% of each other, the receptions are only nine apart and the PPR points are only seven apart. The difference is Thielen gets his via touchdowns (14). He’s been targeted 19 times in the EZ this year, tied for the most. Jefferson has the yardage advantage to a major degree but only has eight EZ targets and nine inside the RZ. There’s not a single corner in this secondary that is even average, so I don’t care in the least who lines up on who.

TE – It might be chasing a little bit, but Irv Smith is still too cheap since he’s got the gig to himself. Kyle Rudolph is on the IR and Smith saw nine targets and caught two touchdowns last game. Those outcomes aren’t likely but he’s also still under $4,000 which is a great price for a tight end that can score. I think there might be better values for the projected game script however.

D/ST – I won’t be going to the Vikings when the Jets are cheaper. You could perhaps twist my arm and say the Lions could have a backup, but so do the Patriots. That’s the backup that couldn’t beat out Cam at any point this year. They have forced 20 turnovers but have just 22 sacks. Let’s see who’s playing for the Lions.

Cash – Cousins, Thielen, Jefferson, Mattison

GPP – Smith

Lions

QB – I know that Matthew Stafford wants to play this week but I can’t see why the Lions would let him. He’s beyond banged up with rib, thumb and now ankle injuries. The risk of him getting pulled at some point would seem to be pretty high. He did have an awful game the first matchup with the Vikings with just 10 DK points. To their credit, the Vikings have climbed to 13th in DVOA against the pass which is a big difference from the start of the year. Stafford is just 20th in pDB at 0.43, 24th in points per game, 15th in touchdown passes and 13th in RZ attempts. That’s an awful lot of average for Safford with additional injury risk.

RB – If D’Andre Swift gets full run in this game, he’s going to torch Minnesota. He generated 70 scrimmage yards against a very good front seven last week with a second and third string quarterback. The Vikings do not boast one of the better front seven’s in football and it shows. They are down to 27th in DVOA against the run. I wouldn’t expect another six touchdown day against this defense but we don’t need six. Swift has a layered skill set which is always awesome to target in DFS and has at least three receptions in every game he’s played except one.

WR – I really am looking at Marvin Jones again, even though he flopped badly on Saturday. I simply can’t fathom why he got THREE targets but I think that’s a blip on the radar. He’s been close to a 30% share these past few weeks and the Vikings secondary has matchups he can exploit. I would feel much more comfortable if Stafford was healthy but the salary is too low. He still leads the team in EZ targets and is second only to Hockenson in RZ targets. Cameron Dantzler has allowed a 2.10 pPT and a 112.4 passer rating, so Detroit should wise up and target this man.

We had some interest in Danny Amendola and Mohamed Sanu on the three game slate but on a sprawling one, I’m not going there. They are no better than fourth or fifth in the pecking order for targets after Jones, Swift and Hockenson.

TE – T.J. Hockenson is really the same as he ever was – a safe cash option and really nothing more. He might even be expensive at this point and if Stafford can’t make the game, I would have little interest. When a high end is closing in on $5,000, I want at least 18 DK to play him. Hockenson hasn’t even cleared 17 DK yet at all his year. Minnesota has been solid to the tight ends this year, slightly above average for DK points per game allowed and just five scores.

D/ST – The Lions can’t generate turnovers at just 12 or sacks at 21. That’s not going to do you much good, even at the salary. I’m becoming pretty firm on the Jets in anything under about the $3,000 price range.

Cash – Swift

GPP – Jones

Dolphins at Bills, O/U of 42.5 (Bills -3.5)

Dolphins

QB – The only real choice here has to be Ryan Fitzpatrick. He never really deserved to get benched in the first place and the offense just isn’t as good with Tua under center. This is the kind of cheap player I’m after on this slate. He should be in for the whole game because the easiest way for Miami to clinch a playoff spot is simply win. That’s going to be a big focus and FitzMagic is under $5,500 against a 16th ranked DVOA defense. He already carved them up once this year for 27 DK points and I’m right back to the well here with him. He’s 13th in pDB and first in completion rate under pressure, 58.6%. We’ll see how the other games shake out but he’s a very appealing target.

Covid strikes again. Tua will have to start and my interest level plummets with that. He’s hit 4x at this price range (more of what I want from a cheap quarterback) and just hasn’t been that great for fantasy so far. Tua is just 28th in points per game and 31st in yards per attempt. That’s not good enough for me and I’ll pass. They didn’t want to start him with a playoff berth on the line. That’s not a good endorsement for me to play him.

RB – Welcome back Myles Gaskin. We’ve touched on it before but if the Dolphins have a back that they can use as a workhorse, they’re going to do it. Gaskin played over 75% of the snaps in his return and had 19 touches. Both his touchdowns came on receptions, which is a little weird but he racked up a massive 33.9 DK points. He’s still probably not quite expensive enough, even though he’s not under $6,000 anymore. Buffalo is just 17th in DVOA against the run and Gaskin should once again get all the work he can handle this Sunday. That’s even more true now that Tua is starting.

WR – DeVante Parker is still struggling with a hamstring injury and that’s really got me not looking at him at all. His target share is only 20.8% and the air yards share is under 25%, so there’s nothing overwhelming here. If he’s banged up, I don’t see Miami pushing him to the limits with the playoffs potentially looming next week. I know they need to win for the easy path but the injury management might take the forefront.

If Parker is out, Lynn Bowden is less of a target. We saw last week that Bowden is easier to defend when the receivers aren’t very good around him. That would be the case again, so let’s see how this shakes out on Friday.

*Update* Parker is still limited at practice.

TE – Mike Gesicki came back from missing one game into his normal role as well, being targeted seven times for a 9.4 DK game. I think the fact Fitzpatrick pushes the ball downfield a little more is a big bonus for Gesicki, especially with the receiving corps banged up. His 76.6% route rate is eighth in football and he went scorched Earth on Buffalo in Week 2. Scoring 30 DK in that game is still his high water mark. Buffalo has been hit by the tight end all year with the sixth-most receptions and fourth-most yards. If Parker is out, Gesicki becomes even more of a target.

D/ST – They’re a very good unit but the Buffalo offense is a buzzsaw right now. I won’t play Miami on this slate with so many other spots to pick on.

Cash – Gaskin

GPP – TBD

Bills

QB – I would assume that the Bills will put their best foot forward here to clinch the number two seed. It doesn’t come with a bye week anymore but it’s still nice to be at home until the AFC title game, potentially. That means Josh Allen is in play, just like any other week. He’d be a front-runner for MVP in a lot of years and has accounted for 42 total touchdowns to 15 turnovers. Allen sits fourth in pDB, second in points per game, fifth in touchdown passes, third in yards and second in RZ attempts. The transformation he’s made this year has been stunning and he has among the highest ceilings on the slate, if not the highest. Miami’s defense is very strong, but Allen also hung 37 DK on them the first game.

RB – This continues to be a backfield that I’m not terribly interested in. They split touches and snaps almost literally 50-50 last game and that’s mostly been the story when both are healthy. They kill each other and when guy like Zack Moss scores a touchdown for 12.7 DK, he looks like a bargain. However, the RZ carries are 20 for Devin Singletary, 27 for Moss and 23 for Allen. That’s not leaving either back for a big role, although Moss is three games behind the other two. He remains my favorite if you play one, but neither are really strong targets. Miami has only allowed 1,392 yards even though they rank 23rd in DVOA against the run.

WR – Stefon Diggs is on an absolute tear right now. Since Week 8, he’s not been under seven receptions and has been under 15 DK just once. His last three games have totaled 422 yards and four touchdowns with 30 receptions. He’s one of the best receivers in the league and the Bills are using him as such. Diggs has a 29.9% target share and a 36.0% air yards share. On top of that, he leads the league in receptions and receiving yardage so he’s still priced incredibly low. We typically don’t mess with the Byron Jones and Xavien Howard duo but Diggs is a different player.

Cole Beasley and Gabriel Davis could be in play to some extent, but we need the John Brown news first. After we know if he can play, we can figure out the matchups and who we’d want out of this bunch. We now also need Beasley news, as he didn’t practice Thursday.

*Update* Beasley is out for this game but Brown is back in. I don’t think they’ll push him a ton, but he’ll be in line for some snaps to get back into shape before the playoffs get rolling.

TE – One thing that could be overlooked is the increase in the workload for Dawson Knox. One the past four weeks, he has four, four, seven and four targets which is interesting. That’s equated to a 12.3% targets share and the second-most RZ targets on the team. He’s still super cheap and could potentially be a GPP target. Miami has been one of the better teams against tight ends with the seventh-fewest DK points per game allowed and only five touchdowns. Knox is GPP only, but not as thin as he was for most of the year.

D/ST – Buffalo is kind of in no man’s land for me. They’re not super cheap or expensive, but they have generated 22 turnovers and 37 sacks on the year. With all of Tua’s issues so far, turnovers haven’t been one of them. I think we have better point per dollar options.

Cash – Diggs, Allen

GPP – Knox, Brown

Ravens at Bengals, O/U of 44 (Ravens -12.5)

Ravens

QB – Baltimore is another team that will play their starters until the game is won because win and get in is the easiest pathway. That means a full run of Lamar Jackson and if he gets pulled, it’s because he went off and the game is out of reach. Jackson’s down game over the past month has been 22 DK points, which is strong. There’s been some (valid) criticisms of his game this year but when the Ravens needed him most, he’s shown up in spades. He sits third in pDB and seventh in points per game, not too shabby for a “mediocre” season. Among just quarterbacks, he’s taken the lead in carries and yards, with the fourth-most rushing touchdowns and second-most RZ carries. If you spend up, Jackson is one of the primary targets.

RB – I’ll be the first one preaching the gospel about how good J.K. Dobbins is but he’s too expensive on DK. He’s not even being targeted twice per game so far and his value comes totally from rushing yards and touchdowns. That’s a LOT to ask for at this salary as he needs to get to 21 DK. Even with Mark Ingram being totally phased out of the offense, Dobbins is still in a time share with Gus Edwards. He’s yet to clear 15.1 DK in those three weeks with no Ingram nor exceed 15 touches. When a player likely needs two scores to pay off with nothing to fall back on, I’m usually out past MME formats. Even the 20th ranked DVOA against the run isn’t enough to sway me at nearly $7,000.

WR – Marquise Brown always seems so underpriced but he’s probably slightly over, if anything. He and Mark Andrews are the main cogs in this passing game and have target shares right about 24%. Brown easily has the air yards share lead at 37.4% which is always why I want to play him. There’s game-breaking potential somewhere in there. Hollywood is only one EZ target behind Andrews for the team lead, which is nice to see. He’s not the prototypical EZ threat. The matchup with William Jackson is tough on top of it as Jackson is top 20 in catch rate allowed, passer rating and pPT.

The Ravens still have the lowest pass attempts per game in the league, so on a slate this size I won’t turn to low-volume targets like Willie Snead, Dez Bryant or Myles Boykin.

TE – Last week saw Andrews draw double-digit targets for the first time and he’s still underpriced. With at least two of the other big three tight ends potentially not playing much, Andrews might be the most elite target for tight end on the slate. He should be over $6,000 and the Ravens are sure to target him heavily once again this week. Andrews tops out at about a 70% snap share but his 82.4% route rate is all we care about and it’s fifth among tight ends. Cincy has allowed the second-most yards to the position with eight scores and Andrews is a prime option.

D/ST – I wanted to play them until I saw they were $4,200. That’s likely going to be too expensive for my blood although the 44% blitz rate is really tempting. Stix (that goat that he is) had us on the Cincy offense last week but the matchup goes to the opposite end of the spectrum here. Baltimore is great, but very tough to pay for.

Cash – Jackson, Andrews

GPP – Brown, D/ST, Dobbins

Bengals

QB – Brandon Allen was the hero of the day last week but it’s a new week and this is a spot where it’s best to not chase the game log. I will give him some credit for a 47.1% completion rate under pressure across his 121 attempts but this is still a very bad matchup. Baltimore has fallen back to 16th in DVOA against the pass but have only given up 21 touchdown passes. This is a much more talented unit than the Texans unit they faced last week. Allen is much likelier to have a bad game in this spot.

RB – I can kind of rinse and repeat for Gio Bernard. Last week was he worst run defense in football as far as yards given up go. Baltimore is eighth in DVOA against the run and 11th in rushing yards given up to backs. Bernard is still really cheap for the 23 touches he got last week and the eight targets were great. The frustrating part was he got one RZ carry to four for Samaje Perine, getting vultured once. I think Gio is still really cheap for the potential role, but it is not the smash spot it was and the RZ work really annoys me.

WR – If there’s one player that might tempt me, it could be Tee Higgins. This would really only be if Tyler Boyd is out again but the rookie from Clemson is really proving he’s a player at the NFL level. He’s approaching a 1,000 yard season and with 92 yards this week, he’s going to get there. He and Boyd are one target apart for the lead but Higgins has still sen over 100 targets this year for a 19.5% share. Only A.J. Green has more EZ targets than nine for Higgins and he’s doing his best with questionable quarterback play. If Boyd plays, this passing game becomes a little more muddled. He’s going to be in the slot mostly at around a 77% rate. We’ll get some clarity on Friday.

*Update* Boyd is cleared for this game and that means I’m not interested in the Bengals passing game.

TE – There’s really no middle ground for Drew Sample as he gets targeted either once or seven times lately. Considering the past two games have been just once, that really leaves him as a thin target. His rate is just 9.2% and when Boyd is out and he still gets no work, that’s not a good sign. He does have 11 RZ targets but that’s not enough for me to want to play him this week.

D/ST – This defense is horrible and has the second-fewest sacks with a pressure rate just barely over 18%. No thank you.

Cash – None

GPP – Possibly Higgins

Steelers at Browns, O/U of 42 (Browns -9)

Steelers

QB – The Steelers have announced that Mason Rudolph will start this week and I might actually have some interest. Do I think he’s any good? Not even a little bit BUT he is $4,300. He wasn’t as bad as I remember last year with a 62% completion rate and a 13:9 TD:INT ratio. The talent around him is a little better this year with Diontae Johnson having a full season under his belt and the addition of Chase Claypool. Even if he just gets us 200 passing yards and a touchdown, that’s workable at this price point. Cleveland is all the way down to 25th in DVOA against the pass so as a salary saver, Rudolph can get it done here. It helps that Cleveland will be without corner Denzel Ward again as well.

RB – There seems to be a split to some extent between James Conner and Benny Snell as Conner had five rushes to six for Snell. Conner also had about a 65-35% split in the snaps, which makes things a little harder to read. Either way, I’m fairly uninterested here. The Steelers running game has been garbage all year long and it’s not just on the backs. They’ll try to run the ball with a backup quarterback, but that doesn’t mean they can. Cleveland is only 18th in DVOA against the run but the situation is ugly.

WR – If we go back to last year where Rudolph started the majority of games, Johnson was still the lead target at a 20.5% target share. That’s not set in stone as JuJu Smith-Schuster was hurt and missed games, but I would still give a slight lean to him. My biggest fear is both of these players are priced like Big Ben is playing, and I’m not likely to go there. If I play Mason, it’s probably in cash only and by himself. Claypool is interesting a little bit if Rudolph is willing to push the ball downfield, and the rookie got back to right around 80% of the snaps last week. They could also get pulled early and the stealth play is James Washington. He’s playing a good bit of snaps but he’s still the number four. In this game, he could be the number one and he’s dirt cheap. With the Steelers sitting Ben so early in the week, all the starters are on red alert to leave early.

TE – Eric Ebron might be the most valuable player in this passing game (pending snaps played). Rudolph had a 6.2 yards per attempt last year and was mostly unwilling to get too aggressive. With Ebron having just a 7.1 aDOT, he could be targeted quite a bit. Even with Ben in, it’s not like this was a vertical offense. Ebron has a respectable 14.9% target share and is tied for the team lead in RZ targets. Changing quarterbacks can be volatile for the roles of players, but I think Ebron has he best chance to make the smoothest transition for as long as he’s in.

D/ST – They won’t be on my radar at all. With Ben already out and the team not having a traditional bye week, I can’t see T.J. Watt, Cam Hayward, Minkah Fitzpatrick or Joe Haden playing that long. At this price, they likely won’t be worth it.

Cash – Rudolph

GPP – Washington

Browns

QB – Here’s another team we need to be very interested in. After last week’s stumble, Cleveland needs this game and I think Baker Mayfield is in play despite the red “one” next to his name for the matchup. As I said, I don’t think the Steelers are going to risk their most important defensive players. They are razor thin in depth at multiple spots. For any hope of a playoff run, they need those guys healthy. Mayfield should be able to have a good game and was really clicking before he had no receivers last week. Now he has them all back in the fold and their backs are against the wall. Baker is one of the more interesting quarterbacks that is cheap.

RB – I said last week that I liked Jonathan Taylor in this same spot and I have to say the same for Nick Chubb. He’s going to have an easier path and somehow, even on 28 yards rushing he produced 17.6 DK last week. Now, he’s not going to get five targets again this week but the defense is going to be much less motivated to stop him. Chubb is going to get 20 touches against a defense that won’t risk anything. That’s all I need to know, and the fifth-best DVOA shouldn’t concern you. Kareem Hunt is in play as well, but not really my preferred target at the salary. I expect Chubb to get the vast majority of work here.

WR – I’m sure I’m not the only person happy to see Jarvis Landry back and he is going to have a big game. His 28% target share without OBJ speaks volumes, as does his 14 RZ targets. No other player has more than six in that time span and I’m really looking at him in a big way in cash games. He fell $400 from last week. That’s enough for me and since he’s in the slot around half the time, he won’t have to deal with Joe Haden even when Haden plays.

Rashard Higgins is the GPP target again with backup corners suspected. He’s the air yards share leader at 31.7% and is close to a 20% target share on his own. Cleveland will likely try to get on top quick and if that happens, Pittsburgh could wave the white flag early. He’s a super cheap option to go after in GPP.

TE – Now that there’s other threats in the passing game, it’s even easier to get behind Austin Hooper. No, he won’t get to 15 (!!) targets again this week but they’ll be higher quality targets and that’s all the matters. Since he’s under $4,000 and has the third-highest target share on the team, Hooper is pretty easy to play in any format if punting the position. I can see him in cash but I do prefer him in GPP more.

D/ST – If you don’t want the Jets, I can see the Browns defense as a punt. They have 37 sacks and 20 turnovers, both respectable marks. Rudolph didn’t impress anyone last year and there’s not a big reason to fear him.

Cash – Baker, Landry, Chubb

GPP – Hooper, D/ST

Cowboys at Giants, O/U of 45 (Cowboys -1.5)

Cowboys

QB – I guess Andy Dalton read that I didn’t think he had any ceiling because he went bonkers this past week with 377 yards and three touchdowns for 30 DK points. This is a tougher matchup although the Giants are a weird mix. The DVOA is just 24th against the pass but have given up just the seventh-fewest DK points per game. With a 21:10 TD:INT ratio, that’s not that bad of a mix and I’m hesitant to go back to Dalton here even with the talent he has.

RB – Since Dallas still has a chance to sneak into the playoffs, expect Ezekiel Elliott to get plenty of run. Zeke looked healthy last week and got 23 touches, and we should bank on that again. He scored 20 DK points even without a touchdown and the Giants have given up the third-most receiving yards. Zeke is too cheap against a team that is sitting in the 20’s in DVOA against the run and he’s going to try and give them every chance to sneak in.

WR – It could be another week to focus on Michael Gallup and CeeDee Lamb since Amari Cooper will face off against James Bradberry. Really, it may not be that big of a difference as Cooper produced anyways last week (the Eagles decided to move Darius Slay off him after Gallup was blowing up. It’s almost like you need multiple good corners). Since Dalton has come back, Gallup has the lead in targets with 43 to 38 for Cooper to 36 for Lamb. The latter is really the scariest one as he’s got the lowest target share and is under 60% of the snaps since Dalton returned. That’s tough as he needs to score to pay off.

I would prefer Gallup at the salaries and target share that we have at hand. Additionally, the matchup with Isaac Yiadom is not a worry. He’s allowed a 13.0 YPR, 106.3 passer rating and a 1.80 pPT. This isn’t just game log chasing.

TE – Dalton Schultz has really taken a step back with Dalton and is a distant fourth in targets. He’s not been over 44 yards or four receptions in the last six games, so he’s been the definition of safety valve. The salary is not very high and he could go 3x, especially considering they’ve allowed almost 800 yards to the position. Now, they’ve only let up four scores so Schultz doesn’t stand out in any other way than possibly a punt tight end.

D/ST – Dallas is on a three game streak of really producing on the defensive side of the ball. They’ve racked up 10 turnovers and seven sacks, and with the Giants poor quarterback play they’re on the board as an option. I don’t really love the price here though.

Cash – Zeke with a bullet point

GPP – Gallup, Lamb, Cooper, Dalton

Giants

QB – I honestly don’t care who the quarterback is but I’m not playing him. The assumption would be Daniel Jones is healthy enough to go but 16 turnovers to 10 touchdowns is trash. We know what he is and it’s a turnover machine with a super low floor and not much ceiling this year. This is an easy pass with a 0.33 pDB, 32nd in the league. I know they can sneak into the playoffs and need this game, but still.

RB – We talked last week about the split this Giants backfield was becoming and that held true again. They were down early, but Wayne Gallman only had six carries and barely played 50% of the snaps. The only reason we played Gallman earlier was he was then getting fed the rock. Now that Alfred Morris and Dion Lewis involved, I’m very leery here. I know Dallas is weak on the ground with the 24th ranked DVOA against the run but I don’t trust any back on this team.

WR – The only receiver that I’m looking for here is Sterling Shepard. He is tied for the target lead since he came back in Week 7 with 70 targets and leads in RZ looks with nine. No player has more receptions on the team since that point and Shepard is still very cheap on DK. He crushed his price last week and the Dallas secondary is still not good either.

I know that Darius Slayton has the air yards share lead at 28.4% but the target share is under 17%. He gets a great matchup in but the volatility of production isn’t that appealing on this giant slate unless Shepard trends towards being out.

TE – Evan Engram looks like his ankle injury won’t keep him out of the game, so we need to look at him. He’s tied with Shepard for the team lead in targets and is under $4,000, a great combo at tight end. Engram also leads in RZ targets and the Dallas defense can be had. They are playing better, but the target share doesn’t come this cheap at the position. He’s a primary option if not using Andrews in my eyes.

D/ST – Is it weird that I don’t want to play this unit against the Cowboys right now? We haven’t said that a lot over the past two months but the Giants could get beat up here. They’ve been struggling as of late, with just two sacks and one turnover across the last three games. Dallas can be vulnerable on the offensive line but New York might not be able to take advantage.

Cash – Shepard, Engram

GPP – Slayton (MME ONLY)

Falcons at Buccaneers, O/U of 50 (Buccaneers -7)

Falcons

QB – Tampa might be in the top 12 in passing yards allowed over the past three weeks, but that’s skewed by facing the Detroit Lions gaggle of poor options last week. Matt Ryan has his flaws, but this is still a spot that can be had. It’s a little risky because Ryan is pressured almost 24% of the time and that’s worrisome. There’s a good news/bad news here because these two teams just played each other. Ryan lit them up for 30 DK points but I wonder if the closeness of the scheduling hurts Ryan here. The Bucs just played him and may be wise to some of their plays. I think Ryan is cheap enough for GPP but I’m not a huge fan in cash.

RB – The Bucs boast the best run defense in yards allowed and DVOA in football so I will have zero Ito Smith this week. He played 32% of the snaps last week and Todd Gurley and Brian Hill played more snaps last week. There’s no reason to go here.

WR – Calvin Ridley is very expensive and I don’t care in the least. He’s been massive without Julio Jones this year and just look at the game logs. He’s been over 100 yards or has scored a touchdown in every single game since Week 12. He pantsed this Tampa defense for 35 DK points last time with a 10/163/1 line and I want another piece of him. In that time frame, Ridley has a 28.9% target share and a 50.7% air yards share. Those numbers are enormous and he deserves to be this high in salary. Jamel Dean has played well with a 91.0 passer rating allowed and just a 1.50 pPT but I don’t fear many corners with Ridley.

I also want to go back to the Russell Gage play. He had a rough time of it last week and that game script just did not go at all how I thought. However, Gage has been in the slot for the majority of his snaps and has an 18.7% target share over the past five games. He has 35 total and nobody has more than 25 on the team. Being in the slot against the Bucs is a profitable spot as well against Sean Murphy-Bunting. He’s allowed a 2.10 pPT on the year.

TE – Especially if you want to stack this game, Hayden Hurst could be an option. He’s had five targets in each of the past two weeks and scored in each game. I still don’t consider him more than touchdown or bust, but he could score with the offense as it is right now. He’s tied in the RZ targets at six with Gage and Ridley (although just one EZ target). I’ve not had a good feel for Hurst all season, but the Bucs have given up eight scores on the year.

D/ST – Not against a Tom Brady that would probably like to win this game.

Cash – Ridley

GPP – Ryan, Gage, Hurst

Buccaneers

QB – My goodness did Brady go full ham sandwich last week. He put up 32.9 DK in ONE HALF of football and if they had let him off the leash, he could have broken the league record for passing touchdowns in a game. If the Bucs win, they guarantee a spot against the NFC East champ. It would be on the road, but it’s hard to not want that spot if you’re Tampa. Brady just put up 26 against this Falcons defense and they are going to have a rough day. They rank 17th in DVOA against the pass but they are also a good run-stopping team. With the playoff fate on the line, Tampa will put the ball in Brady’s hands.

RB – Ronald Jones is back from a stint on the Covid list and a finger surgery, and his price is really too low. Before his absence, Coach Bruce Arians said it was RoJo’s job. I don’t trust BA, but he also scratched Leonard Fournette the last game Jones played. That’s a good sign and this is a very interesting spot. The Falcons are sixth in DVOA against the pass and have allowed the second-fewest rush yards in football. They are also tied for the fourth-most receptions to backs and if Brady is dropping back 40 times, Jones should have at least 3-4 receptions on top of whatever carries he gets. He’s just way too cheap for his role, especially if Fournette is scratched again.

WR – The price really jumped up for Mike Evans but how could it not after he dropped 40+ DK last Saturday? He got these Falcons for 20 DK two weeks ago and that was without a touchdown. If he scores, he could go nuclear again and he has 17 total RZ and EZ targets since Antonio Brown rolled into town, most on the team. Evans is also the only player over 20% in target share so he fully deserves to be this pricey. Rookie A.J. Terrell and his 112.9 passer rating and 13.5 YPR don’t have much of a chance on paper.

Chris Godwin and AB are much harder to separate. Godwin has the target lead at 48-47 and a slight edge in air yards share, though it is negligible. Godwin also has the reception and touchdown lead so I have to give him just a little bit of an edge, though you can argue that it’s not worth playing Godwin at $1,100 more in salary. That tends to be where I land on this slate in that I’ll just take the stronger value. I would say I’m likely only using Godwin or AB in Brady stacks.

TE – Everyone might chase the big Rob Gronkowski game from last week but he literally only had his two receptions that both scored for 58 yards. That’s living your best life and we need to understand just how volatile Gronkowski still is. Even in a great matchup that is Atlanta, he’s capable of scoring 5.9 DK in any game. The Flacons have let up 10 touchdowns and the third-most yards, just know what you’re getting into at the price.

D/ST – There’s not a lot of reason that you couldn’t play the Bucs in this spot but I’m not overly excited about it. The price is still high and they’ve been bleeding points to a lot of teams. They are third in sacks and second in pressure rate so there’s potential but you need a lot of it at the salary.

Cash – Brady, Evans, RoJo

GPP – Godwin, AB, Gronkowski

Packers at Bears, O/U of 51 (Packers -5.5)

Packers

QB – With the Packers needing to win for the easiest clinch for the number one seed, I think we get enough Aaron Rodgers to play. He’s been phenomenal with an obscene 47:7 total touchdown to turnover ratio to go along with over 4,000 yards passing. Chicago is tough on paper with the ninth-best DVOA against the pass but Rodgers is immune to that. He chewed up the Bears for 25 DK points and four touchdowns in the first meeting. That’s easily 3x at this price and the Packers will want to close this one out as fast as possible to secure the precious bye week. The loss of tackle David Bakhtiari is a big deal, but I still expect the Packers to push for home-field.

RB – On the flip side, I think Aaron Jones is too expensive to really consider too heavily. He’s not a sure bet to get a ton of touches as the Packers have split the snaps more than we’d like almost the entire year. Last week was a blowout but A.J. Dillon had over 20 touches and is sort of interesting. My fear is he doesn’t get significant run until the game gets out of hand. If that’s the case, Rodgers will be out so I’m more likely to fade this situation. The Bears being fourth in DVOA against the run so that doesn’t help either.

WR – One of the only teams to contain Davante Adams so far have been these Bears, who held him to a 6/61 line in their first meeting. That’s not really the concern and if the Packers go for the kill shot early, Adams almost has to be at the center of it. There’s not much to say on Adams at this point, nor his 34.6% target share and 39.5% air yards share in the offense. When you’re getting that amount from Rodgers, the sky is the limit every week. Kyle Fuller is a great corner and is 16th in catch rate allowed at 57.6%. I also don’t care with Adams. To make it better for Adams, the Bears are without Jaylon Johnson as well in their secondary.

I really won’t go to the secondary options in Allen Lazard nor Marques Valdes-Scantling. They only combined for three targets last week and are both under 15.5% for the season on target share. We’re not even sure Rodgers will even play the whole game.

TE – Robert Tonyan would be the preferred secondary target but man he is expensive. He basically has to score because the target share is only 11.9% and he has only 10 RZ targets. Tonyan lives on touchdowns with 10 on the season and I just can’t stomach that price tag for such a volatile player. He only looks like a reliable target because of the touchdowns and the only reason to go for him is the Bears have allowed 10 scores to tight ends, tied for second-most.

D/ST – They are just far too expensive for a unit that has only 16 turnovers on the year in my eyes. The Bears can give the ball away with 20 on the season but this still feels pretty dicey.

Cash – Rodgers, Adams

GPP – Tonyan, D/ST

Bears

QB – The Bears actually still can get in the postseason, and the coaching staff and players are fighting for their jobs. That includes Mitchell Trubisky, who is trying to prove that he deserves to start in the 2021 season. Since he got back into the lineup in Week 12, he has played fairly well. He’s thrown for 10 touchdowns in that period against just four interceptions. Only once has he had a completion rate under 68% and the only games that haven’t been fantasy relevant have been either just one touchdown pass or just 21 attempts. He should need to throw a lot in this one and I like Trubisky at this price range once again.

RB – I’ll thank DK for not moving the price on David Montgomery, who produced another 120 scrimmage yards and a touchdown last week on 25 touches. Monty has been a terror lately and is still inside the top 10 in scrimmage yards on the season. I am worried about script but Monty did produce 28 DK in this matchup the first go-around. Rocking an 11.2% target share is nothing to be ashamed of either and the Packers are vulnerable on the ground. They are just 19th in DVOA and I think Monty is a good pick in GPP, but would worry about potential floor in cash games. he best way to beat Green Bay (in theory) is to keep Rodgers off the field. That means all the Monty.

WR – I find myself having such a hard time clicking on Allen Robinson’s name even though he smashed in the first game. Usually, I’m loathe to go after Jaire Alexander with receivers but Robinson is talented enough to overcome any matchup. There’s really nothing metric-ly (it’s a word, mind your business) wrong with playing A-Rob. He has a 26.4% target share and a 31.3% air yards share, both to easily lead the team. Only Jimmy Graham rivals him in the RZ and EZ shares, but I just never feel comfortable projecting Robinson for the nearly 25 points he needs.

I still want Darnell Mooney as my secondary receiver, but he’s nothing to ever rely on. He’s just the only other receiver that is over 16% in air yards share (23.4%) so he fits the bill for a potential long touchdown. That’s really the best we can say about him.

TE – Graham has really been a buzzkill lately with three touchdowns in the last three games. He’s only playing about 45% of the snaps but has six combined RZ and EZ targets to just one for Cole Kmet. Since you’re punting either player, it likely makes more sense to go Graham. You need the touchdown to pay off and he has the better shot at it. Green Bay has only allowed five touchdowns to tight ends on the season so neither player stands out as a super strong play.

D/ST – Not against Rodgers.

Cash – Trubisky, Monty (maybe, not sold yet)

GPP – A-Rob, Graham

Saints at Panthers, O/U of 47.5 (Saints -6.5)

Saints

QB – I don’t know if I could possibly get behind Drew Brees on this slate. He’s looked strikingly average since coming back and three interceptions in two games is very non-Brees like. He just doesn’t look right and there seems to be no zip on the ball. The Saints have locked up the division title and if the Packers start running away with their game, there’s no reason for New Orleans to push at all. With needing help to get to the number one seed and Brees looking like he’s in poor form, I’ll pass.

RB – One player that could really turn into great chalk is Latavius Murray. For the same reasons outlined with Brees, Alvin Kamara is not super likely to get a big workload. That means we could get Murray for at least 15 touches (more if Kamara is sat outright) against the 21st DVOA run defense and I’m all in on that at the salary. Murray is more than a capable back and if they sit Brees, Taysom Hill brings an added dimension with his legs to help Murray anyways. Let’s see how the Saints approach this, but Murray could be mega chalk. I’m hopeful that Kamara is active and people overlook Murray.

*Update* Kamara has been put on the Covid list and will not play in this game, leaving Murray as one of the chalkier plays on the slate in all likelihood.

*Update Two* Murray has now been ruled out as well, and this Saints offense is so thin that I don’t think almost any are really in play.

WR – The receiving corps is incredibly thin for the Saints right now, lending more credence to the fact they may run the ball a lot in this one. Emmanuel Sanders is the alpha with a bullet point, but the price is in no man’s land. He’s not super pricey, but the targets are flighty. He’s seen no more than five the past three weeks and that’s not likely to be good enough since he needs almost 17 DK to hit 3x.

I’m not playing any of Juwan Johnson or Marquez Callaway with the questions surrounding this offense and what could change in the middle of the game.

TE – For the minimum price, Adam Trautman could be a punt option. He’s had games where he’s been on the field over 60% of the time and it’s possible Jared Cook might not play a full game. It’s not like Trautman has been a target magnet at all but he’s so cheap, you’re not going to need much. The Panthers are tied for the second-most receptions allowed and the eighth-most yards, so this is a soft matchup. Cook would have some value if we knew he’d play the whole game but we can’t predict that.

D/ST – On the season, New Orleans has produced 42 sacks and 21 turnovers. Normally they are a strong option but could suffer the same fate as the offense in not playing the full game. I’ll use a different unit.

Cash – Murray

GPP – Sanders, Cook, Trautman

Panthers

QB – I’m less and less motivated to play Teddy Bridgewater anymore just because it’s so hard to find a ceiling game. He’s hovering right around average to slightly below in pDB, points per game, touchdowns, yards….everything. He’s a fine “holding someone’s spot” option but I think it’s clear he’s not someone you build a team around. New Orleans is fourth in DVOA against the pass, so this would normally not garner any attention from me. Even playing the angle where the important starters are done by halftime isn’t enough to tempt me. We have other options in the bargain basement to chase.

RB – Sees Mike Davis is still going to start. Closes out the RB tab for the Panthers.

It might not be that cut and dry, but Davis has not seen his price decrease virtually at all despite having just ONE game over 15.9 DK points since Week 5. That’s three months of football that DK has not budged on the $6,000+ price tag. Now he gets a Saints unit that has allowed the seventh-fewest rush yards to backs and are fourth in DVOA. Close out the tab.

It’s not likely to be Davis anymore, but I’m not willing to play Rodney Smith in a tough matchup statically when I can play Ty Johnson for $300 more.

WR – The prices for the Panthers receivers are really appealing on all fronts. Both D.J. Moore and Robby Anderson have a 23.7% target share or higher to go along with an air yards share of at least 33.9% (Moore is over 40%). They are all under $6,000 and Moore got the Saints for 4/93/2 the first game while Anderson went 6/74. Moore is going to get some of Marshon Lattimore who has gotten beat up for a 14.3 YPR. That’s a perfect fit for Moore’s game. That should leave Anderson more on Janoris Jenkins with his 1.70 pPT.

Curtis Samuel might be the forgotten man to some extent but if he’s going to get seven rushing attempts on top of five targets like last week, we have to be interested there as well. Samuel is on the field about 67% of the time on the season and has 38 rush attempts to go with his 86 targets. That style of volume isn’t bad at all and Samuel runs out of the slot a good bit. He’s also likely to get some more rushing attempts with the situation so dire. Moore and Samuel are my favorites of the bunch.

TE – Ian Thomas can continue to be safely ignored with just a 5.7% target share on the year with two RZ looks.

D/ST – It seems like the only time the Panthers defense is worth playing is if they get a defensive touchdown, which we have little chance to predict.

Cash – Samuel, Moore

GPP – Anderson

Jaguars at Colts, O/U of 49.5 (Colts -14)

Jaguars

QB – The Jaguars have locked up the number one pick, so welcome to Duvall Trevor Lawrence. I wonder if that means the Jags turn back to Gardner Minshew now since he’s definitively better than Mike Glennon. Of course Minshew has his flaws but perhaps the Jags can try and dangle him in the offseason to a QB-needy team. The Mustache hasn’t played that terribly when given the reigns this season with a 16:5 TD:INT ratio in nine games. Indy is seventh in DVOA against the pass so it’s not an easy matchup on paper but the price is so low for Minshew that I would remain interested.

*Update* The Jaguars are still starting Glennon and I have no reason to go there.

RB – Week 17 can bring up some weird names and Dare Ogunbowale might well be one of them. There’s no reason to let James Robinson (who is officially out) play in this game and Ogunbowale played over 70% of the snaps last week and handled 17 touches. Not too much came from it with just 78 scrimmage yards but I might be slightly more interested if Minshew plays. Indy is a strong run defense, as they are 11th in DVOA and have allowed the fifth-fewest rushing yards. They are in the bottom 10 in receptions allowed and Ogunbowale has some pass catching chops. He’s not the worst value on the board.

WR – Man, D.J. Chark is just going to keep staring at me under $5,000 again. He leads in target share at just 20% but the air yards share is excellent at 35.5%. Chark also leads in RZ and EZ targets so even in a tough spot against Xavier Rhodes, it’s such a low price. You can also play Laviska Shenault or Keelan Cole if you think Rhodes holds Chark in check. Their target share is about dead even and the receptions are tied at 52, so it’s a little harder to figure them out. I do prefer Shenault since they want to continue to develop him at the NFL level. He also gets more of Rock Ya-Sin, who we’ve picked on a little bit. Even in Week 1, Viska scored a touchdown against these Colts.

*Update* Chark is out for Jacksonville and Ya-Sin is out for the Colts. Cole might be he best option here since Rhodes could see plenty of Viska.

TE – Tyler Eifert had a couple weeks that I was willing to punt him in, but not this time. His snaps have gone under 60% and the target share is barely above 11%. We don’t need to dive this deep at the position.

D/ST – They’re the exact same price as the Jets so this is no contest for me.

Cash – None

GPP – Minshew, Ogunbowale, Chark, Viska

Colts

QB – The Colts need to win and they need some help so we can safely go after them in his game. Philip Rivers is at a nice price for cash games, but that might be about it. He only has there games over 20 DK all season and only once has he hit 4x at this current price tag. The matchup couldn’t get much easier as the Jags are 31st in DVOA against the pass but the Colts still might not need Rivers to throw it all over the yard. I would expect another solid day that won’t kill you, but nothing special from the veteran in this one.

RB – One of the best ways to win this game is to saddle up Jonathan Taylor and let him go to work. Only the Cowboys and Texans have allowed more rush yards to the running back position and they are 22nd in DVOA against the run. Taylor has become the feature back in Indy, even if it did happen later than we thought in the preseason. He hasn’t been under 16 touches since Week 10 and he’s shown his upside lately, with four straight games of at least 19 DK. This could be another spot like he had against the Raiders where he rushed for 150 yards and hit pay dirt twice. Taylor has scored five touchdowns in the past three weeks and should continue that streak this week.

WR – If you know which Colts receiver to play on a given week, let me know. The past two weeks have been Zach Pascal weeks after three straight games of T.Y. Hilton leading the charge. That’s coincided with Pascal suddenly leading the receivers in snaps, so he may represent the best value on the board. His 13% target share is only 1% behind Michael Pittman, and neither player has an imposing matchup. That’s being kind to the Jacksonville secondary, which is terrible.

If guessing, I would take the snaps with Pascal and hope the targets continue to follow. I’m not a huge fan of the Colts passing game because it seems like any given week you can be wrong. One of these receivers will have a pretty nice game, leaving them all as GPP targets only.

TE – Last week saw Jack Doyle and Trey Burton turn 10 combined targets into about 13 DK points. Since they both play so much and Mo Alie-Cox is still involved in playing time, it’s best to just skip this position entirely for Indy.

D/ST – They are absolutely in play as the Jags have 24 turnovers on the year and Indy has created 24 themselves. They’ve also gotten to the quarterback 34 times, my only complaint is the price is pretty high. I’ll likely go lower in salary.

Cash – Taylor, Rivers, D/ST

GPP – Pascal, Hilton, Pittman

Titans at Texans, O/U of 56 (Titans -7.5)

Titans

QB – The Titans are in the “win and clinch” scenario since their easiest path is just beating the Texans, winning the AFC South and getting the four seed. Knowing that, this entire team is in play and I honestly believe a Titans stack is one of the most appealing plays on this slate. They have the highest O/U of any game. Ryan Tannehill might seem a little pricey and he is, but just look at what Brandon Allen did to this defense last week. Brandon. Allen. Since becoming the starter for the Titans, Tannehill has put up stats comparable to Patrick Mahomes in some respects. That’s mind-blowing but true. He’s second in the league in pDB, ninth in points per game, sixth in touchdowns and first in true completion rate. Fire away in any format.

RB – Say it with me – all the Derrick Henry this week. If there is one player that I feel like I’m going to lock in everywhere, it’s Henry. Houston is the stone worst rush defense in football. The Titans absolutely need to win. Even when the Titans got housed Sunday in Green Bay, Henry had 23 touches. Houston is 30th in DVOA against the run and are the only team to surrender over 2,000 rushing yards to this point of the season. Henry is going to steamroll this defense and the first time around he had 43 DK points. I’m not going to be surprised if he approaches that score again this week.

WR – I’m putting basically no stock in the play from last week for the Titans, so A.J. Brown and Corey Davis are both strongly on my radar. Since the prices have closed, I’m just going to find the extra money for Brown. He has the target share lead at 25.1% and the air yards share at 34.4%. The receptions are dead even but Brown has 10 touchdowns to five for Davis. Brown should absolutely destroy this matchup. We’ve relentlessly targeted Vernon Hargreaves and the Houston secondary. We’re no stopping now.

TE – Jonnu Smith is still on the board as a target as well. We always chase tight ends that can score in this price range and Smith leads the team in RZ and EZ targets. That’s the kind of metrics we need because his 59.3% route rate is only 25th in the league. With a lower volume, the touchdown equity has to be higher and he’s scored the third-most touchdowns at the position. If you fade Henry and go full leverage with the passing game, Smith is a very interesting (and cheaper) way to get a second piece with Tannehill and AJB.

D/ST – No way. The Texans offense is still producing at a high level and the Titans defense have a bottom five pressure rate with little chance at racking up sacks even against the Texans.

Cash – Henry, AJB, Tannehill

GPP – Smith, Davis

Texans

QB – The expectation is Deshaun Watson is going to play, and he needs to if the Texans have any remote chance to field a competent offense. It’s really incredible what Watson is doing and he’s not getting the attention he deserves because Houston is so bad. Watson is sixth in pDB, sixth in points per game, ninth in touchdown passes, second in yards, third in true completion rate and fifth in rushing yards. There’s nothing he can’t do against any opponent. Provided his arm is ok after a scary looking hit, Watson is safe for any format.

RB – I didn’t want any David Johnson last week and boy was I WRONG. I couldn’t have been more wrong and credit to the staff who went after him. DJ looked like prime DJ in Arizona and rolled up 31.9 DK points on just 15 touches. Two touchdowns will certainly help and I still feel like I’m chasing if I play him again. The price has gone higher and the odds of him scoring twice and going over 100 rushing yards on so few touches are not great. Tennessee is 16th in DVOA against the run, which isn’t terrible. I still will likely be underweight to none just because of the salary and the massive efficiency. If the backfield is thin like it was last week, maybe I can get on board here.

WR – Just like DJ, I really whiffed on Brandin Cooks but I’m not willing to make that mistake again. If Cooks gets onto Malcolm Butler even just a handful of snaps, he’s going to absolutely torch him. Butler does not have the speed to keep up with Cooks in the least. Since Will Fuller has been suspended, Cooks has the air yards share lead at 34.5% and target share lead at 23.2%. He also has the co-lead in EZ targets and a pristine matchup. Even if the Texans put A’doree Jackson on him to match the speed factor, Jackson has barely played this year and I favor Cooks.

I still like Keke Coutee out of the slot as well. He’s only a little bit behind Cooks for the target share lead and has four RZ targets. Only DJ has more since Week 13 at five, and Coutee also has the EZ target lead with Cooks. He’s running out of the slot which means a lot of Desmond King. He’s been solid but has allowed nearly a 65% catch rate.

TE – If you have to play a tight end (not that I am), it has to be Jordan Akins. Since Fuller has been gone, he has a 14.1% target share and is fourth in raw targets. Even still, he’s only averaging about six PPR points per game and that’s not going to be worth much. Tennessee is just average to the tight end and has only given up seven scores on the season.

D/ST – There’s no reason to play this bad of a defense against a very efficient offense that has only given up 11 turnovers and 22 sacks.

Cash – Watson, Cooks

GPP – DJ, Coutee

Chargers at Chiefs, O/U of 44 (Chargers -3.5)

Chargers

QB – We’ve seen some volatility with the production for Justin Herbert lately, making him possibly a little shakier than he has been at any point this year. The seasonal metrics still look great. He’s eighth in points per game, 10th in passing touchdowns and seventh in passing yards. One facet that has fallen off a bit is the pDB as it’s down to 15th. It’s interesting to note that it’s not even exactly Keenan Allen related. Herbert basically didn’t have him against Vegas and he smashed that matchup. With Kansas City already saying they’re resting players, Herbert should have an easier time in this matchup. I do think there’s options that are safer in the price range.

RB – I am really torn on Austin Ekeler. On the one hand, he’s got a fantastic matchup since the Chiefs will A. not have their first-string offense in and B. KC is 29th in DVOA against the run. They’ve also allowed the most receiving yards to backs, which seems to be directly in Ekeler’s wheelhouse. Well, maybe it is. For some reason, Ekeler only has a total of seven targets in the past two games. That’s pretty baffling considering Allen has played all of 24 of a possible 134 snaps the past two weeks. We’re talking about a player that has a target share over 28% with Herbert but Ekeler is getting the ball less. I firmly believe that Ekeler could smash this matchup, but I’m a little more leery with how the past couple weeks have gone. Ekeler is a premier pass catching back in the league. It’s silly to take that away from the offense.

WR – Well, well, well, how the turntables…. it’s a reference from The Office (pour one out for those who just lost it on Netflix) and it could be Mike Williams week just one week after Stix swore him off. Allen is officially out this week and Williams has the air yards share lead with Allen in the lineup. He saw 10 targets last week and dropped a touchdown, which changes his day significantly. Williams is still far too cheap and should be a strong option against some depth pieces on KC.

Jalen Guyton and Tyron Johnson are fighting for the scraps and I lean Guyton with a higher target share and since he’s cheaper. That’s about all we can say with Williams almost a lock to get double-digit targets again.

TE – We’ll wait to see if Hunter Henry comes off the Covid list before making the call here.

*Update* Henry is not going to get activated for this game, so Williams should see another boatload of targets and RZ looks.

D/ST – Is it weird that I’m scared to play them even without the Chiefs playing the starters? The salary does them no favors, in all honesty. They do have 18 turnovers forced but the 26 sacks is very average. I think they’re just a bit too expensive, even for the situation. It’s still Andy Reid on the other sideline.

Chiefs

QB – When we consider using backup or cheap quarterbacks, Chad Henne will enter the discussion. The biggest issue is he won’t be throwing to Tyreek Hill or Travis Kelce that much because it would be quite silly to play those guys. Henne has not seen significant action since 2014 when he appeared in three games, so we’re dealing with mostly a mystery box here. On his carer, he only has a 59.3% completion rate (on some pretty poor teams to be fair) with a 58:63 TD:INT ratio. Part of me says Reid will be able to coax a solid game out of him as the Chargers are just 18th in DVOA against the pass. The other part of me says we don’t need to risk this and have better options even in this range, which is where I think I land. It would be different if he had the full offense at his disposal.

RB – We have an interesting situation at the running back spot. Last week the world assumed that Le’Veon Bell would be the lead back but it was actually Darrell Williams who had more touches and played 70% of the snaps. They aren’t priced like that in the least and Williams might have some strong value here. Sure, it’s not the usual KC offense but can we totally look past a back who can get 12-15 touches under $5,000? We shouldn’t. The Chiefs could opt for a more run-heavy approach as well and the Chargers are 28th against the run in DVOA. I’d want some more information on who’s playing on offense but Williams could step into being a big value.

WR – I would have to guess that we’ll have more value in Mecole Hardman and Demarcus Robinson. Both Hill and Sammy Watkins would stand to play a minimal role this week and Hardman and Robinson played over 60% of the snaps last week. I’m not sure if we can overstate just how much of the passing game Hill and Kelce leave behind if they don’t play. Of the 588 pass attempts for Mahomes, those two have accounted for 280 targets. That’s 47.6% of the targets and the air yards share combine for over 60%. That. Is. MASSIVE. I would expect Robinson will be more of a possession style receiver while Hardman is more of the explosive player. Both are well in play and Hardman has a slight edge in target share on the season. I lean Robinson in cash and Hardman in GPP but we’re guessing at how well this offense can function. It’s harder to say what the individual matchups will be because we haven’t seen the offense run without the main cogs.

TE – The other tight ends on the roster behind Kelce have combined for 15 targets. That’s it, that’s the list. Nick Keizer has the “lead” with nine targets but I think the exposure to the KC offense can safely stop here. I’d rather play Trautman from New Orleans at the punt price.

D/ST – My goal on this slate is to stick with defenses that will play the starters the whole time and KC does not fit that bill.

Cash – TBD with more info on how KC handles the rest of the starters

GPP – TBD

Raiders at Broncos, O/U of 51 (Raiders -3)

Raiders

QB – Derek Carr should continue to start as it stands, although I don’t wonder if Marcus Mariota gets the nod to see what he’s got with a week of prep. We’ll operate with Carr as the starter and he’s been better for real life football than fantasy this season. Carr sits between 12th and 18th in yards, touchdowns, points per game and pDB so he’s the definition of average. I think the perception is he doesn’t push the ball downfield enough, but that’s not exactly fair either. His 7.8 yards per attempt is actually eighth, which surprised me. It still just doesn’t come together for fantasy on the 14th most attempts. Denver is 11th in DVOA against the pass and Carr is such a bland option that I can’t get there myself.

RB – I feel like I have a very difficult time getting Josh Jacobs right. When I like him, he stinks and when I pass on him he blows up. This is kind of a good spot for him as the game should be competitive and he ran all over Denver in the first game for 30+ DK points. Denver is 25th in DVOA against the run and are bottom 10 in rushing yards allowed. Jacobs was a dud last week but needed an IV on game day and was fighting through illness. If he’s good to go, the spot is excellent for him as is the salary.

WR – The only receiver that is worth playing in my eyes is Nelson Agholor. No other receiver has a target share above 15% (and even Agholor is just 15.9%) so there’s not a lot of meat on the bone for any other option. I wish that Henry Ruggs was more involved in creative ways, but just 40 targets on the season is ridiculous. Anyways, Agholor is the only option here and he leads the team in air yards share at 28.5% which helps negate the lower target rate. Also, he leads in EZ targets at 12 and that is really respectable. Micheal Ojemudia stands to see most of Agholor and he’s just average by any metric.

TE – The main cog in the passing game continues to be Darren Waller and he is the clear pay-up spot at the position. With Kelce out (assuming), Waller is the alpha and his target share is approaching 28%. He only needs two receptions to hit 100 on the season and he was terrible in the first Denver matchup. I’m not sure that’s the biggest surprise since Denver has been very solid to tight ends this year. They’ve only allowed four scores which is tied for the third-fewest. Waller doesn’t need to score per se, but it would definitely help at the price. I lean just playing Andrews and spending up elsewhere like Ridley and Henry.

D/ST – I know it’s the Broncos, who lead the league with 32 turnovers but the Raiders defense is devoid of talent. We have other options that have a lot more than the 19 sacks the Raiders do on the season and the 15 turnovers that they’ve forced this year.

Cash – Waller, Jacobs

GPP – Carr, Agholor

Broncos

QB – In theory, this is the style of spot to consider Drew Lock. He’s only $5,000, the matchup is perfect for him since the Raiders are 22nd in DVOA against the pass and 25th in yardage allowed. On the flip side, we have so many other options that Lock is still a tough sell. He’s 30th in pDB at 0.37, 27th in points per game and 36th in true completion rate. This numbers are pretty bad, Broncos offensive pieces being injured duly noted. The flashes of fantasy relevance are so few that I’m not quite sure I have the guts. That may seem like a weird sentence considering some of the options we have on the table this week, but here we are.

RB – Melvin Gordon left a bad taste in our mouths after last week but I definitely have interest in going right back to the well. He got 16 touches, although how you don’t target MG3 in the passing game when your quarterback is a trash can is beyond me. Phillip Lindsay is done for the season, which means that only Royce Freeman and LeVante Bellamy are behind him for touches. They combined for just eight touches so we know they aren’t real threats. Vegas is 31st in DVOA against the run and and are well over 2,100 scrimmage yards. Have a short memory here and realize that MG3 is still under $6,000.

WR – If we want part of the measure about how poorly Lock played, Jerry Jeudy was targeted a massive 15 times last week and went 6/61. That’s almost defying all logic for a kid as talented as he is. I’m sure it wasn’t all on Lock, but the inefficiency can really sour a day. Jeudy is the leader in air yards share at 31.1% and he’s now pulled ahead for the target share lead at 21.5%. He’s really the only one that I’m looking to play, although Tim Patrick enters the fray if K.J. Hamler is out. Hamler has a 12.8% target share that would need to be absorbed, bumping up both Jeudy and Patrick.

TE – Another victim of some shaky quarterback play was Noah Fant, although he caught more than half of his passes. Fant has been a player all year that you can play in cash or on short slates, but the ceiling just hasn’t been there. After Week 2, Fant has one game over 12.5 DK. Some of that has been his injuries but this still hasn’t proven to be a GPP play at his price. He does have the co-lead in RZ targets so that helps a bit but the Raiders have been average to the position all year with only five scores allowed.

D/ST – The Broncos have only forced 12 turnovers, second-fewest in the league. They are respectable in the sacks department at 39 but I think there’s better punt options since Carr has only been sacked 23 times on the season.

Cash – MG3, Fant

GPP – Jeudy, Lock

Cardinals at Rams, O/U of 40.5 (Cardinals -3.5)

Cardinals

QB – The Cards have to be feeling lucky that they’ll have Kyler Murray under center this week since the opposition isn’t so lucky. They have a shot at the playoffs with needing a little bit of help, so we shouldn’t worry about that angle. This is a tough matchup, as the Rams sit third in DVOA against the pass. We should note that Kyler managed to score 18 DK the first meeting with only five rushing attempts. That’s fairly impressive and the three touchdown passes helped goose the score. I do prefer other options like Watson or Rodgers or Brady, but Kyler shouldn’t be ignored either. He’s sixth in pDB, first in points per game and top 12 in passing touchdowns and yards. Add in the second-most rushing yards and touchdowns and the ceiling is easy to find.

RB – Kenyan Drake is always sort of in play since his price always beckons, but he almost needs to score to hit 3x, let alone 4x. He has no receiving floor with a 5.7% target share on the year. He’s totally reliant on his rushing yards and the Rams don’t present the easiest spot for that. They match their third ranked DVOA against the pass with the same rank against the run. They’ve also allowed the sixth-fewest rushing yards. Drake has a big lead in RZ carries at 55-23 next to Kyler, but it never seems to work out the way. Chase Edmonds also lurks with 11 RZ targets and 13 attempts himself, so I’m not that interested in either.

*Update* Edmonds is questionable, so Drake could be a little more interesting if he’s out.

WR – I wonder what the field thinks of DeAndre Hopkins this week because he could be a great play, especially if he’s unpopular. He went for 19.2 DK the first time around and had a whopping 13 targets. The presence of Jalen Ramsey didn’t really bother him or Kyler as far as workload. He only went for 52 yards so if the yards go up, Nuk could go off for a bigger day.

The secondary target in Christian Kirk has my eye to some extent as well. He’s very cheap and after a month of very little work, he saw 10 targets last week. The Cards were also down big that game which may not happen here. The script is likely different but Kirk is clearly the second-best bet as far as air yards share would lead us.

TE – We saw why I’ve been so loathe to play Dan Arnold lately since he went under five DK points and played under 50% of the snaps. There’s not much of a reason to go after a player in a timeshare with a 8.1% target share on the season.

D/ST – They generate the sixth-highest pressure rate with a 39% blitz rate and that’s got a chance to confuse a backup. The 46 sacks is top five in the league and the 19 turnovers forced are very solid as well. If you’re not going after a true punt, the Cards shake out as one of the better mid-range options.

Cash – D/ST

GPP – Nuk, Murray, Kirk, Drake

Rams

QB – John Wolford does not have any experience at the NFL level, which is not a great mix to walk in Week 17 with a playoff spot on the line. Arizona is 10th in DVOA against he pass and we honestly have no idea what to expect from him. What I expect from the Rams in general is to try and smash mouth their way to victory. They already rank seventh in rushing attempts per game, so the run-heavy approach isn’t going to change. Wolford will have to make a throw or two to loosen up the defense, but this isn’t something I want.

RB – This backfield is a mess. Cam Akers isn’t officially out, but still isn’t practicing with an ankle injury. Malcolm Brown is questionable and Darrell Henderson is on IR. If Akers is out, we’re looking at possibly Xavier Jones with a backup quarterback and not having one of their top wideouts. Yikes.

*Update* Akers is a game time decision on he last game of the slate, so there’s not a ton of safety of using him. The potential for this offense to be a disaster is too high for my liking.

WR – If we have even a little bit of faith in Wolford or coach Sean McVay, Robert Woods might well be a bargain. Cooper Kupp is “not likely to be available” according to McVay which leaves a gaping hole on the passing game. Kupp was responsible for 23.7% of the target share and 22.7% of the air yards share, which now needs replaced. Woods is the obvious guy to step up, as his numbers basically mirror Kupp’s all the way around. My fear is there is simply not enough talent around him to make this play work. Patrick Peterson has been bad but Arizona might be able to triple cover Woods in this game.

That slo brings Josh Reynolds and Van Jefferson to consideration, but I’m not sure how much. Jefferson only has a 20.3% snap rate so this would be a big leap for him to play a ton of snaps. Reynolds plays a lot more at 71.4% but I think the answer is still in the run game. The Rams will play a lot of two tight end sets if I had to guess, so this is mostly just Woods and maybe a 1/20 share of Reynolds. Someone still has to get them the ball.

TE – I might actually play Tyler Higbee a little bit even though his route rate continues to be low at 55.7%. I don’t think he runs more routes, but the snap share of 78.7% might go up this game, as will Gerald Everett. Higbee only has an 11.3% target share on the year and five RZ looks, but he’ll help replace the gap from Kupp. He’s not a high priority target, but is a potential GPP option.

D/ST – I never really mind them, but containing Kyler can be a challenge. They only sacked him twice the first time around and that was when he really wasn’t running to help nurse a shoulder injury. I will have other priorities, even though the Rams are always capable of a big effort with 49 total sacks and 21 turnovers forced.

Cash – None

GPP – Woods, Higbee, Reynolds, D/ST

Seahawks at 49ers, O/U of 46 (Seahawks -6.5)

Seahawks

QB – I’m not sure if anyone has noticed, but Russell Wilson hasn’t been cooking much of anything lately. In his last six games, he only has one contest with more than 32 attempts and that just makes little sense. The Seahawks continue to try and go back to their roots of running and defense, and Russ has suffered. He hasn’t thrown for over 263 yards in six games and he’s been over two passing touchdowns just once. In four of those six, he’s only thrown one. The volume has really taken a hit and I’m not sure I’d want to spend on him at all outside of MME formats. The 49ers won’t roll over and die here and have the eighth-best DVOA against the pass.

RB – Chris Carson is limited at practice again but that has been the case for weeks. Seattle does have an outside shot at the number one seed (a small check mark for Russ too, but still) so I expect Carson to have another 18 touches or more. The 49ers are tough on the ground too but Carson’s price might be the most appealing of Seattle. He’s going to get 15 carries and his role in the passing game is always underrated with an 11.9% share. He’s played at least 63% of the snaps the past two weeks so I trust him in all formats.

WR – You can’t make me stop playing D.K. Metcalf, I’ll tell you that. If I’m spending the salary on one of the Seattle studs between him and Russ, it’s DK likely 90 times out of 100. It’s been tough sledding for him too with the downturn of Russ but he still has just under a 40% air yards share and leads in targets by two. Metcalf almost seems due one more monster game in the regular season and the matchup is a little easier now with Richard Sherman not active. Jason Verrett has been excellent this year and is top 30 in most metrics we value, but he’s quite small against Metcalf.

Tyler Lockett has not been a part of my lineups almost the entire year and that will continue. Even though he is under $6,000 and only has two fewer targets than Metcalf, he’s paid off this price for 3x just three times all year. He’s had two good games, two nuclear ones and then a bunch of replacement value games and he’s too expensive for that.

TE – I will not play a Seattle tight end on anything but a showdown slate and those are pretty much over for the season, so I’m out. Jacob Hollister has 13 targets over the past month with a ceiling of 9.7 and floor of 3.0. He has to score for just 3x and the 49ers have allowed just four touchdowns on the season. It’s too thin of a play.

D/ST – If you’re not looking at Arizona, Seattle fits the bill here. They’ve climbed to 16th in total DVOA, which is impressive for how bad they were to start the season. They haven’t scored under five DK points since Week 9 and the addition of Carlos Dunlap was quite the add. A healthy Jamal Adams was monstrous too and the 49ers are the walking wounded on offense.

Cash – Carson, D/ST

GPP – Metcalf, Russ

49ers

QB – We’ll be treated to another C.J. Beathard game and I’m really not willing to bite on the last game. Sure, he managed to throw three touchdowns but he lost a fumble and went just 13-22 for 182 yards. That’s not going to get it done on most games and the only way you can make the case is in garbage time. I’d rather take chances elsewhere with some more talented options. I think Seattle causes some issues for the passing game this week.

RB – I’m not sure if I thought I would say this two weeks in a row, but Jeff Wilson is probably still too cheap. Even if you take away the unlikely receiving score, he still would have been over 20 DK points and that will play. Do I think he rushes for 183 yards again? Not particularly but if he can manage another 20 touches I’m going to be interested. Seattle is 10th in DVOA against the run but I trust the San Fran system more than that ranking. They have a good running game and it can give teams fits. If this game stays close, Wilson can still do some serious damage. He played 70% of the snaps last week and that is appealing at this salary.

WR – San Fran is down to Kendrick Bourne and Richie James as their lead options with Brandon Aiyuk and Deebo Samuel on the shelf. I have mild interest especially in Bourne since I don’t think the 49ers can run and hide in this game. They’re going to need some plays in the passing game and Bourne is one of the best bets to move the ball. We can’t take the 14% target share too seriously since the top two options are out, so Bourne is a solid value. James has one massive game to his credit, so he’s a bare minimum dart throw but probably not much more. I do have to assume that Seattle matches Bourne with Shaquill Griffin, and that could be an issue. Griffin has allowed just a 1.60 pPT and a 10.4 YPR.

TE – I honestly don’t know why the 49ers would let George Kittle play. He’s that dude and I know he wants to play, but it would be silly of the organization to let him. He’s got his money, and it’s been a long season filled with injuries. If he’s active, I wouldn’t mess with him after a 50% snap share last week. He only had five targets which won’t pay the bills at his price. Just play Mark Andrews in a game the Ravens need to win.

D/ST – I prefer the Seattle defense, but any unit against the Seahawks is in play. Wilson has been sacked at a top five rate and that can lead to mistakes. The 49ers only have 28 on the season and are beat up on that side of the ball, which is why I’d just play Seattle.

Cash – Wilson, possibly Bourne

GPP – James

Core Four

Derrick Henry, Alexander Mattison, Jarvis Landry, Myles Gaskin

I want to stress that Mattison is CASH ONLY to match the chalk. The staff is split on him. Jason wrote him up for his content, Stix hates him. He’s projecting at massive ownership in cash, so you just have to eat that. In GPP, I’m going heavy on Tennessee stacks. Henry speaks for himself this week, while I want big parts of Gaskin and Landry. The former will likely have at least 20 touches and Landry should have a field day against a Steelers defense who isn’t playing anyone.

Win and In

Tennessee – Tannehill, Henry, Brown, Davis, Smith

Miami – Tua, Gaskin, Bowden, Gesicki (possibly Parker)

Baltimore – Jackson, Dobbins, Brown, Andrews

Cleveland – Baker, Chubb, Hunt, Landry, Higgins, Hooper

Los Angeles – Wolford, TBD on backs, Woods, Higbee

Chicago – Trubisky, Monty, Robinson, Mooney, Graham

Win and Need Help

Indy – Rivers, Taylor, Pascal, TY, Pittman

Arizona – Kyler, Drake, Hopkins

Dallas (and they won’t know the Washington result while playing, so they are really one of the most appealing teams) – Dalton, Zeke, Gallup, Cooper, Lamb, Schultz

New York – Jones, Gallman, Shepard, Engram

Playing for Seeding

Buffalo – Allen, Singletary/Moss, Diggs, Knox

Pittsburgh – Technically they are, but have already benched Big Ben. My interest is really just Rudolph and Washington

Green Bay – Rodgers, Jones, Adams, Tonyan

New Orleans – Brees, Murray

Seattle – This is NOT likely, so they run the risk of benching early. Russ, Carson, Metcalf

Tampa Bay – Brady, RoJo, Evans, AB, Godwin, Gronkowski

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Thanks a ton to Adam for filling in the past two weeks while I was out of town for my bachelor party then strictly prepping for the DraftKings World Championship! I hope everyone had a Merry Christmas and a wonderful holiday season thus far! Lets get back to it and are dive into a nice 10-game Week 16 NFL DFS slate. Also, good luck to everyone who made their season long Championships!!

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

  • CHALK REPORT: David Montgomery, Austin Ekeler, Le’Veon Bell, and Travis Kelce project to be incredibly high in cash game ownership (over 35%). I think we’ll likely want to lock in AT LEAST ONE of them in our NFL DFS cash lineups. It’s surprisingly a decent spread on ownership this week.
  • Small player pool this week and you’ll notice that in the article.
  • 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. Patrick Mahomes ($8,500 DK / $9,400 FD) – He’s the most pricey quarterback on the slate and likely the highest in ownership. We don’t care about either of those things this week. It’s Patrick Mahomes, at home, against a banged up Atlanta Falcons secondary who are giving up an expected minimum of 290 passing yards. Not to mention the Chiefs just lost their lead running back, Clyde Edwards-Helaire.

    Mahomes and this passing attack are going to go nuts.
  2. Jalen Hurts ($7,000 DK / $8,200 FD) – If you need some savings, ride the hot hand of Jalen Hurts against Dallas. Both of these teams have been playing and an impressive quick pace and should offer little-to-no defense. Hurts clearly is a more than just a Taysom Hill like quarterback as Pederson and company called over 40 pass plays last week. They trust this kid and so should you.
  3. Mitch Trubisky ($5,700 DK / $7,200 FD) – If you need a value play, look no further than Trubisky against the 32nd ranked pass defense (DVOA). Jacksonville is an absolute trash football team right now and clearly will be trying to lose this game to sure up the #1 overall draft pick.

    Honorable Mention: Justin Herbert

Running Backs

  1. David Montgomery ($7,700 DK / $7,800 FD) – Extremely valuable on FanDuel as opposed to DraftKings, but likely to be the highest owned running back on both sites. Montgomery has been on fire lately and likely won’t be slowed down in this matchup against Jacksonville. I don’t think Montgomery is a must-play (on DraftKings), but he’s likely the top-dog running back on a small Week 16 NFL DFS slate.

    Personally, give me the guy below him.
  2. Miles Sanders ($7,000 DK / $7,300 FD) – On a small slate with not a whole lot of running back talent, I will make sure to roster one of the most talented runners on the slate (toss up between Sanders and Nick Chubb). In this case, I’m going with Miles Sanders on both sites due to the significant discount. Doug Pederson is done getting cute and not unleashing Miles Sanders as he’s racked up over 80% of the snaps in the past two weeks.

    In a game with no defense, give me all of the Miles Sanders I can get against the 25th ranked run defense (DVOA).
  3. Melvin Gordon ($5,600 DK / $6,400 FD) – ALL THE WAY IN ON MELVIN GORDON.
    – Revenge game
    – No Philip Lindsay
    – The Chargers are one of the worst run defenses in the NFL
    – The Meme Play of Week 16
https://twitter.com/StixPicks/status/1342876494297767942

4. Le’Veon Bell ($5,800 DK / $6,400 FD) – With no CEH, Le’Veon Bell is an easy freesquare this week. Personally, I don’t think he’s a must play either, but this is a very affordable way to get exposure to the best offense on this slate (by a mile). If he’s going to be 40% or higher in NFL DFS cash game ownership, it won’t hurt to roster Bell. A double-digit, home-favorite running back is something we always invest in.

5. Gio Bernard ($4,800 DK / $6,000 FD) – Way too cheap on DraftKings against a Houston defense that absolutely bleeds fantasy points to opposing running backs and ranks 29th in run defense DVOA. Yikes.

Honorable Mention: Nick Chubb, Austin Ekeler, Kareem Hunt

Wide Receivers

  1. Calvin Ridley ($8,500 DK / $9,400 FD) – Too expensive for me, but it’s hard not to love the only game in town for the Atlanta Falcons, especially when they’ll be chasing points all game long.
  2. Allen Robinson ($7,700 DK / $7,500 FD) – His pricing on FanDuel makes zero sense so absolutely lock him in over there and likely do the same on DraftKings. This is a must-win game for the Bears (I find it very hard to believe this game will even be close) but they’ll get Allen Robinson going early in this game and take advantage of the worst secondary in the NFL.
  3. Jarvis Landry ($6,900 DK / $6,500 FD) – Keep an eye on this game’s status with Cleveland having COVID-19 issues, but if it goes, Landry is in another elite spot on the inside of the Jets’ 29th ranked pass defense. Cleveland is in a must-win game and won’t hesitate to score at will to start this game.
  4. Robert Woods ($7,000 DK / $7,300 FD) & Cooper Kupp ($6,600 DK / $6,800 FD) – We have picked on Seattle’s secondary all year long and I refuse to quit now after a few poor weeks from the Rams’ offense. McVay will be on a mission to right the ship this week and I’m expecting a big output for the Rams’ passing attack with Cam Akers out with an injury.
  5. Tee Higgins ($4,700 DK / $5,800 FD) & AJ Green ($3,400 DK / $5,500 FD) – No Tyler Boyd = load up on Tee Higgins and/or AJ Green. I strongly prefer the upside in Tee Higgins who will see a lot of Vernon Hargreaves in coverage, but you can certainly punt down to AJ Green as well if you don’t use Higgins. Houston’s defense as a whole is trash.
  6. Jamison Crowder ($4,500 DK ONLY) – Not in love with the play, but if this game stays on schedule for Sunday, Crowder’s price is way too low for the expected target share against a poor Cleveland secondary.

    Honorable Mention: Brandin Cooks, Tyler Lockett, Mike Williams (if Keenan Allen is OUT), Cam Sims

Tight Ends

  1. Travis Kelce ($8,500 DK / $8,800 FD) – It’s Travis Kelce and it’s a matchup against the Falcons (27th in DVOA against opposing tight ends), but most of all, it’s Travis Kelce.
  2. Mark Andrews ($5,700 DK ONLY) – He needs to be priced up over $6K. If you can’t afford Kelce, Mark Andrews is a clear number two option here at the tight end position.
  3. Logan Thomas ($4,900 DK / $6,000 FD) – Helluva price hike over the past few weeks but this dude is just an absolute target machine (regardless of who plays QB). Better yet, Terry McLaurin is likely out for this matchup. Thomas will be a busy man on Sunday.

    Honorable Mention: Noah Fant, Hayden Hurst, Dallas Goedert

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. Chicago Bears
  2. Cleveland Browns
  3. Washington Football Team
  4. Houston Texans
  5. Carolina Panthers
  6. Denver Broncos

NFL DFS Cash Game Sample Lineup

QB: Patrick Mahomes
RB: Giovani Bernard
RB: Melvin Gordon
WR: Tee Higgins
WR: Jamison Crowder
WR: Cooper Kupp
TE: Mark Andrews
FLEX: Miles Sanders
DST: Denver Broncos

Good luck this week!

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NFL Game By Game Breakdown Saturday Special

It’s that time of the year again when the NFL is playing on Saturday as well and they’re back with three games this week! We need to know who to play and for what reasons, and that’s what the NFL Game By Game Breakdown Saturday Special is all about! I believe this slate is cash and GPP viable, so let’s dig in and see where we’re heading.

Buccaneers at Lions, O/U of 53.5 (Bucs -9.5)

Buccaneers – Pace is 9th

QB – When we’re looking at quarterbacks that could have a ceiling game on this three game slate, Tom Brady has to be an option. The question is whether he’s a strong option and that’s where things get dicey. The Bucs are heavy favorites and Brady wouldn’t be in line to push the envelope. Just look at the past two weeks. In Week 14, he threw it 23 times in a comfortable win. When he had to get them on the comeback trail against the Falcons, he threw it 45 times and went for 26 DK. There’s really not a lot else to pick at for Brady. He’s 12th in pDB at 0.49, fourth in touchdown passes, first in RZ attempts and fifth in passing yards. The only aspect that is scary is the competitiveness of this game (or lack thereof).

RB – It appears that Ronald Jones will still be out this Saturday and that means we can go right back to the well with Leonard Fournette. Last week with Jones out, Fournette played 66% of the snaps and had 17 touches. If he gets that workload again, he should destroy this price tag. Fournette is more suited to be in a leading game script and the fact he still got 17 touches last week is fantastic. Detroit is down to 28th in DVOA against the run and have given up the fourth-most rushing yards and fifth-most receiving yards. Fournette is a stone cold lock at this salary.

WR – The Bucs have a three-headed monster at receiver but Mike Evans is just far too cheap for this matchup. Really, every single one is and I can easily get on board with Evans and Antonio Brown even if not playing Brady. Evans continues to lead in targets and air yards share since AB has walked through the door. Additionally, he’s been the main option in the passing game in the RZ and EZ. Evans is still leading with 10 RZ targets and when Brady leads in RZ attempts, that can be a lot of points in a hurry. Amani Oruwariye is going to see Evans the most, and he’s allowed a 1.90 pPT and a 14.7 YPR over 92 targets.

The Lions have a revolving door at corner right now, so the matchup for AB is a little murky. If Darryl Roberts is active, it’s likely up to him. He’s only played about 51% of the snaps but over 41 targets, he’s allowed a 73.2% completion rate. That’s a huge number. Justin Coleman should face Chris Godwin in the slot. Godwin is ever so slightly third in targets and that’s why I would lean playing Evans and AB at the salaries. If Brown is going to take over some of the target share and Evans has RZ work, Godwin is in no man’s land salary-wise. Coleman has only been targeted 36 times but has allowed a 90.7 passer rating.

TE – At this juncture, Rob Gronkowski needs the touchdown to be worth playing. He’s been targeted at the second-highest rate in the RZ and EZ behind Evans since Week 9, but the outcomes have been volatile to say the least. Gronkowski has three games under eight DK points and two over 13. It’s interesting to note that Detroit has given up only the third-fewest yards to the position but have allowed seven scores. He’s certainly not my favorite option and I’m likely playing him only with Brady. You could make the argument he’ll be chalky given the price on this short of a slate.

D/ST – The high end for this defense has certainly fallen off lately and I’m not real convinced I want to pay up. They do have 43 sacks and that’s always appealing, as are the 21 turnovers which are tied for the fifth-most. Detroit has allowed the fifth-most sacks which is a good match but let’s see how the defenses line up with salary.

Cash – Fournette, Evans, Brown, D/ST

GPP – Brady, Godwin, Gronkowski

Lions – Pace is 7th

QB – Matthew Stafford is a gamer, you have to give him that. He couldn’t have been near 100% last week and he still gave it a go. Now, that didn’t amount to much for fantasy and this matchup is just average by some respects. Tampa has fallen to seventh in DVOA against the pass but at the same time, they’ve gotten tagged multiple times through the air lately. They are down to 25th in passing yards allowed per game and over the past three games, they rank third-worst at 320 yards per contest. The defense for the Lions should have issues and Stafford is likely to face a negative game script. The veteran for the Lions is only 22nd in pDB but ninth in yards and attempts with 23 touchdown passes. He offers intrigue, but only in MME formats.

RB – It’s not a good matchup on paper, but D’Andre Swift is clearly the man in the backfield. He went back up to 19 touches and over 60% of the snaps again, a welcome sign after injury. In those two weeks, Swift has seven RZ carries and two RZ targets. That’s the kind of usage that can pay off even in a tougher matchup and if an “expensive” back comes in chalky, Swift is an intriguing pivot. Considering Tampa gives up the fewest rush yards in the league and is third in DVOA against the run, I think Swift is a really strong pivot from other options in GPP. Tampa has allowed the most receptions to backs and that’s something Swift can really exploit.

WR – The matchup for Marvin Jones almost doesn’t matter as I’m not sure how you argue with the target share at this price and it’s hard to avoid it. He’s under $5,000 and since Week 10 he’s been getting fed the ball. Jones has a target share approaching 28% and the air yards share is almost 45%. For this amount, I almost don’t care how the matchup looks and Tampa has struggled in that secondary a lot lately. Carlton Davis was shutdown for a portion of the year but has gone backwards. He’s up to a 1.80 pPT, 12.6 YPR and a 68.5% completion rate. Jones is very likely to be a staple of my lineups.

Another player that is just too cheap (and I can’t believe I’m saying this) is Mohamed Sanu. He’s played at least 59% of the snaps in his last three games and he’s the bare-minimum on DK. Do I expect anything massive out of him? Not exactly but when a player is only $3,000 and he has the same amount of targets as Danny Amendola. The veteran slot receiver does have an incredible matchup. Sean Murphy-Bunting has been a disaster in the slot with 900 yards allowed on 66 receptions for a 127.5 passer rating and a 2.20 pPT. I prefer Amendola for this reason. What’s interesting is I’m not sure we need to punt with these receivers with no big spends at RB. However, they are a perfect fit if you need a cheap guy.

TE – We talked about T.J. Hockenson as a consistent force for a tight end and he went out and completely and utterly laid an egg. He was only targeted four times, which is tied for his season low mark. Tampa is in the bottom 10 in DK points given up per game and it’s not like Hockenson isn’t a major part of this offense. Even in the time frame of Jones getting peppered, Hockenson is still managing a 19.5% target share and is tied for the RZ target lead. He might be under $5,000 but he’s shown so little ceiling this year that I don’t think I end up playing him that much. I’ll likely get my Detroit exposure from Jones, Swift and possibly punt Amendola.

D/ST – The Lions have only managed 19 sacks all season and 12 turnovers. The 12 takeaways are tied for the second-least in the league and those kinds of numbers won’t cut it, even at a punt price.

Cash – Jones, Swift, Hockenson

GPP – Stafford, Amendola, Sanu

49ers at Cardinals, O/U of 49.5 (Cardinals -4.5)

49ers – Pace is 21st

QB – Nick Mullens left the game early last week but not before he turned the ball over another three times contrasted with his two touchdown throws. He’s the likeliest of the quarterbacks to either get pulled from the game or pull a 25 spot while mounting a furious comeback (that he helped create in the first place).

Mullens is out which leaves the 49ers down to C.J. Beathard. It’s a short slate and all options need explored, but I can’t see a reason to go here. Think of how poorly Mullens has played this season and then ask yourself why he hasn’t been pulled yet. You know why? Beathard is even worse and can’t wrestle the starter’s job away. Over 438 career attempts, he’s under a 58% completion rate and a 14:13 TD:INT ratio. We don’t need this cheap of a quarterback and even if we do, we can turn to Vegas.

RB – Stop me if you’ve heard this one before – we need clarity on the San Francisco running backs. Raheem Mostert and Jeff Wilson are both questionable. That could potentially leave Tevin Coleman and Jerrick McKinnon as the only players left standing here and that’s about the only way I want a piece of this backfield.

*Update* OK, so we know that Mostert is out. That really opens it up to use Wilson, who was not listed on the injury report Wednesday. Wilson played 46% of the snaps last game and that was with Mostert active. He is pretty cheap but the matchup doesn’t do him any favors. Arizona is 14th in DVOA against the run and 10th best in DK points allowed per game. I have a strong feeling I’m going just two running backs on this slate but Wilson is on the board for GPP.

WR – It’s a little funny to compare Marvin Jones to Brandon Aiyuk from just a metrics standpoint. Let’s turn it back to Week 7, which is when Aiyuk started to catch fire. He extended his streak of 19 DK points or more to six this past week and most of it has come without Deebo Samuel. Since Deebo is out, Aiyuk will continue to be the man in the receiving corps. He’s owned a 30.7% target share and a 39.4% air yards share. He’s nearly $2,000 more than Jones. That’s not to talk smack on Aiyuk, who is an excellent play. It’s to highlight how mis-priced Jones is and we might start our receiving corps with these two players.

I’m not terribly worried about the quarterback switch in playing Aiyuk. I can envision multiple screens and short passes to make it easy on Beathard. Arizona corner Patrick Peterson is statistically washed with a 118.0 passer rating allowed and a 2.10 pPT.

Don’t get too fooled by the game log for Kendrick Bourne. He’s sill cheap but he caught a Hail Mary at the end of the game to goose his score in a pretty big way, otherwise it was mostly a quiet day. What was a little surprising was he only played 50% of the snaps last week and Richie James was right about 65% and he’s a good bit cheaper. I think you only play one and James would be the favorite. Not only did he have the snaps advantage, but he saw seven targets on top of it. Having reps with Beathard in practice doesn’t hurt either. These are players that could suffer with a third-string quarterback though in real game action. I don’t think it’s wise to get too carried away.

TE – I would not expect George Kittle to be back for this game even though Coach Kyle Shanahan said it’s possible and he would play if healthy. If Kittle is active, I’m plying him at $5,000. It’s really not even a question. That would be the biggest factor to hurt Aiyuk and his target share. Kittle is typically near the $7,000 range. He has a 23.9% target share when active this year.

If not, it’s going to be Ross Dwelley and Jordan Reed manning the position again. The former plays more snaps but the latter is the pass catcher, with a 28-17 target lead since Week 7. He has been touchdown or bust with just nine receptions over the past four games but he’s also under $3,000. If we’re loading up with other skill positions, Reed makes sense to punt. The matchup stinks as the Cards have catapulted to the sixth-fewest DK points allowed per game. Just get us into the end zone and we’d be golden.

D/ST – I don’t want to play against a healthy Cardinals offense although the price is fine. The 49ers are an average defense and just got housed in Dallas. There’s no doubt that the Cards have more talent and they’ve only given up 22 sacks on the season.

Cash – Kittle if active, Aiyuk and Reed as a punt if he’s not

GPP – Aiyuk if Kittle is in, Wilson, James, Bourne

Cardinals – Pace is 2nd

QB – Is Kyler Murray the chalk on the slate? Most likely. Is there anything wrong with eating the chalk at the position? None whatsoever. I don’t think any other option (including Brady) possesses the style of ceiling that Kyler has shown time and again this season. Half of Kyler’s games have resulted in over 28 DK this year and an eighth was 27.8. Murray has run the ball over 20 times these past two weeks, which is a fantastic sign after his shoulder issue hindered him for nearly a month. In the first game this year, Murray got San Fran for almost 28 DK and they had a far healthier defense at the time. Kyler has the lead in points per game at his position with his 11 rushing touchdowns and he’s still in the top 12 in yards and passing touchdowns. Eat the chalk.

RB – The floor for Kenyan Drake is really terrifying and I’m not sure I can get there with him this week. Even during the stretch that Murray wasn’t running as much, Drake had two games of 16 DK or under. The only solid game he had was a double touchdown day against the Patriots. Over the course of the full season, Drake has only played about 57% of the snaps and is not that involved the passing game. His 5.8% target share is really discouraging. When we get a back that doesn’t really catch passes and has to score to pay off, he’s really not that interesting. If we’re playing anyone, Chase Edmonds makes more sense for cheaper. He’s going to get some carries and has some passing game upside with a 13.4% target share. Additionally, Edmonds has the second-most RZ targets on the entire team.

WR – How can we not want to stack Kyler with DeAndre Hopkins? I don’t believe it’s a coincidence that the past two weeks have seen Nuk go nuts when Kyler’s arm stopped bugging him. Hopkins has a 32.9% air yards share and a 29.2% target share in this offense, which is just silly. He’s only 11 targets off the league lead and the price is more than fair. Just like Kyler, the SF matchup doesn’t worry me at all. He went for 32 DK in their first meeting and this stack is my starting point, regardless of contest or format. Richard Sherman should see plenty of Hopkins and Sherman has allowed a 64.7% completion rate on 34 targets.

We can look at Christian Kirk or Larry Fitzgerald as a lower priced option, but neither are huge standouts. The target share is about identical at 15.7% but Fitzgerald gets the better matchup in the slot. Kirk has to deal with Jason Verrett, who is top 20 in both pPT and passer rating allowed on 65 targets this year. Fitzgerald gets Dontae Johnson on the slot and that’s advantage Fitzgerald stats-wise. Johnson has only played part-time but over 28 targets, he’s allowed a 64.3% catch rate. I believe there are better plays than the secondary Arizona receivers.

TE – I could see playing Dan Arnold on this slate, although I’m still just not buying it that much. He’s such a low target player in this scheme at 7.8% and he’s mostly been getting “lucky” for lack of a better word. The Niners are the best team in the league in points per game to the position, and I’d just rather play Reed. Even when they get to the red zone, Murray can run it, Edmonds gets RZ targets and Hopkins is sill there.

D/ST – This unit makes the most sense at price I believe. I know they struggled with Jalen Hurts, but Beathard does not equal Hurts. Mullens has been pressured 28.9% of the time and I don’t think Beathard is going to fare much better from that perspective. Considering the Cards have 43 sacks, this is the best mix of price and upside to my eyes.

Cash – Kyler, Hopkins, D/ST

GPP – Fitzgerald, Drake, Kirk, Arnold

Dolphins at Raiders, O/U of 48 (Dolphins -3)

Dolphins – Pace is 27th

QB – I completely stayed away from Tua Tagovailoa last week against the Patriots but he still managed a very respectable fantasy game. He’s not likely to replicate two rushing touchdowns very often but the Raiders defense doesn’t represent much of a challenge. They rank 21st in DVOA against the pass after all. There’s some aspects to pick at with his game so far but one aspect that looks great is the completion rate under pressure. He’s 12th so far in the league at 44.4% and when he’s kept clean, we’re looking at 77.2%. The pDB is 0.42 and that’s not great, but it’s not terrible either. Given the salaries, I’m going to prefer the quarterback on the other side of this game but I wouldn’t be surprised if Tua was the lowest-rostered quarterback on the slate. That’s interesting in MME formats.

RB – The great news for the Miami backfield is they subscribe to the workhorse back theory. Salvon Ahmed was the best back active last week and he had 24 touches and a touchdown. However, Myles Gaskin is back for this week and is a great play on his own. Vegas can be had on the ground in a big way. Only six teams have given up more than the 1,500 rushing yards to backs the Raiders have surrendered. On top of that, they’ve also allowed the eighth-most receiving yards and rank 31st in DVOA against the run. I suppose there is slight concern about a timeshare after an extended absence for Gaskin but that’s not how the Dolphins have handled the backfield so far. Even at 15 touches, Gaskin is not expensive enough.

WR – This unit is really beat up for the Dolphins right now. DeVante Parker and Jakeem Grant both missed last week, leaving Lynn Bowden as their lead receiver. While I like what Bowden has been bringing that past few weeks, he’s not capable of being the alpha in the passing game yet and the results showed that. If Parker is back, that helps Bowden a lot because he’s going to draw the defense towards him and let Bowden have easier coverages.

Bowden also has some extra motivation here as the Raiders drafted him in the third round and traded him to Miami almost immediately. That’s a little rarer in the NFL. The rookie is in the slot almost 60% of the time and will see mostly Nevin Lawson. The slot corner for the Raiders has been targeted 58 times and has allowed a 1.90 pPT with a 115.9 passer rating.

Since Week 12 when Bowden has been integrated into the offense, Parker has seen fewer targets. In that time frame, his share is only about 19.5% and that’s a little scary when we break it down further. He shouldn’t be penalized for just two targets in an injury game but he also saw 14 targets against the Jets. That’s an outlier to be sure and it wasn’t with Tua, who was injured. We know he’s not healthy and I prefer AB for $200 less. Parker still has some ability to post a big score as he’s facing Damon Arnette, who has only been targeted 24 times through limited snaps. Arnette has also let up a 70.8% passer rating. I prefer to play Gaskin from this offense, but Parker and Bowden both are interesting.

TE – Just like Parker, Mike Gesicki sat last week and we’re hoping he returns this week after a monster game against the Chiefs. The duo of Bowden and Gesicki are much cheaper to get exposure to the Dolphins passing game and Gesicki has a 17.9% target share with Bowden along for the ride. GOATsecki also has four touchdowns in that time span and it seems like another threat in the middle of the field has brightened his outlook a little bit. In his last three games, Gesicki has seen 22 targets and I’m loving that stat. He’s eighth in route percentage so even though we wish he played a few more snaps, Gesicki is only on the field to catch passes. Vegas has only given up five scores but they’re in the bottom half in the yards allowed as well. I’m just not sure if I can fit him at this position yet. He would also take a backseat to Kittle without question.

D/ST – I just can’t see spending top dollar on a defense on a three gamer. There’s only so many values that we can play in one lineup and I’m SURELY not sacrificing a Kyler/Nuk stack just to play Miami. They have a top 12 pressure rate on the season, almost 40 sacks and lead the league in takeaways. The price is justified by those stats but it’s still a hard one to fit salary-wise.

Cash – Gaskin, Gesicki, Bowden

GPP – Parker, Tua, D/ST

Raiders – Pace is 25th

QB – If there’s a quarterback that I’m willing to play over Kyler, it’s going to be Marcus Mariota. That sounds like a weird sentence but let’s talk about it. It seems that Derek Carr has a solid chance to miss this game with a significant groin injury. Mariota looked phenomenal in relief on Thursday night, throwing for 226 yards and a touchdown to go with 88 rushing yards and a rushing score. That latter part is exactly why I’m interested in Mariota. The Miami defense overall is vastly better than the Chargers defense. However, the Raiders are willing to use Mariota’s legs and that is so valuable at his price tag. Even though the Dolphins are the fifth-best pass defense in DVOA, Mariota still has 3-4x ability here if he’s going to run. Injecting the offense with some zone read concepts in the middle of a game makes me believe Vegas will do it again this week if Mariota is active. That can give any defense some fits.

Welp. I was really sort of interested in Mariota, but Carr practiced fully on Wednesday. I’m not sure a significant groin injury lasts under a week, but that’s just me. Anyways, I’m even more set on Kyler at this point. I’m not dissing Carr, who has played well this season. He’s just not going run like Mariota did and the makes it much tougher to get close to the “likely” score for Kyler. Carr’s efficiency is average across the board, sitting around 13th-16th in yards, touchdowns, pDB and attempts. With Miami fifth in DVOA against the pass, it’s a tougher matchup for Carr and I expect his favorite target to have a tough road himself. That could leave Carr’s ceiling even lower.

RB – Josh Jacobs being the most expensive back on the slate leaves him in an intriguing spot. Miami is 23rd in DVOA against the run but also has only allowed 1,293 rushing yards so far to backs. We know that Vegas is going to pound the ball as he had 26 rush attempts last week and three receptions. Even with overtime noted, Jacobs gets a heavy workload when he can. The issue with him is when they’re behind, it’s not always a big game for Jacobs. His preferred script is either close or winning so it’s imperative to nail the game script. I don’t think Miami runs away and hides here but with the salary, I do prefer other backs. If he’s not super popular, the GPP case is easy to build. Likewise, if he’s super chalky, fading could be key if he only scores around 12-15 DK.

WR – This is probably the easiest group to fade on the slate. The passing game runs through the tight end position and no receiver has more than a 15.7% target share, which belongs to Nelson Agholor. That’s not exactly the mark we hope for considering what we can have for $400 more in Marvin Jones. The good news for Agholor is he does lead the team in EZ targets at 12 and his aDOT is 14.4 which translates to leading in air yards share. My biggest fear with Agholor is the matchup on the outside. He’s playing 75% on the outside and that’s going to leave him mostly on Xavien Howard. The Dolphins corner is fifth in catch rate allowed, 12th in pPT and first in passer rating allowed at 49.7.

You could make an argument for Hunter Renfrow in the slot with attention on Darren Waller, but that’s a thin play. He’s barely above a 14% target share and has all of five RZ targets on the season. The matchup with Nik Needham who has climbed all the way up to eighth in passer rating allowed and fifth in pPT at 1.30. There’s better punt options on the board in my mind.

TE – I know Waller is coming off an enormous game, but I’m not sure I want to spend up on him this week. Coach Brian Flores of the Dolphins is quickly becoming one of the more prominent coaches in football and he’s going to figure out ways to make it difficult for Waller. I would be stunned if he’s not rolling the bulk of the coverage to Waller every single snap and making Agholor or others beat them. That’s about the only reason to not play Waller, because he is the alpha in the passing game. He owns a 28.2% target share, 25.2% share of the air yards and has 21 targets in the RZ for a 35.6% share. Fading him is based purely on Flores and salary. It doesn’t help that Miami is the eighth-best team in DK points per game against tight ends. I’m hoping Kittle plays so this is a much easier call.

D/ST – It might be against a rookie quarterback, but I can’t see much of a path for the Raiders defense. They are tied for the second-fewest sacks on the season and the 15 takeaways are the fourth-least. I’m passing here with such little splash play ability.

Cash – Jacobs

GPP – Waller, Carr

Core Four

Kyler Murray, DeAndre Hopkins, Leonard Fournette, Marvin Jones

As I stated above, the Kyler/Hopkins stack is the starting point in any format for me. They represent the highest upside of any two players at their position in my mind. We need some savings and Fournette and Jones are absolutely perfect for that. Fournette gets a glorious spot and has 20 touch potential, while Jones is the cheapest alpha receiver on the board. His target share and air yards cannot be ignored at his salary.

*Update* The way the slate has broken, the three running back approach is a lot more viable than I thought. We have three backs that are not more expensive than $5,500 all projected to lead their backfields. It’s a rare slate to get that style of pricing and production.

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NFL Game By Game Breakdown Week 16

This week is kind of a boring one. We have the shortest slate we’ve had in a long time with just 10 games. There’s not a lot of games with juice, although some could turn into some solid contests. We still have a lot of work to do and money to make, so let’s hop to it in the NFL Game By Game Breakdown Week 16!

Colts at Steelers, O/U of 45 (Colts -1)

Colts – Pace is 17th

QB – I certainly can’t advocate Philip Rivers that strongly on this slate. The price is appealing and the matchup isn’t as terrifying as it used to be, but can Rivers score more than 20 DK here? Or ever for that matter? He’s only 20th in pDB at 0.44, 15th in touchdowns at 20 and not inside the top 10 in attempts overall. We’d really like to see more touchdowns considering Rivers is sixth in RZ attempts, but here we are. The metrics that I’m holding onto the most are his completion rates under pressure and the deep ball. Rivers sits fifth under pressure at 50.8% and eighth in deep ball at 46.2%. With the Steelers defense battered by injuries, Rivers has potential to hit a couple deep balls and smash that salary. However, I don’t put a lot of faith in that and Rivers would be MME only for me.

RB – Jonathan Taylor is still an excellent target even at his salary and the relatively tough matchup. Anytime he’s going to get 20 touches, Taylor has massive appeal. He’s ripping off chunk yardage anymore with at least a 5.2 YPC over his past three games. The Steelers have shown cracks against the run at multiple points this season and the defense is floundering a little bit. Some of that is cyclical from their offense just vomiting all over themselves lately, but it’s still starting to show. Pittsburgh is still third in DVOA against the run but I’m betting on the talent of the Colts offensive line and Taylor. I think he may well be one of my primary GPP targets on the slate.

WR – Why do you hate me T.Y. Hilton? I finally gave in and bought all the way in to Hilton and he flopped. He’s still the same exact price as last week and we just saw the floor, so we should tread carefully. The Colts offense is so spread out that it’s easy to see where the bad game comes from any given week. Hilton has the air yards share lead at 29.8% and the target share lead at 18.2%. The latter number is really not what we’re looking for in a lead target and he’s playing only about 65% of the snaps. He should also face the toughest Steelers corner in Joe Haden who sits ninth in pPT and third in completion rate allowed.

Michael Pittman and Zach Pascal are playing the majority of the snaps but it’s harder to get behind them in a thin passing game. Sure, Pascal went off last week but that was the first time he’s been in double-digit DK points since Week 9. That’s not the play I’m looking for all that much, especially with only a 12.8% target share. Steven Nelson should face the rookie Pittman and Nelson is up to a 110.1 passer rating allowed even with a 56.7% completion rate.

TE – As long as there’s a three-headed monster of Jack Doyle, Mo Alie-Cox and Trey Burton, I’m out on this mess. I don’t even want to say “touchdown or bust” since they all play at least 40% of the snaps so you’re just shooting darts blindly.

D/ST – The way the Pittsburgh offense is playing right now, this may well be one of the better plays on the board. Indy generates pressure at about a 25% rate, top 10 in football. They are also only two turnovers off the league lead and the Steelers are abysmal right now with little reason to think something suddenly snaps the right way.

Cash – D/ST

GPP – Taylor, Rivers, Hilton, Pittman

Steelers – Pace is 24th

QB – Even if I played 150 lineups, I wouldn’t touch Ben Roethlisberger on this slate. I can confidently say I can’t remember a time where he has played worse for this long of a period. It’s mistake after mistake and he honestly doesn’t look like he can see the field right now. The past two games have produced four turnovers to just three touchdowns and he hasn’t cracked 190 yards passing. Indy is still sixth against the pass in DVOA and stand to be a stiff test. The Pittsburgh offense has a myriad of issues, including not being able to complete a pass downfield. Once you factor in Big Ben is the QB7 in salary, this is a very easy pass.

RB – Benny Snell may have run for 84 yards Monday night but I don’t think he or James Conner can replicate that feat this week. For starters, the Colts are fifth in DVOA against the run and have only allowed 1,099 rushing yards to backs in 14 games. They have allowed 13 total touchdowns but chasing just that might not be advisable against this defense. If the offense can’t move the ball (Indy is seventh in total yards allowed per game) I can’t see how any back pays off this week. We have better options.

WR – I fully believe that the receivers are priced correctly here. Diontae Johnson should be the most expensive option and he’s still viable on DK. He owns a 23.5% target share, is tied for the lead in EZ targets and is the leader in yardage. We saw Monday even when Ben is unusable, Diontae can still pay off. The biggest issue is Johnson has what could be his toughest matchup of the season in Xavier Rhodes. The veteran corner is top 15 in pPT, passer rating and catch rate allowed. With the route tree being fairly shallow due to the quarterback, it’s a tough route to take in playing Diontae. You guys know how much this pains me to say.

JuJu Smith-Schuster is on the board but he just hasn’t been reliable this season. Even Diontae seems to churn out yardage while JuJu hasn’t been over 55 yards receiving since Week 10. Chase Claypool is the deep threat in the offense for the most part, and has said above 60% of the snaps lately. The trick is getting him the ball and that seems to be as difficult as putting a man on the moon for this offense. Claypool does get Rock Ya-Sin, who has been a weak link for the Colts defense. He’s allowed a 13.9 YPR and a 71.2% catch rate. Ya-Sin also is giving up a speed advantage with a 4.5 40-yard dash and Claypool threatening a 4.3. If anyone, I’d play Claypool and hope lightning strikes for a longer touchdown.

TE – Eric Ebron missed the first practice of the week and that could open the door for a Vance McDonald punt play. He played 92% of the snaps on Monday night after Ebron left early with injury. The obvious issue was he wasn’t targeted but I would think that changes with a full week of practice running as the tight end one. Having said that, it’s not a play in cash with the Pittsburgh offense in such a miserable funk. The Colts allow the fifth-fewest DK points to the position on top of it, so Vance would be GPP only.

*Update* Ebron practiced in full so he’ll be playing. That doesn’t mean I’m interested.

D/ST – I won’t have any Steelers defense this week. Not only are they being sabotaged by the offense, they aren’t exactly playing well themselves. They forced no turnovers and only had two sacks last week and are missing so many pieces. They still lead the league in sacks and pressure rate but the trend is decidedly downward and the salary is not.

Cash – None

GPP – Claypool, Diontae, Ebron

Falcons at Chiefs, O/U of 54 (Chiefs -10.5)

Falcons – Pace is 3rd

QB – We have not been able to trust Matt Ryan at all this season, but this seems like a spot where he is underpriced and we should be interested. The Chiefs are going to score and Ryan should easily go over 40 attempts. We’ve talked about needing the volume since he’s only 26th in pDB at 0.41. Ryan has crawled up to 22 passing touchdowns and he does sit third in passing yards. Kansas City has fallen to 13th in DVOA against the pass and they’ve allowed 24 touchdown passes. With a negative game script on tap, we could see Ryan go over 25 DK points just like last week. He’s pretty underpriced for the likeliest outcome of this game.

RB – Coach Raheem Morris said to the press that Ito Smith is now the lead runner and that’s cool for him I guess. He’s still only totaled 37 rush attempts the past four games and even at minimum price, that doesn’t move the needle. Sure, the Chiefs struggle against the run as they are 30th in DVOA and bottom 12 in rush yards to backs given up. The issue is how long the Falcons can keep this game close enough to continue to run, and in my eyes it won’t be very long.

WR – I don’t know how easy it’s going to be to get exposure to Calvin Ridley, but we may need to try in a game stack. He’s been phenomenal the past three weeks when Atlanta has asked him to do more without Julio Jones through some of that time. He’s totaled 395 yards on 23 receptions with two touchdowns in that time span. He’s been a monster and he should be with a 52% air yards share and 30.8% target share the past three weeks. Charvarius Ward is mostly going to be tasked to play Ridley and Ward has allowed a 14.4 YPR, 108.5 passer rating and a 1.80 pPT.

I tend to think Russell Gage is still too cheap. Even with Julio playing in the Saints game, Gage has still earned a 21.4% target share and has three straight games over 15 DK. Being $3,400 cheaper than Ridley helps out a lot as well, which makes it a lot easier to play Gage in the passing game. He’s mostly in the slot at about 62.5% and that leaves him on some of L’Jarius Sneed. Gage will have a rotating matchup pending where he lines up at but Sneed has been excellent on 38 targets. He’s only allowed 18 receptions for 180 yards in limited playing time. The individual matchups don’t worry me a lot here since the volume should overcome those concerns for both Ridley and Gage.

TE – It pretty much figures that when I say Hayden Hurst has disappeared from the offense, he goes out and scores. Now, he didn’t do a whole lot more with just a 4/21 line but in this environment, I don’t hate the punt. He’s actually tied in RZ targets over the past three weeks and that helps mitigate the fact he’s not doing much else. KC has allowed the sixth-most yardage and seven scores. I think a very interesting stack could be Hurst/Gage/Tyreek/Kelce and then pick a quarterback depending on who you can afford.

D/ST – We know better.

Cash – Ridley, Gage, Ryan

GPP – Hurst

Chiefs – Pace is 13th

QB – It’s going to take some doing, but Patrick Mahomes is in one of the best spots he could ever ask for. Atlanta is 19th in DVOA against the pass and have allowed the second-most passing yards in the league. Additionally, they’re let up the fourth-most touchdown passes in 28 on the season. Mahomes is fourth in pDB, second in points per game, first in yards and third in touchdowns. He gets to face a pass funnel defense and is worth the top dollar on the slate. We don’t need to spend a lot of time here to explain this is one of the best plays you can make if you can afford him.

RB – All the attention will be on LeVeon Bell with Clyde Edwards-Helaire not playing this week. Bell produced on 16 touches last week and some of that was at the end of the game just to run out the clock. When he’s in the actual offense, the ceiling could be higher. The matchup is actually stout on the ground as Atlanta is fourth in DVOA against the run. Only the Bucs have allowed fewer rushing yards to the running backs but they have allowed the fifth-most receptions. My early read would say he’s chalky, but it’s not like he’s priced differently than CEH. If the passing game goes lower rostered than it should, all the better for leverage.

WR – Tyreek Hill had an ultra-rare “down” game and still hit 17 DK points last week. I say down game because he was held under 55 yards receiving against the Saints but that is not likely to happen here. Hill is still in the slot about 35% of the time but he’ll face a good bit of Darqueze Dennard and the football gods themselves might not be able to help Dennard in this spot. He runs a 4.51 40-yard dash and has allowed a 97.2 passer rating on 61 targets. Hill’s speed is going to absolutely roast him. I’m sure Atlanta will try to help, but every team does and Hill still gets his every week. Among receivers who have played at least 10 games, Hill is ninth in air yards share at 36.6% and that’s all we need from Mahomes.

Sammy Watkins continues to be the ultimate leverage inside the Chiefs passing game. There’s going to come a week where he goes 5/70 with a touchdown or two and infuriates everyone who paid up for Hill or Travis Kelce. Just like Hill, Watkins is in the slot for about 36% of his snaps which speaks to the movement of this offense. It’s one of the myriad of reasons it’s so difficult to defend. Watkins will likely see the most of Isaiah Oliver, who’s allowed a 1.90 pPT and a 113.5 passer rating. We want to be on him the week he goes off.

*Update* Tyreek is going to play, but the hammy leaves him questionable. This would be a textbook week for Watkins to go off. I also have a much higher interest in Kelce.

TE – Travis Kelce is still underpriced for his production, regardless of his position. He also had a “down” game last week for yardage, being held under 70. He still scored 22 DK and that just speaks to the nuclear upside of both he and Hill. He can break the single-season record for a tight end in receiving yards this week and he gets the spot to do it in. Atlanta is tied for the second-most receptions allowed and seventh-most yards to go along with nine scores. Just give me all the KC passing game once again, especially if it doesn’t garner the attention it deserves.

D/ST – Matt Ryan is top 10 in pressure rate so there’s a good chance the Chiefs defense makes a couple splash plays in this game. They have 25 sacks on the season and are tied for the fifth-most takeaways in football. If you’re in this price range, they make plenty of sense with more chances for sacks and turnovers if Atlanta passes more.

Cash – Mahomes, Hill, Kelce, Bell (chalkiest in cash)

GPP – Watkins

Browns at Jets, O/U of 47.5 (Browns -9.5)

Browns – Pace is 29th

QB – Suddenly now that Baker Mayfield has games that he can throw the football in weather-wise, he’s playing extremely good football. The last three weeks he’s popped off for a combined nine touchdowns to just two turnovers, and the Browns offense is humming. Baker is actually better than the perception or the salary on DK. He’s 12th in pDB and touchdowns, despite being just 19th in attempts. Mayfield is also 11th in air yards so when he does pass, he’s pushing he ball downfield. The Jets are 29th in DVOA against the pass and even if the game script doesn’t demand a big volume of attempts for Mayfield, he can be played in any format at his price.

RB – Nick Chubb is one of the better running backs in football and the salary is deserved but I’m not sure I’m going there with him this week. First, the salary is going to be the highest on the board. I believe this week lends itself to cheaper backs with higher-priced receivers and we’ll touch on that later. Secondly, the matchup isn’t great. I do think Chubb is mostly matchup proof but we can’t ignore the Jets are ninth in DVOA against the run and hold opponents to under 100 rushing yards per game. I don’t think Chubb is a “bad” play, he’s just one that I’m not going overboard to get into a lineup. Kareem Hunt almost always gets double-digit touches, but generally will need a touchdown to really pay off and I think he’s overpriced.

WR – The first glance may lead you to think Jarvis Landry is overpriced but that’s not really the case. Since the Odell Beckham injury, Landry owns a 28% target share and 37.8% of the RZ target share. His six EZ targets leads the team as well and he’s the main cog in the passing game. He’s down to just 46% of snaps in the slot, so his matchup is certainly not set in stone. The most likely corner is Arthur Maulet, who has been targeted 26 times and allowed 20 receptions. Landry with Baker is my favorite way to attack the Jets defense in cash game settings.

The tournament play is Rashard Higgins, who has found new life lately. He leads in air yards share since OBJ went down with a 31.7% mark. Higgins is also second in RZ targets and comes significantly cheaper. Primarily playing on the boundary, he should face a lot of Lamar Jackson. Through his 39 targets, he’s allowed a 14.0 YPR and a 109.9 passer rating. The Monday Night Football broadcast talked about how the Browns pass early to punt the rock late, so we can possibly get some fireworks from this passing game right out of the gate.

*Update* Well…that changed abruptly. Almost the whole receiver room is not playing in this game and that’s a big switch the night before. I think both Chubb and Hunt get a pretty big bump. Hunt should likely play a lot of slot receiver and he’s going to be a nice value on DK especially. We can also look more towards the tight end position to get some value targets with Hooper and maybe even David Njoku and Harrison Bryant.

TE – It’s a little hard to size up Austin Hooper. He’s missed three game since the OBJ injury but does still have a 13.7% target share. I suppose that’s not awful for his price tag and the matchup is a cakewalk. No team has allowed more than the 13 scores to tight ends than the Jets, and they allow the most DK points per game. In the touchdown or bust category of tight ends, you could do worse than Hooper. He does have four EZ targets in his five games played and he may only need one this week.

D/ST – If it’s a defense that boasts Myles Garrett and now Denzel Ward is back, we’re interested against the Jets.

Cash – Hunt, Chubb, Hooper

GPP – Baker, D/ST

Jets – Pace is 14th

Just like last week, don’t play Jets. They upset the Rams last week and not one of heir main offensive players crossed 15 DK points. Sam Darnold scored 14, Frank Gore touched the ball 24 times and scored 13 and Jamison Crowder scored 12 DK. Scores like that just really aren’t helpful. If the receiver corps comes into this game beat up with injuries, we’ll reevaluate.

Giants at Ravens, O/U of 43.5 (Ravens -10.5)

Giants – Pace is 19th

QB – The early read would suggest that Daniel Jones is back in the lineup this week, but we really shouldn’t care for fantasy. Jones has 14 turnovers to just nine touchdowns this season through 12 games, which is putrid. He’s 32nd in pDB at 0.33 and 30th in points per game. Now factor in that Baltimore is top 12 in DVOA against the pass and there’s no reason to play Jones this week, especially if that hammy is still bugging him a little bit.

RB – This backfield turned into a gross mess in a hurry. Last week saw Wayne Gallman and Alfred Morris split 16 carries to a 9-7 ratio with Gallman eking out the lead on attempts. He played under 50% of the snaps for the first time since Week 9 and that won’t come close to cutting it at his current price tag. The Ravens are sixth in DVOA against the run and have only allowed backs to rush for 1,243 yards. This is an easy fade for me and we can let others deal with this headache.

WR – If Jones is back, I guess I’m moderately interested in Sterling Shepard? Someone has to catch the ball in this offense and he’s got a 23.8% target share through the eight games since returning from injury. He also paces the team in PPR points and is cheap on DK, which is easily his best format. Shepard has been on the outside most with just a 23.1% slot rate. That likely leaves him on Marcus Peters who is allowing a 65.3% catch rate and a 13.1 YPR.

Golden Tate is in line to miss the game, which could slightly help Darious Slayton. He remains the home run hitter in an offense that can’t really hit home runs, so it’s a pretty thin play. The aDOT is 13.7 and that explains why he has 21 receptions to 41 for Shepard (who is at an 8.1 aDOT). I don’t have a compelling reason to play Slayton this week.

TE – If there’s another Giant to be played, it’s Evan Engram. He’s the target leader since Week 7 to go along with nine RZ targets, also the team lead. He’s under $4,000 so he fills the punt category at his position. The Giants are underdogs here so they should be throwing a good bit. The Ravens are below average in receptions and yards allowed to the tight end, but have only allowed five scores. Engram can pay off in PPR settings, but he’s not a preferred play.

D/ST – They actually aren’t a bad defense with 20 turnovers forced and 34 sacks, but the Ravens offense is clicking right now. It’s not a great matchup but it could be worth a punt in MME formats. Baltimore can put up points, but they are not flawless on that side of the ball.

Cash – None, Engram is closest

GPP – Shepard, D/ST

Ravens – Pace is 31st

QB – It’s nice to see the 2019 Lamar Jackson finally show up. He’s now eclipsed 26 DK over the past three weeks with a 37 mixed in. For once, a big score for Lamar came without rushing for a ton of yards as he only ran for 35 against Jacksonville but totaled four touchdowns. He’s a really fascinating GPP candidate. If folks spend into this range, they almost surely just spend the extra $500 and go to Mahomes. These players get it done differently but the ceilings really aren’t that far apart with Jackson’s legs. Despite some uneven play this year, he’s still third in pDB and seventh in points per game. He’s also second in rushing yards per game at the position and fourth in touchdowns, so he could be a slate breaking play at what is likely under 5% rostered this week.

RB – Seeing the Giants hold Nick Chubb in check could lower the interest on J.K. Dobbins for some, but not for me. Dobbins only played 53% of the snaps largely because of blowout last week. He still had 15 touches and if that’s the floor….Dobbins is probably still a little too cheap here. New York is only 15th in DVOA against the run which isn’t intimidating at all. Gus Edwards is going to get some touches, but Dobbins has clearly taken over the backfield. If the Giants can keep it closer than the Jags did last week, Dobbins has 20 touch upside and multi-touchdown upside. He only trails Lamar in RZ attempts with a 21-28 ratio.

WR – Marquise Brown really isn’t that bad of a play this week *ducks*. It’s been a very poor and frustrating year for the second-year receiver but he’s picked it up lately, scoring at least 13 DK in the last four weeks. Now, the big issue when playing Hollywood is the fact that James Bradberry will be back and he’s been very solid so far. Bradberry has only allowed a 1.60 pPT and a 79.8 passer rating. That certainly leaves Brown as a GPP only target but his 38.9% of the air yards share ranks fifth among receivers who have played 10 games.

The secondary receivers don’t leave us with much right now. Willie Snead, Dez Bryant and Miles Boykin all get snaps and all but Dez played over 50% las week. Dez and Boykin both caught touchdowns but they did almost nothing else. Snead leads this group in target share at 14.6% but I’m really uninterested as a group. Playing receiver roulette with a team that is dead last in pass attempts per game is not leading to green very often.

TE – One of the main reasons we can’t go to secondary receivers is Mark Andrews and his role in the passing game. He also played just over 50% of the snaps in the blowout but paid off with a 5/66/1 line and has that ability every single slate. The Giants have been solid to the high ends, including only allowing four touchdowns on the season. However, Andrews is a different animal and owns a 22.5% target share and has the RZ target lead on the team. No Raven pass catcher has more than his seven touchdowns and anytime he’s under $6,000, he feels underpriced. With only one elite tight end on the slate, Andrews is a cost-effective alternate if you don’t want to punt and won’t spend on Kelce.

D/ST – It’s not easy to fit their salary, but Jones is a turnover factory. Baltimore has forced 20 takeaways on the season and are one of two teams blitzing over 40% on the season (42.9%). With Jones sporting a 31.6% completion rate under pressure, the upside for the Ravens is easy to see even at the price.

Cash – Lamar, Dobbins, Andrews

GPP – Brown, D/ST

Bengals at Texans, O/U of 46 (Texans -7.5)

Bengals – Pace is 18th

QB – We’re not 100% who the quarterback is but Brandon Allen is “on track to be available if we need him”, according to Coach Zac Taylor. That seems to read as Ryan Finley is going to start after helping upset the Steelers this past week, and he probably deserves to be. He definitely missed some throws and only accounted for 89 (!!) passing yards but totaled two touchdowns. He found his rushing legs late in that game and I don’t wonder if that’s something the Bengals will incorporate more moving forward. I’m not here to say he’s Lamar 2.0 or anything like that, but a few zone reads and bootleg action could help this offense (and run game specifically) in the short-term. Finley doesn’t do much for me even in a spot against the 28th ranked team in DVOA against the pass, but this next man surely does.

RB – Gio Bernard is a building block for me in cash at this price tag. I know it’s been hit or miss with him as far as results, but the Bengals showed they will ride him into the ground if they can. He had 26 touches last week and the 25 rush attempts is easily his high water mark on the season. Even if he gets closer to 18 touches, the matchup is set for him to smash this price. Houston is 29th in DVOA against the run and it’s a defense we target every week. They’ve allowed 1,916 rushing yards to running backs which is most in the NFL. On top of that, backs have added another 615 yards receiving (seventh-most) and scored 18 times. If the Bengals trail, Gio is involved in the passing game with a 9.8% target share. That’s not shabby for a backup. He’s simply far too cheap in a goat matchup, at least in cash if nothing else.

WR – The sad thing about this game is we absolutely cannot trust any receiver. As I mentioned, Finley went 7/13 for just 89 yards and I’m not sold on him at all. The one aspect that could potentially shift my opinion at least a little is the status of Tyler Boyd. He suffered a scary-looking concussion on Monday and has yet to practice. If he’s out, Tee Higgins is going to see targets. The quality of said targets is up for debate, but he saw six of the 13 attempts last week. He’d face off against Phillip Gaines or Vernon Hargreaves, and both players have allowed over a 1.90 pPT and a 114.4 passer rating or higher. We could also turn to A.J. Green as a pure punt as he played over 90% of the snaps. With the individual matchups looking so good, they can be considered but only in GPP.

*Update* Boyd is out and I have moderate interest in Higgins.

TE – Drew Sample is down to a 71.6% route rate, which is 16th in the league. He’s on the field at a top-ten rate but he’s only sporting a 9.7% target share and has only 10 RZ targets on the season. I think there are better punts on the board for a full slate.

D/ST – They played lights out on Monday and any defense against the Texans is at least in some type of consideration. They’ve allowed a top 10 pressure rate, but I’m really unsure if the Bengals can take advantage. They only have a 17.7% pressure rate which is second-lowest and are tied for the second-fewest sacks at 16. They can be used as a punt, but anything over three points might be a bonus.

Cash – Gio

GPP – Higgins, Green, D/ST

Texans – Pace is 12th

QB – It’s really kind of crazy how Deshaun Watson just keeps spitting out massive fantasy games in the face of adversity. Tough defense on the other side? No problem. Down your best receiver? I’ll make this dude from the practice squad relevant, don’t worry. All Watson does is produce and I’ll bet a good bit he won’t be rostered enough like usual. He’s top 10 in pDB, points per game, touchdowns and yards. On top of that, he’s sixth in rushing yards among quarterbacks and the matchup isn’t scary. Don’t take Monday into account too heavily. The Bengals were fired up in a divisional matchup. This is a big letdown spot on a short week. They’re 27th in DVOA against the pass and I won’t be surprised in the least if Watson goes for 25+ yet again.

RB – It’s not very often that we see a running back score 27 DK points when they have all of TWENTY SEVEN yards rushing and not score a touchdown. David Johnson accomplished that feat last week on the back of 11 receptions for 106 yards. That came with Duke Johnson and C.J. Prosise both out and that needs to be the case again if I’m looking at Johnson at this price tag. He’s expensive for a back that only has 479 rushing yards on the season through 10 games and 11 of his 27 receptions came last week. This just really seems like chasing to a big extent. The Bengals have allowed the fifth-most rushing yards to running backs but this is really a scary play salary-wise in my opinion. Let’s double back to see if Duke or Prosise are active.

*Update* Duke is out, but Prosise is in. David Johnson is just too pricey in my eyes.

WR – We only have a three game sample size without Will Fuller but the metrics do matter. Brandin Cooks leads in target share at an even 20% but the ball distribution has been spread out pretty evenly. Chad Hansen, Keke Coutee, Jordan Akins and Johnson all have shares of at least 14% so there’s not exactly one alpha option to turn to. Perhaps the biggest aspect to stand out is the RZ and EZ targets for Coutee. He has four and three respectively, both to lead the team. He also has the lowest aDOT at 9.4 while Hansen and Cooks are above 12.0 each. Coutee is mostly the slot receiver at a 57.6% rate which should put him on Mackensie Alexander. The Bengals corner has allowed a catch rate over 70% so I actually like Coutee the best of the options.

Cooks remains my least favorite in general terms. He’s got the target share lead but it’s not overwhelming and I’ve said I don’t think he can be a number one anymore in a passing game. On top of that, William Jackson is playing good football for Cincy. He’s inside the top 20 in pPT, passer rating allowed and in the top 10 in catch rate allowed at 53.6%. Hansen will still be the GPP only option. He’s still playing over 90% of the snaps which is great and gets LeShaun Sims. Across 63 targets, Sims has allowed an 81% completion rate and a massive 2.30 pPT. If the Bengals leave him on the field, Hansen has long touchdown potential.

TE – You could make the argument that Watson shouldn’t throw to Akins so much, since he has 80 combined receiving yards across the last three games on 10 receptions. The Bengals have allowed the third-most yards to the position, which I suppose puts Akins on the board as a punt option. It’s still not one I enjoy and Akins rarely crosses 55-60% of the snaps so it’s a thin play.

D/ST – This is too expensive for a defense that has created just eight takeaways (dead last by four) and has 32 sacks. If they were a punt price, we’d be talking. As it stands, no thank you.

Cash – Watson, Coutee

GPP – Johnson, Hansen, Cooks, Akins

Bears at Jaguars, O/U of 47.5 (Bears -7.5)

Bears – Pace is 15th

QB – The Bears get ANOTHER great spot, and that’s been about a month-long trend for them. They’re touring the worst defenses in football and this week the bus stops in Jacksonville. What that means for Mitchell Trubisky is murky, at best. Since taking back over as the starter, he’s had two games of about 14 DK and two over 21 DK. The Bears have scored 30+ in three straight but it hasn’t been because of Trubisky in those games. He’s playing competently, but has been under 30 attempts twice. I’d have to lean that way again if they can get away with it. Without multiple touchdown passes, the ceiling isn’t very likely for Trubisky. The matchup is pristine with the Jags sitting dead last in DVOA against the pass but Trubisky is still just GPP for me as he’s 16th in pDB at 0.47. If he throws under 30 attempts, it may not end well.

RB – You know what’s kind of crazy? David Montgomery is 10th in scrimmage yards this season. That’s right, 10th with 1,255 total yards. He joins only Dalvin Cook and Aaron Jones as players in the top 10 that haven’t played a full 14 games, either. Jacksonville is better in DVOA against the run but still down at 23rd. Chicago really loaded up Monty last week with 32 carries and this is awesome to see as his previous high in attempts was 21. The Jags have allowed the third-most rushing yards to backs and an additional 630 receiving yards. With the game script likely in his favor, Monty should be the workhorse once again. If we spend up at running back, I have Monty>Chubb on this slate.

WR – It should come as no surprise at all, but Allen Robinson has gone as Trubisky has gone over the past four. When Turbisky has posted a big score, A-Rob has gone for 27 and 30 DK. If Trubisky was quiet, Robinson has been at 12 and 13. That obviously makes sense, and is a big reason why I’m shying away from Robinson this week. Chicago is a big enough favorite that they shouldn’t have to throw a ton. They can say anything they want, but Jacksonville DOES NOT want to win. They’re in the drivers seat for Trevor Lawrence in the 2021 draft. Robins has a 25.7% target share and a 31.4% air yards share in the offense and the matchup isn’t scary at all. Jacksonville is on their third-string corners and could be without Sidney Jones again. The only concern is game script and volume.

I’m sticking with Darnell Mooney over Anthony Miller. Since we project the Bears to not pass, we need the lightning strike touchdown. Mooney is tied with Miller at eight EZ targets but the 13.0 aDOT is the highest on the team. That could go a long way at his price and corner Tre Herndon has allowed a 74.3% catch rate and 112.2 passer rating on 74 targets.

TE – The results stunk but Cole Kmet played every single snap for the offense for the first time in his career. That’s one heck of a good sign moving forward. He only saw two targets and is still within that range of outcomes this week, but it’s a sweetheart matchup. Jacksonville has allowed the second-most touchdowns to the position and that plants Kmet firmly in the punt category. Jimmy Graham has a 13.3% target share but if that starts shifting to Kmet, he’s way too cheap.

D/ST – The Bears are just an average fantasy defense, as they only have 33 sacks and 15 turnovers on the season. I don’t think it’s a terrible play, but the price is not that friendly for the likely outcome. Jacksonville does have 14 interceptions on the year and it comes down to who’s starting at quarterback.

Cash – Monty, Kmet

GPP – Robinson, Trubisky, Mooney, D/ST

Jaguars – Pace is 6th

QB – The coaching staff is no saying who will start in this game. Both Gardner Minshew and Mike Glennon are going to get reps with the first team during the week. Remember how I said that the Jags don’t want to win this game? I wouldn’t be surprised if the starter is Glennon. Minshew went 22-29 last week for 226 yards and two touchdowns. That’s not a “split reps with the backup” next week at practice style of game. If it’s Glennon, there’s no chance I’m playing him. I’d honestly rather play Finley.

RB – James Robinson is expected to play this week, which seemed like a long shot with how his ankle got rolled up last week against the Ravens. His volume keeps him in the running no matter what. This man got 19 touches last week in a complete blowout. Chicago is fifth in DVOA against the run and it’s not a spot we want to write home about. With a possible lingering ankle injury, tough matchup and potential backup quarterback, Robinson is an easy fade outside of MME formats.

WR – I don’t see how any receiver really is going to stand out here, especially with Glennon. D.J. Chark does lead in target share at 20.1% and he does come very cheap, but there’s a reason for that. He’s not been great for fantasy this year. That’s not even accounting for the fact he’d likely see most of Kyle Fuller, who has only allowed a 55.4% completion rate on 92 targets.

Laviska Shenault will face fellow rookie Jaylon Johnson for much of the game and Johnson leads the league in pass break-ups with 16. He’s top 15 in completion rate at 56.8% and has the upper hand in this spot. Buster Skrine faces off with Keelan Cole in the slot and that is likely the best possible spot to attack. Skrine has allowed a massive 72.7% completion rate and a 112.7 passer rating. Cole is right about a 15% target share and a 15.3% share of RZ targets so for only $3,500, he could work in the projected game script.

TE – Chicago has really scuffled with tight ends this season, allowing 10 scored, the second-most receptions and fourth-most yards. That’s a whole lot of production and Tyler Eifert is still very cheap. He actually cleared 10 DK in both of Glennon’s starts earlier in the year and is a better target than Kmet at the same price point. Eifert may wind up being my punt of choice if spending all the way down.

D/ST – I’m very concerned about their ability to stop the run, but this is still Trubisky on the other side. He can melt down at any points and this is about as low as I would go this week at defense. That’s about all I can muster for a unit that has 17 sacks and 15 turnovers.

Cash – Eifert

GPP – Robinson, Cole, Chark

Panthers at Washington, O/U of 42.5 (Washington -0.5)

Panthers – Pace is 28th

QB – One of the first aspects I look at in a quarterback when going against Washington is how they fare under pressure. Teddy Bridgewater sits 24th in completion rate under pressure at 37.2% so that is a big issue. We have to credit the Panthers offensive line for only giving up pressure 19.2% of the time but any unit will have their hands full with the Washington front seven. There’s some small upside in rushing as Bridgewater is 10th in yards and actually has 17 RZ attempts on the year. It’s not a big part of his game but it could come in handy in this spot. Still, Washington is second in DVOA against the pass and allows the third-least passing yards on the season. With a 20:13 TD:INT ratio allowed, it’s probably better to go elsewhere on this slate.

RB – I can firmly say I will not have any Mike Davis on this slate. He’s been very hit or miss after bursting onto the scene when Christian McCaffrey first got hurt. He always gets a fair amount of touches, but eight of his games have been under 16 DK points without CMC. That’s just not going to cut it at his price point and he’s got such a low floor, you can’t even use him in cash. Washington is worse in DVOA against the run, but 13th isn’t anything terrible. I can’t make a strong case for him with Dobbins cheaper and potentially the back on the other side of this game.

WR – Based on the matchup involved, I think Curtis Samuel might be my favorite option here. He boasts an 18.6% target share and possibly most importantly, he has the lowest aDOT of the trio at 6.5. An added bonus is he leads in RZ targets on the year with a 24.5% share and he has 31 rushing attempts. He’ll see the majority of Jimmy Moreland who has only allowed a 1.20 pPT but a 63.2% catch rate. The ball likely has to come out quick and Samuel could be the primary beneficiary.

Robby Anderson could get the easiest matchup on the outside as he should face Ronald Darby a decent amount. Darby is top 20 in pPT but also allows a 13.8 YPR so when he gets had, it’s for chunk yardage. Anderson still has the raw target lead by 22 and has a 25.8% target share. He shouldn’t be forgotten in this game. The hardest one to get behind is D.J. Moore. Not only did the price come up, but he’s the main deep threat in the offense with an aDOT over 12.0 and the air yards share lead at 39.7%. He gets Kendall Fuller who has allowed a 1.80 pPT. This is mostly a Samuel or Anderson spot to me.

TE – Ian Thomas has seen eight targets the past two games to bring his target share all the way up to….6.1%. That’s a pass for me with only two total RZ targets.

D/ST – I can get on board here if Dwayne Haskins is starting again. Carolina is still bottom eight in pressure rate on the season with only 24 sacks, but they got home five times against Aaron Rodgers. That’s a decidedly different matchup and the price isn’t awful. I do wish it was under $2,700 though.

Cash – Samuel, Anderson

GPP – Moore, D/ST

Washington – Pace is 11th

QB – It’s trending to Haskins again, but he would be a hard pass for me. He only has a 0.29 pDB which is 35th in the league. In six games, he has five touchdown passes and seven turnovers. Carolina is 26th in DVOA against the pass but I don’t trust Haskins at all in this spot. Coach Ron Rivera does not want him starting and it’s clear his time in Washington is likely running out.

RB – I’m getting excited that Antonio Gibson might get back into action here. He was in full breakout mode in the previous three weeks to injury, with six total touchdowns and 305 scrimmage yards. The Panthers are 22nd in DVOA against the run and have allowed over 2,000 scrimmage yards. Additionally, the 13 touchdowns allowed is exploitable as well. If he can’t go, J.D. McKissic walks into the same spot and he played 86% of the snaps last week with 22 touches. Whoever is the lead back in this game is very interesting.

WR – It’s Terry McLaurin or bust as always in the receiving corps. He’s leading the league in air yards share at 41.7% among anyone that has played 10 games. The target share is also over 25% and even with Haskins at quarterback, he’s going to get fed the ball. We’d have to assume the Panthers will try to get Rasul Douglas on him as much as possible and Douglas has regressed as the season has gone. He’s up to a 106.8 passer rating allowed and a 69.4% catch rate. McLaurin has blowup ability every week, even if it hasn’t been shown lately. No other receiver is above a 9.3% target share and I won’t go there on a full slate.

*Update* McLaurin is now doubtful for this game and that’s a huge hit for the passing game. a player like Cam Sims should leap forward, but man I’m not comfortable with that at all. Maybe if Alex Smith gets back we can use him as a punt but that’s as far as I would go.

TE – Logan Thomas has been coming on lately with 35 targets over the past month. He’s caught 32 of them and scored twice while producing 261 yards. The price has certainly come up but with an 18.5% target share, it’s a fair price. No player has more RZ targets than Thomas and he leads in touchdowns as well. I wonder just how popular he’s going to be with Andrews a few hundred more. The Panthers are tied for the seventh-most DK points given up to the position, so it’s a pretty good spot for Thomas. The passing game flows through McLaurin, Thomas and the backs and that’s the most important thing. With McLaurin out, Thomas would be my primary target in the pass game.

D/ST – They remain one of my favorite units as they are tied for fourth in sacks on the season. They have also forced 18 turnovers and even against Bridgewater, that’s a nice aspect to have. They are still plenty cheap and can be used in any format.

Cash – D/ST, Running Back, Thomas

GPP – Cam Sims

Broncos at Chargers, O/U of 49 (Chargers -3.5)

Broncos – Pace is 10th

QB – It’s probably easier to predict who’s going to win the 2025 Super Bowl than figuring out how Drew Lock is going to play this week. Since Week 8, he’s had scores of 20, 33, 10, 12, 12, 26 and 11. If you catch him when he’s right, he’s going to obliterate his price tag. Lock is 27th in pDB, 27th in points per game and 26th in yards. Sure, he’s missed some time but this is still not great by the stats. You can’t even bank on a negative game script because that’s what happened last week. The Bills trucked the Broncos but Lock didn’t do anything. I can’t see myself going this low as the Chargers are 17th in DVOA against the pass.

RB – I don’t know how much more Melvin Gordon can outplay Phillip Lindsay without getting more touches. Let’s break this down over the past three weeks –

Gordon – 39 attempts, 260 yards, 6.6 YPC, eight receptions, 54 yards

Lindsay – 36 attempts, 88 yards, 2.4 YPC, five receptions, 14 yards

We’re not playing Lindsay but my biggest gripe is it hurts the ceiling for Gordon because Lindsay bites into the potential. The Chargers are 26th in DVOA against the run and the price is fair for MGIII but we need Lindsay out before I’m ready to look his way.

*Update* Lindsay is out, wheels up for Melvin Gordon.

WR – Lock completed all of five passes to receivers last time out and that’s about as low as the floor can go. Jerry Jeudy has the highest target share at 20.2% and he has a 30.4% air yards share to lead the team as well. He should face off against Casey Hayward and that’s a tough spot for the rookie as Hayward has the second-best completion rate allowed at 48.1%. I can’t bring myself to be interested in Tim Patrick or K.J. Hamler. They’re going to have a game here and there, but predicting A. Lock’s good game and B. getting the right hookup is wildly difficult.

TE – I’m not that into receivers because the best stacking option is Noah Fant. He has the lowest aDOT on the team and is only 13 targets behind Jeudy for the target lead. Considering Fant has missed a good bit of time this year, that speaks to how he’s valued in this offense. The Chargers have allowed 10 scores to the position which is tied for third-most. I would consider him slightly better of a target than Logan Thomas, but it’s not by much.

D/ST – I don’t really want to go against the Chargers offense right now and the Broncos only have produced 12 turnovers all season long. The 37 sacks is decent, but they could definitely give up 30 points here and have just a small chance at five DK or more.

Cash – Fant, Gordon

GPP – D/ST, Lock, Jeudy

Chargers – Pace is 8th

QB – I’m betting that Justin Herbert doesn’t draw much attention at his price point, but that could be a mistake. The rookie was held back by his coaching staff last time out. He was carving up the Raiders defense and LA went super conservative in the second half. Even with that, Herbert scored another 31 DK points. Herbert has only been under 19 DK points twice, an amazing feat of consistency for a rookie. He was shooting lasers last game and has all the metrics in his favor too. He’s eighth in points per game, ninth in touchdowns, eighth in yards and fifth in attempts on the season. Denver is ninth in DVOA but that doesn’t scare me. Just look at what the Buffalo offense did to this defense.

RB – It was a bad look for Austin Ekeler the last time we saw him. He got 17 touches and and played his normal 62% of the snaps. Still, he looked like he was playing hurt and the production seemed to follow with just 79 scrimmage yards. He also got poached by Kalen Ballage for a touchdown but that hasn’t been a big issue since he got back. Ekeler has seven RZ attempts to three for Ballage. Denver has given up nearly 1,900 scrimmage yards and if people are still sour about the last game, that would be to our advantage. He’s still the lead back with unique receiving upside since he’s had a 21.2% target share since coming back from injury.

WR – The Chargers receiving corps is a little bit of a question mark right now. Keenan Allen is game-time again and I don’t need to tell anyone how that ended last week. It wasn’t good. I’m hopeful he doesn’t play in all honesty so we know what we have to deal with. If he sits, Mike Williams becomes a lock in a lot of lineups. Allen being out would open up 26.5% of the air yards share and a 26.7% target share. He also owns the RZ and EZ target lead so Williams stepping into that style of role would be a massive step forward. We need to see who’s in or out before figuring out the matchup there.

The duo of Jaylen Guyton and Tyron Johnson would enter the picture as well. Guyton played more snaps as he usually does, upwards of 90% last week. I can’t see that changing if Allen is out. They saw six and five targets respectively, so I’d take Guyton with more snaps at a cheaper price. Just like Williams, let’s see what happens with Allen on Friday before diving too far into the matchups.

*Update* Allen is still listed as a game time decision. That is terrifying after last week and I’m very unlikely to pay the price for Allen this week. The smart play is to take shots with Johnson or Guyton but this being a late game is really not helpful.

TE – Hunter Henry is on the Covid list, but it must just be a contact issue because he’s not officially ruled out yet. Donald Parham would start in his stead and if he filled the role as Henry does, that could be a 17% target share with 10 RZ targets. At minimum price, I think we have to be at least a little interested. The Broncos are above average to the position with only four touchdowns allowed. The entire receiving corps needs some clarity before we can figure out where to go and who we need to play.

*Update* It doesn’t look like Henry will be active for this game. Parham can be used as a punt but GPP only.

D/ST – With the Denver offense playing poorly a lot of the time, you could argue the Chargers are in play. However, they only have 24 sacks and 16 turnovers. This numbers are not great and the price is not exactly cheap. I would likely just play Washington and take the more talented unit.

Cash – Herbert, Ekeler

GPP – Johnson, Parham, Guyton, D/ST

Rams at Seahawks, O/U of 47.5 (Seahawks -1)

Rams – Pace is 16th

QB – The Rams dropped a game to the Jets last week (insert Nelson Muntz HAHA GIF here) and Jared Goff was on of the reasons that happened. He didn’t play utterly horrible but 209 passing yards against the Jets at home? Yikes. It’s a prime example of why playing Goff is a spin on the roulette wheel every week. He’s just 23rd in pDB, 19th in touchdowns, 20th in points per game and 11th in yards despite seventh in attempts. Seattle has shown improvements in defense over the past few weeks, having crawled up to 24th in DVOA against the pass and only allowing 167 passing yards per game in the past three. I’m not super high on Goff, but he’s always worth a share in MME.

RB – Much of the attention this week is going to be on the backfield and the cheap pieces of Darrell Henderson and Malcolm Brown. It’s a bummer that Cam Akers is out after seizing control of this backfield lately. Henderson has the lead in attempts at 126-91 and RZ attempts at 30-16, so he’s my preferred option this week. It’s Sean McVay, so we could get the short end of the stick but Henderson has gotten more work and down more with it over the course of the season. I have to fall back on that. Seattle is 12th against the run in DVOA and has allowed the third-fewest rushing yards to backs (on the third-fewest carries faced) but Henderson is way too cheap to overlook in cash.

WR – I always fall to who’s cheaper between Robert Woods and Cooper Kupp and this week it’s Kupp. Neither player did much the first meeting, which is a slight surprise. These guys are virtually identical by metrics. Kupp has a lead in targets by two, RZ targets by one, it’s a dead heat in EZ targets and they are within 11 PPR points of each other. Kupp should have the slightly easier individual spot. Ugo Amadi mans the slot for Seattle and I prefer that spot to Shaquill Griffin on Woods. Griffin has been targeted 78 times and has given up a 1.70 pPT. These aren’t primary targets for me at this point at their prices.

TE – I’m mostly going to ignore the fact that Tyler Higbee had a big game last week. New York is among the worst teams defending the tight end position and Higbee is still just 29th in route percentage at 54.8%. That’s not going to get it done very often and the touchdown is great when you get it, but a waste of a roster spot when you don’t. Higbee is climbing in price on top of everything else, which makes me less interested.

D/ST – The Rams are right there with Washington for my favorite defense on the slate. They are a big mismatch for what Seattle struggles in, which is protecting the quarterback. They’ve allowed the third-most sacks and the eighth-highest pressure rate. There’s a reason LA scored 13 DK in the first meeting.

Cash – Henderson, D/ST

GPP – Kupp, Woods, Goff

Seahawks – Pace is 23rd

QB – I talked about this last week but we’re seeing a pretty easy pattern for Russell Wilson – if a defense can pressure, his ceiling crashes. His poor games have come against teams that are in the top 12 in pressure rate. LA is outside of that range, but they ALWAYS play Russ and he Seahawks tough. After getting embarrassed last week, they’re going to come to play here. Wilson is an excellent play by a lot of metrics, but I won’t go there this week. The Rams are fourth in DVOA against the pass to top it off. There’s too many options around him to have anything above MME exposure.

RB – I’m comfortable with the workload that Chris Carson got last week since he touched the ball 17 times and played 70% of the snaps. That’s his high since he came back from a foot injury and even though it didn’t amount to much for fantasy, I wanted to see that come back before I though about playing him. The Rams are still good against the run, ranking seventh in DVOA. They have also only surrendered 1,099 rushing yards to backs, sixth-best in football. The game should be close and Carson has a 12.1% target share on the year. He’s not a terrible play but would be reserved for GPP only in my eyes.

WR – For the first time all year, I’m not sure I want a Seahawks receiver. D.K. Metcalf gets Jalen Ramsey for the second time, and Ramsey has been one of the only corners to slow down Metcalf this season. You know full well Metcalf circled this game on his calendar after that first go-around. I’m here with popcorn, but I’m not going to be here with my lineup. $7,800 is too much to gamble on in my eyes. Ramsey is fourth in pPT at 1.30 and 14th in passer rating at 78.9. That’s over 76 targets and he’s also sixth in YPR at 9.8.

That would make you think we liked Tyler Lockett, but he stunk up the joint the first Rams game as well. Lockett has played 14 games and has missed 3x at his current salary a whopping 11 times. I don’t think I can sing up for that level of “consistency” and that’s not a compliment. Lockett has a 23.7% target share and a 56% slot rate. He should matchup with Troy Hill, who is 10th in pPT at 1.40 over 95 targets. No thank you.

TE – If you play anyone, play Jacob Hollister since Will Dissly haas games like last week when he doesn’t get a target. That’s not an advocation to play Hollister, who only has a 6.5% target share on the year.

D/ST – I could get there. This unit is way better off when Jamal Adams is playing his safety/linebacker hybrid and Carlos Dunlap is rushing the passer. They’ve hit at least five DK since Week 10 and nine DK in three weeks straight. The pricing hasn’t quite caught up with their talent and upwards trend yet.

Cash – D/ST

GPP – Carson, Metcalf, Russ

Eagles at Cowboys, O/U of 49.5 (Eagles -2.5)

Eagles – Pace is 4th

QB – To quote Ron Burgundy in Anchorman, “That escalated quickly” in regards to the salary of Jalen Hurts. He went from $4,800 to $7,000 in a blink of an eye, but I can’t say I blame DK for getting aggressive. Hurts has scored 25-ish DK points in two weeks from rushing production alone. That’s not counting his 500+ yards passing with four touchdowns. Hurts isn’t completing a high rate yet at just 41-74, but baby steps. He’s more than making up for it. He’s averaging 0.52 pDB early on and the Dallas defense is 20th in DVOA against the pass. I’m not ready to anoint Hurts as Lamar Jackson or anything, but he’s doing a good imitation so far. Hurts is a little high for cash, but a great GPP play in my eyes.

RB – I really want some exposure to Miles Sanders on this slate but his price is jacked up too. I’m not sure how he gets an increase when he scores 10 DK the previous week. The positives to take are he has a combined 36 touches since Hurts has been the starter, and that’s the workload we need for this salary. Sanders has also played over 80% of the snaps in both games, so maybe his price isn’t as bad as the first glance would indicate. Dallas has faced the most carries from backs, but have also given up the second-most rushing yards and 14 touchdowns. If there’s a week for Sanders to pay off at $7,000, it should be this one.

WR – It’s always dicey to take a two week sample as gospel, but that’s all we have with Hurts and these receivers. The two biggest winner so far are Jalen Reagor and Greg Ward. Reagor has 12 targets while Ward has 10. Ward also has the only two RZ and EZ targets of the pair, which he cashed in for two scores last week. Neither player has done a ton with their targets as Ward has 35 receiving yards and Reagor has 95. Reagor is playing mostly outside, which leaves him on Rashard Robinson for the most part. The Cowboys corner has been targeted just 19 times in four games but has allowed a 73.7% catch rate and a 2.10 pPT. Ward is in the slot, which is a little easier to get targets and faces Jourdan Lewis. He’s been targeted 63 times and has allowed a 1.60 pPT. Hurts is still very much in the development stages as a quarterback, so be careful.

TE – Philly has been super heavy on two tight end sets, with both Zach Ertz and Dallas Goedert playing 75% or more last week. They had seven and eight targets each, which really makes them better plays than the receivers. I almost hate to say it, but Ertz might make the most sense. His bets days seem pretty clearly behind him, but seven targets and 75% of the snaps at $3,100 is useful. The Eagles have used two tight ends like very few teams, so I’m good with either option.

D/ST – Another unit that would normally check in as viable, but is scary. They have some injury concerns but if the band is healthy, you can get me on board. They are top five in pressure rate on the season and are tied for the fourth-most sacks. They only blitz 22.5% which means their front can get home and create havoc.

Cash – Ertz, Geodert, D/ST (if injuries cooperate)

GPP – Hurts, Sanders, Reagor, Ward

Cowboys – Pace is 1st

QB – One of the biggest issues that spooks me about Andy Dalton is the 40.7% completion rate under pressure this year. That stands to happen a good bit in this game and we still haven’t seen much ceiling from Dalton. He’s only hit 20 DK once and the Eagles should have more pieces from the defense back in action than they did last week. Philly is just 23rd in DVOA against the pass, but Dalton is also just 30th in pDB at 0.36. I suppose you could go there for cash but the GPP upside has not been a thing for him.

RB – Is it weird to say that I want to see more Tony Pollard and I kind of hope Ezekiel Elliott sit again? Pollard is shining when he gets any kind of work and turned 18 touches last week into 31 DK points. The Eagles are 10th in DVOA against the run so Pollard is fully priced at $6,500 and would be GPP-only. He’s still playing for a longer-term job in the league whereas Zeke has everything he could ask for contract-wise. Let’s see who’s going to start.

*Update* Zeke is saying he’s going to play, but I would be shocked if he gets the workload needed to pay off the salary. As long as he’s active, the same can be said for Pollard.

WR – The trio of Amari Cooper, Michael Gallup and CeeDee Lamb have been very close in targets since Week 11 when Dalton came back. Gallup actually leads with 35 targets to 32 for Cooper and 31 for Lamb, but Cooper and Lamb both have more receptions. They also have more yards, while Cooper has more touchdowns. What’s interesting is Cooper got totally shut down the first time around. Some will undoubtedly chalk that up to Darius Slay, but it had more to do with the quarterback at that point. Slay has allowed 779 yards and a 71.7% completion rate on 92 targets, so you miss me with the shutdown corner claim.

Lamb will be in the slot when he’s on the field, but that’s only about 67% of the time anymore. When he’s playing, he’ll get Nickell Robey-Coleman mostly. He’s been solid with a 1.50 pPT and I think it just makes more sense to take the snaps with Cooper and go that route. That matchup isn’t set in stone since Avonte Maddox is out but Gallup could have a weak link to pick on. Lamb is the most awkward price so I have them ranked as Cooper>Gallup>Lamb.

TE – Dalton seems to look at Dalton Schultz less and less as he’s down to a 12.3% target share. He’s a fairly distant fourth in targets since Week 11 so even though it’s a great spot, it’s still questionable. Philly has allowed eight scores to the tight end and almost 800 yards receiving. Schultz is fine, but I wish I felt better about him.

D/ST – Hurts got sacked six times last week, so the Philly offensive line is still a mess. Dallas only has 26 on the season, but they could be punted for that reason alone. Even if they give up 30 points, 4-5 sacks a a turnover would mean they don’t kill you.

Cash – Cooper

GPP – Gallup, Schultz, running back, D/ST, Lamb

Core Four

Travis Kelce, Melvin Gordon, Gio Bernard, Kareem Hunt

I changed the Core 4 a good bit because full disclosure, I had the Baker and Jarvis Landry stack in cash. That’s not going to happen now with the receiver room being out of action. Instead, I’m pivoting a good bit. Kelce stays, but Hunt and MG3 are new. Hunt is going to rack up at least 15 touches, and I tend to think at least six receptions. Gio is just too cheap even if they trail and if you still want to play Lev Bell, I do get it. As I pointed out in the analysis, Bell is not priced differently than CEH. He wouldn’t have been in my Core 4 on his own, so Bell just misses.

Primary Game Stacks

ATL/KC – Kelce, Mahomes, Hill, Gage, Ridley, Hurst, Ryan, Bell

Note – This is the only game that is over 50 for the O/U and is the highest by four points.

Secondary Game Stacks

PHI/DAL – Hurts, Sanders, Ertz, Goedert, Cooper, Gallup, Dalton, Lamb

DEN/LAC – Herbert, Ekeler, Fant, MG3, Johnson, Guyton, Parham

CLE – Baker, Landry, Higgins, Chubb

LAR/SEA – Henderson, Kupp, Metcalf, Woods, Russ, Goff, Lockett

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

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NFL Week 15 Fantasy Recap

Stix and Michael discuss the NFL Week 15 Fantasy recap! Where we were right, where we were wrong, and some season long plays that might be waiver claims.

We spend a majority of the show going over how Stix constructed his 3 lineups for the DraftKings Live Final! We went over the games he liked the most, how constructing in this tournament was a bit different, and how he made sure to follow his process. There were a few places he went against his better judgement, and it may have cost him. Overall, we’re happy that he was there representing the Win Daily Sports Family!

We’ll be there all week with the same jazz as usually getting you ready for week 16 of the NFL! Make sure you’re on the look out for all the goodies that are coming down the pipe! Also don’t forget to check out our new promotion! Our 6 month all access pass is now only $150!

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NFL DFS: Stix Picks Week 15 Cash Game Checkdown

It’s Adam Strangis and not Stix for the second straight week and we’re back to get you your cash picks! Last week was very solid as the misses were few and far between. I have to say that two of my favorite plays absolutely crushed my hopes last week in Aaron Jones and Corey Davis. Still, the vast majority of picks returned 3x and that’s what we’re after in NFL DFS: Stix Picks Week 15 Cash Game Checkdown!

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

  • CHALK REPORT: Derrick Henry, Alvin Kamara, Brandon Aiyuk, Lynn Bowden, Jonathan Taylor, Lamar Jackson, T.Y. Hilton and cheap Saints ALL project to be high in cash game ownership. I think we’ll likely want to lock in AT LEAST THREE or FOUR of them in our NFL DFS cash lineups.
  • 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!!

Week 15 Cash Game Checkdown: Quarterbacks

  1. Patrick Mahomes ($7,900 DK/ $8,900 FD) – We won’t spend much time here. Mahomes threw three picks last week and still put up 24 DK points. He’s in the late hammer game that is attracting all sorts of attention. Do we need to spend up this far? I don’t believe so with the backs we’re targeting but if you can get there, it’s Mahomes.
  2. Lamar Jackson ($7,500 DK/$8,200 FD) – Due to some depressed stats for most of the year, Jackson finds himself at a cheaper price than normal in a total smash spot. Jacksonville is 24th in DVOA against the run and 31st against the pass. Jackson has started running again, racking up over 220 rushing yards over the past two games. Baltimore absolutely needs this game against a week opponent and Lamar being Lamar is their best path to win and is probably my choice in cash this week.
  3. Kyler Murray ($7,000 DK/$8,000 FD) – Another quarterback who has been sub-par lately, Kyler checks in as a massively cheap option with his rush attempts coming back. His shoulder really hindered him the past few weeks. There was a three game stretch where he ran a total of 15 times. That negates what makes him a truly special fantasy player. Last week, Kyler ran 13 times so an Eagles defense that is missing members of the secondary can be had in a big way.
  4. Drew Brees ($5,900 DK/$7,500 FD) – Brees is a little better value on DK but too cheap on either site. The Saints are a playoff team with Super Bowl aspirations. I have faith he’s ready to go or the Saints wouldn’t rush him for a non-conference game that doesn’t mean an overwhelming amount in the leg run. Brees is still 10th in points per drop back on the year and will either have to put up 30 to keep up with KC or be chasing for a big part of the day.
  5. Jalen Hurts ($5,900 DK/$6,900 FD) – There is small concern with any player like Hurts that game film will provide ways to exploit him to a bad game. However, I laid out the math in Game By Game. On DK, a combo of 50 rushing yards, 150 passing yards and a touchdown of any kind has you right in the 3x window. Even though the Cardinals defense is 9th in DVOA overall, New Orleans is higher and Hurts played well last week. I think it’s spending up or down this week as the mid-range all has some flaws.

Honorable Mention – Mitchell Trubisky, Ryan Tannehill, Philip Rivers

Week 15 Cash Game Checkdown: Running Backs

  1. Derrick Henry ($9,500 DK/$10,200 FD) – One of the absolute stone locks for me in cash, Henry is in line for a monster day. He’s slated for 22-25 rushing attempts or more against one of the worst rush defenses in football. Detroit is dead last in DVOA against the run and only five teams have allowed more rush yards to backs. Tennessee needs to keep winning and Henry has a shot at 2,000 rushing yards for the year. He checks far too many boxes to sweat any lack of receptions.
  2. Alvin Kamara ($7,400 DK/$7,800 FD) – I loved Kamara before Brees was starting but now, the man is likely to be the most popular player on the slate. Not only does Brees love him, but receiver Michael Thomas is out. The spot to attack KC is with running backs, especially since they’ve allowed the third-most receiving yards to backs. Kamara is a massive bargain and every cash lineup needs to start with he and Henry to my eyes.
  3. Jonathan Taylor ($7,200 DK/$7,400 FD) – This might be the back I’m least happy about potentially not playing. It’s not impossible, but we would have to go cheap at receiver. Taylor has cleared 15+ touches in his last three games, rolled up 331 rushing yards, 83 receiving yards and three touchdowns. The rookie is doing what we though he might at the start of the year. Hey, better late than never. Oh, he also gets the Texans who have surrendered the most rushing yards in football to backs. That’s the same defense that got gouged for over 100 rush yards by David Montgomery last week on just 11 carries.
  4. Cam Akers ($6,600 DK/$6,700 FD) – The Jets are a punchline, but the matchup by the stats isn’t the easiest. The Jets are eighth in DVOA against the run and that’s slightly concerning. However, it’s all about opportunity as the biggest favorite on the slate. The Rams should be able to handle this game easily and that should lead Sean McVay to run the football. As a team, they are seventh in attempts per game. Akers himself has had a long week to recover from his 50 carries over the past two games. He’s not my favorite option, but the workload and Vegas supports the play.
  5. J.K. Dobbins ($5,900 DK/$5,900 FD) – I know that Gus Edwards scored more last week, but Dobbins went back to over 60% of the snaps last week and has 24 carries over the past two games. He gets the same rush defense that Lamar does, and has huge upside. When we get a double-digit carry back in the best rushing offense in football, we have to be interested under $6,000. The matchup is just the cherry on top and the Ravens seem to recognize who their best back is.
  6. Leonard Fournette ($4,500 DK/$5,500 FD) – Am I doing cartwheels playing Fournette? No, for two reasons. One, I’m fat and can’t do a cartwheel so it’s a moot point. Secondly, Coach Bruce Arians lies like a rug. So when he says that Fournette will start if (and it’s increasingly likely) Ronald Jones is out, I don’t fully believe him. However, Fournette has played the pass catching back role and should get at least a dozen touches. At $4,500 that’s enough. In fairness, he has had a couple big games so if he makes it all work, I’m just going to deal with BA.

Honorable Mention – Dalvin Cook, David Montgomery, D’Andre Swift, J.D. McKissic, Salvon Ahmed (if Myles Gaskin is out)

Week 15 Cash Game Checkdown: Wide Receiver

  1. Tyreek Hill ($8,800 DK/$9,300 FD) – He’s the WR1 hooked up with the best quarterback in football. Do I need other reasons?
  2. DeAndre Hopkins ($7,900 DK/$8,600 FD) – If you spend up on any receiver not named Hill, it has to be Nuk this week. Not only is his quarterback operating at full capacity, but Hopkins is seeing targets at a top five rate in the NFL. He now gets a banged up Darius Slay on the other side, who shouldn’t scare anyone. That’s if Slay suits up. If not, the wheels are even further up for Hopkins. He could truly be a slate breaker his week.
  3. Brandon Aiyuk ($6,300 DK/$6,900 FD) – We’ll have a couple high salary receivers in Honorable Mention, but if we spend up on backs we have to trim salary somewhere. Aiyuk fits the bill against the Cowboys secondary. He’s on fire, with at least 19 DK in his last five games and a total of 56 targets in that time span. With Deebo Samuel and George Kittle out, Aiyuk will have to carry the passing game and he rookie is up for it.
  4. T.Y. Hilton ($5,500 DK/$6,800 FD) – He’s an easier fit on DK but I’m in love with T.Y. this week. Not only have he and Rivers been clicking, he historically owns the Texans. On top of that, Houston’s secondary has been a disaster since losing corner Bradley Roby to suspension. I know Hilton has been invisible for most of the season but he’s come alive at the exact right time.
  5. Emmanuel Sanders/Tre’Quan Smith ($4,200 DK/$5,500 FD and $3,200 DK/$5,000 FD) – With Thomas being out, the next two Saints receivers step into the spotlight. Smith has actually been playing more snaps than Sanders the past two weeks, an interesting development. He has one more target than Sanders and while the quarterback changes, both receivers will be needed to fill the 43.6% air yards share and 28.1% target share that Thomas vacates. This game is one of the highest O/U’s on the slate and it’s far too easy to get exposure here.

Honorable Mention – DK Metcalf, Allen Robinson, any Tampa receiver, Marvin Jones, CeeDee Lamb

Week 15 Cash Game Checkdown: Tight End

  1. Travis Kelce ($8,000 DK/$8,500 FD) – I mentioned it in the Gam By Game and we talked about it in Discord, but Kelce is actually still underpriced. Yes, he’s a tight end by position but you’re getting a discount on the receiver-like production he’s giving you. Metcalf is more expensive, yet Kelce has more PPR points. He’d be my main target from the Chiefs given the price deficiency if you can afford him.
  2. Mark Andrews ($5,500 DK/$6,800 FD) – My only sort of issue is the amount of times Baltimore passes the ball. Jackson has only 34 attempts combined the past two weeks, but Andrews can still get it done. He put up 12.8 DK last week without a score and Jacksonville has allowed 10 touchdowns on the year to tight ends.
  3. Jared Cook ($3,400 DK/$5,600 FD) – You can’t go full hog on Saints in cash, but Cook is going to help fill the Thomas void as well. Cook already leads the team in end zone targets and he’s third in red zone targets. With Thomas out, Cook has double-touchdown potential just like Mike Gesicki did last week against the Chiefs.
  4. Cole Kmet ($3,000 DK/$5,100 FD) – Kmet has played over 70% of the snaps the past three weeks after the Bears bye week. Additionally, Kmet has seen three, seven and seven targets over this three games and the past two has at least four receptions. He’s just way too cheap for the growing role and he’s easy to fit in any build.

Honorable Mention – T.J. Hockenson, Dallas Goedert

Week 14 Cash Game Checkdown: 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. Dolphins
  2. Colts
  3. Seahawks
  4. Patriots
  5. 49ers
  6. Cowboys

Sample Lineup

QB – Patrick Mahomes

RB – Derrick Henry

RB – Alvin Kamara

WR – Brandon Aiyuk

WR – T.Y. Hilton

WR – Tre’Quan Smith

TE – Cole Kmet

Flex – Leonard Fournette

D/ST – Cowboys

Let’s get after it this week my friends! 

Thanks for check out this Week 15 Cash Game Checkdown. 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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NFL Game By Game Breakdown Week 15

We’re deep into the NFL season and we’ve hit the point where we have games on both Saturday and Sunday! That’s awesome for degenerates and we have all 13 games in total broken down! The first portion of this article is devoted to Saturday’s two game slate, complete with its own Core Four. We have a ton of work to get to so let’s not mess about and get right into NFL Game By Game Breakdown Week 15 to win some money!

Saturday Slate

Bills at Broncos, O/U of 49 (Bills -6)

Bills – Pace is 26th

QB – It was a tale of two halves last game for Josh Allen as he rebounded from an atrocious first half to put the Steelers away. The number overall don’t look terribly impressive but consider they basically all came in one half. Allen has 15 total touchdowns over the past five games and has three games with at least 29 DK points in that stretch. We know the weather won’t both Allen really at all as long as it’s not a blizzard. He now ranks fifth in yards, sixth in pDB at 0.55, fourth in points per game and seventh in passing touchdowns. When you count in the six rushing touchdowns, it’s not hard to see where the ceiling can come from. Denver is seventh in DVOA against the pass and they hold quarterbacks to 19.6 DK points per game. Still, Allen is the likeliest candidate to match or exceed Aaron Rodgers for the QB1 on the slate. If he’s half as popular as Rodgers, that can to be attacked in GPP.

RB – It’s difficult to get behind this backfield on a normal slate. Zack Moss played more snaps and had 13 carries to just seven for Devin Singletary last week. That was a slight surprise since Moss fumbled early in Week 13 and was clearly benched. The salary for Moss is not tough to play but it’s much harder to find the ceiling for him. Allen has 22 RZ attempts and that always is a real threat to Moss or Singletary not scoring. Singletary is the clear third option when the Bills get close with just 16 RZ carries. He has three more games than Moss so the gap is likely wider than that.

With the salaries involved on this two game slate, I think Moss is going to be a popular option. It makes a lot of sense if you can snag 15-ish touches at this price. The Broncos are 22nd in DVOA against the run and have given up the 10th most rushing yards to backs. Normally, Moss wouldn’t be that interesting but on this slate he’s likely near a must if you try to load up on pricey studs.

WR – Stefon Diggs is just that dude. He leads the NFL in receptions at 100 even and that’s plenty of reason to play him on DK alone. That doesn’t even count his 35.7% air yards share and his 29.5% target share in the offense. Diggs leads in RZ targets as well and is the WR4 in PPR settings. I would love to play him and Davante Adams together but we’ll have to see how the rest of the slate shakes out. Regardless if Denver tries to match him with A.J. Bouye or not is not important to me here.

The secondary receivers are quite interesting as well since John Brown remains out. Both Gabriel Davis and Cole Beasley would be on the radar. Davis is a rookie but leads the Bills with six receiving touchdowns and he has 11 EZ targets, also the team lead. If you take the route of playing Allen over Rodgers, Davis is a great way to try and get what amounts to a 10 point touchdown. Davis also has a floor since he only has a 10.2% target share so if he doesn’t score, he could bust. Beasley just keeps on ticking and has at least five receptions in seven of 13 games. He’s in the top 20 in receptions and yards at the position.

TE – We usually just skip the Buffalo tight end, but some slight attention has to be paid to Dawson Knox. He saw seven targets last week, a season high. Over the past month, he’s been a little bit more involved with at least four targets in four of the last three games. Both of his receiving touchdowns have come in the last three weeks and if Brown remains out, he’s a viable punt option. Denver has only allowed three scores to the position but they’re also approaching 700 yards allowed.

D/ST – Buffalo is probably going to be the most popular defense on Saturday. Every dollar is important so it’ll be a little harder to get to the Packers and nobody will want to play against the Bills or Packers. The Bills are just average in pressure rate but they’ve been able to get home 31 times. Despite some flaws, they have also generated the third-most takeaways in the league. Give me splash play ability against a questionable offense any day of the week.

Priority – Diggs, Allen, Moss, D/ST, Davis, Beasley, Knox

Broncos – Pace is 10th

QB – The Drew Lock Experience continued last week as he went bonkers, throwing for four touchdowns and 280 yards. It’s exactly what we talked about in his erratic play. Sometimes he can look like an above average starter, others he looks like he shouldn’t have made it past high school. Lock has finally pulled his TD:INT to an even 13 on each side (better late than never I guess). With the Bills forcing so many turnovers, Lock is a terrifying option in some respects. The plus side is this could be a negative game script and he is wildly cheap. Lock isn’t likely to match the true ceiling of Allen or Rodgers with is 32nd ranked pDB. If he can get to within 4-6 DK points in garbage time, the salary saving could be worth it. Buffalo does give up the seventh-most DK points per game to the position. I can see Lock being in a winning lineup if he gets to 22-24 DK and your other studs do their job.

RB – I simply cannot fathom why the Broncos insist on splits the carries almost equally lately between Melvin Gordon and Phillip Lindsay. The past two games have seen Gordon carry it 28 times for 199 yards while asking on four receptions for 34 yards. Lindsay as 25 carries for 50 yards and two receptions for seven yards. That is astounding in their difference and Denver not being able to see it. In fairness, Gordon did have a bit of shoulder injury this past week to explain the attempts for Lindsay a bit but even still. Buffalo has allowed over 1,700 scrimmage yards and 11 total touchdowns while siting 18th in DVOA against the run. I wish I felt better about Gordon here and Lindsay is not on my board.

WR – For all the work that Lock did, it didn’t exactly translate to receivers getting a ton of targets. Jerry Jeudy, Tim Patrick and K.J. Hamler all saw five targets or fewer, which can make this difficult to project going into the next game. Hamler might wind up being my favorite since he plays a lot of his snaps in the slot. That’s typically where we attack the Bills defense and Taron Johnson is not the best corner, defensive touchdown last week notwithstanding. Johnson has allowed an 11.8 YPR and a 62% catch rate so far. Hamler is absolutely boom or bust with a 14.3% target share which is fourth on the team. You’re likely to have one or two of those style of players in the lineup for the two gamer.

Jeudy continues to play more outside snaps and that should likely leave him on some of Tre White. The Bills corner has struggled with consistency this season with a 67.6% catch rate allowed and a 101.3 passer rating. That would leave Patrick to see Levi Wallace in most sets and Wallace has been fairly sound this year with a 1.60 pPT over 64 targets. Patrick is living a charmed life lately, accumulating just 11 targets over the past three games. He has seven receptions for 80 yards and three touchdowns, which is carrying almost all of his production. That always makes things sketchy and that’s why I lean Hamler for the $700 savings. I do have a lot of Hamler to make everything else work and he’s a Stix favorite as well.

TE – It looks like Noah Fant dodged a bullet as the Broncos thought he may have Covid. Fant has returned negative tests for two days straight so he should be ready to go Saturday. Fant has not done anything spectacular this year and has a target share under 17% and just a 6.8 aDOT. That’s the lowest of any receiver in the offense and Hamler is next lowest at 11.1. The Bills are the fourth-worst in DK points per game this year and have given up the second-most yards. Lastly, they are tied for the most receptions given up so Fant has about the best matchup he could ask for. With him being under $4,000, he could make the most sense at TE this slate even with linebacker Matt Milano for Buffalo back in the lineup.

D/ST – I think there’s an outside chance the Denver finishes with close to negative points in this game. They only have 11 turnovers forced on the season, which doesn’t help. The 36 sacks are decent but the Buffalo offense is playing extremely well. I’d be trying to get to Buffalo even if the popularity is way higher.

Priority – Fant, Hamler, Lock, Gordon, Patrick, Jeudy, D/ST

Panthers at Packers, O/U of 51.5 (Packers -8.5)

Panthers – Pace is 29th

QB – Teddy Bridgewater is really in the same exact boat as Lock is. There’s not a lot to love metrics-wise for him but the garbage time production is palpable here. The Panthers trailed in last week’s game and Teddy B hit 20 DK, which would be about 4x at this salary. Also just like Lock, I doubt he can match the ceiling of Allen or Rodgers and would be hoping he gets within about 4-6 DK points of those two. The lack of touchdowns continues to cap Bridgewater, though it’s not like he’s smashing in other aspects. He’s 17th in yards, 15th in pDB and 16th in points per game. The 14 passing touchdowns is just 21st in the league. He does have four rushing touchdowns which helps a bit but it’s not like we should bank on that. Green Bay is 18th in DVOA against the pass but are top-five in DK points per game against the position. If he’s projecting to be the least popular quarterback, he’s worth taking some shots with.

RB – This is really the weakness to attack against the Packers since they are 25th in DVOA against the run. They are bottom-five in DK points per game and where they really can’t defend is pass catching running backs. They’ve allowed the most yards and the sixth-most receptions, not to mention 18 total touchdowns. With Christian McCaffrey all but out, attention shifts to Mike Davis. He awoke from his slumber last week to produce 26.3 DK points with two touchdowns. Even with the Panthers getting their receiving corps back in action, it’s hard to not love Davis given the slate and matchup.

WR – We should expect D.J. Moore back from the Covid list here and he’s among my favorite receivers on the slate at his cost. For one, he avoids Jaire Alexander for the most part. I typically do not try to go against Alexander and Robby Anderson doesn’t strike me as the one to break the mold there. Moore has a 22.9% target share and leads in air yards share at 40.3%, which could leave him in a prime spot to do some damage. No Panther has more than his eight EZ targets either and he leads the team in touchdown receptions. The price is rock bottom for him.

If we think Anderson gets muted here, that could open the door for another Curtis Samuel game as well. He’s running about 53% of his routes from the slot and if the Panthers are chasing, he could see plenty of targets to pay off his low salary as well. With Moore back, Samuel should be mostly in the slot and that means Chandon Sullivan for Green Bay. Sullivan has been solid with an 88.2 passer rating allowed and a catch rate under 60% across 67 targets. It’s mostly playing the script here.

TE – Carolina has not utilized this position at all this year.

D/ST – The Panthers are bottom seven in pressure rate, are under 20 sacks this year and are on the road. They do have 18 turnovers forced, but relying on 13 fumbles against a premier NFL offense doesn’t seem like a recipe for success.

Priority – Davis, Moore, Samuel, Bridgewater, Anderson

Packers – Pace is 32nd

QB – I’m not sure what else I can really say about Rodgers that we haven’t said already. He seemingly is good for three touchdown passes every single game, as he’s only been under that mark in three of 13 games. He legit averaging three per game since he’s at 39, leading the NFL. Rodgers is sixth in yards, first in pDB, fifth in points per game and has done this all on being 13th in attempts. He draws a defense that just got thrashed by Lock, can’t pressure him and is 26th in DVOA against the pass. The odds of Rodgers scoring the most DK points at the position are high and he’s priced as he should be.

RB – I’m trying very hard to not let last week cloud my judgement on Aaron Jones. He got 70% of the snaps and 17 touches, which is right about what I expected. What I didn’t expect was a 9.5 DK performance and it was baffling in that spot. This particular spot is basically just as good since the Panthers are 19th in DVOA against the run and are over 1,800 scrimmage yards allowed so far. What’s interesting to note with Jones is he’s only had one true ceiling game this year, and that did come when Davante Adams first got hurt and missed about half the game.

Past that, he broke a 77-yard run against Philly that helped give him 26.8 DK. Without that run, it would’ve been another game under 20. Jones has eight of his 11 games under that mark, and was very close to it being nine. This is more than just he flopped last week. The track record this year suggests that with the passing game operating at such a high level, Jones isn’t as likely to smash any given week. Among the big name studs on this slate, he’s the easiest to fade in my eyes.

WR – One player I don’t want to fade is Adams, and I’m trying my best to start any lineup with the Diggs/Adams duo. I’m not convinced it remains the optimal path since you’d have to take e a lot of chances. Adams just doesn’t stop, adding another 7/115/1 to his season last week. He trails Tyreek Hill for the WR1 in PPR formats by about 12 points and has played two full games fewer. That’s not even counting the half game he missed against Detroit. He is legitimately unstoppable with a 33.3% target share and a 37.8% share of the air yards.

The probability for any other Packers receiver plummets after that but Marquez Valdes-Scantling still seems to be the clear choice. He has a bizarre goose egg in the mix, but the past four weeks have seen him garner six targets in three of those games. He’s scored a touchdown in two of those games and has crossed 20 DK points in those contests. Panthers corner Donte Jackson doesn’t exactly pose the biggest threat with a 96.8 passer rating allowed. MVS has the second-most targets on the team and just under 30% of the air yards share. The double stack with Rodgers, Adams and MVS is a very viable path to take here. Allen Lazard is more of a dart throw and I think we can turn to a player in the Denver/Buffalo game for better chances. Lazard has not crossed 12.3 DK points the last four weeks and has three games at eight DK or lower.

TE – Over that same four weeks, Robert Tonyan has been just a machine. He’s been targets 20 times and has 19 receptions and a touchdown in every single game. You really can’t argue that he shouldn’t be the TE1 in salary on this slate. I think the floor is lower than it looks since he’s been scoring so much and would rather play Fant unless stacking Big Bob with Rodgers. Carolina has allowed six touchdowns, the fifth-most yards and are tied for the most receptions. Both he and Fant are in statistically great spots.

D/ST – They will likely be a little difficult to squeeze in and I’m not particularly convinced they deserve to be so high in price. They only have 13 turnovers on the year to go with their 35 sacks. However, Carolina has the third-fewest turnovers as a team and Teddy B has only been sacked 23 times. Buffalo just makes much more sense.

Priority – Adams, Rodgers, MVS, Tonyan, Jones, D/ST

Core Four

Davante Adams, Mike Davis, Zach Moss, D.J. Moore

Adams truly just speaks for himself and with CMC off the slate, he will be universally rostered. It’s chalk you have no choice but to eat. I’m not exactly overjoyed to play Moss but the touches come at such a cheap price and it allows me to move around other pieces in the lineup. Lastly, the duo of Panthers players make for a good run back option of a heavy Packers stack. Don’t be afraid to go Rodgers/Adams/MVS/Tonyan on a two game slate. They’re the best offense by a good margin and if Rodgers hits three touchdowns yet again, all three receivers could be in business.

Sunday Main Slate

Buccaneers at Falcons, O/U of 49.5 (Bucs -6)

Buccaneers – Pace is 9th

QB – It was certainly weird to see Tom Brady only throw the ball 23 times this past week, a season low. That’s not going to translate to a ton of fantasy success since Brady is at a 0.49 pDB, 12th in the league. His accuracy numbers on the deeper dive still leave something to be desired as well. Brady is 33rd in completion rate under pressure and 24th in deep ball completion. The Bucs are still chucking it in a general sense as Brady is top five in attempts but seeing this chance out of the bye could be noteworthy.

It could also be game script related since Tampa didn’t have to throw it a ton last week. The price came down slightly for Brady against a pass funnel defense. Atlanta is 20th in DVOA against the pass and 31st in yards given up overall. We do have to pay attention to the recent sample. The Falcons have faced Justin Herbert, Taysom Hill and Derek Carr over the past three games and are averaging just 220 passing yards allowed. It’s a mixed bag of opposition, but the Falcons are continuing their surge in play with Raheem Morris at the helm.

RB – With Ronald Jones now on the Covid list and ruled out, Leonard Fournette is going from healthy scratch to starter. Given he was just not in the lineup, I’d be careful with Fournette outside of cash. He’s too valuable to pass in that format but there’s concerns about GPP. Atlanta is a top 10 unit in DVOA against the run and has allowed the second-fewer yards to backs on the ground. LeSean McCoy and Ke’Shawn Vaughn are also behind Fournette to mix in. I think Shady could be some serious GPP leverage depending on who’s popular coming into Sunday.

WR – It’s fairly difficult for too many weapons to have good games when the quarterback only throws 23 times and all of the Bucs players felt the brunt. Antonio Brown was actually the leading scorer of the big three on five targets and he only hit 9.9 DK points. Of course, it was Scotty Miller hauling in a long touchdown pass that helped out nobody. AB is still only playing 61.2% of the snaps but is just six targets behind Mike Evans for the team lead in their games together. Brown and Chris Godwin are tied at 34 while Evans is at 40. The biggest difference maker is is the 10 RZ targets for Evans. That’s almost 50% of the RZ looks in this offense and he leads in PPR points since AB joined.

Evans gets rookie corner A.J. Terrell who has gotten smacked around for a 2.10 pPT and a 118.4 passer rating allowed. That would leave Brown to mostly play against Darqueze Denard and Godwin in the slot against Isaiah Oliver. Neither corner is anything we should worry about here. At their prices, Evans is still absolutely my favorite and if not playing him or double stacking, AB makes more sense at $5,400 than Godwin does.

TE – I’m typically a little hesitant to play Rob Gronkowski anymore as he’s mostly touchdown or bust. That’s legitimately all he did in this past game and he’s $4,200. He only has 24 targets over the past five games but this is a good spot to potentially find the end zone. Atlanta is tied for the third-most touchdowns given up to tight ends on the season with the third-most receptions. I would likely reserve Gronkowski for a Brady stack to maximize on his scoring but it wouldn’t surprise me to see the Gronk Spike in this contest.

D/ST – The Bucs defense is in a good spot here and the price is depressed after a string of poor outings. They have the second-highest pressure rate in football and Atlanta is right about inside the top 10 in pressure rate allowed. Tampa is still tied for the third-most turnovers forced and I have a good bit of interest if things break the right way on the injury front.

Cash – Evans, D/ST

GPP – Brady, AB, Gronkowski, Godwin

Falcons – Pace is 5th

QB – The trend of Matt Ryan playing poorly without Julio Jones continued this past week with three interceptions and just 10.3 DK points. Ryan has not been over 14 DK points in any game that Julio has missed this year and we got rumors last week of the Falcons potentially shutting Julio down for the season. That would leave me totally off Ryan, who has just not played that well regardless. He’s down to 25th in pDB, 20th in points per game, 15th in touchdowns and fourth in yards. It’s great that he can chew up yardage but eventually, fewer touchdowns does you in. What’s scary about the touchdowns is Ryan is second in RZ attempts. He is very cheap and if Julio plays, that would change things. As of now I’m not really looking his way since he ranks 25th in pressured completion rate.

RB – There’s exactly no chance I’ll play Todd Gurley this week. Over the past three games, he has no higher than eight attempts in any game. He’s not getting a ton of work and he draws the best run defense in the NFL. No team has allowed fewer rushing yards per game overall and to the running backs specifically. This is an easy pass and we don’t need to spend much time here.

WR – If Julio is out, there’s really only two options on the radar and one of them is wildly expensive in Calvin Ridley. He’s more expensive than players like DeAndre Hopkins and others, not to mention he’s just below Tyreek Hill and DK Metcalf. That’s a lot to ask and I know he flirted with 30 DK last week but I still struggle to get there. Ridley is tied for third in RZ targets and second in EZ targets so there is definite reason to think he could score twice. Carlton Davis has been relatively strong this season. The 1.80 pPT is a little high as is the 12.5 YPR, but he’s been targeted 104 times which is a ton.

Russell Gage is a much easier play to get behind at cost although I’m not expecting a 39-yard touchdown pass again. He still drew seven targets and should be playing in the slot. Not only will Ryan need to get the ball out quicker (8.9 aDOT for Gage), but the slot is the spot to go after in the Bucs passing defense. Sean Murphy-Bunting has allowed a 71.4% catch rate and a 129.0 passer rating so far this season. Gage is plenty cheap enough to get the job done at his salary. His 17.4% target share is respectable, and there’s potential for more without Julio. No other receiver played 50% of the snaps last week.

*Update* Julio is out as we pretty much expected

TE – Hayden Hurst has just disappeared from the offense over the past month. He has a zero, 1.7, 1.9 and an 8.8 game log and that is ugly. He’s really not being given many chances since three of those games Hurst was targeted four times or fewer. We need to look for better options at the position this week.

D/ST – The Falcons may be top 10 in pressure rate but I’m not sure this is the right spot for them. Brady has only been sacked 16 times so you’re banking on some turnovers here. It could happen, but let’s see what we’re looking at for other punts as we go through the slate.

Cash – Gage

GPP – Ridley, D/ST

Seahawks at Washington, O/U of 44 (Seahawks -5.5)

Seahawks – Pace is 20th

QB – It’s not that we have to worry too much about matchups when we talk about Russell Wilson but this is for sure not the easiest spot he’s going to encounter. Not only is Washington second in DVOA against the pass and third in passing yards allowed per game, they are tied for the fifth-fewest touchdowns allowed. That’s not even talking about the front for Washington, which stands to give Seattle fits. Wilson has been sacked the second-most times this year behind Carson Wentz and Washington is a top 10 pressure rate team. Wilson had a four game stretch against the Cardinals, Giants, Rams and Eagles that he didn’t post more than 20 DK. The common denominator? All of those teams are in the top 12 in pressure are on the year. Russ will be GPP only this week for me.

RB – The snaps might seem like Chris Carson is still not healthy, but I’m not worried in that aspect too much. The blowout nature of the Jets game allowed Seattle to be cautious with Carson to get him right for the last three weeks. He is still priced pretty much near what I’m willing to pay for him. Washington is strong against the run with the 10th ranked DVOA and the ninth-fewest rush yards allowed. One aspect that helps is Carson is 21st in receptions Mong running backs, an unheralded part of his role. Carson has earned a 12.2% target share and still leads the team in attempts and RZ attempts as well. The price leaves him out of cash for me but I’d play him in GPP without hesitation.

WR – I’m actually pretty excited for this matchup. DK Metcalf is now behind Travis Kelce for the receiving yards lead and squares up against a good secondary. The targets between he and Tyler Lockett might be dead even at 106, but Metcalf has a 40.1% to 27.5% lead in air yards share and leads in yards by almost 300. He should spend most of his time against Kendal Fuller. Not only is Fuller tiny compared to Metcalf, he’s allowing a 12.2 YPR. If Metcalf gets some snaps against Ronald Darby, it’s all over. He’s allowed a 14.3 YPR this season and would get toasted by Metcalf.

Lockett has fallen to the second fiddle role and there’s not much of a debate. He’s still too pricey for a player of his inconsistency. Locket has had two nuclear games, two 3x games and not a whole lot else for the salary involved. He’s targeted just as much as Metcalf but the production does not match week to week. Jimmy Moreland has quietly been strong over 63 targets with a 1.20 pPT and an 80.2 passer rating allowed.

TE – The playing time for Will Dissly and Jacob Hollister is split almost right down the middle, really hurting both players. Hollister has all of five more targets and they both have 20 receptions, so you’d just be hoping the one you played found the end zone. I’d slightly prefer Hollister since on the season he’s played far fewer snaps and still has more targets but it’s a thin play.

D/ST – Seattle has been playing some poor quarterbacks/offenses the last little bit but they have fully taken advantage. They’ve scored at least nine DK the past three weeks and have racked up three turnovers to go with 11 sacks and a safety. That trend may well continue with how many missing pieces the Washington offense could have this week.

Cash – Metcalf, D/ST

GPP – Wilson, Carson, Lockett, Hollister

Washington – Pace is 14th

QB – We’re not sure who’s starting at quarterback yet between Alex Smith and Dwayne Haskins so we’ll double back here with more analysis when we know the starter. I doubt that I love either of them with Seattle playing better on the defensive side of the ball lately.

*Update* Smith has been ruled out and Haskins is going to start. With the amount of quarterbacks under $6,000, it’s extremely difficult to get down to Haskins. Seattle is only allowing 132 passing yards per game in their past three and this is another poor quarterback they can play well against.

RB – At a guess, Antonio Gibson won’t be quite ready to come back this week from a turf toe injury. That would leave J.D. McKissic as an option once again though the price did come up. McKissic and Peyton Barber split touches fairly equally but McKissic did much more with his. Barber barely averaged three yards per carry while McKissic was over six yards per attempt. McKissic only saw four total targets but that probably had a lot to do with Smith missing about half the game. Seattle is better in DVOA against the run at 11th and only three teams have given up fewer yards to the backs. However, they are tied for the fourth-most receptions allowed which is directly in McKissic’s wheelhouse. Seeing him getting 11 carries was encouraging and I’m right back to him at the salary.

*Update* Gibson is doubtful which basically means he is out.

WR – With the Washington pass game going haywire on Sunday, no receiver did much of anything. This continues to be a one man show for me. Terry McLaurin has had a couple bad weeks here but talk about a spot to get off the hook. Scary Terry still has the highest air yards share among receivers who have played at least 10 games at 42.7%. He is still a top 15 receiver in PPR formats even with the past few weeks not being that kind to him. The Seahawks will likely try to get Shaquill Griffin on him as much as they can as Griffin only allows a 10.0 YPR and a 1.70 pPT. He would be the best chance of containing McLaurin.

TE – A prime beneficiary of McLaurin being quiet has been Logan Thomas over the past three weeks. He’s accumulated 20 targets and has caught 19 passes along with two touchdowns. The question sort of remains if McLaurin gets back to his normal production levels if Thomas can maintain. If the Washington defense can’t mute the Seattle offense, we may have to find out because they might have to throw a lot. Thomas has a 17.3% target share which is third on the team. If we like this one to shootout, it’s easy to funnel Washington through McLaurin, McKissic and Thomas.

D/ST – I’m going to be interested here at this salary. I talked about it in Wilson’s analysis but he’s been sacked a ton this year. The Washington defense is only five behind the league lead and is top-five overall in DVOA on the year. They come into this one very cheap and have some room to give up some points to still walk away with a solid DK score.

Cash – McKissic

GPP – McLaurin, Thomas, D/ST

Bears at Vikings, O/U of 47 (Vikings -3)

Bears – Pace is 12th

QB – Is…is Mitchell Trubisky playing sort of well lately? He’s not thrown a pick the past two games to go with four touchdowns and is completing over 73% of his passes. In the Detroit game, it didn’t translate to fantasy with just one touchdown and a fumble. The Houston game more than paid off with just about 25 DK points and this is going to be the third straight matchup Trubisky should be able to handle. Trubisky actually hasn’t been that incredibly poor by the pDB metric at 0.47, good for 16th. When a quarterback is this cheap and we know he does have a ceiling, he has to be considered. Now factor in that Minnesota gives up right about 20 DK points per game and he’s really not a poor option at salary. It should be noted that the Vikings have climbed to 12th in DVOA against the pass but that’s not a deal breaker here.

RB – Speaking of playing well lately, David Montgomery has entered the chat. He’s now hit 27 DK or higher in three straight games and the only thing the Bears did wrong is get him just 11 carries last week. He ripped off an 80-yard score the first play for the Bears offense and only got 10 more attempts….because reasons. This is what some thought the Bears were getting last year and Monty shredded the three easy matchups he just got. Minnesota isn’t much different with the 20th ranked DVOA defense against the run and the ninth-most rushing yards allowed to backs. He missed the first game against the Vikings but I’m very much still interested here. The price is a little scary with his career track record, but he’s a bell cow and deserves to be priced so high. The fact that the Vikings are still down linebacker Eric Kendricks is a nice boost for Monty as well.

WR – With flighty quarterback play comes flighty production, otherwise known as The Allen Robinson Career Arc. Almost any outcome is possible here and he’s coming off a ceiling game of 30 DK. There’s not an individual matchup that concerns me with A-Rob almost at all, it’s just down to quarterback play. The only main category he doesn’t lead for receiving on the Bears is RZ targets and he’s two behind Jimmy Graham. The price is up there and I think I’ll likely fade for other options unless I go with a Bears stack. It doesn’t much matter to me if he faces Cameron Dantzler, who has allowed 2.10 pPT so far.

Darnell Mooney and Anthony Miller were mostly afterthoughts last week and they continue to be thin options. I’m basically always going o side with Mooney since he has the boom potential. Miller needs to be more of a PPR guy and that’s not what he is in the offense. Mooney is the only other player to be above 20% in air yards share and have an aDOT over 10.0. He would see a good bit of Chris Jones. In his partial playing time this year, he’s allowed a 13.1 YPR and a 122.9 passer rating. Both players are right around 100 PPR points but give me Mooney if either.

TE – Graham may have vultured a touchdown, but I’m all aboard Cole Kmet here. For the second straight week, Kmet saw seven targets and for the first time all year, he played over 80% of the snaps. It’s clearly starting to click a little for the rookie and the price hasn’t moved. If we can get a tight end that is playing those kinds of snaps and getting targeted heavily at this price, it’s silly to ignore him. The Vikings are a neutral matchup as far as DK points per game goes, but we’re just trying to keep ahead of the curve here. Chicago picked him high in the draft with other needs and with a bunch of tight ends on the roster at the time for a reason.

D/ST – Chicago is a hair expensive for my tastes. Almost 25% of their sacks came last week against Houston so that total is a bit inflated. The 14 turnovers forced is nothing special and neither is the price. I suppose you can argue that this squad knows the Vikings and might have some answers but they weren’t super impressive the first game. Their touchdown came from a Cordarrelle Patterson return. I like other options on any end of the salary spectrum better.

Cash – Monty, Kmet, Trubisky

GPP – Robinson, Mooney, D/ST

Vikings – Pace is 24th

QB – In the first game, Cousins was eight yards shy from the 300-yard bonus and threw two touchdowns. Cousins hasn’t been throwing interceptions much lately but he does have a lost fumble in every game over the past four. He’s balanced that with 10 touchdowns but the matchup doesn’t leap off the page statistically. Chicago is 10th in DVOA against the pass and they’ve only surrendered 17.9 DK points per game. Cousins has the efficiency working for him with the eighth-most touchdown passes and 10th highest pDB this year. He’s only 19th in attempts so if the Vikings passed more, Cousins might even be better than he is. We don’t need him in cash with an option $200 cheaper but that means Cousins checks the boxes as a solid GPP play.

RB – Last week Ghost hammered home the point that Dalvin Cook was the large field GPP play over Derrick Henry and I fully believe that’s the case this week as well. Henry is more expensive but has the nuts matchup. Cook has a perceived tough spot against the Bears, but it may not be as tough. Last week against the Bucs, Cook scored 22 DK and put up over 100 rushing yards on the best run defense in football. Defensive tackle Aikem Hicks for the Bears hasn’t missed a game but has been battling injury. If he were to miss, Cook’s spot gets vastly improved. As it is, Cook put up 114 scrimmage yards in the first Bears game. He’s unbelievably talented and if he comes at a fraction of the popularity, you must consider him in large GPP’s because he can certainly out-score Henry.

WR – It’s a little funny because both Adam Thielen and Justin Jefferson gave this defense fits last time. It’s one of the few games that both have paid off together this season. Thielen scored twice and Jefferson went for 8/135, both eclipsing 20 DK. They both flopped last week and it that could work to your favor in GPP. Not many will be on them. Saying Thielen lives on touchdowns isn’t exactly fair but Jefferson leads Thielen by over 300 yards receiving. The have almost an identical aDOT and Jefferson has a six point lead in PPR settings. Thielen evens the scoring by holding a 12-7 lead in touchdowns and no player has been targeted more in the end zone. Jaylon Johnson should be mostly tasked with Thielen and Johnson has given up a 15.0 YPR and a 1.70 pPT. That leaves Kyle Fuller with Jefferson and Fuller sits ninth in catch rate allowed a 55.6%. I’d go Thielen here since he’s cheaper.

TE – When you’re trailing in a game and you can target Tyler Conklin more than Thielen, you just have to do it. Kyle Rudolph has a chance to be back this week which would relegate Conklin back to the bench, but Irv Smith would be my favorite play in this spot. That’s not saying much as the tight ends don’t get a ton of work and the touchdown equity is hurt by Thielen. However, Smith would be cheap enough to look at. Even on just 28 snaps, Smith managed to go 4/63/1. Especially if Rudolph is out again, that’ll work against the Bears.

*Update* Rudolph is out again, so Smith is in play for sure.

D/ST – This really isn’t going to be a unit that I love over these last few weeks. They only have 21 sacks to go with the sixth-lowest pressure rate in football. On top of that, they aren’t exactly the cheapest price. Chicago is an offense that can be attacked with some defense but I’m not convinced the Vikings are one of them.

Cash – Smith

GPP – Cook, Jefferson, Thielen, Cousins, D/ST

Texans at Colts, O/U of 50.5 (Colts -7.5)

Texans – Pace is 13th

QB – Even with just 30 passing attempts, Deshaun Watson put up 16 DK last game. That was with his top three receivers to start the year out for the game and an egregiously dropped touchdown pass by one of his tight ends. This is to illustrate just how good Watson is, even if his own franchise hasn’t helped him very much the past couple seasons. This is another spot that is going to be very difficult for him since Indy is sixth in DVOA against the pass and are the ninth-best team in DK points allowed per game. Watson sits seventh in pDB, sixth in points per game, second in passing yards and ninth in touchdown passes. It’s depressing to see how little he has around him right now. Quietly, Watson is seventh among quarterbacks in rushing yards as well. If Brandin Cooks can make it back, maybe you can sell me on an underpriced Watson even in a tough matchup.

RB – David Johnson is expected back since he was a close contact instead of having Covid. That’s great news for him but it doesn’t mean I’m looking to play him. The Colts are also top 12 in DVOA against the run and Johnson just has flashed almost no tangible upside this year. Of his nine games played, just two would have hit 3x on his current salary. I’m sure he’ll get double-digit rush attempts but there’s nothing here that I’m interested in.

WR – This receiving corps still has potential even though I’m not exactly on Watson this week. I’m very likely to not have any Brandin Cooks, as he’s going to see Xavier Rhodes and that didn’t work out well the first time around. Cooks was held to just 11.5 DK by Rhodes and I’m of the opinion that Cooks is not an alpha in a passing game at this juncture. What I am interested in is Keke Coutee and Chad Hansen. The latter has come out of nowhere to be productive in his two games so far. He’ll face more of Rock Ya-Sin in this game and Hansen got Indy for 5/101 the first time around. Coutee is right about 54% in the slot so far so should face a good deal of Kenny Moore. Ya-Sin and Moore are definitely the corners to attack on this defense if any. Ya-Sin is my favorite to go after with a 1.90 pPT and a 100.9 passer rating allowed. Given the salary, I think Hansen may well be my favorite and could be played in all formats.

TE – As Ghost said in the Discord, I’m off this three-way split among the tight ends. Jordan Akins, Darren Fells and Pharaoh Brown could all play heavy snaps and none of them can catch. We can do better. Heck, a player like Kmet is only $300 more than Akins.

D/ST – This unit just got worked by Trubisky. They do have 31 sacks, which is respectable but only eight (!!) turnovers forced and that’s the least in the league. With the Colts not giving up a ton of sacks or pressure, I can’t see a route that makes it worth the punt.

Cash – Hansen, Coutee

GPP – Watson, Cooks

Colts – Pace is 17th

QB – You want a pivot off what I expect to be the popular option? How about #NoodleSZN at the exact same price point. Philip Rivers might be a noodle arm at this point but he can still produce fantasy points. I do have concerns about a true ceiling game from him and he certainly is not my cash option over Hurts. If the Colts can keep him under 35 attempts, there’s a good chance that’s how they play the game. With Houston’s issues in the secondary, Rivers might not need a ton of attempts to have a good game and he could out-score some of the chalkier quarterbacks. Rivers is somehow eighth in passing yards on the season and 15th in touchdown passes despite being 11th in attempts. I know exactly who I’m stacking with him as well.

RB – It’s not Jonathan Taylor in the Rivers stack, but talk about a smash spot for the rookie. He’s taking over this backfield even though the snap counts wouldn’t give it away. The past three games he’s not cleared 56% but he has a combined 55 carries and nine receptions. He tagged Houston for 22.5 DK on just 13 rush attempts last game and we saw the ceiling he possesses last week against Vegas. The scary part about the Vegas game? He was still used quite poorly early in the contest. In the first drive, JT had seven touches, scorched Vegas on four plays over 10 yards and totaled 60 scrimmage yards. He then saw just two more touches until just about halftime. I mean, come on. Feed. Him. MOAR. He still totaled 22 touches and with Houston dead last in rushing yards allowed to backs and 29th in DVOA against the run, I still love JT at his salary.

WR – You can call me a fish or whatever you want but I LOVE T.Y. Hilton this week. After the game two weeks ago, Hilton has played 17 games against the Texans and has 93 receptions, 1,647 yards and 11 touchdowns. This is his spot and has been for years. Hilton is playing his best football of the season and has cleared 18 DK over the past three weeks. It seems like Hilton and Rivers have clicked over that time period as Hilton has a 39.3% air yards share and a 22.1% target share. With Bradley Roby not there to stop him, Hilton could smash this price tag.

With Hilton hitting strong and JT doing his own work, Michael Pittman has been really quiet lately. He’s scored under 10 DK the past three games but that leaves him on the GPP radar. The Houston secondary poses little threat and Pittman has the second-most targets. He also has the most RZ targets over that span and one touchdown going his way would be a big difference maker. Hilton and Pittman will spend time on Vernon Hargreaves (2.00 pPT and a 113.9 passer rating) and Keion Crossen (only targets eight times so far). It’s not hard to love the Colts passing game.

TE – There’s not any reason I can see to play tight end roulette here. Trey Burton, Jack Doyle and Mo Alie-Cox all play over 40% of the snaps and have way too low a floor to take a shot here.

D/ST – Of the highly priced defenses, Indy is absolutely in the running to play. Watson has been sacked the third-most times this season the Colts have generated 22 turnovers on the season. There’s no reason to not like them, even at the price. In the last game, they sacked Watson five times and got two turnovers.

Cash – Hilton, Taylor, D/ST

GPP – Rivers, Pittman

Lions at Titans, O/U of 51.5 (Titans -11)

Lions – Pace is 4th

QB – It sure looks like Chase Daniel is going to start for the Lions this week. That’s not great, even in a dynamite matchup. Tennessee is down to 28th in DVOA against the pass but Daniel may not be the ideal candidate to take advantage here. Over the course of 237 attempts, he has an 8:6 TD:INT ratio. His receiving corps is not great, the starting center has a fractured throat and I just don’t think it’s wise to go this low. We can play Trubisky if we go cheap.

*Update* Stafford is still up in the air but their starting center Frank Ragnow is out and that is a blow to the offense overall.

RB – There’s really only one option in this backfield and it’s D’Andre Swift. He only played about half the snaps in the first game back from a concussion and had 11 touches. Neither Kerryon Johnson nor Adrian Peterson had over six touches and Swift should play more this week if he’s healthy. He’s wildly talented and they Lions are likely to lean on him if they can. The Titans are 16th in DVOA against the run and give up the eighth-most DK points per game. Swift should fly under the radar here and he could easily got for over 20 DK with his 12.6% target share on top of his rushing workload. The only real issues are the functionality of the offense around him.

WR – The only person I’m willing to play from the corps is Marvin Jones. He’s got a 28.4% air yards share in the offense and is just under a 20% target share as well. Jones leads the team in EZ targets, is tied for the lead in touchdowns and is only two ZR targets off the lead. I don’t fear Malcolm Butler who has allowed four touchdowns and a 1.50 pPT over 98 targets this year. I fear the quarterback situation, but Jones is worthy of some GPP consideration.

TE – I don’t think it particularly matters who the quarterback is as T.J. Hockenson should be his usual safe and consistent self. He’s sitting just under a 16% target share on the season and leads in RZ targets for the Lions. Hockenson hasn’t surpassed 16 DK points this year so I leave him off my GPP builds almost every single week. That’s not going to change this week, even though the Titans have given up seven scores on the year. Hockenson is a cash only option but not one I personally play at cost.

D/ST – The Lions only have 12 takeaways on the year and Tennessee is tied for the fewest giveaways on the season. That doesn’t make sense to play, especially with the third-lowest pressure rate in football.

Cash – Hockenson

GPP – Swift, Jones

Titans – Pace is 7th

QB – The only reason I can come up with to not like Ryan Tannehill this week is if we get the same game script that the Titans had last week. They had control of the Jaguars very early on and never let it go, leading Tannehill to only throw it 24 times. He didn’t cross 215 yards and even though he threw two touchdowns, the DK result was disappointing at 16.5. The volume is the only concern with Tanny as he sits second in pDB at 0.59, 10th in points per game and fifth in touchdown passes on just the 18th most attempts. The salary is fair if he has to throw over 30 times but it’s hard not to project this as a run-heavy game.

RB – It’s a rare slate that I’m willing to pay $9,500 for Derrick Henry in any format, especially cash. This is the exception because I don’t see a game where Henry doesn’t get 22-25 touches against one of the worst run defenses in the NFL. Detroit is 26th in DVOA against the run and they’ve given up the fifth-most rushing yards in football to go along with being tied for the most rushing touchdowns. Not only does Tennessee need to continue to win down the stretch, Henry has an outside shot at 2,000 yards rushing. We don’t always love the lack of targets or receptions but this is the type of spot where it might not matter that much.

WR – Corey Davis, why did you do that to me man? After loving Davis all week, he flopped and that makes it two weeks in a row that I’ve been on the wrong Tennessee receiver. I still like Davis quite a bit because that game was such a bump in the road for him. A.J. Brown is the alpha but the metrics suggest they continue to be close. The air yards share is within 4% of each other and Davis trails by only eight targets on the year. Brown leads in PPR formats by 25 points but that five extra touchdowns makes the difference.

If we believe that Tennessee doesn’t throw very much, I think we have to spend up for Brown. They should make sure he gets his before the game is out of reach. He gets Amani Oruwariye who’s gotten tagged for a 2.00 pPT and a 14.9 YPR. With the injuries in the secondary, Davis faces Darryl Roberts who has a 1.90 pPT. It’s a long way of saying Detroit’s corners are very bad.

TE – Jonnu Smith didn’t score last week, so he flopped and that’s about his story this year. He’s only 24th in route percentage among tight ends, 18th in targets and 22nd in receptions. This isn’t really my favorite spot at all. I really think Henry just goes bonkers here and there will be almost no opportunity. The Lions give up the seventh-fewest DK points per game to the position even though they’ve allowed seven touchdowns. They are tied for the least receptions allowed and only the 49ers have allowed fewer yards.

D/ST – I guess they’re on the radar with Daniel at quarterback, but I hate it. They’re wildly expensive for a uni that has a bottom-five pressure rate and 14 sacks. The 18 turnovers is playable but the price is gross.

Cash – Henry, Henry, Henry

GPP – Brown, Davis, Tannehill, D/ST

Jaguars at Ravens, O/U of 47.5 (Ravens -12.5)

Jaguars – Pace is 3rd

QB – The Mustache is back in action, as Gardner Minshew came off the bench last week and looked comfortable for the most part. He was 18/31 but threw for almost 200 yards and a score. I know they didn’t look the part Monday night, but going against the Ravens on the road isn’t the easiest spot for Minshew. Baltimore is still 11th in DVOA against the pass and they got hit harder on the ground as far as touchdowns go Monday night. They still have just an 18:8 TD:INT ratio on the season and even with the cheapness and the negative game script, I can’t say I love Minshew. He’s only 23rd in pDB but he was 12th in points per game. You’d just have to hope the garbage time production piles up.

RB – James Robinson finally found a floor game in part because the game was out of control so quickly. The 12 carries was the lowest since Week 6 and you could easily see the same script this week. On paper, the Jacksonville defense is not a match for the Baltimore offense and that’s the biggest concern for Robinson. He does still have a safe-ish floor for touches as he hit 16 last week but the chances at production are dicey. Even after getting beat up on the ground by Cleveland, Baltimore is still inside the top 10 in DVOA against the run. I greatly prefer Taylor for just $100 more even with the popularity baked in.

WR – I’ve already seen some noise that Minshew being back in the lineup is a big boost for D.J. Chark but I’m not sure that tracks. Yes, Chark was the leading receiver in terms of target share (19.4%) and air yards share (32.2%) but it’s not like those were eye-popping numbers. Keelan Cole and Laviska Shenault both were within three targets although Chark did miss a game. My point is Minshew spreads the ball around a bit more than folks seem to think. Sheanult will have his hands full with Marcus Peters, who is a flawed corner but better than the rookie. Cole will face Marlon Humphrey in the slot who has only allowed a 60% catch rate. Chark could have one of the better matchups. Jimmy Smith and most of the other corners are banged up right now. Even if they tried Peters on him, Chark could do some damage since Peters is a 1.90 pPT corner.

*Update* Smith is out, leaving the Ravens secondary one good corner short.

TE – Now that Minshew is back, Tyler Eifert is likely back to not being a factor. He barely eked out a 10% target share this first seven weeks and isn’t the security blanket that he was for Mike Glennon.

D/ST – I’m not saying the Baltimore offense doesn’t have some issues, but Jacksonville doesn’t have the defense to exploit them. Only three teams have fewer sacks than Jacksonville and they showed last week they can’t stop the run. I’ll pass.

Cash – None

GPP – Minshew, Chark, Robinson

Ravens – Pace is 30th

QB – Baltimore needs to win out in a big way and Lamar Jackson is looking more like the 2019 version lately. Over the past two games, he’s rushed for 218 yards and three touchdowns. That’s to go along with three total touchdown passes on just 34 attempts. Jackson should be able to pick apart this defense however he wants to since they rank 31st in DVOA against the pass. Jackson was over $8,000 constantly last year and if he’s going to run like this, he’s just far too cheap. I think he may threaten Patrick Mahomes for the best odds for the top quarterback score.

RB – Gus Edwards tilted us off the face of the Earth Monday but I’m still about J.K. Dobbins here. He played over 60% of the snaps and had 13 carries to seven for Edwards, even though Edwards scored twice. This is what we saw before Dobbins caught Covid and Mark Ingram played just two snaps last week. Dobbins is the lead dog and Edwards will get some run as well. Only the Cowboys and Texans have allowed more rushing yards to running backs and that doesn’t count the 12 rushing touchdowns. I prefer Dobbins but in large field GPP’s, Edwards could smash his paltry price. That’s especially true if the game gets out of hand and Edwards gets a couple more chances.

WR – With the likelihood that the running game is going to do the heavy lifting in this game, I’m not sure how interested I will be in Marquise Brown. Hollywood does own the target share lead for the team at 24.7% but 80 targets on the season is not that impressive. In fact, that’s 37th among receivers. Still, the matchup is glorious. You just have to know what you’re getting into. If he gets six targets, you’ll probably be lucky and he’s going to need to break a big play and score to pay off. That leaves him and Willie Snead in GPP only for me. The Jaguars will be without Sidney Jones, who is the best corner they had left.

We had a Covid scare earlier in the week but the reports are that all receivers will be eligible to play here so the original analysis would stand.

TE – I will almost always side with Mark Andrews if I stack with Lamar because I feel he has more stability in the passing game. Andrews had been playing a higher percentage of snaps lately after the Ravens lost Nick Boyle and his matchup is wonderful as well. Jacksonville is one of two teams that have allowed double-digit touchdowns to the position and Andrews is sixth in route percentage on the year at 89.3%. The fact he’s $100 cheaper than Brown makes it even more attractive.

D/ST – I prefer Indy as I think they have better chances to get to the quarterback, but Baltimore is perfectly fine as well. They have forced 19 turnovers and have 28 sacks, but they are also banged up a little bit. Let’s see who’s tracking as active for them before making the call here.

Cash – Jackson, Dobbins, Andrews

GPP – Edwards, Snead

Patriots at Dolphins, O/U of 41.5 (Dolphins -1)

Patriots – Pace is 25th

QB – I detest talking about Cam Newton and this New England offense. It’s one of the worst in the league, and Newton is 26th in passing yards and 35th in passing touchdowns. The only reason you play Cam is the rushing production since he has 11 rushing touchdowns and is third in rushing yards among quarterbacks. That’s about all I can say for him at this point and that’s not much. Cam is averaging right abut 180 passing yards and Miami is fifth in DVOA against the pass. If Cam rushes for 50 yards and a score, he can hit 3x at least. However, I’m going to play what I suspect is the chalk at quarterback in cash and am mostly uninterested in Cam in any format this week.

RB – Damien Harris practiced in full and he’s the only trustworthy back in this offense as far as touches. Even in a blowout, Harris still had 11 carries and he’s not been under that number since Week 6. Miami is 23rd in DVOA against the run and if we think the game stays close, Harris likely has at least 15 carries. The Dolphins are under 100 yards per game to the backs but this is about the only way the Patriots can move the ball. I don’t want to mess with Sony Michel or James White as their roles are wildly unpredictable.

WR – If we don’t like Cam, it stands to reason that any receiver is not that appealing. I would still lean towards Jakobi Meyers as he’s playing about 40% of his snaps in the slot. That leaves him off Xavien Howard and Byron Jones and that would be the matchup we’re looking for. Meyers would face Nik Needham although statistically, he has improved. Needham is up to a 59.1% catch rate allowed and a 70.7 passer rating over 44 targets. I’m not looking to play Damiere Byrd or N’Keal Harry on anything but showdown slates. With the boundary corners that Miami boasts, this is a pretty easy spot to look elsewhere on the main slate.

TE – The Patriots aren’t using the tight end in the offense this year, and now Ryan Izzo is on IR to put the cherry on top.

D/ST – This is probably the best play from the New England side. I’m sure you’re going to hear it plenty the next couple days but Bill Belichick is now 21-5 against rookie quarterbacks. This is after he and the Patriots defense just smashed the Chargers and Justin Herbert was playing lights out before that. New England has forced 19 turnovers so far and I expect a couple more this week.

Cash – D/ST

GPP – Harris, Cam

Dolphins – Pace is 27th

QB – Last week I knew Tua Tagovailoa had some appeal playing catchup against the Chiefs and he certainly did with 31 DK points. I don’t expect anything close to that this week because they won’t be in the same exact game script. Tua is going to have his hands full with Belichick and his offense is coming into this one banged up a little bit. On his own merits, Tua is playing decent football. He’s at a 0.42 pDB and does have just two turnovers in parts of seven games. Tua is not a force for fantasy on most weeks since he only has a total of 10 touchdowns and it’s sort of hard to see where any ceiling is coming from here. We can play Tua another week.

RB – As long as Myles Gaskin is out, this is a tough spot to love. I suppose that is Salvon Ahmed makes it back, he would change things. Miami has shown that they will use a bell cow back no matter where they are on the depth chart. Even DeAndre Washington had 15 touches last week and he wasn’t even on the team to start the year. Ahmed hasn’t played in three weeks but the Patriots run defense doesn’t pose a huge threat on paper. New England is 28th in DVOA against the run. With Ahmed under $5,000 and Gaskin under $6,000, we could get a boatload of touches for cheap. Ahmed practiced Thursday but was wearing a non-contact jersey.

*Update* Ahmed is questionable and this one may go all the way up to kick on Sunday

WR – Both DeVante Parker and Jakeem Grant were limited in practice, a good sign they could play. Parker leads the team in target share at 20.8% and now the team will be without one of their top red zone threats. Parker should get Stephon Gilmore and I’m siding with Gilmore here. He’s down to a 1.60 pPT and we’re relying on a rookie to get him the ball. Grant is not really a big enough factor to get behind in the passing game.

Regardless of who else is healthy, Lynn Bowden looks to be a significant salary saver again. The last three weeks, his snaps have increased all the way up to 77% last week and he’s playing in the slot almost 60% of the time. The targets have followed the past two weeks with four and nine. Yes, last week had a lot to do with Dolphins injuries but he’s so cheap and the role is growing fast. At this price, 5-7 targets could make him a great play. He’s in the slot almost 60% of the time and that means Jonathan Jones, who’s allowing a catch rate over 67% over 73 targets this year.

TE – It sure looks like Mike Gesicki will be out this week so we could have a cheap tight end option here. Both Adam Shaheen and Durham Smythe are on the radar and both play about 50% of the snaps. Neither has been utilized as a target hog this year and Smythe holds a slim lead in snaps overall and targets. Even the RZ and EZ targets are basically the same. I would lean Smythe slightly but it’s not likely the best play ever as we could play the wrong tight end here.

*Update* Gesicki is actually being listed as questionable. I likely still don’t go here, but it seems that they feel more confident that he could play.

D/ST – They might be $700 more but you can really make a strong argument that the Dolphins defense is the better play than New England. Tua is already better than Cam in my mind, although that’s a low bar to clear right now. The Dolphins have racked up 34 sacks and are tied for the most takeaways in football. I wouldn’t be surprised at all if both defenses scored well, but Miami has the easier matchup.

Cash – D/ST, Bowden

GPP – Parker, Gesicki (if active)

49ers at Cowboys, O/U of 45 (49ers -3)

49ers – Pace is 21st

QB – I wish I had any confidence in playing Nick Mullens. The Cowboys can be had and have given up a 25:7 TD:INT ratio on the season and I fully believe that coach Kyle Shanahan can tear that defense apart. However, Mullens could easily sabotage this spot. He’s sitting at a 0.36 pDB which is 30th in the league. He’s only thrown 10 touchdowns and has only hit 3-4x on this salary just twice in his starts. I could maybe get on board for GPP’s but honestly don’t think we need to dive this far down the ladder.

RB – It could be mostly the Jeff Wilson show if Raheem Mostert is out. Wilson had 12 touches last week and they love him I the RZ. He’s tied for the team lead in attempts despite playing just nine games so you know the chances of a score are decent. It doesn’t seem like Jerick McKinnon or Tevin Coleman are factors in the run game right now, but that can change at the drop of a hat. Dallas is 23rd in DVOA against the run and are tied for the second-mis rushing touchdowns allowed. Mostert has to be out for me to be interested.

*Update* Mostert has no injury designation and would still be my favorite 49ers back, but that doesn’t say much

WR – With the news that Deebo Samuel is out again, it’s really hard to not like Brandon Aiyuk. The rookie has been absolutely on fire his past five games, racking up at least 19.7 DK in that time. He’s leading the receivers in snap rate at 85.5% and has a 22.9% share of the targets. Additionally, he leads in air yards share at 32.2%. It looks like Rashard Robinson would draw the assignment and through 19 targets, Robinson has a 129.1 passer rating allowed. This is a long way of saying Aiyuk is really in a smash spot, even with flighty quarterback play.

Kendrick Bourne and possibly even Richie James could enter the punt conversation. Bourne played almost 90% of the snaps last week when Deebo exited after just one snap and saw seven targets. James only played about 30% of the snaps and is even thinner considering who’s throwing the ball. Bourne really has my eye since he’s only $600 more and he’s second in RZ targets on the team. Aiyuk and Bourne are really my primary targets in the passing game this week.

TE – We’ll need clarity here. If (and that’s a big if right now) George Kittle is healthy and gets cleared to play, he’s immensely cheap. Make no mistake, the 49ers will not let him play unless he’s fully healthy. He and Aiyuk could do some damage against this porous passing defense in Dallas. The Cowboys have been a little better than average to the position, but Jordan Reed would make my GPP list if Kittle is out. The production is up and down but he has five, four, six and six targets over the past four games. At $3,200 I’ll take a look.

*Update* Kittle is out

D/ST – I still prefer the Patriots defense, but the 49ers are an option right next to them in salary. They generate pressure 24% of the time and have forced 18 turnovers. Despite all their injuries, they also only allow about 22 points per game. The Dallas offense certainly has plenty of flaws and San Francisco could exploit them.

Cash – Aiyuk, D/ST

GPP – Mostert, Reed, Bourne, Wilson

Cowboys – Pace is 1st

QB – If we couldn’t get a ceiling game from Andy Dalton when the Cowboys scored 30 against the Bengals, it’s hard to see how we get one now. Dalton is still just 31st in pDB at 0.34 and only has nine touchdown passes. His deep ball completion rate is just 26.3% and the matchup is not ideal. The DVOA against the pass is only 13th but the 49ers have a 21:11 TD:INT ratio. We’ve only seen Dalton hit 20 DK points once in his starts and I don’t think we need him in our lineups.

RB – The snaps for Ezekiel Elliot and Tony Pollard have been closer than you might think after the bye week. In those four weeks, Pollard has played at least 30% of the snaps and he’s taken 28 rushing attempts to 61 for Zeke. He’s also taken five targets to 14 for Zeke so while it’s clear who the number one is, Pollard is creeping in just a bit on the workload. After last week’s flop, Zeke did come down to $6,100 and the price looks enticing. The matchup does not as San Fran is seventh in DVOA against the run and they’ve given up the fifth-least rushing yards to backs. With Pollard taking some work, injuries on the offense and matchup, I can’t get behind the Zeke play.

WR – We’ve attacked the 49ers defense in the slot this year and CeeDee Lamb fits that bill perfectly. He’s in the slot 85% of the time and gets either Emmanuel Moseley (if active) or Dontae Johnson. If it’s Johnson, he’s been targeted 28 times and has allowed a 100.3 passer rating. Moseley isn’t much better at a 101.8 passer rating and a 1.80 pPT so the matchup is excellent. The 18.2% target share is plenty good enough to get the job done at his salary.

Amari Cooper is much more expensive but has had a serious floor with Dalton under center. He’s scored no lower than 14 DK and has at least four receptions, 43 yards and/or a touchdown in every single game. The matchup is more difficult against Jason Verrett who has only allowed a 1.50 pPT and a 10.3 YPR. Michael Gallup should see mostly Richard Sherman or Verrett, so his matchup isn’t great either. Sherman has only been targeted 28 times since he’s missed some time but has allowed an 11.5 YPR and a 67.9% completion rate. Trusting Gallup in this spot is not exactly what I’m looking to do. I would be looking towards a very cheap Lamb or Cooper in this game.

TE – Dalton Schultz always seems to be a “safe” option and with Dalton starting the past four games, he does have a 13.9% target share. What is interesting at his salary is he leads in RZ targets in those four games with six. Now, the receiver trio has a combined 13 EZ targets to just two for Schultz. The angle of Gallup and Cooper being silenced on the boundaries could funnel more targets to Lamb and Schultz. The only real issue is the 49ers have allowed the fewest yards and DK points per game to the position. I would prefer to play Lamb and likely find other cheap tight ends.

D/ST – They went bonkers last week in what was an excellent call from Ghost, and there’s still some small potential here. I don’t like the price that much but Mullens can melt down at any point. My fear is the Cowboys just get run on and with only 24 sacks on the season, there’s not a lot of safety with this pick.

Cash – Lamb, Cooper

GPP – Schultz, D/ST, Gallup

Jets at Rams, O/U of 44 (Rams -17.5)

Jets – Pace is 11th

I’m going to make this very simple – don’t play Jets. The Rams are ranked 3rd in overall DVOA and the Jets are the worst offense in football. Jalen Ramsey will almost surely take Breshad Perriman or Denzel Mims out of the picture entirely while Jamison Crowder has been a ghost outside of two touchdowns against the Raiders. WE have other teams to pull values from and this is just nothing that I’m interested in. Even the backfield is a split between Frank Gore and Ty Johnson. I’m fully subscribed to #NeverJets this week.

Cash – None

GPP – None

Rams – Pace is 18th

QB – I’m much happier to get behind this side of the game, although Jared Goff might not be the optimal route to take. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t think the Jets and their dead last DVOA against the pass can stop him or coach Sean McVay. It’s more of the fact that I don’t think Goff gets the opportunity we want from a player of his salary. Just look at last week. The Rams controlled that game from the word go and the running game was going nuts. Thus, Goff only threw it 25 times and didn’t cross 140 yards passing. LA is the heaviest favorite on the slate and are at home, so I’m only using Goff in GPP. His 0.42 pDB is 23rd in the league and only has 18 touchdowns (17th) and 53 RZ attempts (20th). He could flop or throw four touchdowns in this spot.

RB – It took a lot longer than some expected, but Cam Akers has to be solidified as the starter in this backfield. Over the past two weeks, he has 53 touches and is just under 300 scrimmage yards. Even the week before, he rushed for 84 yards on just nine touches. It is worth noting that the Jets actually have been solid against the run. They rank eighth in DVOA and they’re only mid-pack in rushing yards allowed to the back. The Rams are more talented and their run game should win out even in the “bad” spot it is, but I would rather fellow rookie Jonathan Taylor. Akers might have a little more security but the matchup for Taylor gives him the slight edge.

WR – Since we suspect there could be some danger in Goff’s number of attempts, I’m sticking to only Cooper Kupp and Robert Woods this week. Kupp still holds very slight edges in target share, RZ and EZ targets and receptions. Woods has two more receiving touchdowns and two rushing touchdowns, to give Woods the slight edge in PPR settings. I typically just fall with whoever is cheaper unless there’s a severe mismatch individually. I don’t believe that’s the case this week because they are both in good spots. Kupp should draw Javelin Guidry, who I had to look to make sure that was a real name. He’s played very little this season and containing Kupp seems like a bit of a long shot. Blessuan Austin will be mostly tasked with Woods and Austin is giving an 11.5 YPR and 94.1 passer rating over 55 targets so far. I’m not likely to double stack this offense with the salaries involved knowing they could throw it under 30 times, leaving it an MME offense for me.

TE – Tyler Higbee is firmly in the touchdown or bust category, as he hasn’t crossed double-digit DK points in any game he’s not scored. Considering that’s only happened in two games so far, it’s been rough to play him unless it’s a showdown. Higbee only runs a route 53.6% of the time and that’s 28th in the league. He’s too pricey in my eyes to hope he scores, even in a great matchup. The Jets lead in touchdowns given up to the position so perhaps in a Goff stack it could work. That’s just not my first priority this week.

D/ST – If you can possibly afford them, play them. It’s that easy.

Cash – Akers

GPP – Goff, Woods, Kupp, D/ST, Higbee

Eagles at Cardinals, O/U of 49 (Cardinals -6)

Eagles – Pace is 8th

QB – I’ve made references to who I think the chalk will be in cash games a few times at quarterback. I think it will come from this game, and since Jalen Hurts is under $6,000 he’s likely my choice for cash. He ran the ball eighteen times last week and went over 100 yards. I don’t really expect that latter part, but it does show where the ceiling is and how willing he was to take off. This really just becomes easy math. Let’s set Hurts at 50 yards rushing and 150 yards passing. That’s 11 DK already, basically 2x. If he scores a touchdown of any kind, that puts him at 15-17 DK which is closing in on 3x. I think those yardage marks are a little low, so it shows how easy it could be for Hurts to hit 3x. If he scores two touchdowns, we’re cooking with gas. Arizona isn’t the easiest matchup as they sit ninth in DVOA against the pass. However, the Saints are top five and Hurts passed that test just fine for fantasy purposes.

*Update* With another quarterback at $5,900 active, Hurts will not be popular at all I’m betting.

RB – Do we actually have some life from Miles Sanders?? The snaps were finally over 60% (81% o be exact) and he had 18 touches, the most since Week 11. I’m not sure why it took the backup being in to finally utilize Sanders but I’ve found it best to not try to get inside the heads of Philly coaches. Nothing good comes from that exercise. Anyways, Sanders is up there in price but a ground-based offense with a running threat at quarterback opens up the lanes. Arizona is just 15th in DVOA and they’ve given up almost 1,700 scrimmage yards with 13 combined scores. I think Sanders is a wonderful GPP play but I do not trust him in cash whatsoever. There are many better plays than him in cash.

WR – I almost have no interest in any receiver. Travis Fulgham has been worked out of the rotation almost completely at just 11% of the snaps. Jalen Reagor saw just four targets last week and even though Patrick Peterson has not played well for Arizona, he can handle the rookie. Peterson’s 119.3 passer rating allowed and 2.10 pPT is an appealing set of metrics to attack when we have a better receiver.

Alshon Jeffery might garner some attention but I am loathe to trust any receiver that saw one target the week before, especially from a running quarterback. Jeffery was also under 50% of the snaps and I simply can’t get behind that. Greg Ward is minimum price and did see the most looks out of his receiving corps but that’s faint praise. He’ll play the slot which means he faces Byron Murphy and statistics suggest that’s an advantage for Murphy. He’s only allowed a 1.40 pPT and a 10.3 YPR on 72 targets. Stacking Hurts seems fairly difficult.

TE – If you must stack Hurts, this is the position to likely go for. Dallas Goedert led in targets last week with six and is playing nearly 90% of the snaps. Philly played a lot of two tight end sets last week with Goedert and Zach Ertz both over 70% of the snaps. Ertz managed to take three targets all of eight yards so he is not of any interest. On top of that, Arizona is a top-five team in DK points allowed per game and has only given up three scores. Goedert was able to churn out 43 yards on four receptions so he’d be my main sacking partner with Hurts. I think it’s better to play Hurts solo in cash and go elsewhere in GPP.

D/ST – It looks like a certain quarterback is running again, and the amount of pressure Philly gets could backfire and flush him. I won’t play Philly this week.

Cash – Hurts

GPP – Sanders, Goedert

Cardinals – Pace is 2nd

QB – It didn’t amount to much but Kyler Murray running the ball 13 times last week was an excellent sign for him. He almost matched the total of his previous three games combined and the price has come back down to Earth after three straight sub-par outings. Make no mistake, Kyler is just an average to maybe below-average fantasy asset if he’s not running. I’m not saying he can’t be a good traditional quarterback at some point, but that’s not where he is right now. If he can’t run, he won’t be worth the price. Now that he is, Kyler is likely a little too cheap. Philly is 22nd in DVOA and have a 19:4 TD:INT ratio. Lastly, the Eagles are likely down their starting corners Darius Slay and Avonte Maddox this week. The path is there for Kyler to smash this price tag.

*Update* Maddox is out, Slay is questionable but doesn’t change any outlook on Kyler.

RB – I’ve played the Cardinals the last few weeks that if Kyler can’t run, Kenyan Drake was the route to take. I’m encouraged by the 23 carries Drake got last week even with Kyler running more than 10 times as well. Drake hasn’t been wildly efficient this year and is still not getting a ton of passing game work, but he’s extremely cheap. He also needs the game script to go his way. Look a the last four weeks. In the two games they lost, he carried the ball a total of 22 times. When they won, he carried it 55 times. That’s a pretty striking difference. I feel like this game should be competitive so I’d be comfortable playing Drake, just not in cash game settings. Chase Edmonds is always on the edge of the radar since he’ll typically get about 6-10 touches but we don’t need him with the Tampa value.

WR – For the first time in a few weeks, I’m on board with DeAndre Hopkins. I’m trusting his quarterback a bit more and the Eagles secondary A. wasn’t great in the first place and B. is really banged up right now. Nuk clearly owns this passing game with a 29.1% target share and a 32.1% air yards share. Only three receivers have more targets than Hopkins on the season and he’s back under $8,000. Hopkins checks all the boxes this week and has seen 24 targets the past two games. He could go very overlooked with folks jamming in pieces from the last game of the day.

I don’t think we need to dive too far past Hopkins but Christian Kirk could be in play for large field GPP. With the Eagles down both starting corners, Kirk is going to face off against the fourth-best corner on Philly. That’s probably Jalen Mills as Nickell Roby-Coleman slides over to Hopkins or at least tries to. Kirk is the only other Cards receiver that has over 12% of the air yards share. These are educated guesses since Philly hasn’t been this desperate in the secondary this year. There’s a strong likelihood that they can’t stop Hopkins and he’s easily the best target here.

TE – Over the past four games, Dan Arnold has scored four times. That’s fairly impressive for a player that has been targeted a total of 12 times and has six receptions in those games. It’s not a limb to go out on but I doubt he continues to score on 66.7% of his receptions. Arnold is still under a 7.5% share of the targets and only five RZ and four EZ looks. Philly does struggle against the tight end with eight scores allowed but it’s a thin play for $3,500.

D/ST – It’s not too hard to see a path for success here. The Cards have 38 sacks and are a top five team in pressure rate, which could be an issue for a rookie quarterback. Hurts certainly handled pressure well last week but every game gives other teams more tape. They’ve also generated 18 turnovers and it wouldn’t be a shock if Hurts gave them one or two.

Cash – Nuk, Kyler

GPP – D/ST, Drake, Arnold

Chiefs at Saints, O/U of 51.5 (Chiefs -3)

Chiefs – Pace is 15th

QB – It’s a rare quarterback that can throw three picks and still end up scoring 24.6 DK points, but Patrick Mahomes is a rare dude. He’s only third in pDB but leads in yards, is third in touchdowns, fourth in attempts and second in points per game. I would have been more excited to play him if I thought the Saints could keep up, but it looks like at least one more week of Taysom Hill. Gross. While opponent basically doesn’t matter for Mahomes, I was hoping for Drew Brees to make this a shootout of all shootouts. Mahomes is an elite play in all formats, just like always.

*Update* Someone on the Saints is back…..

RB – It sure looks like we can put to rest any thoughts about Clyde Edwards-Helaire losing the job to Le’Veon Bell. After not seeing the field for a week due to an illness, CEH played right about 75% of the snaps this past week and hit 14.1 DK without scoring. The Saints aren’t a defense to attack on paper. They’ve barely allowed 1,200 scrimmage yards and are the best DVOA against the run in the league. With CEH, it’s sort of the same story as last week. He’s a talented back with some issues during his rookie campaign that touched the ball 21 times last week. That’s in the best offense in football. He’s under $6,000. Everyone will try to jam in the passing game, and one of these weeks CEH is going for two scores. I want to have some exposure for the game he had against the Raiders in Week 11.

WR – You want to talk about ceiling, just look at Tyreek Hill las week. He touched the ball four times and scored 26.1 DK points while generating 111 scrimmage yards and hit pay dirt twice. There’s just not a ton of players capable of doing that on a weekly basis. Hill owns nearly 40% of the Chiefs air yards share and no corner from New Orleans should scare us. Janoris Jenkins runs a 4.4, Marshon Lattimore has been getting cooked all year and runs a 4.3….you get the picture. Additionally, Hill moves all over the formation so it’s not like just one corner will contain him.

With how many targets are getting soaked up through the rest of the offense, I don’t love Sammy Watkins or DeMarcus Robinson. Watkins is under a 15% target share and Robinson is lower than that. We can see the floor when both players combined for four targets last week. The best leverage on the passing game is CEH or hoping Watkins goes 4/65/1 or something along those lines.

TE – I get that Travis Kelce is expensive for a tight end, but that’s the price you pay for the leader in yardage. Kelce sits at 1,250 receiving yards on the year which is tops and his PPR scoring is only 20 points behind Davante Adams. Suddenly he doesn’t seem all that expensive. We talk all the time about not playing double tight end. However, I would be willing to take that route with Kelce in all honesty. If you pick a cheap player like Cole Kmet and then still play Kelce, I’m not sure I could completely fault you. Kelce shouldn’t be as “cheap” as he is when comparing to receivers. He’s really unstoppable and if I’m fading Henry this week, it’s to stack up the Chiefs offense which we should be doing every single week.

D/ST – I certainly don’t think they’re a terrible options because I can see them forcing plenty of turnovers. The price is really no man’s land for me though. I like a lot of defenses right below and above their salary, so I doubt I land there much. If they can force the Saints out of their comfort zone they will likely pay off their salary with a 23.4% pressure rate and 20 turnovers.

Cash – Mahomes, Kelce, Hill

GPP – CEH, D/ST, Watkins

Saints – Pace is 31st

QB – The Saints did open the window for Brees to return, but reading the tea leaves it doesn’t seem like it’s going to be this week. Enter Hill, who was decent for fantasy last week. Hill easily had his best yardage day as a starter, throwing for 291 yards in a comeback effort. That script should follow him here and he still kicked in another 33 rushing yards. Hill actually has a completion rate over 72% in his games but he’s also logged seven turnovers to go with nine total touchdowns. We saw the upside the opposing quarterback for the Chiefs has last week in Tua. Hill represents that same idea and he’s slightly easier to make a game stack work over Mahomes.

*Update* Brees has been named the starter for this game and is just incredibly cheap.

RB – I was hoping that we got Brees back in large part because I would have felt Alvin Kamara was in a smash spot. Kansas City is 30th in DVOA against the run and have given up the eighth-most rushing yards to backs. They have also allowed the third-most receiving yards, which Kamara had been lacking. However, he saw 10 targets this past week which was an exciting step with Taysom at quarterback. I mean, it’s about time you utilize one of the best backs in the NFL. Since Kamara was struggling for a a few games with Hill, his price has plummeted. We don’t get Kamara at this price very often and feel like he’s going to get the valuable targets. With the Saints underdogs here, I’d be surprised if Kamara doesn’t see a bunch of targets and I really think he might be my favorite Saint.

*Update* With Brees back, Kamara is the utter and stone lock chalk.

WR – Michael Thomas has played more like the MT we expected without Brees. That’s in large part because he’s been healthy now but it’s still weird to think about. In the four games with Hill, Thomas is up to a 33.5% target share and a 47.8% share of the air yards. Even last week when Kamara got more involved, Thomas had another eight targets. He’s been playing on the outside and on paper he has a tough spot against Bashaud Breeland. The Chiefs corner has been targeted 47 times and is 11th in passer rating allowed, eighth in catch rate allowed and 16h in pPT. Those are impressive marks but it’s hard not to lean Thomas in the matchup.

Tre’Quan Smith could wind up gaining some attention as a punt. His snap percentage has gone up massively the past couple of weeks, right up there with Emmanuel Sanders. Smith has 12 targets the past two games and Sanders has 11, but Sanders is $1,000 more expensive and the DK points are almost dead equal. If they’re so close, let’s just play Smith. He’s split his snaps between outside and slot almost evenly. The Chiefs can switch corners between these two receivers so the individual matchup isn’t as important. They would switch off between Charvarius Ward and L’Jarius Sneed. It’s the fact that Smith is over 80% of the snaps the script leads to more throwing. He works well in any lineup you have going.

*Update* Well, blow that all up. Thomas is a surprise inactive and that’s going to bump everyone up a notch. Both Manny and Tre’Quan are massively cheap with all of Thomas’ work left up for grabs. That also locks Kamara in for a massssssssive target share and given the cost involved, I think you could get away with a Saints stack even in cash. I do think it could make more sense to play Hurts so you don’t have Brees, Kamara and a Saints pass catcher but I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t tempted to break my rule this week of no stacks in cash.

TE – Another cheap way to get exposure to the Saints offense is Jared Cook. I’m not typically a big fan but he does have some relatively strong touchdown equity. He’s second in RZ targets and tied for the most EZ targets with Hill under center. Cook certainly isn’t the same style athlete that Mike Gesicki is, but the young goat scored twice last week against these Chiefs. Cook has found the end zone in each of the past two games and that’s been an issue for Kansas City all year. They’ve allowed the fourth-most yards and seven scores. I could certainly understand a Chiefs stack with a super cheap run back from the Saints or possibly both Smith and Cook. Either way, we want some love from this game.

D/ST – Ok, maybe not every aspect of this game is in play.

Cash – Kamara, Brees, Sanders

GPP – Smith, Cook

Core Four

Derrick Henry, Alvin Kamara, Leonard Fournette, Brandon Aiyuk

If I get sent a cash lineup without Henry and Kamara to start, I’m not giving it my approval. I’m slightly kidding, but I can’t emphasize just how important those two building blocks are in my eyes. Kamara is around $1,000 too cheap and even at the sky high price, Henry checks far too many boxes to worry about no receptions this week. Fournette is not an exciting choice, but RoJo is expected to be out and the Bucs insist Fournette will start. He’s flashed fantasy upside and the price is too sweet to pass up. Lastly, Aiyuk is in a total smash spot without Deebo and Kittle. He’s going to be very popular and we should ride the wave.

Primary Game Stacks

KC/NO – Any player in this game can be on the radar, and Kamara with Chiefs skill players is where I’m starting. I’ll rotate in Mahomes and Brees, and that will dictate the other pieces.

DET/TEN – Henry, Brown, Tannehill, Davis, Stafford, Jones, Swift, Hockenson

PHI/ARI – Nuk, Kyler, Goedert, Sanders, Hurts, Drake, Kirk

Secondary Game Stacks

SF/DAL – Aiyuk, Mostert, Lamb, Cooper, Schultz (This is mostly working around the other stacks)

CHI/MIN – A-Rob, Monty, Cook, Thielen, Jefferson, Trubisky, Cousins Kmet, Smith

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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NFL Week 14 Fantasy Recap

Ghost and Michael discuss the NFL Week 14 Fantasy recap! Where we were right, where we were wrong, and some season long plays that might be waiver claims.

There were some crazy games in Week 14, and there was a lot of boring games unfortunately. Ghost got his call on the Browns Ravens game wrong, but after watching that, it made the whole week wayyyy more interesting! Hopefully everyone in the their season long playoffs lived to see another day and can still take advantage of everything over here at Win Daily Sports.

We’ll be there all week with the same jazz as usually getting you ready for week 14 of the NFL! Make sure you’re on the look out for all the goodies that are coming down the pipe! Also don’t forget to check out our new promotion! Our 6 month all access pass is now only $150!

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It’s a pleasure to be filling in for our Director of NFL, my Sunday livestream co-host and good friend @StixPicks as he’s out for his bachelor party this weekend – congrats brother, another one bites the dust! If you haven’t done so already this season, make sure to give his NFL DFS Bible a read; it’s never too late to learn the foundations of the weekly challenge that is NFL DFS and take your winnings to the next level.

Before reading this NFL GPP article, I highly suggest reading Adam’s Cash Game Checkdown and Game by Game Breakdown to get ahead of the curve. Players garnering high ownership (aka chalk) will be omitted unless I love them for GPP as well, but this does not mean they are not viable. The plays listed in this article will be the ones that we aim to target for ceiling games; ones that can win us a tournament. As usual, players identified as cash plays are certainly viable, but we’ll be focusing on players that will be both low-owned and that offer a higher ceiling than a high-owned player in the same salary range at their respective position to get ahead of the field. Should a player be mentioned that is projected to be high-owned, it’s simply someone I love too much to avoid in NFL GPPs this week.

If you’re looking for a complete strategy article for NFL DFS, nothing is as complete as Stix’s NFL DFS Bible; it’s important to note the process we follow for GPPs nonetheless without getting into immense detail. Before getting into individual plays, it’s crucial to identify which games we want to target for full game stacks, which games we need a piece of – potentially in every lineup – and which games we can eliminate from the slate altogether. As such, my top stacks are as followed:

1) Tennessee Titans

  • Death, taxes, and Tennessee stacks after Thanksgiving. You may have heard me say this for the past few weeks, but it’s something I truly live by in NFL DFS and certainly in my GPP lineups since last season. Coming in with the highest implied team total on the slate at 30.5, the Titans have a plethora of options in multiple price ranges to take our lineups to the top of the leaderboards.

2) Tampa Bay Buccaneers

  • Coming in just under the Titans by half a point, the Bucs have an implied team total of 30.0 on this slate and have a glorious matchup versus the Vikings defense – or lack thereof. The reason for which I have them ranked above some of the best offenses in the NFL in positions 3-5 is because the Vikings are in a much better position to keep up in this game than other opponents, thus making this a more attractive game stack.

3) Kansas City Chiefs

  • The Chiefs aerial attack is something I want a piece of in a ton of lineups; the combination of Miami’s defense and KC’s non-existent run game with Lev Bell and CEH dealing with questionable illnesses means Mahomes will be throwing a ton to chase the Steelers for that #1 seed in the AFC – and there ain’t no stopping Patty & Co.

4) Green Bay Packers

  • The highest game total on the slate at 55.0 points, the Packers slot in comfortably at #4. I prefer to have the Rodgers/Adams combo or Aaron Jones solo than stack this game – unless D’Andre Swift is confirmed in, whereby I’ll get one of the aforementioned plays with Swift for a mini-stack in a few lineups.

5) Seattle Seahawks

  • One of, if not the best passing attack versus the 32nd-ranked DVOA pass defense in the NFL? Sign me up for a high-priced, low-owned Wilson & Co. stack.

NFL GPP DFS: Week 14 Quarterbacks

1) Ryan Tannehill ($6,700 DK / $7,900 FD): The Jaguars want to lose for a better draft pick and the Titans need this win for the AFC playoff picture. Picking on a bottom-3 pass defense DVOA is no surprise, yet Tanny is not pulling the ownership he deserves.

2) Russell Wilson ($7,900 DK / $9,000 FD): Russ coming in at roughly 5% ownership is simply a joke versus this Jets defense. Yes, the Seahawks can get up early, but if they do, it’s because Russ cooked ’em. With RT Brandon Snell slated to come back, Wilson will have more time to throw the ball, and that’s dangerous for any defense in the NFL.

3) Tom Brady ($6,900 DK / $7,800 FD): The ultimate GPP play, #NoodleSzn. Never thought I’d get here, but Minnesota’s pass defense has been abysmal all season long and the Bucs will look to gain some momentum in their playoff push.

4) Patrick Mahomes ($8,100 DK / $8,900 FD): It’s Patty Mahomes. No explanation is needed, but with Miami stopping their run game fairly easily here, look for Mahomes to sling it for 60 minutes.

5) Aaron Rodgers ($7,500 DK / $9,100 FD): A-Aron in a dome @ Detroit is a recipe for a nuclear slate-breaking performance. This could be an Aaron Jones game, but Rodgers has torched Detroit in their stadium throughout his entire career and has been playing some of the best football he ever has.

NFL GPP DFS: Week 14 Running Backs

1) Derrick Henry ($8,700 DK / $9,600 FD): He rumbled his way to 159 yards and 2 touchdowns versus the Jaguars this time last season and King Henry could be in for revenge after flopping in this matchup earlier this season. December is otherwise known as Derrick Henry month and the power RB faces a Jaguars defense that won’t be able to stop him. Whether or not we stack with Tannehill and Davis or AJB is to be seen, so look for updates in Discord.

2) Aaron Jones ($7,600 DK / $8,700 FD): If you’re not playing the Rodgers/Adams pairing, Aaron Jones is your guy. The upside? He’s proven to crush Detroit — rumbling for 236 on the ground and 3 scores in Week 2. The downside? His snap count remains fairly constant at 66%, but the big play ability is simply undeniable in this matchup.

3) Dalvin Cook ($9,400 DK / $10,200 FD): This is where we begin to spice things up. Facing a stout TB run defense, Dalvin is getting little-to-no ownership on this slate — and that’s a big mistake. No matter whether Mattison was out or not (he is indeed OUT), Dalvin is the guy here and a backup RB changes nothing. Not only is Vita Vea, the Buccaneers’ best run defender, done for the season, but replacement Steve McLendon is also trending to be out as well. I’ve said it since he returned to injury versus GB in Week 8, Minnesota NEEDS Cook; Mike Zimmer is coaching for his job and they’re fighting for a Wildcard playoff spot in the NFC. Quietly being a Top 5 offense in the NFL, Cook saw 38 touches last week with the best part being the fact that he ran 37 (!!!) routes, with his previous season-high being 24.

4) James Robinson ($7,500 DK / $8,000 FD): The Titans defense has been a funnel in past weeks and JRob has been a ROTY candidate after going undrafted. Being on the field for roughly 90% of the team’s offensive snaps, the Jags use JRob in all facets of the game and will rely on him heavily in this contest yet again.

5) Ronald Jones ($6,100 DK / $6,300 FD): Another piece of our TB stack, this play has NOTHING to do with Coach Bruce Arians saying he wants to get him 20+ touches this week. We know the way he is with that, so I’m not hinging this play on a press conference. Rather, Jones is in a smash spot because the Vikings’ one capable run-defender, MLB Eric Kendricks, has been ruled out. After James Robinson just torched them for 23.5 DK points last week, Jones has 30+ upside at a mere 6k on both sites.

Others to Consider:

6) Ezekiel Elliott ($6,600 DK / $7,600 FD): The o-line is still banged up but the Cowboys should roll in this one with Ryan Finley under center for the Bengals. Zeke looked good last week and at a mere $6,600 on DK, it’s a great 1-2 stack with Cowboys D in GPPs since the majority of the field will go to David Montgomery for $100 less.

7) D’Andre Swift ($6,500 DK / $6,900 FD): If he’s healthy, play him. GB’s run D is atrocious and is a spot I constantly target, week-in, week-out. The Lions won’t risk their future RB if he is anything less than 100%, so if he’s in, it’s a smash spot for the kid who has been picking up momentum in his past few starts and someone who can catch the ball as well.

Low-owned value plays

  • Wayne Gallman ($5,700 DK / $6,000 FD)
  • Giovanni Bernard ($5,000 DK / $5,700 FD)

NFL GPP DFS: Week 14 Wide Receivers

1) Davante Adams ($9,300 DK / $9,600 FD): the top wideout in the league needs no explanation for our NFL GPP lineups. Facing a Detroit defense that will be once again without top rookie Jeff Okudah and Desmond Trufant, Adams has ample opportunity to break the slate. He’s pricey, but worth it.

2) DK Metcalf ($8,400 DK / $8,600 FD): He leads the league in all statistical categories when facing 1 on 1 coverage, and there is no stopping the athletic sophomore in this matchup.

 3) Mike Evans ($6,600 DK / $7,300 FD): He only has 14 receptions in his past three games, but he also has 29 targets and 4 touchdowns in that span.

 4) Corey Davis ($5,700 DK / $6,800 FD) & AJ Brown ($7,300 DK / $8,000 FD): It only makes sense to stack our top GPP quaterback with his two top receivers; Corey Davis is having a breakout campaign and is simply too cheap on both sites.

5) Allen Robinson ($6,800 DK / $7,000 FD): With the chalk being David Montgomery, look no further than ARob to get leverage over the field in a matchup versus the awful Vernon Hargreaves. Houston will give Chicago more trouble than anticipated and ARob will be counted on tremendously.

6) Value Plays

  • Mike Williams ($4,700 DK / $6,100 FD)
  • Chad Hansen ($3,900 DK / $5,100 FD)
  • Collin Johnson ($3,600 DK / $5,100 FD)

NFL GPP DFS: Week 14 Tight Ends

1) Travis Kelce ($7,400 DK / $8,200 FD): Although Tyreek Hill is viable in any GPP, his price is too high for his floor in this matchup versus Byron Jones and Xavien Howard. Cue Travis Kelce, who would be a top 5 WR if his statistics translated to the position, for a mere $7,200 at TE.

2) TJ Hockenson ($5,000 DK / $6,000 FD): With Marvin Jones being preoccupied by Jaire Alexander, Hock should see a ton of work down the middle of the field as Detroit chases points all game long.

3) Logan Thomas ($3,300 DK / $5,200 FD): JD McKissic chalk? Logan Thomas value is the pivot. With rookie sensation Antonio Gibson ruled out of this contest, McKissic has a safe floor and seemingly sees 8+ targets — which is great for PPR on DK — but if you need a punt TE, Thomas has to be the guy in this Football Team offense.

4) Noah Fant ($4,100 DK / $5,500 FD): I’d love to play Jerry Jeudy here, but his health worries me. Cue the GPP interest in Noah Fant, who has been Drew Lock’s go-to target in all facets of the game.

NFL GPP DFS: Week 14 DSTs

I typically try to narrow this down to a handful of options but can offer one piece of advice regarding DSTs: do not get cute with it by playing a DST versus the Chiefs simply because they’re minimum price. Do not change a skill-position player, and certainly not a component of your NFL GPP stack just to fit in a DST. Slot in a team that you are comfortable with and remember, a DST selection is like a car; as you drive it off the lot, it begins to lose value; the moment the game begins, your DST is at risk of losing points. Play it smart, but don’t overthink it either.

  1. Seattle Seahawks ($3,000 DK / $5,000 FD)
  2. Dallas Cowboys ($2,400 DK / $3,500 FD)
  3. Carolina Panthers ($2,900 DK / $3,400 FD)

Others to consider

  • KC Chiefs ($3,500 DK / $4,200 FD)
  • LA Chargers ($2,600 DK / $3,700 FD)

Make sure to check out @StixPicks’s AETY projection model here and our cheat sheet for both DraftKings and FanDuel as well. You can find me on the livestream tomorrow morning at 11am EST and in Discord, as well as on Twitter @DFS_Ghost!

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