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Another great week for Week 11 NFL DFS Cash Games! I hope everyone enjoyed their Thanksgiving and are ready to get right back at it for a solid Week 12 slate (without a lot of terrible games that are easy fades and just a few up-paced games where we really want to invest). Let’s go.

I’ve been under the weather recently so won’t be writing a whole lot about each player. Just DM on Twitter/Discord this week if you need to talk over your build with someone.

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

  • I’m narrowing down the player pool a lot this week. I see a ton of different cash lineups in the discord with way too may different players in the builds. With this article, we should all be honed in on educated plays and smash this slate.
  • CHALK REPORT: Josh Allen, Dalvin Cook, Nyheim Hines, James Robinson, Brian Hill, Justin Jefferson, Stefon Diggs, Keenan Allen, Travis Kelce, and Darren Waller ALL project to be incredibly high in cash game ownership (over 40%). I think we’ll likely want to lock in AT LEAST FOUR or FIVE of them in our cash games.
  • Just because a player is not mentioned in this article, does not mean they are not cash viable.
  • AETY Model Projections change throughout the week, please ensure you check out our final projections before lock!
  • I update this article periodically through the week. Be sure to check back on Saturday night / Sunday morning for any additions/revisions!!

NFL DFS Quarterbacks

  1. Patrick Mahomes ($8,000 DK / $9,000 FD) – Always my favorite quarterback play on any slate. There’s really no one as safe and as consistent as Patrick Mahomes. I don’t think he’s a must play in cash this week, but I do think Travis Kelce is. Use one or the other or a combo of the two in your NFL DFS cash game lineup.
  2. Josh Allen ($7,600 DK / $8,600 FD) – By far the highest owned quarterback on this slate in a high total game against a Chargers’ defense that will be missing both Casey Hayward and Melvin Ingram. Chris Harris does return, but I don’t think this Chargers’ defense can stop a nosebleed these days, it’s wheels up for Allen and the Bills.
  3. Ryan Fitzpatrick ($5,500 DK / $7,400 FD) – Hello, sweet, sweet savings (on DraftKings). Fitzpatrick gets the nod as Tua was recently ruled out with injury and also will be missing any threat of a quality running attack with no Salvon Ahmed or Myles Gaskin. This matchup against the Jets is the best matchup on paper for opposing quarterbacks (ranked 32 in pass defense DVOA) and will pose no threat for Fitzpatrick getting to 3x value on DraftKings.

    As of now, he’s my personal cash game quarterback.

    Honorable Mention: Justin Herbert, Kyler Murray, Teddy Bridgewater

Running Backs

  1. Dalvin Cook ($9,500 DK / $11,000 FD) – It’s Dalvin Cook in one of the best matchups all season. He’s on fire and a core piece of my DraftKings’ cash build. As for FanDuel, he’s hard to fade there as well (-400 odds to score a TD, lol), but he’s very expensive. If you can afford him, use him.
  2. James Robinson ($6,300 DK / $7,400 FD) – Simply priced way too low for the workload he’s likely to receive with Chris Thompson out and Mike Glennon now under center. Cleveland’s defense is not what is was earlier in the season and will again be missing Myles Garret.

The Value Backs

  • Nyheim Hines ($4,600 DK / $5,700 FD)
  • Brian Hill ($4,000 DK / $5,100 FD)
  • Wayne Gallman ($5,000 DK / $5,700 FD)

Honestly, I’ll be locking in two of the above value backs because I’m locking in Travis Kelce and Dalvin Cook. If you don’t want to do that, I suggest you just use Hines and get creative with your build elsewhere.

Honorable Mention: Gio Bernard, Kareem Hunt, Josh Jacobs

Wide Receivers

  1. Keenan Allen ($8,000 DK / $8,200 FD) – Keenan is simply on another planet this year and just insane weekly rapport with Justin Herbert. You all know how much I love to load up slot receivers against Buffalo’s Taron Johnson, so this is a matchup that should be fruitful.

    I am interested to see how Sean McDermott and this defense try to scheme away Keenan Allen. There’s no chance they just let Taron Johnson get worked for four straight quarters. I’d imagine McDermott watched the Miami/Buffalo film and took notes on how Brian Flores used safeties to help out their awful slot corner, Nik Needham.

    I think I’ll fade Keenan at 20% ownership in GPPs, but I’ll be quite interested in using him in NFL DFS cash games.
  2. Stefon Diggs ($7,600 DK / $7,900 FD) – Getting exposure to this Chargers/Bills game is going to be one of my higher priorities in all of my DFS lineups regardless of cash or GPP. You cannot go wrong with Stefon Diggs, especially when John Brown is out.
  3. Justin Jefferson ($6,300 DK / $7,000 FD) – Jefferson is likely to be the heaviest owned wide receiver on this slate with Adam Thielen likely missing this game due to COVID-19. I will likely fade him in tournaments but eat the chalk in cash games here against a well below-average Carolina secondary.

    I don’t love using he and Dalvin Cook together but many times this year the double stack has been on the winning side of cash game lineups. It’s probably best you eat the chalk here as well.
  4. DeVante Parker ($5,900 DK / $6,500 FD) – Simply way too cheap of a WR1 price-tag against the Jets’ secondary.
  5. Jarvis Landry ($5,200 DK / $5,700 FD) – Well, if you saw my whiskey-infused tweet the other night, you know how high I am on Jarvis Landry this weekend, lol. Tre Herndon is literally the only starting cornerback left on this active roster in Jacksonville… that is a problem. Landry should bust out in a massive way on Sunday as long as the Jaguars can keep this one somewhat close.
  6. Laviska Shenault ($3,300 DK / $5,000 FD) – He’s damn near min price on both sites with a 4.5 receptions prop. Despite what the quarterback situation is here, Shenault should be the focal point of whatever is left of the Jaguars passing game. We just need 10 points, Laviska!

    Honorable Mention: Calvin Ridley, Robby Anderson, Antonio Brown, Michael Pittman, Gabriel Davis

Tight Ends

  1. Travis Kelce ($7,000 DK / $8,000 FD) – No need to say anything.
  2. Darren Waller ($6,000 DK / $7,100 FD) – The only tight-end that is anything close to the fantasy producer Kelce is. I’d much rather have Kelce at the slightly higher price-tag, but this should be a great game environment in Atlanta for Darren Waller.
  3. Evan Engram ($4,500 DK / $5,600 FD) – Really my only “value” tight-end this week.

    Honorable Mention: Kyle Rudolph, Jordan Reed

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. Miami Dolphins
  2. New Orleans Saints
  3. Los Angeles Rams
  4. New York Giants
  5. Denver Broncos

NFL DFS Cash Game Sample Lineup

QB: Ryan Fitzpatrick
RB: Dalvin Cook
RB: Nyheim Hines
WR: Justin Jefferson
WR: Laviska Shenault
WR: Stefon Diggs
TE: Travis Kelce
FLEX: Brian Hill
DST: Broncos

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NFL Game by Game Breakdown Week 12

It was a pretty solid Thursday to get us off and running for the week. The team and the Game by Game hit on a lot of the right plays, even if neither game was all that exciting. We might have 12 games on the main slate, but that seems very much in doubt because the Ravens can’t get their act together. If it plays, that breakdown is in the Thanksgiving Day Game by Game. It will be updated with any pertinent information like Lamar Jackson missing IF it plays. For now, we can focus on the 11 games that seem to be safe and get ready for who we want to play and stack up in NFL Game By Game Breakdown Week 12!

Titans at Colts, O/U of 51.5 (Colts -3)

Titans – Pace is 4th

QB – These two teams are well-acquainted since they just played each other in Week 10. That’s a game that Ryan Tannehill would just as soon forget since it was his worst fantasy game of the season, not even breaking 11 DK points. Overall for Tannehill, the numbers look pretty strong once again. He only has five turnovers on the season to go with 22 touchdown passes and one rushing score. He remains great on a pPD point of view, ranking fifth at 0.56. Tannehill’s biggest “issue” for fantasy is the Titans are 27th in pass plays per game.

That doesn’t leave him a lot of room for any inefficiency and the matchup doesn’t do him any favors either. Even after getting tagged by Aaron Rodgers, the Colts defense still ranks fourth in DVOA and fourth in passing yards allowed per game. There’s another quarterback who is $100 cheaper in a smash spot late on and even in GPP’s with more popularity, I’d probably rather play that player. Tannehill is only on the board as an MME option to me.

RB – It’s very possible that Derrick Henry comes in as a stealth option this week. Three of his last four games he’s rushed for over 100 yards and he’s hit at least 14.9 DK in those three games. Even against Indy the first time around, Henry ran for 103 and was actually at a 5.4 YPC. Once Tennessee got down later in the game, Henry wasn’t a huge factor since he only has 22 targets on the season. If the game had stayed closer he could have had an even bigger game. The tougher matchup on paper and lack of pass catching leaves him out of cash for me this week. Indy is fourth against the run in DVOA and third in rushing yards allowed per game, but they have allowed 111 yards per contest in the past three. You could catch Henry under 10% and he’s capable of going off for 30 DK here with multiple touchdowns.

*Update* Colts defensive stud DeForest Buckner is out with Covid and that is a big-time boost to Henry and honestly the whole offense. Buckner is among the best lineman in the game and he’s a key cog for the Indy defense. I know Ghost is on Henry and I’m on board with this call. Make sure to check out the live stream on Sunday at 11am to get his take!

WR – The nose for the end zone with A.J.. Brown continues as he scored again last week. He’s only been held out of the end zone just twice so far this season and one of those times was two weeks ago against the Colts. What game log watcher might not realize is AJB dropped what could have been a monster play in that game and seemed to get rattled after that. He’s back under $7,000 and despite the more difficult matchup statistically, I think he needs to be on the radar. Xavier Rhodes has been playing like one of the best corners in the league with a 1.40 pPT and 47.9% catch rate allowed but AJB is special.

Corey Davis just keeps chugging and it doesn’t seem like anyone is giving him any attention. Considering he’s the WR2 in a run-based offense, 549 yards in eight games is a pretty big deal. He turned in 19.3 DK points last week and saw his price rise by just $100. Davis actually holds a very slight edge in air yards over Brown and is only four targets behind him for the team lead. I said it last week, but the price disparity really shouldn’t be this wide. Even though Brown has four more touchdowns, he’s only out-scored Davis by 20 PPR points this season. He also gets the easier matchup on paper against Rock Ya-Sin who sits at a 1.70 pPT and a 69.8% catch rate.

TE – Indy has been fairly lethal against tight ends so far with the fourth-fewest DK points allowed per game. They have only allowed one touchdown and it was scored on a rush attempt by one Jonnu Smith, who has some serious touchdown appeal. Only Darren Waller of the Raiders has a higher RZ share, as Smith is at 30.9%. Smith is tied for the third-most RZ targets overall and fourth in EZ targets. He needs every once of touchdown upside he can get because Smith only runs a route on 59.6% of his snaps, 27th in the league. Much like the Titans offense as a whole, I don’t mind him exactly but he’s not a cash play or close to it.

D/ST – For all the good Coach Mike Vrabel has done with this team, the defensive side of the ball is just not that great. They allow right about 26 points per game and have just 12 sacks on the entire year. That’s the second-fewest in the league and the Titans are 32nd in pressure rate at just 17.5%. I’ll pass on them.

Cash – None

GPP – Henry, Davis, Brown, Smith, Tannehill

Colts – Pace is 20th

QB – The production for Philip Rivers has been better lately with seven touchdowns in the past four games, but that doesn’t mean it’s all that great. It also doesn’t mean his price should be $6,100 and I’m basically not all that interested at that salary. He does have a toe injury that was bugging him on Sunday but he’s still expected to start. Rivers just hasn’t been anything special at his position all year. He’s 25th in pDB, points per game, 23rd in touchdowns, 12th in passing yards and 13th in attempts. That’s not what we like to go after, especially at the salary. Rivers threw for 308 yards last game but only had one touchdown, capping him under 19 DK points. That would technically be a 3x return but just barely. We have better options even though Tennessee is just 25th in DVOA against the pass.

RB – Lol. I hate this backfield. After Nyheim Hines shredded Tennessee for over 100 scrimmage yards, I figured the Colts would ride the hot hand into their next game. Well, that was a swing and a miss. Hines only touched the ball nine times and played under 40% of the snaps. The somewhat good news was Jordan Wilkins was minimized with just five touches. Rookie Jonathan Taylor entered the game having been iced out of the offense the past couple weeks. Naturally, he had 26 touches and actually had a longer run called back that would have pushed him up near 30 DK.

It’s just impossible to know who’s going to get the work every week. Taylor is the most talented back and he could have a big game this week. The Titans are 19th in DVOA against the run and are 20th in rushing yards allowed per game. Additionally, they’ve given up 14 total touchdowns. It’s nice to know that Taylor was targeted in the passing game. I’m 49% sure that if you threw me in the backfield, Rivers would target me just because I was the “running back” on the play. If you think Leonard Fournette has bad hands, you haven’t seen anything. Anyways, Taylor is my back of choice but you simply cannot consider him in cash.

*Update* Taylor is out on the Covid list and Hines really jumps to the forefront with his salary. I still expect there to be some type of split between Hines and Wilkins. Hines is my priority but Wilkins could be a nice pivot off the chalkier $4,000 running back we’ll talk about later.

WR – The weapons for Indy are very difficult to figure out and that extends past the running backs. Since Michael Pittman came back in Week 8 from injury, the highest target share is Zach Pascal…at 13.89. He has one more target than Pittman, and that leads the team in that four week period. The good news for Pittman is he’s flashed big play ability, with 40 and 45 yard receptions in back to back games. Those have come after the catch for the most part and we see the blend of size and speed that led him to be a high second-round pick. Malcolm Butler isn’t a corner that makes me scared at all.

Pascal himself likely doesn’t have the same upside that Pittman does, although the RZ work is just 3-2 to Pittman’s favor. I can no longer play T.Y. Hilton as he has no touchdowns, sits 76th in yards, 65th in receptions and is 58th in air yards in the NFL.

TE – Find someone in your life that loves you like Rivers loves his tight ends. Mo Alie-Cox and Jack Doyle both played over 50% of the snaps last week, while Trey Burton was around 35%. Doyle saw six targets, Alie-Cox saw two and Burton saw five. He and Doyle both hauled in a touchdown, but Doyle finished under eight DK points and Burton barely cleared 10. It’s a mess and having potentially 7-8 players that can be involved any week is a nightmare. With the Titans being in the bottom 10 to tight ends and allowing six scores, one of these players is scoring. Burton has the most RZ targets with Pittman active so he’s the one I’d lean, though Doyle holds slight appeal in MME formats at minimum price.

D/ST – I normally don’t like using defenses against the Titans. They have the fewest giveaways in the NFL at five and Tannehill has only been sacked 14 times. The Colts have generated the third-most turnovers in the league and have 22 sacks, so they are generally cheaper than they should be. It’s just not likely to get a ceiling game in this one.

Cash – Hines

GPP – Pittman, Burton, Rivers, Pascal, Doyle

Cardinals at Patriots, O/U of 49.5 (Cardinals -1.5)

Cardinals – Pace is 2nd

QB – There has to be some lingering concerns for Kyler Murray, who injured his shoulder the last game we saw him. It seemed to affect his throws and he only ran five times, matching his season-low. Considering that game was one that they trailed, you’d have to think not running much was a choice. Provided he’s cleared and everything is fine, Murray is still the cheat code at the quarterback position. His running alone makes him a worthy choice every week but the passing upside gives him 40 DK point upside. Kyler is still first in pDB at 0.66 and points per game so the price is totally fair. If you’re scoring 20 DK points on a floor game, that says a lot in and of itself. The Pats are down to 30th in DVOA against the pass, and Kyler should be able to have his way as long as he’s healthy.

*Update* The Cardinals are having discussion about making three quarterbacks active just in case. Murray would not be a player I’d use in that scenario and Mahomes $200 cheaper would be the play about 98 times out of 100 for me.

RB – Ever since Kenyan Drake has come back, he and Chase Edmonds have split snaps almost 50/50. However, Drake has the advantage in touches in a pretty major way at 32-17. New England isn’t much to fear on either front with being ranked 31st in DVOA against the run and allowing the 21st most rushing yards per contest. I actually like Drake a decent amount here. Yes, Murray has the chance to tilt you every single trip to the red zone but Drake has a 7-4 lead in RZ attempts the past two weeks. Folks could see the snap rate being so close and assume the workload is the same, but that hasn’t been true at all. Give me the touches when the prices are about the same. If Murray isn’t running to protect the shoulder, I think the ceiling really takes off for Drake. He might well be one of my favorite GPP plays of the entire slate.

WR – I’m going to be very interested to see where the perception is on DeAndre Hopkins this week. He’s coming off one of the more single disappointing games of the year, flopping against the terrible Seahawks secondary. Now he gets to face Stephon Gilmore and it needs to be said that Gilmore has been way worse this season. Nuk is still third in raw targets and has a 28.8% target share on the season, so the price is justified. If we can get him sub-5% I’m going to be interested. Gilmore has been far worse in 2020. Through 38 targets, he’s allowing a 13.8 YPR and a 105 passer rating.

Hopkins wasn’t the only player that disappointed last game as Christian Kirk didn’t break double-digit DK points. Kyler was content to dump the ball to Larry Fitzgerald all night so Hopkins and Kirk suffered a bit. That’s not a fear this week because Fitzgerald has Covid, so the Cards lose his 17.1% target share. We normally fear Bill Belichick taking away the primary weapon for the opposite team, but I’m not convinced the Patriots are capable this year. Kirk should see J.C. Jackson, who can be picked on as well with a 2.10 pPT. Andy Isabella enters as a GPP target with Fitzgerald out, but just remember he’s not exactly draped himself in glory in limited chances this year.

TE – Unless it’s a showdown slate, we can safely ignore any Cardinals tight end.

D/ST – Quietly, the Arizona defense is ninth in total DVOA and have 12 takeaways and 25 sacks. They are priced fairly with the Patriots having 15 giveaways and they allow the second-highest pressure rate in football at 27.7%. The Cards are in the upper half in pressure rate even with the loss of Chandler Jones. This is not a bad play at all.

Cash – Drake (I feel safe with him but he’s not needed), D/ST

GPP – Kyler (pending health updates), Hopkins, Kirk, Edmonds, Isabella

Patriots – Pace is 21st

QB – I guess Cam Newton heard me say he lacked passing upside because all he did was go out and throw for 345 yards this past week. He only ran three times against the worst rushing defense in football, because 2020. My concerns with Newton still run deep. He’s just 13th in pDB, 15th in points per game and 36th in passing touchdowns. Rushing production can overcome some of these numbers but the matchup is significantly tougher this week. Arizona is 13th in DVOA against the pass and 18th in yards allowed, to go with an 18:8 TD:INT ratio. Newton has multi-touchdown upside every game but I’m not a fan of the price and the risk he brings as a quarterback. Those weapons are still not good.

RB – The Pats are down a back with the injury to Rex Burkhead, which opens up some potential for James White. He was targeted nine times this past week and of course the game script played a big part in that. We might have a similar spot as far as script if New England has to chase points with the Cards. White isn’t likely to do much on the ground with just 21 attempts on the season, but Burkhead had an 11.6% target share. We know that White is accomplished in the passing game and this spot sets up for him to be my favorite Patriots back. He might even be one of the better cheap backs on the entire slate if projected game script goes right. One player I won’t be looking at is Damien Harris. Not only does he not catch passes with a 2% target share, Sony Michel is likely to be active this week. Harris and Michel occupy he same style of role for New England, and I don’t want to play a back with no pass catching upside at almost $6,000.

WR – I talked myself into Jakobi Meyers last week with his salary and the fact he was getting roughly 40% of the targets since he came back in Week 7. Of course in true Patriots fashion it was Damiere Byrd who went bonkers for just about 30 DK points. Even after the dud, Meyers still has a 29.8% target share and nearly 50% of the air yard share in this offense. As we were sharply reminded of last week, there is some significant volatility to this passing game. Byrd should face a healthy bit of Patrick Peterson. Byrd has the ability to get behind him as P2 was getting roasted all night against Seattle. However, to say there’s a difference between D.K. Metcalf and Byrd is the understatement of the year. Meyers should face Byron Murphy who has been solid this year with a 1.40 pPT. I don’t love either player this week.

TE – Ryan Izzo is under a 7% target share on the with 12 receptions and has one RZ target.

D/ST – They’re playing the seventh-best scoring offense and have no real means to contain Kyler. Even at the bargain price and the fact they’ve gotten their pressure rate up to 26.5%, I can’t see reasons to playing them this week. That would change if Kyler isn’t all that healthy.

Cash – White

GPP – Meyers, Byrd, Cam

Browns at Jaguars, O/U of 49 (Browns -6)

Browns – Pace is 24th

QB – The Browns may finally get a game that doesn’t involve weather, but that doesn’t mean I’m looking to play Baker Mayfield in any real capacity. He’s almost fantasy irrelevant and sure looks like he’s overrated with each passing week. The pDB is under league average at 0.45 and the points per game is 28th. Sure, some of that has been out of his hands these past few weeks but the production hasn’t been there outside of one anomaly game all year. He’s thrown 15 touchdowns and five came in one game. That means he’s barely averaging one touchdown per game otherwise.

Even when he had a four week stretch where he threw two touchdowns in every game, he never topped 17.5 DK points. The matchup is glorious. Jacksonville is 31st in DVOA against the pass, allow the fourth-most yards and 21 touchdown passes so far. However, the projected game script is likely very run heavy and the floor for Baker is palpable.

RB – How some folks treat Nick Chubb this week is an interesting Rorschach test, if you will. There’s a circle of analysts who dislike playing a back like Derrick Henry due to lack of pass catching and general floor outcomes in cash. Well, Chubb is about a $500 cheaper version of Henry. If anyone thinks Henry is a poor cash play, Chubb isn’t much better.

He’s played six games so far (five full games) and has four targets. FOUR. In the two weeks he’s come back, Chubb only has two RZ attempts to nine for Kareem Hunt. Even if some of that is a little bit of bad luck, that’s eye-opening. On the season as a whole, it’s 32-12 for Hunt. If that trend continues, Chubb appears to be cheap but is actually quite expensive. Assuming he gets zeroed in the pass game, he needs roughly 120-ish yards with the three point bonus and one touchdown to hit 3x. That’s a lot, even if the 21st ranked DVOA runs defense doesn’t seem daunting.

It’s going to be tempting to not just plug in Hunt if you want exposure. We should expect Cleveland to control this game, which means a lot of run plays. In the past two weeks with Chubb back, Hunt still has 32 attempts and four receptions. The touches are near equal, and Hunt has the aforementioned RZ work going for him. Hunt’s price dropped dramatically and I may actually prefer him to get exposure to this backfield. I also think Hunt is the better cash play at salary.

WR – With the ceiling so low for Mayfield this year, it’s not easy to love the receiving options. I will say that even though the results have been putrid, I can’t come away from he 29.0% target share for Jarvis Landry since Odell Beckham tore his ACL. Now that they actually have weather that can not kill the passing game, Landry could be stealthy on DK. What is a little surprising is the 45.9% slot rate. That’s not as high as we’ve come to know with Landry but that doesn’t hurt him either. He’s barely over $5,000 and that target share typically isn’t so cheap. The matchup with Tre Herndon isn’t an issue since he’s allowing a 118.2 passer rating.

Rashard Higgins has been the deep threat in this time frame with a 15.7 aDOT and unsurprisingly, it’s been a bit of a struggle. He has 7/127 in three games which doesn’t look like much but the matchup is why you possibly chase. Sidney Jones is the Jags best corner with a 54.5% catch rate allowed but he’s also only played six games. There’s a super low floor if the Browns run 40 times here.

TE – Is it maybe Austin Hooper week….again? I know, I’ve said it for about three weeks running but remember – this is mostly written on Tuesday. We’ve had reasons to bail on the Cleveland game for the last three weeks. Hooper has an 18.9% target share in his two games back and the Jaguars are tied for the lead in touchdowns given up to tight ends this year at eight. They rank seventh in yards given up and every team that has given up more yards have also given up more receptions. Landry, Hunt and Hooper are the only players with RZ targets in the past three weeks and I like Hooper to have a shot to score here.

D/ST – I need to know who’s starting at quarterback here. If it’s Gardner Minshew, I’ll pass because the Browns are still without stud lineman Myles Garrett. You can make a fairly strong case that the Jags with Minshew are a better offense than Philly and Carson Wentz. There, I said it.

*Update* It is not Minshew…..

Cash – Landry, Hunt, Hooper

GPP – Chubb, Higgins, Baker

Jaguars – Pace is 6th

QB – Please, please let Minshew get back for this game. His pDB is not great at just 23rd, but he was 14th in points per game at the time of injury and he has 13 touchdowns in just seven games. Jacksonville was top 10 in pass attempts with him active and the matchup is juicy. Cleveland is 15th in DVOA against the pass but their pass rush is blunted right now. Additionally, they are 21st in passing yards allowed and are tied for fourth in touchdowns given up. Jake Luton has looked like a sixth-round rookie outside of one massive play to kick off his career. Yes, the Steelers are one of the best defenses in football but a 2:6 TD:INT ratio is tough to stomach, even at $5,200. If it’s Minshew, I’m very interested. If it’s Luton, I’d rather play Baker.

*Update* Mike Glennon will be starting Sunday and I have absolutely no interest. He’s played 29 games in his career and while the 36:20 TD:INT ratio isn’t bad, he averages under 200 yards per game. He hasn’t seen any real game action since 2017 and there’s an incredibly low floor for Glennon here.

RB – I don’t appear to be giving James Robinson enough credit lately. This dude touches the ball all the time no matter what. In the last four weeks, he has 95 total touches and has churned out a least 11.4 DK points. That might not sound great for results, but the Steelers game drags it down some. If you can pencil him in for at least ~18 touches, he has to be considered at this salary, even if it’s just for GPP. No running back has a higher percentage of the position’s carries on his team, 96.1%. Cleveland is once again dead average in DVOA against the run at 15, but they are eighth in rush yards allowed per game. It’s not a sparkling matchup but the floor seems pretty safe for Robinson.

WR – To make matters tougher for Glennon, his entire receiving corps is questionable right now. D.J. Chark hasn’t practiced this week, an ominous sign. Laviska Shenault was limited, but that’s all he’s been able to manage after missing two straight games. Even Chris Conley was limited. Look, none of these players are going to be the highest priority. We need some clarity before figuring out matchups so look for an update as we go.

*Update* We have a lot to cover here. Firstly, Chark and Conley are both out. That’s a 20.9% target share and a 12.9% target share, not to mention a combined 13 RZ targets and 10 EZ targets. Not only that, but the Browns are down their best corner, Denzel Ward. Both Shenault and Keelan Cole will step into much bigger roles this week. I will prefer Shenault with an aDOT of just 5.6 to Cole’s 10.4 and I would expect Shenaul to get a rushing attempt or two. Glennon is scary for a ceiling game for either player but they are perfectly fine punts. Cole has been much more in the slot this year but I don’t think that holds up with the limited bodies they have.

TE – Regardless of quarterback, I’m completely uninterested here. Tyler Eifert is going to catch a random touchdown here and there but that’s not something we should chase. His target share is barely 11% and he has seven RZ looks. With just 19 receptions, the floor is scary low.

D/ST – They’re dead last in sacks, have only 10 takeaways and can’t really stop the run. Hard pass.

Cash – Shenault

GPP – Robinson, Cole

Dolphins at Jets, O/U of 44 (Dolphins -7)

Dolphins – Pace is 30th

QB – Coach Brian Flores is playing a dangerous game of quarterback roulette right now, in my eyes. He took Ryan Fitzpatrick out of the starter role despite Fitz playing mostly well. Eight interceptions isn’t great, but the Dolphins were 3-1 and fighting for the AFC East when he made the move. Tua Tagovailoa started that past four games but got yanked in Denver in the fourth. Flores said it was performance-based, but Tua would still start.

I will stress that Tua is not a cash game play with one cheaper than his $5,900 BUT he could be an elite pivot in GPP. This is the Jets defense that is atrocious at every level. They are dead last in DVOA against the pass, third-worst in yards per game and have surrendered 19 touchdown passes. If Tua can’t get it done here, we should be worried about his fantasy production for the rest of the way. He’s only at a 0.41 pDB so there is a floor to be had. It’s just hard not to bet against the Jets right now.

RB – This is a pretty cut and dry position for the Dolphins. I worried that the return of Matt Breida last week might muddy the waters. After all, Salvon Ahmed is an undrafted rookie the Dolphins picked up from the 49ers. Breida might get the benefit of the doubt. That didn’t happen at all, as Ahmed played over 65% of the snaps and racked up 17 touches. Breida had two for the game, so Ahmed is still very much a cash play here. The pricing hasn’t exactly got up to the workload yet. Having said that, the Jets actually rank ninth in DVOA against the run but they’ve given up non total scored and the second-most receptions in the league. Ahmed got involved in the passing game this past week with six targets. If that sticks around, he should be able to approach 3x at this salary.

*Update* Maybe this isn’t cut and dry. Ahmed has now missed practice both days this week. Myles Gaskin is working, but still in a non-contact jersey. Ahmed is now out, so this backfield could be down to Breida and Patrick Laird. Let’s just hope Gaskin is back for Sunday.

WR – Since Tua has been the starter, DeVante Parker leads the team in target share. It’s only 22.9% which is a little lower than I’m in love with but he’s also not over $6,000. With the Jets secondary that is just getting pummeled by any receiver imaginable, Parker is going to be difficult to turn away from. It appears that the chemistry could be growing a bit with seven, seven and nine targets in the last three games which brings him up to a 26.4% target share. The air yards are encouraging at 26.2% and he leads in RZ and EZ targets at five each. Blessuan Austin isn’t going to hamper Parker with his 12.4 YPR and 97.3 passer rating allowed. Parker may well wind up in the Core before it’s all said and done.

Knowing how bad the Jets are, Jakeem Grant is in the conversation again but it needs to be understood as to where the floor is. He’s gotten five, five and six targets the past three games but has only broken double-digits once because he scored. It’s a thin play that’s there solely because of matchup. Grant has at least seen five targets in three straight games and that’s about all that’s needed against the Jets.

TE – Mike Gesicki always seems just too expensive to really get excited about. The good news is he’s running routes on 85.6% of his snaps, but he’s also under 62% for his snaps rate not the season. Gesicki has been third in the pecking order with Tua under center but Parker has been hoarding the RZ and EZ work, leaving just one of each target for Gesicki. He’s always fine, but I can’t get excited past the matchup. New York has allowed seven scores to the position, so maybe in a GPP I’ll throw in Gesicki and hope he finds the paint. Really, who can’t against New York?

D/ST – I don’t always like to go after the most expensive option on the board but you can’t argue the flow chart of good defenses against the Jets. Miami has forced the third-most takeaways this year and matched it with 22 sacks. The Jets actually only have 11 giveaways but they are the lowest scoring offense in football by almost five full points. There’s nothing wrong with playing the Dolphins here.

Cash – Parker, TBD in the backfield

GPP – Grant, Tua, Gesicki, D/ST

Jets – Pace is 9th

QB – Sam Darnold looks like he’ll be back under center and this would be about the lowest I would consider going for quarterback. Even then, it’s particularly gross. No, I take it back. I can’t play Darnold. The Jets offense is singularly bad this season. The 0.30 pDB is 34th and honestly, I just can’t wait to see him on a new team this time in 2021. Miami is 11th in DVOA against the pass and has only allowed 13 touchdown passes all season.

RB – With the news that rookie La’Mical Perine having a high ankle sprain, someone might want to try and take me into Frank Gore ….and I guess I could listen. I don’t love this play and want to be crystal clear about that. I much prefer James White. It has to be pointed out that Miami is 29th in DVOA against the run, ranks 27th in rushing yards allowed per game and they’ve given up over 1,400 scrimmage yards with nine touchdowns. If this was any other back, we’d be interested at this price. We know FOR SURE that Adam Gase loves Gore and his 3 yards, cloud of dust skill set. The matchup is there and the workload is likely there as well, if the Jets can stay competitive. Don’t shoot the messenger here!

WR – Jamison Crowder has been a ghost since coming back from injury and I can’t help but wonder if that’s quarterback related. Flacco has been at the helm for both games and he’s focused on Breshad Perriman and Denzel Mims. Crowder has seen five targets while Mims has seen 16 and Perriman has seen 11. Perriman has scored three times in these two games but the Dolphins matchup is soft on the inside and difficult on the outside.

Byron Jones and Xavien Howard wait on the boundary while Nik Needham is in the slot. Crowder should have a field day there as Needham has allowed a 60% catch rate. Before the injury (with Darnold), Crowder had a 31.5% target share. I’d love for that to come back this week. I’m out on Mims and Perriman this week, as those corners are going to get the best of them for most of the game.

TE – I’m just pretending that Chris Herndon didn’t score last week. He’s been totally uninvolved all year and we don’t chase fluky touchdowns.

D/ST – Honestly, Tua hasn’t been so good that I couldn’t understand a punt of the Jets defense. They have negative points in their outcomes but they do have 11 turnovers forced. That’s about the best I can say for them because the unit is not talented.

Cash – Crowder

GPP – Gore, D/ST

Raiders at Falcons, O/U of 54 (Raiders -3)

Raiders – Pace is 29th

QB – I’ve made a couple references to the quarterback that I liked especially in cash so far it’s Derek Carr. He’s playing lights out right now and has been through most of the year. The completion rate is almost 70%, he’s 10th in completion rate under pressure and seventh with a clean pocket. There have been a few bumps in the road but he’s in full control of this offense and the Falcons are one of the biggest pass funnels in the league. They are 26th in DVOA against the pass and only the Seahawks give up more yards per game. Only the Cowboys have given up more touchdown passes and Atlanta sits at 22 for the season. Carr is seventh in RZ attempts and 11th in touchdowns despite being only 18th in attempts. He’s far too cheap for the upside and he’s almost surely my cash game option.

RB – This is not an exaggeration, I almost spit out my water when I clicked on Josh Jacobs. $7,200 is an eye-popping price for a back that has seven of 10 games fallen short of the 21 DK required for 3x. I’m…I’m honestly not sure how he’s this expensive. There’s certainly nothing inherently wrong with Jacobs. The Raiders are favorites, he’s third in carries in the NFL and he’s involved in the passing game with a 10.3% target share. However, Atlanta is good against the run. They’re only ninth in rush yards allowed per game and they have allowed the third-fewest rushing yards to just running backs. Where they can be had is in the passing game, but that’s not the calling card for Jacobs. He could have 100 yards and score and still fall short of 3x. Too many things have to go right for Jacobs and I’m more fading the salary than the player.

WR – Nelson Agholor is very likely to gain a lot of traction in this spot and he could be the “Jakobi Meyers” of last week. I mean that he could be very popular in cash game settings since he’s under $5,000 and coming off a big game against the Chiefs. The target rate isn’t crazy high at 15.1% but he does lead in air yards at 26.7% and is tied with Darren Waller in EZ targets. The 14.5 aDOT can lead to some volatility but this is a good spot to trust him as much as you can. The salary is too low and rookie corner A.J. Terrell has allowed a 75.5% catch rate and a 2.30 pPT on 53 targets.

One of the biggest failures of the Raiders offense so far has been not having any real role for Henry Ruggs. He’s barely over an 11% target share and has been far more bust than boom so far this season. Right now, he’s just a player that can run fast. It only takes one play but his floor is zero. He’s only in consideration with 20 or more lineups. The emergence of Agholor has seemingly helped cap Ruggs and Hunter Renfrow, especially with Waller as the alpha.

TE – I’m not sure if I’ll have the luxury to spend on him yet, but Waller would be my preferred tight end in cash to go with Carr. Part of the Falcons being a pass funnel is they are the worst team to tight ends. They’re tied for the most touchdowns allowed, second-most yards and the third-most receptions. It legitimately could not line up better for Waller. Setting aside Travis Kelce who is the TE1+++, Waller is the only other tight end with at least 60 receptions, at least 500 yards and he owns a 27.7% target share. Play Waller in any format you like and he will undoubtedly be a piece of a Raiders stack for me this week.

D/ST – Vegas only has 11 sacks on the season, a 21.4% pressure rate and 11 turnovers. The Falcons got rocked by the Saints defense this past week but the talent level is quite different between these two. I’m not particularly interested here.

Cash – Carr, Waller, Agholor

GPP – Jacobs, Ruggs

Falcons – Pace is 8th

QB – For as much as I like Carr, I’m going to be tempted to go right back to Matt Ryan. There’s no denying he was terrible on Sunday and he’s showing signs of not being what he used to be. However, Ryan is 21st in completion rate under pressure at 39.7%. When he’s kept clean, that goes up to 77.5% and Vegas is not getting home to the quarterback. Ryan’s 0.42 pDB is a concern as is his 15.3 points per game. That doesn’t mean he doesn’t have ceiling games in him with a 23, 27, 28 and 32 DK point efforts this year. The Raiders are 18th in DVOA and 28th in passing yards allowed per game. One of the only things somewhat saving them at this point is the 16:8 TD:INT ratio allowed. This game could turn into a track meet the attention is likely to be on Carr and his passing game. That and the combo of a bad taste in folks mouth from last week could turn Ryan into a gem this week with not many on him.

RB – We’ve had to be pretty picky with the spots to use Todd Gurley but this one does check most of the boxes. For starters, the Raiders have a tough time defending the run. They are 32nd in DVOA against the run and have given up 12 rushing touchdowns. The yardage given up to backs looks strong at just 906 through 10 games, but they’ve also faced the seventh-fewest attempts in the league. If teams stick with it, they’ve not shown a ton of resistance. I do wish Gurley had more of a passing floor since Vegas is bottom 10 in receptions and receiving yards to backs, but there’s reasons that Gurley is so cheap. You’re not playing him for his 6.4% target share, you’re after his 42 RZ attempts which is second in the league behind Derrick Henry. I can’t quite get there in cash but Gurley checks in as a GPP option.

*Update* Gurley is a bit of a surprise inactive and enter Brian Hill? He has two games with 10 or more touches this season. One has turned into 15 DK and one has turned into 8.4. With him being minimum for the position and in a shootout-style game, it’s hard to not plug him in and go. He actually has 20 targets on the season, four fewer than Gurley. With a bit of passing game chops to go with his resume this year, I’m in.

WR – The situation here is a little hard to read. Julio Jones injured his hamstring again last week and only played 35% of the snaps. He didn’t look like a player that would suit up this week. He’s being called limited in practice, as is Calvin Ridley. Right now, I’d guess Julio is out but Ridley is in and Ridley becomes fascinating. He gets Trayvon Mullen who has given up three touchdowns, a 100.3 passer rating and a 63% catch rate. Ridley also has 37.2% of the air yards share and a 31.6% red zone share even with Julio. That rises without him.

Russell Gage has to enter into the conversation here as well. He jumped to about 80% of the snaps last week after weeks of being around 55%. Ryan also fed him 12 targets and at $4,800 he could be a staple of cash lineups. Raiders corner Nevin Lawson isn’t anything to worry about either with a 106.3 passer rating allowed. Really, if Julio is out it seems far-fetched that Gage wouldn’t see at least 5-6 targets. He’s at a healthy 16.7% target share as it is.

TE – You would have thought that Julio being in and out on Sunday would have led to a Hayden Hurst game, but you’d be wrong. He went for the goose on Sunday on just two targets. Hurst is only fourth in targets on the team and fourth in RZ looks, which is an issue. Outside of Travis Kelce, the Raiders have been good to tight ends. This is a crazy stat – Vegas has given up 47 receptions, 523 yards and four touchdowns. Kelce in two games has 22/235/2. He’s responsible for borderline half the eight end scoring against Vegas! That doesn’t leave me too excited for Hurst, Julio or not.

D/ST – The Raiders only have 10 giveaways and Carr has only been sacked 14 times. Vegas and their O-Line have only given up a 16.4% pressure rate, seventh-best in football. There’s not a lot to hang on to here since the Falcons only have 17 sacks themselves. They can’t really generate a pass rush and are likely to get carved up.

Cash – Ridley, Gage if Julio is out

GPP – Ryan, Gurley, Hurst

Giants at Bengals, O/U of 44 (Giants -6)

Giants – Pace is 18th

QB – Through this season, Daniel Jones has been a pretty easy pass for me. He’s played all 10 games and six of them he’s failed to reach 15 DK points. Two of those games he’s not even hit 10, which is beyond crippling from a quarterback. Danny Dimes sits 30th in pDB at 0.35, 26th in points per game, 27th in touchdown passes, 21st in yards and this is all despite being third in RZ attempts. Yikes. The matchup is phenomenal with the Bengals ranking 28th in DVOA against the pass and 23rd in yards allowed per contest. This team had their hearts ripped out last week too with the loss of Joe Burrow. Maybe you can construct a narrative that makes you want to play Danny Dimes, but there’s enough options under $6,000 that he won’t be in play for me.

RB – We mentioned Salvon Ahmed as a nice cash option and I think Wayne Gallman falls into that same exact category. Since Devonta Freeman was hurt in Week 7, Gallman has been the man in this backfield. He’s handled 54 attempts and been targeted 10 times with eight receptions. I do kind of wish the target share was bigger than the 7.7% he’s sporting, but he is so cheap for what’s likely to be 15 touches or more. Both of these teams are not good, so I’d be surprised if it’s not competitive.

Of the 12 RZ attempts since Week 7, Gallman has nine of them and he’s scored in every game. Cincy is 23rd in DVOA against the run but they’ve given up the fourth-most rushing yards to backs. They’ve been lucky to only allow six rushing scores so far and Gallman need only a score, 60 rushing yards and a couple receptions to hit 3x. His low-water mark was 13.2 DK against the Bucs, one of the better run defenses in football.

WR – Sterling Shepard came back to the lineup in Week 7 as well and since that point, he and Evan Engram are identical with 32 targets and 208 air yards each to lead the team. Shepard leads in receptions and yards, all while playing only 31.4% of his snaps in the slot. Shepard will Riley line up against LeShaun Sims who has gotten smacked for a 2.30 pPT on 46 targets. He’s also allowed four touchdowns and Shepard’s price is attractive. Since retuning, he’s hit at least 10.7 DK in all four games and has had some tougher matchups in there against Tampa and Washington.

Darius Slayton is still the wild card in this offense. Since Shepard returned, he’s had three, nine, one and seven targets in those four games. When he’s gotten targeted, he’s broken 10 DK points. When he hasn’t…well, that speaks for itself. Slayton should snag the tougher matchup against William Jackson but this isn’t a shutdown corner either. Jackson has still allowed a 14.8 YPR and a 92.1 passer rating on 55 targets. Golden Tate is still an avoid for me as the fourth option in a flawed passing game.

TE – The price and matchup seem attractive for Engram, not to mention the metrics we talked about. He just can’t seem to put it together though with another dud the last time we saw him. Engram is not even a top 15 option at the position on the year but is priced as the TE4 on the slate. Figure that one out. The Bengals is a good spot for Engram as they’ve given up the fourth-most DK per game, six scores and almost 600 yards. There’s just little reason to have faith in Engram and he’s not a cash play.

D/ST – I was hoping they would be a bit lower-priced, but DK did a nice job here. With the loss of Burrow, the Bengals offense becomes a prime target every week. They’ve allowed the third-most sacks and their quarterback play just fell off a cliff. On the year, New York has generated 25 sacks and 15 turnovers. The DVOA doesn’t look strong at 28, but they can make splash plays, have a backup caliber quarterback on the other side and can be afforded in just about any build.

Cash – Gallman, Shepard, D/ST

GPP – Slayton, Engram

Bengals – Pace is 13th

QB – We saw three games from Ryan Finley last season and what we got was not pretty at all. His completion rate was 47.1%, he didn’t pass for 475 yards total and he had a 2:2 TD:INT ratio. I wouldn’t get too fooled by his lone rush attempt on Sunday because he had four last season. The Giants have only given up 15 touchdown passes and even with some better weapons this year (namely Tee Higgins), this is just a super easy pass for me. There’s not any need to get cute to this extent.

The Bengals announced that Brandon Allen will be starting this week, elevated off the practice squad. Just like Finley, he’s a quick pass. His NFL sample size is only three games as well, but he has a completion rate under 48%, a 3:2 TD:INT ratio and averaged under 175 yards per contest. The Giants aren’t the worst defense and we can just play Carr or Tua in amazing spots.

RB – When you have a potential non-functioning quarterback, the running backs could suffer. That’s the case for Gio Bernard even though Joe Mixon is now on the IR. It’s a really solid matchup since New York has given up almost 1,400 scrimmage yards, 10 touchdowns and are tied for the fifth-most receptions. You just can’t help but worry Bernard faces the teeth of this defense the entire day. Seeing as how he’s almost $6,000, this is another player I’m just not really looking at. It could be a long day for the Bengals.

WR – DK is trying to tempt me with Higgins and Tyler Boyd. The former went dropped $800 in salary and while the results were tough last week, he still saw 10 targets. Boyd saw 11 and is very likely to be the safety blanket for Allen. It’s debatable if that matters but Boyd runs in the slot just under 77% of the time. That leaves him on Darnay Holmes who has gotten smacked in limited action. His snap rate is under 50% but if he’s called upon to face Boyd he’s allowing a 73.7% catch rate. Boyd has an aDOT of 8.3 so Finley could hone in on him pretty easily.

Higgins is just six targets behind A.J. Green from taking over second on the team and has more RZ targets. Higgins also draws James Bradberry which is a big issue here. The Giants corner has only allowed a 77.5 passer rating on 69 targets this season. Both receivers are both risky with super low floors with Allen under center but I do prefer Boyd at the salaries.

TE – With the Bengals offensive line issues, Drew Sample has fallen down to running a route on just 68% of the snaps. That’s down to 20th in the NFL and unless something changes with Finely, he hasn’t been involved at all. I tend to doubt he’s suddenly a big part of the plan for the Bengals.

D/ST – You can play the “Daniel Jones turns it over” card because he has 13 in 10 games. The Bengals only have 10 takeaways on the season and 13 sacks, in part because they dealt Carlos Dunlap to Seattle. I don’t want to play a defense that doesn’t have splash play ability.

Cash – None

GPP – Boyd, Bernard, Higgins

Chargers at Bills, O/U of 53 (Bills -5)

Chargers – Pace is 11th

QB – This game should be one of the better ones on the entire slate and I’m looking forward to it. Justin Herbert got over his stumble against the Dolphins pretty fast, going for 30 DK this past week. Herbert has thrown 22 touchdowns already and that’s sixth in the league. The scary part is he’s played in one fewer game than anyone else above him. In his first two starts, Herbert only threw two combined touchdowns. Since then, he’s thrown for at least two every time out and is averaging right at 300 yards per contest. Only Patrick Mahomes is higher by about five yards. He’s at a season-high salary but he absolutely should be. Buffalo is not nearly the defense they were last year, ranked 14th in DVOA against the pass and 17th in yards allowed per game. Herbert really hasn’t let you down yet.

RB – If Austin Ekeler is back this week with no restrictions, it’s all systems go. Buffalo is 26ht in DVOA against the run and they’ve given up over 1,400 scrimmage yards to the backs. A dude like Kalen Ballage has seen 18 targets in three games with the Chargers. Ekeler is vastly underpriced for the game environment if he’s healthy and there’s not much else to say about this one. He’s part of an excellent offense that loves to target the backs with inferior options. We just have to make sure we know what we’re looking at.

WR – It’s about time Keenan Allen got priced up. He’s been a terror with Herbert under center and these two have been unstoppable for the most part. He’s had a 30.1% target share and that’s behind only Davante Adams in the league. Allen is in the slot still a little under half the time and that leaves him on Taron Johnson a good bit. Johnson has allowed a 101.3 passer rating and a 1.70 pPT so far this year on 60 targets. He’s still the primary stacking option with Herbert and there’s little reason to think Buffalo stops him in this contest.

Mike Williams will see the majority of Tre White and that would have sent me running the other way in 2019. Now White is a shadow of himself and not the good kind of corner shadow. He’s been targeted 40 times and is allowing a 72.5% catch rate, 131.6 passer rating and a 2.70 pPT. Those are sky high numbers and Williams has a good four inches and 20 pounds on White. I will not argue in the least if you double up Herbert with Allen and Williams in this spot.

TE – Even with all of Herbert’s success, Hunter Henry hasn’t exactly come along for the ride. As Herbert has gotten comfortable, Henry has mostly turned into a touchdown or bust option. The first two games Henry had at least five receptions. After that points, he’s not been over four and the 48 yards from this past week was the highest yardage since Week 3. Herbert has broken the mold as far as rookie quarterbacks and the only time Henry has scored more than 10 DK points has been when he scored. However, Buffalo is one of the better matchups on the board. They’ve allowed the most yards, most receptions and six scores on the year. If stacking Herbert, I’d rotate Williams and Henry as the second option after Allen.

D/ST – The Chargers defense has been rougher this year with over 27 points allowed, just nine turnovers and only 17 sacks. With a game that is projected to be very high-scoring, I’m not sure they have the ability to cash in on the added opportunities these games can give out.

Cash – Herbert, Allen

GPP – Williams, Henry

Bills – Pace is 22nd

QB – The Chargers are mid-pack in DVOA against the pass and that doesn’t make me worry about Josh Allen here. He finished strong right before the bye week with 39 and 29 DK point games, combining for six touchdowns. Allen is sixth in pDB at 0.55 and fantasy points per game, seventh in yards, fourth in air yards and eighth in passing touchdowns. Allen has been given the keys to the offense as well, sitting eighth in attempts on the season. LA is fourth in touchdowns allowed and Allen leads in rushing attempts inside the red zone and rushing touchdowns. He’s another player that can be used in any format. I tend to lean Herbert and save $400 but this is a very tough call.

RB – Zack Moss has surpassed Devin Singletary in salary and workload the last two games. Moss has 16 rushing attempts and three receptions to just six attempts and four receptions for Singletary. There’s not a ton of touchdown upside with Allen ready to poach any work near the paint. Moss has the lead there as well at a whopping 2-1 ratio. The Chargers are 27th in DVOA against the run and have given up over 1,300 scrimmage yards with 10 touchdowns. Even though the prices are bargains, I can’t bring myself to like either player. If you go this route, it almost has to be Moss.

WR – This matchup is set to be a blast since Stefon Diggs should face a good bit of Casey Hayward. The Chargers corner is typically an avoid for me, but Diggs is a different type of player. Hayward has been targeted 66 times but has allowed a league-best 45.5% catch rate. Now, he has also allowed a 1.80 pPT and a massive 18.6 YPR. Diggs has a 28.6% target share and a huge 36.1% of the air yards share. Allen will have no fear about Hayward and neither do I in this spot.

The decision between Cole Beasley and John Brown might be out of our hands. Brown didn’t practice once again on Thursday, casting serious doubt about playing on Sunday. If that’s the case, Beasley and his 18.8% target share look pretty appealing in a stack. Tevaughn Campbell guards the slot for the Chargers now and in only 18 targets, he’s allowed a 66.7% catch rate. Beasley as the clear-cut number two is at a solid price for his potential upside here.

*Update* Hayward is out for the Chargers and Brown is out for the Bills. To steal a Stix phrase, this is a wheels up scenario for Diggs and Beasley is a great value in my eyes. You could take a GPP shot at Gabriel Davis as well. In Week 5, Davis saw nine targets and Week 7 he saw three. It’s a wild card play but if he gets more than five, he could turn into an incredible value.

TE – There’s not a tight end that is worth considering on this team. Nobody is over a 6.2% target share and the top two options have a combined eight RZ targets.

D/ST – The Bills sort of fit the prototype of a defense in a shootout that could get a couple turnovers and sacks, but it’s not the route I’m looking at. They’re only 17th in overall DVOA and Herbert has only thrown six picks through nine games.

Cash – Allen, Diggs, possibly Beasley

GPP – Moss

Panthers at Vikings, O/U of 51.5 (Vikings -3.5)

Panthers – Pace is 31st

QB – The fact that Teddy Bridgewater was close enough to almost be the emergency option last week leaves me feeling good about his chances of playing this week. That’s awesome because this is a great spot. Even Any Dalton put up 22 DK on this Vikings defense and Teddy could do the same. Teddy B is 17th in attempts even missing a game and 14th in yards. Nothing exactly pops out with the 0.47 pDB and 13 touchdowns, but the Vikings erase a lot of issues. I will say I wish Bridgewater was cheaper, needing about 20 DK to hit 3x. Minnesota might be 12th in DVOA against the pass but the 22 touchdowns allowed erases any good facets. Teddy Two Gloves has talent around him and this is the type of spot we should be targeting him.

RB – Only 10 teams have given up over 1,000 rushing yards to running backs and Minnesota is one of them. Christian McCaffrey is already doubtful for the week which means it’s the Mike Davis show again. He put up just under 16 DK last week with only two receptions. That is kind of a concern as he’s not had more than five receptions since Week 5. His price is a bit high and I don’t believe I would go there in cash. Week 5 was also the last time Davis has hit 3x at this current price. The ceiling has gotten sketchy so even in a good spot, Davis has a wide range of outcomes.

*Update* CMC is questionable but not expected to play

WR – One of the reasons the receptions have dried up for Davis is the 22% target share for Curtis Samuel compared to 12.4% for Davis. Samuel is still priced as the WR3 in Carolina but since Week 7, Samuel has 74.2 PPR points compared to 56.2 for Robby Anderson and 75.9 for D.J. Moore. The latter two are close in price but Samuel really stands out as a value. Aside from a dud against Tampa (excusable against a good defense) Samuel has scored at least 17 DK points in every game.

He’s run 53% of his routes from the slot and Jeff Gladney has been awful. He’s allowed a 108.5 passer rating and a 14.5 YPR. Anderson should get Kris Boyd and he’s allowed a 1.80 pPT while Moore should square up with Cameron Dantzler who returned Sunday. Dantzler has been the worst of the bunch with a 138.4 passer rating and a 73.8% catch rate this year. Samuel is the best value of the pass catchers and Moore should be worth the extra money from Anderson, especially if the field hasn’t caught up with the changes in the passing game.

TE – The Panthers do not utilize the tight end at all since Ian Thomas is under a 5% target share.

D/ST – I did seriously underestimate this unit against a short-handed Lions offense last week, but I’m filing that under fluky results. They won’t shut anyone out again and five of their total 16 sacks came last week. Again, fluky.

Cash – Samuel, Moore, Bridgewater

GPP – Davis, Anderson

Vikings – Pace is 25th

QB – Kirk Cousins isn’t playing bad lately, considering he only has two turnovers in the last four games. In two of those games, he’s been over 20 DK points but he’s needed to throw there touchdowns to do so. Cousins sits fifth in pDB at 0.55 which still makes me double-take every single week. Being 23rd in attempts really hurts he predictability of his production. If you catch him on a game where he throws around 35 times, you’re likely to be happy. If he’s in that 20-25 attempt range, you have issues. This week he could be down Adam Thielen so I’m likely to avoid Cousins if that’s the case. I’d bet the Vikings try to run the ball down the throats of Carolina and get out of dodge. The Panthers are 21st in DVOA but have only allowed 16 touchdowns so far. The range of outcomes is wide but he makes some sense in GPP.

RB – The only question with Dalvin Cook is if I can afford him. Cook is only off the rushing title by 10 yards and he’s one game behind Derrick Henry. The Panthers have allowed the fifth-most rushing yards and are 22nd in DVOA aghast the run. They are also tied for fourth in rushing touchdowns allowed so this is beyond a smash spot for Cook. There is some cache that he won’t hit 3x at this price. Last year, we paid $10,000 for CMC often but he had a massive receiving floor. Cook has a 13.3% target share and might even get more looks without Thielen. Just remember, he needs to hit about 30 DK for 3x. The floor is immense but the ceiling is not a sure thing at this price.

WR – If Thielen is out, attention is going to shift heavily onto rookie Justin Jefferson. He’s already been wildly productive but it’s a question how he’ll react if he’s the true one. Jefferson likely squares off against Rasul Douglas in this scenario. Douglas has allowed just a 1.50 pPT and a 10.4 YPR. Even in not the best matchup, it would be hard to turn away from Jefferson in cash formats I believe. Thielen has accounted for a 29.1% target share, 41.4% air yards share and has a 51.9% RZ share. That’s an immense amount of the passing game and Jefferson has to get some of that. Thielen may have had just a false positive test, so let’s not get attached to Jefferson yet.

*Update* Thielen is likely out, and Smith is as well most likely. If he Vikings passing game is down both targets, Rudolph and Jefferson should see around 50% of the targets if not more. I wouldn’t be too heavy on Olabisi Johnson with the other value receivers we have in front of us.

TE – Neither Kyle Rudolph or Irv Smith have more than a 10.3% target share so they’re not on the radar much unless Thielen is out. If he is, both players would have higher touchdown equity as they should help fill the RZ void left by Thielen.

D/ST – This unit has been besieged all season and are under 20 sacks on the season and have 12 turnovers. If Bridgewater is starting on the other side, I won’t have any interest. If it would be P.J. Walker….maybe I could get there but even then it’s not the best play.

Cash – Dalvin if we can afford him, Jefferson

GPP – Rudolph

Saints at Broncos, O/U of 43.5 (Saints -6)

Saints – Pace is 27th

QB – I’m ecstatic that DK bumped Taysom Hill’s salary all the way up to $6,200 so he’s not the chalk agains this week. We only have one full game to go by, but Hill played about as well as he could have. He ran 10 times for 50 yards and two scores while completing 18 of his 23 attempts. He had a long touchdown passing nullified and if he keeps running like this, he’s going to still be in play. This is a tougher matchup on the road and against the eighth ranked DVOA against the pass. Hill will need to continue to play well to live up to the price unless he rushes for two scores again. I don’t believe he’s really needed at this salary this week because I’m not convinced he can carry the production as teams get film.

RB – So….that was a terrifying sample for Alvin Kamara. The Saints kept his attempts down like always with just 13. He’s only had one game with more than 14 rushing attempts all year. What makes Kamara the weapon that he is was literally non-existent on Sunday. For the first time in his career, Kamara did not record a reception. He was only targeted one time. He’s tied for 12th in targets across the league, not even just wide receivers and tight ends. Hill not using Kamara in the passing game turns Kamara into just another running back. For one of the first times in memory, Kamara is not a cash play in my eyes and a back with just 12-16 rush attempts would have issues at $5,000. It does need pointed out that Kamara was nursing a toe injury last week but I’m not sure that’s an excuse here. Even Latavius Murray got targeted twice along with his 12 rushing attempts. Let’s hope this was a blip on the radar and leave Kamara for deeper GPP.

WR – One player that didn’t suffer with Hill under center was Michael Thomas, who was targeted 12 times. It was just like the good old days and we haven’t seen a game like this since last season. MT scored more Sunday than his other three games combined. He’s also back to a 27.8% target share and would be incredibly cheap if this can keep up. Thomas has mostly been outside with just a 15.4% slot rate and that means likely a good bit of A.J. Bouye for Denver. He’s not been targeted a ton and has missed some time but the 74.1% catch rate plays right into what Thomas does best. He’s the one Saints player that I’m still pretty happy to play in this game.

The game for Emmanuel Sanders would be looking a lot different if he got to keep the long touchdown but 10.6 DK wasn’t the worst outcome. Six targets isn’t exactly great but Sanders is under $5,000 and does have a tough matchup on paper. Bryce Callahan has a 1.10 pPT which is the second-best among corners. I’m most likely to stick with just Thomas here as we continue to learn how Hill reacts as the starter.

TE – I’m struggling to find much of a reason to go after Jared Cook since he’s under 12% for his target share and now he has to worry about Hill in the red zone. Cook does have a 17.3% share in that area of the field but I think that’s going to drop with Hill. Denver has only allowed two touchdowns on the season so I really feel there’s better options.

D/ST – They are expensive after the past three weeks, where they have scored at least 14 DK in all three. I would normally not chase the production, as they’ve racked up 13 sacks and nine turnovers. On the season, they only have 15 turnovers and 32 sacks so a large percentage has come lately. The catch is the Denver offense has turned the ball over the most in football at 23 times. They’ve matched that with 23 sacks so there’s a lot of opportunity for the Saints here.

Cash – Thomas

GPP – Hill, D/ST, Kamara, Sanders

Broncos – Pace is 3rd

QB – I’m not sure where we are on the “Is Drew Lock any good?” question but I’m not looking to find out this week. I believe we’ve played him once so far this year and were rewarded with a 30 DK point effort. However, the matchup is different and the recent play of the Saints have shot them up to fifth in DVOA against the pass. Lock has had injury issues with himself and has been missing his number one receiver for basically the entire year but he’s sitting at a 0.35 pDB, 30th in the league. Lock hasn’t hit double-digit touchdowns yet despite finishing seven games. Other than a two game spurt against the Chargers and Falcons, Lock has scored under 15 DK in his other five contests. This just doesn’t seem like a wise play, even if they chase points.

RB – I wish I had been a bit more bullish on Melvin Gordon last week. We talked about the matchup being perfect for him but I ended up passing on him for other options. I won’t be able to rectify that play this week because I’ll pass against the Saints. They are second in DVOA against the run and have allowed the second-fewest rushing yards to backs. Additionally, they’ve only given up five total touchdowns and under 1,000 scrimmage yards. Gordon is sort of like Todd Gurley where you have to catch him in the right spot. This is decidedly not it in my eyes. The same pretty much goes for Phillip Lindsay. These two split carries evenly last week at 15 for Gordon and 16 for Lindsay, but neither were targeted in the passing game. The floor is quite low for both of them.

WR – I don’t think there’s much of an argument over Jerry Jeudy not being more talented than Tim Patrick, but Jeudy is nursing a foot injury. Patrick continued his streak of productivity this past week with a 19.9 DK showing. He’s right next to Noah Fant for the second-most targets on the team and they’re tied for second in RZ targets. He’s playing almost exclusively on the outside with just 73 snaps in the slot and that puts him mostly on Janoris Jenkins. Statistically, he’s actually been better than Marshon Lattimore. Jenkins is at a 1.60 pPT and a 78.0 passer rating compared to Lattimore’s 2.30 pPT and 125.0 passer rating. The targets have been almost equal as well. If I knew Jeudy was 100%, I’d love to roll him out there. I do prefer Patrick and if you play 20 or more lineups, maybe have a share of Jeudy.

TE – Fant himself continues to tempt me at the price. His production has been very average but there’s been points where the Saints have struggled against the tight end. They’ve given up six scores on the year and Fant has showed upside when healthy. His first two games were fantastic and it seems like ever since then he’s been banged up to some degree. The health of Jeudy seems to be a huge piece of this puzzle. Fant just seems far too cheap right now to not have some exposure in this game where the run game for Denver is not likely to be the answer.

D/ST – I honestly don’t mind the Denver defense as a punt. Sure, the Saints offense is talented but Hill is making his second career start. The Broncos have 28 sacks and are up to the third-highest pressure rate in football. The turnovers aren’t anything major with just 10 but we could see a much different New Orleans offense in this one. At $2,200 they fit into any build you want.

Cash – Patrick

GPP – Fant, Jeudy, D/ST

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

49ers – Pace is 26th

QB – I’ll have exactly zero Nick Mullens on this slate. The Rams are seventh in DVOA against the pass and are second in yards allowed per game. While I think Coach Kyle Shanahan is a top-five offensive coach in the league, there’s only so much he can do with this group of players. Mullens is a backup for a reason with a 0.37 pDB and only 11.6 fantasy points per game. Additionally, the Rams sit at an 11:10 TD:INT ratio. This is just too poor of a matchup when a player like Carr is only $500 more.

RB – We’ll need to see what this running back room looks like closer to lock. Raheem Mostert seems to have a shot to come back from his injury as he’s being labeled “day-to-day”. The Rams are tough agains the run as well, sitting 12th in DVOA. They’ve also only given up six total scores but they are over 1,100 scrimmage yards. Mostert has he speed to take any touch to the house and he’s fairly inexpensive as a GPP option.

If he remains out, I’m pretty scared to touch Jerick McKinnon unless he’s the last man standing. Shanahan has been evil with running back rotations this season. Jamycal Hasty is on IR, but it’s possible Jeff Wilson is back as well. If McKinnon, Coleman and Wilson are all active this is not even in consideration for me. We’ll double back here later in the week.

*Update* Coleman is out for Sunday but Mostert will be active and Wilson is likely to be active for the game. With three potential options, we need to tread extremely light here. Mostert is my favorite, but you’re not getting some massive discount on him coming off an injury.

WR – Another position that looks muddy right now, the receivers from the 49ers are up in the air. Brandon Aiyuk is on the Covid list but we’re unsure why. He could just be a close contact and have a good chance to play. Deebo Samuel is fighting back from another leg injury. You’d have to think he needs to be 100% before the 49ers let him back on the field. Jalen Ramsey would likely see most of Aiyuk and that’s not really the best spot for the rookie. Ramsey hasn’t been perfect, but he does have a 1.30 pPT and can kick into the slot. He’s gone there about 19% of the time this year. Kendrick Bourne might be a nice salary saver as he should get more of Troy Hill. Bourne has a target share right under 15% and 20% of the air yards share, while Hill is at a 1.50 pPT. None of these options are anything more than GPP since the Rams defense should be able to control them a good bit.

*Update* Deebo will actually be active, but it looks less likely for Aiyuk. That means Samuel should see mostly Ramsey. I can’t find much of a reason to challenge that scenario with Mullens slinging the ball.

TE – Provided the missed practice on Thursday for Jordan Reed turns out to be nothing, he might be my favorite 49er. He’s the cheapest at a tough to fill position and he bumped up his snaps last game to about 44%. He’s garnered a 14.4% target share in limited playing time and actually has the third-most EZ targets. When we last saw him, Reed got six targets and that could be in the realm here again. If the receivers are struggling, Reed could see something like eight targets in this game. He’s too cheap if he’s healthy for his role.

D/ST – They are really a middling option here. It shouldn’t be a surprise with the injuries but they’ve only generated 18 sacks on the season. The Rams do have 15 turnovers but they’re also much healthier. I’m likely to pass here.

Cash – Reed (if he’s cleared from a non-Covid illness)

GPP – Bourne, Deebo, Mostert

Rams – Pace is 17th

QB – I did not see Jared Goff going bonkers Monday night. He threw the ball 51 times which is an immense amount. It would be foolish to project that again since he’s only gone over 40 attempts twice. The San Francisco defense might be a little better than perception. They’re 17th in DVOA against the pass but have only given up 17 touchdowns. In addition, the 49ers are in the top 10 in yardage allowed so it’s tough to pinpoint where the spot is for Goff to hit them. He’s been fairly average this season at 0.43 pDB which is 19th. He chews up yards with the eighth-most but he’s only 15th in touchdowns and 16th in RZ attempts. The price is nothing horrible but it doesn’t move the needle a ton for me either.

RB – Cam Akers might have scored on Monday but he didn’t do much else. The Rams are still sporting a frustrating three man RBBC. Darrell Henderson had the most snaps and touches on Monday but maxed out at 46% and 10 touches. The 49ers have been excellent against the run, ranking inside the top 10 in yards allowed and DVOA. Once you throw in touches for Malcolm Brown, this backfield is a pain to predict and not really worth the headache. Henderson would take the lead here simply because he has 30 RZ attempts to 15 for Brown and seven for Akers. That’s about the only facet to hold on to.

WR – I’ll admit I totally missed on Cooper Kupp for showdown Monday. His snap rate from the previous week really concerned me at barely 50%. Kupp answered with nearly 80% this past week and is my favorite Rams receiver again. He spends the majority of his time in the slot which should leave him on Jamar Taylor in that formation. Taylor has been pressed into duty and has allowed a 2.70 pPT on 15 targets so far. Kupp leads the team in targets, is second in air yards share and has the most RZ targets as well.

Robert Woods draws the tougher assignment on paper, going against Jason Verrett. The veteran is surging this season with just a 87.5 passer rating allowed and a 1.60 pPT. He’s not lock-down but there’s little doubt Kupp has the easier path. Woods trails in targets by 17 but he does have 19 rush attempts on the year, a nice little bonus. Josh Reynolds has the lead in EZ targets and maybe he’ll get a few looks this week. Kupp and Woods hugged just about everything Monday night. Kupp had a miserable game the first time these two teams met. I hope folks don’t realize that he was a few inches away from having a huge game and had a couple poor drops. I don’t expect that to repeat.

TE – I’ll be honest, I barely even glance at Tyler Higbee anymore. He’s playing 78% of the snaps which is fine but he runs a route on 51.3% of them. That’s 30th among tight ends and he has a just a 10.7% target share. On top of everything else, he has three RZ targets and one EZ target on the season. A player like Reed is cheaper and a player like Hooper is only $100 more.

D/ST – They’re expensive but that’s perfectly fine. They should be as they have 32 sacks on the season which was tied for third-most before Thanksgiving. San Francisco is tied for the fourth-most turnovers on the season so there’s plenty of chances for the Rams to make a difference.

Cash – Kupp, Woods

GPP – Goff, D/ST

Chiefs at Buccaneers, O/U of 56

Chiefs – Pace is 14th (and they have been playing super fast lately)

QB – It’s kind of crazy how a player like Patrick Mahomes can have just an average fantasy game for a while and then bang, he ends with 348 yards and two touchdowns. That red number in the matchup looks daunting, but A. it’s Mahomes and B. Tampa has started to show cracks lately. Over the past three games they have allowed an average of 260 passing yards per game. That number would be 26th on the season. They’re only four touchdowns away from the league lead in that category as well. With a stout run defense, Mahomes can really put it to them through the air. He’s up to third in pDB, fourth in points per game and third in touchdowns. Oh, he leads the league in passing yards as well. He’s a great option in any format and if he comes in under 10% in GPP….well to quote The Fiend, “Yowie wowie!”

RB – This backfield might be a touch messier than it looks. Clyde Edwards-Helaire was barely over 50% of the snaps and since Week 7, CEH has 33 attempts to 23 for Le’Veon Bell. The rookie does have a 14-5 target lead and that’s where the Tampa defense has struggled. They’ve given up the most receptions at 70 for 442 yards. Otherwise, they are the top ranked DVOA and yards per game rushing defense. I’m not really interested in Bell with only about 25% of the snaps and feel CEH might be a bit too pricey for just receiving work.

WR – Since Bell has entered the fray, Tyreek Hill has owned the targets on this team with a 30.2% target share and 42.2% of the air yards. Now, Bell doesn’t have a real effect on Hill but it’s just an easy point to pull from. Even over the course of the season, Hill is right around a 37% air yards share and trails Travis Kelce by four total targets and one RZ target. Here’s the really exciting part. Hill plays almost 40% of his routes from the slot. That gets him to Sean Murphy-Bunting in coverage and this man just got pantsed on Monday night. He’s allowing a 2.40 pPT, 137.1 passer rating and a 13.3 YPR. If you think Andy Reid doesn’t know that, think again.

Sammy Watkins could be on the comeback trail here. He practiced Wednesday, but did suffer a setback last week. His availability dictates how viable Demarcus Robinson is as a punt. We need to check back towards the weekend. Mecole Hardman got lapped in snaps las week by Byron Pringle last week so I don’t believe we can go to Hardman. Pringle himself is on IR but if Watkins is back, Hardman is buried on the depth chart.

*Update* Not that it mattered, but Bucs corner Jamel Dean is out this week. That lessens the chances even more that Hill will be held in check. Watkins is fully healthy and he could be a fantastic GPP option in a Chiefs stack. He still has a 23.1% share of the RZ targets and he’s under $5,000.

TE – I can’t ever tell you to not play Travis Kelce. I do prefer using Hill to stack with Mahomes and you can always pull the double stack if you’d like. That would get you another 24% of the target share, the most targets among tight ends, and the second-most RZ and EZ targets. Kelce is a nightmare to guard and matchup proof. Tampa has also allowed six touchdowns and over 500 yards, so they aren’t shutting down this position.

D/ST – I actually like the Chiefs defense here. The offense may force the Buccaneers to throw plenty and while KC only has 19 sacks, they get pressure at a top 10 rate. We’ve seen a bunch of times this season that Tom Brady does not handle pressure all that well. He’s 29th in completion rate under pressure at 31.2% and is capable of giving up the ball. Similar to what we tried to hit on for Thursday’s slate, more drop backs means more mistake chances. The Chiefs are capable of making those chances count with 15 turnovers forced.

Cash – Mahomes, Hill, Kelce (though none are necessities), D/ST

GPP – CEH, Watkins

Buccaneers – Pace is 10th

QB – Maybe this makes me look foolish, but I’m not excited to play Brady this week. I believe the Chiefs turn this into a shootout (I know, really sticking my neck out there). If that happens, the Chiefs are going to be able to pin their ears back and wreak havoc. KC is 10th in DVOA against the pass and have a 14:10 TD:INT ratio. The completion rate certainly gives me some pause here, not to mention the 15th ranked 0.48 pDB. Just watching the offense the past couple weeks, it seems like there’s maybe too many cooks in the kitchen. They beat up on Carolina but that’s not anything to write home about. The past two decent defenses they’ve faced have punched them square in the mouth. Brady has all the weapons he can ask for and is ninth in touchdowns, but I don’t love him this week all that much.

RB – If the Bucs can stay committed to the ground game, Ronald Jones should have a great week. Leonard Fournette has basically three fewer games but Jones has him in attempts to a 153-66 advantage. Fournette dropped roughly 3,867 passes Monday night (yes I’m still bitter) and Jones is just the superior back at this point. The Chiefs are 30th in DVOA against the run and 26th in rushing yards allowed per game. This is the weak spot in the armor but teams have to keep it close and have the mentality to be patient with it. My fear with Jones is not the matchup. It’s the ego of Brady and Coach Bruce Arians. They will NOT want to be out-done by Mahomes and Reid. If you told me RoJo gets 15+ carries, he smashes. I just don’t trust the Bucs to not put it into Brady’s hands.

WR – Much to my surprise, the arrival of Antonio Brown didn’t have the effect I assumed through three weeks. My thoughts were AB and Chris Godwin would see a ton of targets while Mike Evans would be the third banana. Brown and Evans are actually tied at 26 targets with Godwin at 22. Brady has attempted at least 38 throws in these three games which is actually just about his average. It’s possible to support all three of these guys to some extent on those amount of attempts. Pittsburgh does it, mind you.

AB has been almost totally outside, which should leave him on Charvarius Ward. He’s been a part-time player but they’ll need all hands on deck. In 41 targets, he’s allowed a 106.8 passer rating and a 14.8 YPR. Brown hasn’t wowed yet production-wise but Brady has also missed him multiple times (and he’s dropped one or two). It really feels like a breakout game is coming. Bashaud Breeland is slated to try and handle Evans, and he’s giving up a lot of height and weight. With Brady not shying away, Evans really looks like a solid play as well. Even with AB, he has nine RZ targets and five EZ targets. Godwin is no slouch and I’ll bet Tyrann Mathieu kicks into the slot a good bit. He’s played there on 37.6% of the snaps and has only allowed a 1.40 pPT. I have this trio ranked AB, Evans (toss-up between the two) and then Godwin.

TE – At his price, it’s tough to get excited for Rob Gronkowski. He’s now fourth in line for targets and Evans is taking ALL of the valuable RZ work. He only has one RZ and one EZ target in the last three games and to no shock, has one game over five DK points. It took a touchdown to get him there and I’m not a huge fan of playing a touchdown or bust tight end at this price. We could play Fant, Gesicki or Engram with better odds at success.

D/ST – With the way they’ve been playing lately and Mahomes on the other side? No thank you.

Cash – AB, Evans

GPP – Godwin, RoJo, Brady

Core Four

Brian Hill, Dalvin Cook, Nyheim Hines, Stefon Diggs

I’m glad I waited to decide on a Core because the Jonathan Taylor news changed the game. With one of the three Colts backs decidedly out of the mix, Hines will surely get at least 10-12 touches even if Wilkins plays well. This is the same spot that Hines just torched Tennessee for two scores and over 100 scrimmage yards. That outcome is certainly in play again. Hill enters the fray as a likely chalk option and I was fine not playing the high-end backs this week. Chubb has issues in my eyes and Cook is really, really pricey. However, Cook is tracking chalky. That shouldn’t be too much of a shock with cheap backs. Ghost got me onto this play more than I was and he’s dead on the money with the thought process. I’m loving the spend on receivers like Diggs who is in a shootout with the Chargers and an easier matchup with no Hayward.

Primary Game Stacks

KC/TB – Mahomes, Hill, Kelce, Evans, AB, Watkins, RoJo, Godwin

LAC/BUF – Herbert, Allen, Diggs, Beasley, Williams, Henry, Davis, Allen (stack two options with whatever quarterback you choose and it’s not an easy choice)

LAV/ATL – Carr, Waller, Ridley, Agholor, Hill, Gage/Julio, Hurst, Ryan

Secondary Game Stacks

CAR/MIN – Cook, Teddy B, Jefferson, Samuel, Moore, Cousins, Anderson, Davis

TEN/IND – Henry (potential slate-breaker), Brown, Pittman, Davis, Tannehill, Taylor, Hines, Rivers, Burton

CLE/JAX – Landry, Hunt, Chubb, Viska, Cole (mostly going to be a one and one stack in part of the main stack, not going overboard here)

Let’s get after it this week my friends! 

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NFL Thanksgiving Day Game By Game Breakdown

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

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

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

Texans – Pace is 12th

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Lions – Pace is 7th

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Washington – Pace is 15th

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Dallas – Pace is 1st

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Ravens – Pace is 28th

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

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

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

James Robinson – 73 yards rushing

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

Tony Pollard – 57 yards

Ezekiel Elliott – 51 yards

J.K. Dobbins – 113 yards

Gus Edwards – 87 yards

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Steelers – Pace is 23rd

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Core Four – NFL Thanksgiving Day Game By Game Breakdown

Terry McLaurin, Diontae Johnson, Gus Edwards, TBD

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

Let’s have a great Thanksgiving slate my friends! 

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First and foremost I am grateful for everyone who took the time to click on this article and the simple fact that you are a part of the Win Daily Family! We are blessed to be able to talk sports everyday and to have you in our community. If anyone is struggling making lineups, need advice, an opportunity, or help, you know where to find me and the rest of our team. Hop in our expert chat and ask away and I will do my best to help each and every one of you to the best of my ability. This is my favorite slate of the entire year, NFL THANKSGIVING DAY DFS has arrived and I’m expecting a big day for all of us so lets break down this slate!

Strategy is very important on this slate, just like any other slate. With only 3 games on the slate we have to avoid mistakes, we need raw points, and we need 1-2 plays that are under owned in order to climb the leaderboards. My approach to the NFL Thanksgiving Day Slate is a little different than typical main Sunday slates. What I do every year is pretty simple. I first build my GPP lines and I simply get exposure to every quarterback as ugly as it may look like on paper. I force in each quarterback and make game stacks of each game from both angles.

Is Alex Smith going to be in my optimal single entry lineup? NO.

Is Andy Dalton a elite QB? NO.

Will I have a shares of each? YES.

Ok so here is the plan. Imagine you have $100 to invest in this slate for tournaments and a $150 for cash games. This is a sample how I would split it up. If you have a strong feel I would change the ownership up slightly and you can always push the envelope on your game stacks by adding more pieces into a stack.

Tournament Structure

  • Deshaun Watson 30%: Have one stack with Cooks, one with Fuller, one with Cooks and Fuller. Don’t mind sneaking in Duke or Akins in as well. Run the stacks back with one or two Lions.
  • Lamar Jackson 20%: Have one stack with Andrews, have one with Hollywood or Duvernay. Run stack back with one or two Steelers.
  • Ben Roethlisberger 20%: Have one stack with Johnson, have one with Claypool. If Juju is out for any reason run a stack with both Johnson and Claypool. Run back with one or two Ravens.
  • Matthew Stafford 10%: We need news on Golladay and Amendola. Will most likely have a stack with just Hockenson or Jones. Run back with one or two Texans.
  • Andy Dalton 10%: Have a stack with Cooper or Lamb. Run back with one or two Redskins.
  • Alex Smith 10%: Have a stack with Terry. Run back with one or two Cowboys.

My Player pool for Tournaments

Texans

  • Deshaun Watson
  • Duke Johnson
  • Brandin Cooks
  • Will Fuller
  • Jordan Akins

Lions

  • Matthew Stafford
  • Need Clarity on Swift (if he is in I love him)
  • If Swift is out both Peterson and Johnson are in play
  • Need Clarity on Golladay & Amendola
  • Marvin Jones Jr.
  • Marvin Hall
  • TJ Hockenson

Football Team

  • Alex Smith
  • Antonio Gibson
  • Terry McLaurin
  • Cam Sims
  • Steven Sims Jr.
  • Logan Thomas

Cowboys

  • Andy Dalton
  • Ezekiel Elliot
  • Amari Cooper
  • Ceedee Lamb
  • Michael Gallup
  • Dalton Schultz

Steelers

  • Ben Roethlisberger
  • James Connor
  • Ben Snell
  • Diontae Johnson
  • Chase Claypool
  • Juju Smith-Schuster
  • James Washington (only if Juju out)
  • Eric Ebron

Ravens

  • Lamar Jackson
  • Gus Edwards
  • Justice Hill
  • Marquise Brown
  • Mark Andrews
  • Devin Duvernay
  • Willie Snead

Cash Games

Its a Deshaun Watson lock button for cash games on both sites. The matchup, the rushing floor, and the fact that Duke Johnson has a yard per carry that is approaching zero makes Watson the quarterback you want for cash games. He will be popular for good reason so don’t get cute.

At running back I think you need to take the discount and grab Gus Edwards here and pair him with Ezekiel Elliott to the best of your ability. I don’t mind sliding in Swift if he starts or Gibson if you want to pivot.

At wide receiver the first person I will be sliding in is Terry McLaurin. The floor is high and the same thing goes with Cooks. The third man in will be Diontae Johnson. I will try my best to lock these 3 as my wide receiver combo for cash.

At tight end depending on how much cash you have left, pending the site you’re playing on, and the flex choice you make I will either go Andrews, Hockenson, Thomas, or Akins if I need some extra savings.

At flex pending your build here are the guys I would be looking at. First up is Swift if he ends up starting. Second is the running back that didn’t make it to your running back spot, so either Zeke or Gibson. If you cant there I don’t mind either fuller, cooper, or lamb. Now in your flex spot make sure you have someone from the latest possible game in this spot in case you need to pivot for whatever reason.

At Defense if you can get to the Steelers go for it, but don’t force it. Next up would be Dallas or Washington at a nice discount. If you need to the Lions are the next team up.

Make sure you check our projection models by clicking here as Nick will be updating them every couple hours and adjusting accordingly.

I hope everyone has a safe and happy Thanksgiving and make sure once lineups lock you spend some quality time with your friends & family!

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NFL Cash Lineup Review Week 11

It was definitely a bit of a tougher week for the results on my end. Not often in DFS will you hit your cash games with three snowflakes and a quarterback under 20 points. The combo of a few players under 25% that played really well tried to saved my bacon on the day. Let’s discuss who we ended up playing and exactly why we made those plays, just like we always do in NFL Cash Lineup Review Week 11!

NFL Cash Lineup Review Week 11

The Lineup

Quarterback

This was a tougher week for quarterbacks in general. A lot of the top tier options were not on the slate for one reason or the other, and only one was in an absolute smash spot in Justin Herbert. As the week went on, Taysom Hill wound up being chalk and I get why. He was under $5,000 and he has the rushing upside that it seemed tough to not fall into 15 DK points.

In my eyes, I felt safer going into the upper end before I played Hill. I had significant worries about the passing production and figured he would need two rushing touchdowns to really smash his salary. That’s exactly what happened, putting me behind the eight ball at this position. I went Lamar Jackson since I felt his upside was sky high in this spot. Tennessee was missing a pass rusher and a safety. That unit has been poor all season. Baltimore has had their own issues but I really believed this was a get right spot for them. The play was to either spend down at Taysom or just go with Herbert.

Also Considered – DeShaun Watson, Ben Roethlisberger

Running Back

This position turned into a disaster for me. I knew that I wanted Dalvin Cook and he was in the Core Four basically since the word go this week. Cook provided the safe floor that I was hoping, even if he didn’t have a nuclear game. The rest of this position did NOT go well and was another spot that really kneecapped me. Firstly, Adrian Peterson did almost nothing. He was the minimum but I didn’t see 18 rushing yards as a potential outcome. The Detroit offense didn’t score a single point and got nothing done. Last week Mike Davis didn’t matter because he was over 80% rostered. This kind of dud matters when the player is only 23.2% rostered.

Speaking of Davis, he was in the Miles Sanders spot until we knew Teddy Bridgewater wouldn’t be active. That was enough of a concern for me to move to Sanders. Even in a bad weather game, he should have been about locked into 15+ touches. That part happened since he had 19 total but Davis did out-score him and those six points would have been useful. There were a plethora of mid-range options like Duke Johnson, Gio Bernard and Kalen Ballage that were in consideration for me. I felt that since I was happy with the receivers, the backs were good to go. I just never expected Sanders and AD to combine for under 12 points and that is difficult to get around.

Also Considered – Nick Chubb, Antonio Gibson

Wide Receiver

This position got a lot better but there was a popular player here that went berserk. We had a dud in Jakobi Meyers but he was one of the chalkier players in this format. I usually won’t go after anything involving the Patriots passing game this year, at least in cash. The difference this week was just how cheap Meyers was and his performance without teammate Julian Edelman. Meyers was over 60% of the targets coming into Sunday. Even with some obvious regression, a 30% target share would be huge. Under $5,000 and against a shaky defense was the perfect recipe. Obviously, the field thought so as well.

Perhaps the most shocking play was Diontae Johnson. We make jokes in Discord and on Twitter about my bromance but he was under $6,000 in a glorious matchup and it seemed like everyone was talking about him. After another massive day, I feel like that’s the last time we got Johnson at this price for the foreseeable future.

One of the biggest “misses” on this slate for me was Keenan Allen. I put quotation marks around the word miss because it’s not like I didn’t love Allen. I mean, how could you not against the Jets? However, spending up on quarterback hamstrung the receiver budget. I was happy with Michael Pittman at the salary in the game script projected to be high-scoring. Maybe it wasn’t the most obvious play but Pittman was not the issue in this lineup.

Others Considered – Allen, Terry McLaurin, Tyler Boyd, Tee Higgins, Amari Cooper, CeeDee Lamb

Tight End

It seems to be the same song and dance every week. I was either going to spend up or spend down at the tight end spot. On FanDuel, this was a very easy position to fill. They embarrassingly had Taysom as a tight end, making their slate super flex. On DraftKings, there was a bit more of a choice. I was able to afford Mark Andrews without any real issues in my eyes, so he was the plug in. I also considered moving him down to Logan Thomas. That was the lowest I felt comfortable but Andrews was the right call. The other tight end that would have fit was Dallas Goedert, but with Lamar I wanted that stack.

Others Considered – T.J. Hockenson

Defense

This is actually a good learning spot. Pay attention when hiring submit on the lineups. I was at work and when Bridgewater got ruled out, I had a couple ideas that I went back and forth with. My intention was to play the Falcons defense at the same price as the Bengals. I didn’t realize I hit Cincy until after lock. Fortunately, that didn’t hurt in the results but it was a poor mistake.

I wanted the Dolphins defense but they just wouldn’t fit with everything else I had. My view is to always build the lineup that you are happy with, then worry about the defense.

Final Thoughts

This wasn’t a good week as far as results, but it was a good lesson to not let your pride get in the way. I’ve made no secret that I don’t think Hill is a good player, or quarterback. The fact the Saints paid him that much has confounded me for a while. However, I also knew he had rushing upside in the red zone. Rushing yards for a quarterback are the Konami Code of fantasy. He was the cheapest option on the board and allowed almost any other build you wanted. My pride in believing he’s not a good player got in the way and it was not the right move. A simple flip to him and working Keenan Allen in (which is what I had at some points) would have smashed cash games this week. Instead, I had to fall back on the profits from a 4-0 day on the Prop Bets side to save me. Let’s get back at it next week!

Core Four Results 

63.7 DK points for $23,800 which was about 10 DK points away from the 3x return we aim for.

Thanks for reading NFL Cash Lineup Review Week 11 and make sure you follow me on Twitter at @bucn4life and be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Models and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport and slate!

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

In addition, I would strongly advise reading my NFL DFS Strategy article I published this offseason, before diving into the 2020 NFL DFS season. If you have any questions or would like some further help when building your lineups, please do not hesitate to reach out to me directly on Twitter.

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

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

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

Adjusted Expected Team Totals Rankings for Week 11

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

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

NFL DFS GPP Quarterbacks

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

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

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

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

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

Running Backs

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

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

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

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

Wide Receivers

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

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

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

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

NFL DFS GPP Tight Ends

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

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

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

Make sure you follow me on Twitter at @stixpicks and be sure to sign up for an ALL ACCESS GOLD ACCOUNT account here at Win Daily Sports. Gain access to our Projection Model powered by AETY and jump into our Discord where we will have our experts talking plays across every sport and slate as sports return.

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

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

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

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

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

If you haven’t yet, I would strongly advise giving my NFL DFS Strategy article I published this offseason before diving into the 2020 NFL DFS season. If you have any questions or would like some further help when building your lineups, please do not hesitate to reach out to me directly on Twitter. Without further ado, let’s do this thing!

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

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

NFL DFS Quarterbacks

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

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

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

Running Backs

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

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

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

Wide Receivers

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

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

Tight Ends

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

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

Defense / Special Teams

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

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

NFL DFS Cash Game Sample Lineup

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

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NFL Week 11 Team Stacks

Mitchell (@MitchellThoenn1) and Michael (@MichaelRasile1) check out the week 11 team stacks for the NFL!

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NFL Game By Game Breakdown Week 11

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

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

Falcons – 8th in Pace

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

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Julio, Ridley

GPP – Ryan, Hurst, D/ST

Saints – Pace is 26th

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

GPP – Winston, Cook, Sanders

Lions at Panthers, O/U is not up

Lions – Pace is 7th

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Jones, Hockenson, AP, Johnson

GPP – Stafford, Hall

Panthers – Pace is 29th

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Anderson, Moore, Davis

GPP – Samuel, Walker

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

Eagles – Pace is 5th

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Reagor, Wentz, D/ST

GPP – Sanders, Ertz, Goedert

Browns – Pace is 25th

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

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Landry, Hooper

GPP – Hunt, Chubb, D/ST

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

Patriots – Pace is 20th

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Meyers, Harris

GPP – Cam, Byrd, Burkhead, D/ST

Texans – Pace is 11th

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

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Watson, Duke, Cooks

GPP – Fuller, Akins

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

Titans – Pace is 4th

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

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Davis

GPP – Henry, Brown, Smith, Tannehill

Ravens – Pace is 30th

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

GPP – Brown, Snead

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

Steelers – Pace is 24th

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Ben, Johnson, Claypool, JuJu

GPP – Ebron, Conner

Jaguars – Pace is 6th

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – None

GPP – Cole, Conley, Chark, Robinson

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

Bengals – Pace is 15th

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

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Boyd, Gio

GPP – Burrow, Higgins

Washington – Pace is 13th

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

GPP – Gibson, Sims

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

Dolphins – Pace is 31st

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Ahmed, Grant, D/ST

GPP – Tua, Parker

Broncos – Pace is 3rd

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

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – None

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

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

Jets – Pace is 9th

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

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Crowder

GPP – Perriman, Mims, Perine

Chargers – Pace is 10th

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

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Herbert, Allen, Williams

GPP – Ballage, Henry, Guyton

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

Packers – Pace is 32nd

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

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Adams, Rodgers but neither are needed

GPP – Jones, MVS, Lazard

Colts – Pace is 22nd

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Pittman

GPP – Hines, Rivers, Pascal, Taylor

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

Cowboys – Pace is 1st

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Lamb, Cooper, Schultz

GPP – Dalton, Zeke, Gallup

Vikings – Pace is 23rd

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

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

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

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

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

Cash – Cook

GPP – Jefferson, Thielen, Cousins, D/ST

Core Four

Dalvin Cook, Diontae Johnson, Jakobi Meyers, Adrian Peterson

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

Primary Game Stacks

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

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

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

Secondary Game Stacks

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

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

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

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

Let’s get after it this week my friends! 

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

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NFL Week 10 Fantasy Recap

Ghost and Michael discuss the NFL Week 10 Fantasy recap! Where we were right, where we were wrong, and some season long plays that might be waiver claims.

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