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NFL Week 5 and Shriners Open DFS Hits

It’s another great Monday here for the Win Daily Sports Family! We are making money hand over fist and can’t wait to keep helping people get in the green! We had some great NFL Week 5 and Shriners Open DFS Hits to build that bankroll and make that money.

On Saturday, one of our long time Family Members hit for a cool $20k in a Saturday PGA Showdown for the Shriners Open. Not a bad way to get your weekend going and ready for the NFL Sunday coming up!

After a great Saturday of helping others, our writer Steven Polardi who covers the PGA, had a $10k second place finish for himself! Helping people all week pays off when you’re able to take home a nice hit on Sunday when it’s all said and done.

And after joining the Win Daily Sports Podcast for a little QB breakdown, Mitchell Thoennes turns in a nice 4 figure day for an even more enjoyable NFL Sunday! This even included a $1,500 hit in a single entry tournament.

We love winning and helping others win! If you want some FREE help check out WinDailySports.com/chat to get 7 free days in our expert chat. Make sure to follow us on Twitter @WinDailySports!

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NFL Week 5 Fantasy Preview

Nick (@StixPicks) and Michael (@MichaelRasile1) breakdown the week 5 slate! We find a couple ways to get different with two different games being canceled this week. Here is our NFL Week 5 Fantasy Preview!

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Finally, we had a down week in NFL DFS Cash Games last week. I’m super pissed off on how much of a miss Kenyan Drake and Darrel Henderson were, but we’ll get right back on the success train this week. 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 5, please see below for my notes on roster construction:

  • The player pool is starting to slim down with all of these injuries/postponed games, but there are a ton of great value plays at every position this week.
  • Dak Prescott chalk week… I’m not a fan, but I get it.
  • Mike Davis chalk week – probably a must play in cash games. Likely CEH as well (for me at least).
  • Looks like a great week to get value WRs
  • Just because a player is not mentioned in this article, does not mean they are not cash viable.
  • AETY Model Projections change throughout the week, please ensure you check out our final projections before lock!
  • I update this article periodically through the week. Be sure to check back on Saturday night / Sunday morning for any additions/revisions!!

NFL DFS Cash Game Quarterbacks

  1. Patrick Mahomes ($7,700 DK / $9,000 FD) – Crazy expensive and likely not to crack my cash game lineup, but it’s Patrick Mahomes. The floor is incredibly high with a 33.5 point implied team total against this putrid Las Vegas secondary.
    AETY Projection: 24.62 points
  2. Dak Prescott ($7,400 DK / $8,700 FD) – You’ve all seen what Dak has been doing, lol. I’m still not buying in that the Giants can keep this one close and keep Dak’s foot on the gas pedal, but this Dallas defense is so bad that it’s unlikely they blow anyone out this year. As much as I hate it, Prescott is just fine for cash games this week.
    AETY Projection: 22.95 points
  3. Kyler Murray ($7,200 DK / $8,300 FD) – Half man, half quarterback, and half running back. Kyler’s rushing floor speaks for itself and he’s likely to be in play for cash games on a weekly basis. I worry about the Jets’ ability to keep this game close, but Kyler is good for 19+ fantasy points every week.
    AETY Projection: 23.18 points
  4. DeShaun Watson ($6,900 DK / $7,900 FD) – Yep, I’m going back to the well of DeShaun Watson. The Jaguars are ranked dead last in pass defense DVOA, Houston’s offense is relatively healthy, Bill O’Brien is gone, etc. etc. I think this game has crazy shootout ability and I love the price-point here for DeShaun Watson. Hopefully he looks to do some damage on the ground as well. Watson in a dome with a 30 point implied team against a brutal defense is plenty for me to go back.
    AETY Projection: 23.83 points
  5. Teddy Bridgewater ($5,900 DK / $7,100 FD) – Hello, Mr. Value. Bridgewater’s price is criminally low against this Falcons’ defense (ranked 31st in pass defense DVOA). Matt Rhule’s offense has been quite productive and will not be slowed down in Atlanta this weekend. Bridgewater is the perfect pay-down QB for NFL DFS Cash Games.
    AETY Projection: 20.93 points

    Honorable Mention: Matt Ryan, Gardner Minshew, Jimmy Garoppolo

Running Backs

  1. Ezekiel Elliott ($7,800 DK / $9,000 FD) – Hard to not love Elliott this week despite Dallas losing yet another key offensive lineman for the season. I’m not likely to jam in Elliott into my cash game lineup, but it makes a lot of sense with the high Vegas total in this matchup against the Giants.

    Low-key, the Giants have been incredibly stout against opposing running backs (limiting then to under 3.7 yards per carry), but Elliott is just so active in this offense (both rushing and receiving) that it makes him quite difficult to fade… especially when 30% of the field is likely to use him in NFL DFS Cash Games.
    AETY Projection: 22.51 DK / 20.74 FD
  2. Clyde Edwards-Helaire ($6,800 DK / $7,900 FD) – CEH’s price makes it rather easy for me to fade Zeke Elliott in cash games. The snap counts continue to rise in favor of CEH and they’re an 11-point home favorite. Not to mention Las Vegas is the 30th ranked run defense. This one is easy, lock in CEH.
    AETY Projection: 20.27 DK / 18.62 FD
  3. Mike Davis ($6,400 DK / $6,800 FD) – Not going to lie to you, I was never a believer in Mike Davis, but his usage alone has made me a believer. It’s relatively cheap exposure to this CAR @ ATL shootout and everyone is going to roster Mike Davis. In cash, it makes a lot to sense to roll him out there. Atlanta’s run-defense isn’t half bad, but Davis is simply too active in the passing game to pass-up. He needs to be priced up near $7K.
    AETY Projection: 20.99 DK / 18.73 FD
  4. James Robinson ($6,700 DK / $6,600 FD) – Damn near a freesquare on FanDuel, James Robinson is a fine cash game and GPP play this week against the 29th ranked defense in terms of run DVOA. Did you watch what Dalvin Cook just did to this defense? He’s no Dalvin, but he’s clearly a 3-down back for Jacksonville. He’ll be very active in this shootout on Sunday.
    AETY Projection: 20.57 DK / 18.99 FD
  5. Kareem Hunt ($6,500 DK / $7,000 FD) – I always love Kevin Stefanski running backs (usually it’s Nick Chubb… RIP for now) and will continue to love em again in Week 5. Chubb is going to be in for a big workload against a very stout Indianapolis defense, but I’ll back this outside-zone run scheme any day of the week. Cleveland’s offensive line is incredible and will pave plenty of lanes for Hunt to hit value.
    AETY Projection: 18.79 DK / 17.13 FD
  6. Jerick McKinnon ($5,800 DK / $6,400 FD) – If Mostert misses this game, I’m simply locking in Jerick McKinnon on DraftKings. The AETY Model loves this matchup for San Francisco running backs and McKinnon is in for a nice day if Mostert can’t suit up.
    AETY Projection: 18.28 DK / 16.53 FD
  7. Antonio Gibson ($5,000 DK / $5,800 FD) – If you need some salary relief, Antonio Gibson is your man this weekend. The Rams defense is very solid but they’re getting absolutely carved up by good running backs (averaging 5.0 yards per carry and 28th in run defense DVOA). I prefer Gibson more in GPPs, but if his salary makes the rest of your lineup sexy, ride him in cash games.

    We all know what Kyle Allen did with CMC last season. It’s checkdown time (let’s just hope those don’t all go to JD McKissic).
    AETY Projection: 14.65 DK / 13.32 FD

    Honorable Mention: David Johnson, Josh Jacobs

Wide Receivers

  1. Calvin Ridley ($7,500 DK / $8,300 FD) – It’s very likely that Julio Jones is going to miss this game with his hamstring injury. This game is everyone’s favorite shootout so make sure you get a lot of exposure to Ridley if you’re into this game. Rasul Douglas and Donte Jackson do not have what it takes to contain Ridley at home in the dome… and we all know Atlanta’s defense is not going to get stops. It’s a Ridley Sunday.
    AETY Projection: 18.30 DK / 15.00 FD
  2. JuJu Smith-Schuster ($6,700 DK / $7,300 FD) – No one is going to play JuJu, but this matchup against Nickell Robey-Coleman on the inside of this Philly secondary is one of the nut matchups in NFL DFS. You likely should just get your JuJu exposure in GPPs, but this is too good of a spot to leave him off this article.
    AETY Projection: 15.74 DK / 12.87 FD
  3. Will Fuller ($6,500 DK / $6,600 FD) – Jacksonville’s secondary is awful. Enough said. We love Watson and we love Fuller.
    AETY Projection: 15.28 DK / 12.77 FD
  4. DJ Chark ($6,500 DK / $6,600 FD) – Great price across the board for DraftKings and FanDuel. Chark is by far the #1 receiving threat on this Jacksonville offense and he’s likely to see 9+ targets in this shootout. Bradley Roby has been solid, but Chark is going to feast on him on Sunday. This is a mismatch made in heave for Minshew and Chark.
    AETY Projection: 15.32 DK / 12.64 FD
  5. CeeDee Lamb ($6,000 DK / $5,900 FD) – Darnay Holmes may be the worst slot-cornerback in the NFL. CeeDee Lamb seems to be getting a full run in this Dallas offense and that’s starting to phase out Michael Gallup just a bit. Lamb is in a smash spot in this matchup and has the world of talent to bring a lot of upside to the table here against the Giants. Cash, GPP, whatever it is, Lamb is a top-10 play for me this weekend.
    AETY Projection: 14.23 DK / 11.75 FD
  6. Robby Anderson ($5,900 DK / $6,200 FD) – No need to go deep into this one. It’s cheap exposure to this Carolina passing attack against Atlanta’s secondary. Both Robby Anderson or DJ Moore make perfect cash game plays this week.
    AETY Projection: 17.70 DK / 14.52 FD
  7. DeVante Parker ($5,900 DK / $6,400 FD) – Miami is a 9-point underdog on the road against a San Francisco secondary that is extremely beat up. Parker is a #1 wide receiver priced under $6K… That’s something I’m always targeting in NFL DFS. I don’t quite agree that the 49ers should be this big of a favorite, but I do love this matchup for Parker. Way too cheap.
    AETY Projection: 13.66 DK / 11.12 FD

    Honorable Mention: DeAndre Hopkins, Golden Tate, Darius Slayton, Amari Cooper, Diontae Johnson, Russell Gage, Olamide Zaccheaus

Tight Ends

Not going to do much write-ups for the tight-ends, there’s so many in play this week.

  1. Travis Kelce ($6,400 DK / $7,800)
  2. George Kittle ($6,600 DK / $7,100 FD)
  3. Zach Ertz ($5,700 DK / $6,500 FD)
  4. Evan Engram ($4,600 DK / $5,500 FD) – cheapest quality piece of exposure to the Dallas / New York game. He’s incredibly popular this week so I’m fine with you eating this chalk in cash games.

    Honorable Mention: Hayden Hurst, Darren Waller, Chris Herndon, Eric Ebron

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 Rams
  2. Baltimore Ravens
  3. Pittsburgh Steelers
  4. Cleveland Browns
  5. Washington Football Team

NFL DFS Cash Game Sample Lineup

QB: Teddy Bridgewater
RB: CEH
RB: Antonio Gibson
WR: DJ Chark
WR: DeVante Parker
WR: Robby Anderson
TE: Evan Engram
FLEX: Kareem Hunt
DST: Browns

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NFL Game by Game Breakdown: Week 5

It’s looking like we have another week of NFL action that might be changed by Covid, so the slate should shrink a little bit. For now, the two games that could be off the slate aren’t included but absolutely will be if hey get played. As it stands, there’s a lot of work to do for games that we know are being played so let’s go to work on the NFL Game by Game Breakdown: Week 5!

Cardinals at Jets, O/U of 47 (Cardinals -7)

Cardinals

QB – One of the biggest questions for Kyler Murray is deciding how to weigh his past two weeks of production. The end scores look perfectly fine, over 24 DK points in both. However, it was kind of ugly getting there. He did save himself with three touchdown passes last week but threw for a whopping 133 yards. He did put forth his second-highest rushing output to help get there as well with 78 yards. I don’t believe Kyler is a bad play, but the salary is getting up to the elites. I may prefer to just spend a couple hundred higher and maybe feel just a hair safer. Of the five quarterbacks that are over $7,000, Murray might be my least favorite this week.

RB – I’m not falling for Kenyan Drake anymore. If he couldn’t get it done against the Panthers, I’m not taking him for just $300 less on this slate. I know that the GPP mindset should tell us to keep taking shots with him. The field will keep migrating away but you would have to think there’s got to be a game coming at some point. Drake does have 54 carrie which is inside the top 10 in the league. He leads the team in red zone rushes at an 8-4 ratio over Kyler and yet, Drake is under 10 DK point per game.

Chase Edmonds is not really helping Drake out. Edmonds is third on the team in targets with 11 and has left Drake with under a 5% target share. Only DeAndre Hopkins has more red zone targets and they are tied with one end zone target each. The Jets don’t appear to pose a threat defensively, as they have given up the sixth-most rushing yards to running backs. The five rushing touchdowns is tied for the third-most but the DVOA is seventh as far as rushing defense. A lot of the boxes check for Drake but I just don’t see how you can possibly have any confidence in clicking his name.

WR – When the QB has 133 yards passing, it’s going to be a tough scene for the pass catchers. Hopkins had what was easily his lowest scoring game of the season, despite still seeing nine targets. That marks the fourth straight week with at least nine targets so the volume remains virtually unrivaled. Nuk is third in targets behind only Amari Cooper and Keenan Allen. If he puts in a week of practice that doesn’t include his ankle hurting again, he’s likely too cheap. Guys like Tim Patrick got loose on the Jets secondary, they won’t stop Hopkins.

The other pieces of the Cardinals passing attack are a bit tougher. I will always have a soft spot for Larry Fitzgerald, but he’s totaled 88 receiving yards in four games playing 83.6% of the snaps. That’s just operating with a black hole sadly. Andy Isabella has already out-produced Fitzgerald in a much smaller role and that leaves him as too risky for fantasy as things stand. Fitzgerald has eaten up 18 targets to just nine for Isabella. Christian Kirk returned to the lineup and scored, but his floor is also frightening. Hopkins is the only one I’d play until the Cardinals #FreeIsabella.

TE – We can safely continue to not play Dan Arnold as the 7.9 DK points was his season-high water mark. He’s yet to exceed four targets or 39 yards receiving.

D/ST – The price is very high but it’s pretty much deserved at this point. Sam Darnold might miss this game with a shoulder injury and we’d have to expect rookie tackle Mekhi Becton to be out. The Jets (of course) mishandled the young man’s shoulder injury last week, making things worse in the process. The Cards aren’t a great defense but they are in double-digit sacks and the pressure rate against Darnold is over 25%. If Joe Flacco has to start, all the better.

Cash – Nuk, Kyler (safe but again, not where I’m heading in cash if paying up)

GPP – Drake, D/ST

Jets

QB – The status of Sam Darnold is really up in the air. If you’re the Jets, it truly makes little sense to try and push the player who is supposed to be your franchise QB. This team is going nowhere, and fast. We also saw how they treated Becton, so anything is on the table for Darnold. Arizona might only be 23rd in passing DVOA, but there are few redeeming factors for the Jets passing game. Darnold is 25th in passing yards, 18th in intended air yards and 23rd in on target rate. I’m not sure I would play Flacco if you spotted me my entry fees, so this is likely a pass for me.

*Update* Flacco is slated to start this game and Darnold is officially out.

RB – Just like the quarterback position, I’m not even giving his backfield the time of day. When Frank Gore has 55 (FIFTY. FIVE.) carries in an offense at this point, you have to ask what the plan is. He’s giving new meaning to the adage “three yards and a cloud of dust” and even with seven red zone attempts, I don’t have virtually any reason to play him. Arizona has allowed the ninth-most rushing yards to backs but are 14th in run DVOA so we can leave Gore on the sidelines where he belongs. There’s a narrative that La’Mical Perine could see slightly more work now that the Kalen Ballage experiment is over, but you’d have to trust Adam Gase to be smart.

*Update* Le’Veon Bell is possibly set to come back for this game from the IR. That’s well and good and you can talk me into some GPP shares, but this offense is terrible with Darnold. Flacco doesn’t improve them in any tangible way.

WR – Jamison Crowder is the clear leader in this receiving corps and came back from injury to rack up 10 targets and over 100 yards Thursday night. Since it looks like he came out of that game healthy, this is a solid spot for him, although I would prefer Darnold to play. Crowder lives in the slot so he won’t have to deal with Patrick Peterson. Instead, he’ll mostly see Byron Murphy. Murphy has been solid so far, only allowing 12 receptions on 26 targets for a 1.20 fantasy point per target, but I still like Crowder. The volume is just hard to pass up since he’s averaging almost 12 targets a game.

It appears that Breshad Perriman could be back and it’s hard to know what to expect from him. He’s no played a full two games and he’s only seen seven targets total. I could see Flacco liking him a lot as a deeper target, but wouldn’t want to take too many chances with this offense as a whole.

*Update* Perriman is now doubtful and Jeff Smith is another GPP play at minimum price. He saw nine targets last week against Denver and played 95% of the snaps. Obviously, the QB isn’t the greatest but we don’t need a lot at $3,000.

TE – Chris Herndon is seeing just about five targets a game but he hasn’t exceeded 37 yards and has just one red zone target all season. He blocks far more than is useful for fantasy, and the Cards have been better this season against the position. They only have given up 187 yards and two scores so far, which is pretty massive progress from last year. There’s plenty of other options this week.

D/ST – The Jets get a bad rap on all fronts, and plenty of it is deserved. They do stand 10th in defensive DVOA which really isn’t bad. The issues are it hasn’t totally shown up on the field. With only six sacks, it’s hard to think they get to Kyler a lot with a 8% hurry rate. They do have four picks, but most of them came from Brett Rypien on a short week. I can’t find a route where they’d be worth the gamble.

Cash – None

GPP – Crowder if Flacco plays, Smith, Bell

Panthers at Falcons, O/U of 54.5 (Falcons -1.5)

Panthers

QB – If you decide to spend down at QB this week, Teddy Bridgewater has to be among the prime candidates. He’s rolling with a 73% completion rate and over 286 yards per game, which is not too shabby. The TD:INT ratio is really what is holding the scoring back, since it’s only 4:3. Atlanta is beyond banged up in the secondary and rank 31st in passing DVOA. Bridgewater is sixth in on target rate which helps mitigate being 21st in intended air yards. As of now, Bridgewater seems like a great cash play at quarterback since the Falcons have allowed the second-most passing yards to date with 13 touchdown passes.

RB – It still appears like it’s mostly the Mike Davis show, but Reggie Bonnafon started to bite into his share just a bit this past week. Davis is at his season high in salary and over $6,000 for the first time but he’s still right around a potential 3x return. He’s exceeded 22 DK in both games as the full-time starter and even with Bonnafon getting some touches, he went over 20 touches for the second straight game. I have no qualms playing him in any format and he may even wind up as a Core Four play.

Bonnafon is slightly interesting since he’s barely above RB-minimum this week. He did only play a bit over a quarter of the snaps, but also racked up 12 touches. I wonder if this was game script or just the fact that Davis isn’t used to such a heavy workload. If it’s the latter and he’s actually going to get 8-10 touches, he could be worth a GPP shot but nothing more. Atlanta is the 12th best rushing defense in DVOA.

*Update* Bonnafon suffered a high-ankle sprain and won’t be on the active roster for at least three weeks. That really bumps up the outlook for Davis who already looked very solid.

WR – The trend of Robby Anderson being cheaper than DJ Moore continues after yet another dud from Moore. Anderson actually has two more targets than Moore and has been fairly consistent so far. In three of the four weeks, Anderson has gone over 17 DK points and continues to be sub-$6,000. It’s like Adam Gase has no clue what he’s doing with offensive players or something. With all the injuries to the Falcons secondary, Anderson is one of the better receiver plays on the board to my eyes.

Moore is still an air yards darling and he should break out at some point. It seems to be forgotten that Moore went for 20 DK in Week 2 and has still yet to score. He gets the same putrid Atlanta secondary and faces Isaiah Oliver, who is giving up 2.10 points per target. The GPP appeal is there but I do prefer Anderson.

TE – I don’t believe that the five targets for Ian Thomas this past week is anything but an anomaly. He had four all season coming into this game and there’s no reason to suspect his role is changing. Even with a touchdown, he scored 8.5 DK. That’s not something we want to chase.

D/ST – The Panthers aren’t even averaging a sack per game, although they do have seven turnovers forced. Five of them are fumbles and that doesn’t seem super sustainable. I don’t have interest since they can’t get any type of pressure on the quarterback.

Cash – Davis, Anderson, Bridgewater

GPP – Moore

Falcons

QB – It was a really rough game for Matt Ryan and the Falcons Monday night but it gets easier coming home to the Panthers. Ryan has excelled against two poor defenses so far but has struggled against some better ones. Carolina is 26th in passing DVOA and so they qualify as a bad one, even though in fairness they haven’t given up over 1,000 yards passing yet. Their schedule has been uneven so far and maybe the passing yards given up isn’t the best measure.

Ryan is only 21st in on target rate so far this year but he does rank first in intended air yards, so there is a trade-off there. Only two quarterbacks have had more attempts so far and Atlanta is playing at the second-fastest pace in the league right now. Even potentially without his top receiver, Ryan feels just far too cheap here.

RB – If there’s ever a time to play Todd Gurley, this is the week. The Panthers are 25th in run DVOA, are tied for the most rushing touchdowns given up and are giving up nearly 100 yards per game. Gurley leads the league in red zone attempts since Derrick Henry hasn’t played his fourth game yet and Gurley is under $6,000. He’s a player that I almost never go after and if the Panthers go up on the Falcons, he could get game-scripted out. Both Brian Hill and Ito Smith have matched his targets so far. Gurley isn’t what he used to be but he does have multi-touchdown upside in this game.

WR – Even with his salary, I won’t have one lineup with Julio Jones in it. I frankly don’t think he plays period but even if he does, he clearly can’t make it through a game and is not worth the risk.

That leaves Calvin Ridley as the lead dog and he’s priced as such, the WR2 on the slate even though he’s coming off a goose egg on Monday Night Football. It’s projected that Ridley would see Rasul Douglas who is allowing a 75% catch rate and a 1.40 points per target. I’m not convinced I need to spend this type of salary when Hopkins is right there and has safer volume. Ridley does have eight red zone and end zone looks, so the scoring upside is huge. We can also look at Olamide Zaccheaus, who racked up nine targets Monday. That does represent the majority of his 16 targets but if Carolina is focused on Ridley and even Russell Gage, Zaccheaus has value a minimum price. Gage has seen a significant downturn in his target rate so I’d rather just save the $2,100 if not playing Ridley.

*Update* Jones remains questionable but didn’t practice all week. Carolina’s secondary is now also down corner Eli Apple, which certainly doesn’t help matters. If Julio sits, I think Zaccheaus could slide into cash considerations.

TE – Hayden Hurst is another tight end that likely needs a score to truly pay off his salary. It’s true that he might not have Julio in the lineup and that’s 12.2% of the targets opening up, but he’s not my favorite. He’s averaging about five targets per game which isn’t bad but the red zone work isn’t there. He only has two targets and one end zone look. He’s a fine option even with the Panthers only allowing 150 yards and a score so far.

D/ST – Certainly not, especially at $3,000.

Cash – Ryan, maybe Gurley

GPP – Ridley, Zaccheaus, Gage, Hurst

Rams at Washington, O/U of 45 (Rams -7.5)

Rams

QB – It was a pretty disappointing day for Jared Goff and the Rams on Sunday. Sure, they won but they also struggled mightily to put the lowly Giants away. Goff won’t even be inside the top 20 of passing attempts by the end of the Week 4 and that’s kind of an issue for a QB at this salary. Goff offers nothing on the ground although he oddly has 16 “attempts”. The positives for Goff are the completion rate over 72% and a 6:2 TD:INT ratio. The 265 passing yards per game are fine, but nothing special. Washington is actually a top-eight team in passing yards allowed, which isn’t exactly what I thought we’d see at this juncture of the year.

A big part of the reason they rank poorly against the QB for DK points is the third-most rushing yards allowed to the position. This is where it has to be noted that they’ve already faced Lamar Jackson and Kyler Murray, who have rushed for a combined 500 yards already. I won’t be using Goff this week myself as I don’t think this game stays close enough to make him worth the salary.

RB – Sean McVay…you fickle man. It really seemed like we had a bead on the running back usage with Darrell Henderson and then Sunday happened. He only played 22 snaps while Malcolm Brown got a better chunk of the work and that has to scare you for this week. Heading into Week 4, Henderson had spent the past two games out-touching Brown 35-20.

Brown was the man in the backfield in Week 4 and there’s no reason that we know of that it happened. It would be one thing if Brown was ripping it up, I would understand the coach riding the hot hand. Brown got 14 touches and racked up *checks notes* 56 yards. I’m not a head coach in the NFL but that’s just baffling to me. Washington is right in the middle of the league when it comes to rushing yards allowed to the running backs, so I’m not being subject to the whims of McVay this week with no discount on either back. To make matters even worse, Cam Akers should be back his week. We hate three headed monsters and this is going to be one that is unpredictable mid-game.

WR – It certainly wasn’t a banner day for the receivers, although Cooper Kupp did break off a 55 yard score that was the back breaker in the fourth quarter. Both he and Robert Woods saw seven targets a piece but Woods only had 35 yards. Kupp is averaging over 74 yards a game but if he hadn’t got loose for the 55 yards scamper, it was going to be a floor day for Kupp as well. We’re looking more towards the individual matchups even though both guys move around the formation a good deal. Salary also doesn’t help since Kupp is just $100 more.

Kupp will square off with mostly Jimmy Moreland, who is allowing 1.60 points per target on 24 targets. Woods will get a good dose of Ronald Darby who is at a 1.70 mark but allows 19.8 yards per reception. Washington is a shocking third in passing DVOA but I still think the Rams receivers get the better of this spot. I will slightly prefer Woods since Darby is typically a player we target heavily.

TE – We talked last week about how few routes Tyler Higbee was actually running and three out of four weeks, i’s really shown through. Week 4 was already the third time that Higbee has been no higher than eight DK points. The only game he did anything of note was a three touchdown performance against the Eagles (they might have some issues against the position). In the three poor games, Higbee has a grand total of 10 targets. He’s just too expensive in my eyes when you have your choice of the elite tier for around $1,000 more. The only option more expensive than Higbee that I wouldn’t play over him is Zach Ertz.

D/ST – The Rams defense is one of the most expensive options on the slate and they should be. This is another spot where they should thrive with Washington already giving up the fourth-most sacks. That’s tied for the fourth most and additionally, Washington is tied for second in giveaways with eight. LA is holding teams to just 20 points per game and have been about the only unit to give the Dallas offense issues.

Cash – D/ST, Kupp, Woods

GPP – Goff

Washington

QB – It sort of figures that Dwayne Haskins put up his best fantasy performance of the season against the Ravens defense. He may not have thrown a touchdown, but he did rush one and he didn’t turn over the football. It was the first time all season his completion rate has been over 57.6% and exceeded 224 yards. To say we might want to be cautious here is a bit of an understatement. A quarterback scoring the 12-13 points Haskins had the other three weeks really kind of dooms your squad, so Haskins is nothing more than an MME option and a dicey one at that. LA has only given up five touchdown passes to four interceptions while ranking seventh in passing DVOA.

Update – Kyle Allen will start and he was a nightmare last season. he production for Gibson and McLaurin shouldn’t take a huge hit (see D.J. Moore and CMC in 2019) but the Rams defense looks to be the best on the slate now.

RB – The Antonio Gibson train keeps picking up steam and his DK point total has gone up every single week. Gibson matched his high water mark in carries with 13 and set a new best with five targets. His explosiveness showed a little on a 40 yard reception but the main story is the workload. If he becomes a player who gets 15 touches or more every game, $5,000 is just way too cheap. What we really like is three of his five targets came lined up as a receiver and Washington is catching on to the fact that Gibson is clearly the best option in their backfield. J.D McKissic is going to get snaps and be somewhat involved (he had eight targets on Sunday). He just won’t offer a ton of production on the ground and Gibson is the more gifted player. The Rams are allowing just about 100 yards per game on the ground and the ninth-most receiving yards on 29 targets.

WR – It’s the Terry McLaurin show in this receiving corps and his price just really hasn’t moved all season so far. $6,100 is the most expensive he’s been but that’s not enough for a receiver that is averaging nearly 10 targets and nearly 100 yards per game. McLaurin has had some tough matchups and has still come through it producing about every week. He just got Baltimore for 118 yards on 10 receptions. He’s going to see Jalen Ramsey on the other side and that might have folks skip McLaurin altogether. Ramsey has allowed 1.40 points per target on 27 targets and 10 yards per reception. He’s of course a great corner, but McLaurin checks in as a really good GPP option for me. Dontrelle Inman and Steven Sims are both under a 15% target share and I’m not likely to go after either.

*Update* Sims is now on IR, which concentrates the targets even further.

TE – I’m not falling for the Logan Thomas play any more. Most of his metrics are super favorable, such as targets, air yards and routes run on drop backs by Haskins. That’s all well and good but he’s turned that into a season line of 13/102/1 which just isn’t good enough. This past week he wasn’t even targeted that heavily with just four. LA has allowed three scores to the position but only 165 yards receiving through four games, so it’s not even that special of a matchup to try and get right.

D/ST – With Jared Goff only being sacked six times, this might not be the exact matchup to exploit. Washington is down Chase Young and other than Week 1, haven’t been getting to the quarterback consistently. They only have six sacks the past three weeks and have seen their price come up $500 after last week. I likely don’t take this route in Week 5.

*Update* Young is questionable, and even if he’s active for just partial snaps, I don’t mind the Washington defense at salary with their front.

Cash – McLaurin, Gibson

GPP – Allen

Eagles at Steelers, O/U of 44.5 (Steelers -7.5)

Eagles

QB – Carson Wentz emerged from the West Coast with a victory, but I can’t say I’m jonesing to play him. He’s still on the grisly side of a 4:7 TD:INT ratio and that’s not a safe bet to improve against a rested Steelers squad. Now, Wentz doesn’t have to face the Steelers after a typical bye week. They had spent the week planning to play the Titans, so there’s not a lot of extra prep work. It’s still a lot to ask for Wentz to have a good game here with a rag-tag group of weapons.

Wentz is 26th in on target rate, which is fairly brutal at this point of the season. Sure, the cast around him hasn’t helped a ton but Wentz should be better. He’s 20th in passing yards despite being fourth in intended air yards and you have to wonder if he has time to air it out in this one. He’s being pressured over 21% of the time and is tied for third in sacks. Pittsburgh leads in pressure rate and blitzes over half the time.

RB – It’s a fair price for Miles Sanders, but the matchup is about as tough as it gets. No team has allowed fewer rushing yards at 121 than the Steelers, and they have a 10 yard lead on Tampa Bay for the per game lead at 54 yards rushing. Sanders does have five targets per game but I’m not convinced that I want to pay this much for receiving work. Even that hasn’t been a weakness for the Steelers with just 12 receptions and one score allowed. Only getting 15 touches Sunday night was a hair alarming, in honesty. The Eagles were down Dallas Goedert, DeSean Jackson, Jalen Reagor and Alshon Jeffery has yet to play. Sanders gets 15 touches when they desperately needed offense? I’ll pass on Sanders here.

WR – DeSean Jackson, Alshon Jeffery and Jalen Reagor remain out. Not to skip over any spot too much, but I can’t get behind a Greg Ward play in the least. Even with seven targets last week, he generated 7.8 DK points. Even in his range, there’s better situations to attack.

TE – Maybe this is just me, but Ertz looked incredibly poor on Sunday night. He seemed very slow and had no explosion whatsoever. I didn’t really think it was possible to have nine yards on five targets/four receptions. The 2.3 yards per catch is fire though, let me tell you. Ertz does have 29 targets which is excellent volume but the 139 yards receiving is not ideal. He’s also only found pay dirt just once, which hurts any type of ceiling for Ertz as well. He’s getting an 18.9% target share and somehow has 18.5% of the air yards but only two red zone targets through four games. Any of the four options ahead of him in salary are better options, even with the added expense.

D/ST – I actually don’t mind the Eagles defense to some extent. They absolutely have their flaws in the secondary and elsewhere, but they are getting home to the quarterback. Philly is averaging over four sacks a game and the jury is still out as far as how good the Steelers are. The combined record of the three teams they’ve beat is 1-11, with the lone win coming against the Jets.

Cash – None

GPP – D/ST

Steelers

QB – Pittsburgh is back in action after their impromptu bye week and we’re still looking for the first really big game from Ben Roethlisberger this year. He’s been pretty good, with a 7:1 TD:INT ratio thus far but we haven’t got the massive game that has been a trademark of his seasons recently. Part of last game’s mediocre production was losing his favorite target Diontae Johnson to a concussion fairly early in the game.

The good news is Big Ben has been really on target so far, with an 81.3% rate. He’s still outside the top 20 for intended air yards but it still feels like just a matter of time before things start clicking at a higher level. The Eagles are the ninth-best as far as DK points but also have allowed the ninth-most passing yards and are 16th in passing DVOA. They’ve allowed virtually nothing on the ground but you won’t need that from Roethlisberger. He’s a fine play in any format this week.

RB – The last time we saw the Steelers, they were acting like a total oddball team. Typically, Coach Mike Tomlin runs one back and when he’s been healthy, that’s been James Conner. While he did rack up 22 ouches for 149 yards and a score, both Benny Snell and Anthony McFarland were both involved with seven and six carries. That’s not enough to really worry us about Conner, who is still pretty underpriced with the volume he gets.

In his last two games, he’s averaging 20 touches per and Philly has been their usual tough self against backs. They just miss being top 10 in DK points given up and the front four is the strength of that defense. They can be a little vulnerable to the passing game with 18 receptions for 188 yards so Conner checks in as a volume-based option coming out of the bye. I don’t think we’re at the point where we have to worry about Snell or McFarland quite yet.

WR – Considering he was hurt the last time he played, Johnson is still really underpriced if he’s active. When we were heading into Week 3, he had an outlandish target share that was inside the top five in the NFL. Even after missing over half a game, he still leads the team in targets with 25 and is the only player with over 20% of the air yards (27.9%). Johnson should draw Darius Slay who has been stout so far. He’s allowing just 1.20 fantasy points per target on 26 targets through four gams thus far.

About the only metric JuJu Smith-Schuster holds the lead on Johnson is yards by a bit and touchdowns, with three. Otherwise, it’s been fairly pedestrian for JuJu. You would’ve though that JuJu was in line for a big game with the early exit to Johnson, but you’d be wrong. He only had four receptions for 43 yards and was only targeted five times. Rookie Chase Claypool led the team in snaps in Week 3 and drew four targets himself. The end result wasn’t great but his aDOT is 14.7, easily the best on the team. He’s still worth taking some GPP shots in hopes of the big play, and Roethlisberger really seems to like him. I just wouldn’t expect over 70% of the snaps again.

TE – I’m torn here on Eric Ebron. I don’t really trust him, but his targets have increased in each game. With Johnson out, Ebron drew seven targets and turned them into 5/52/1 on the game. Philly have been ripped apart by the position, allowing five scores already and the fourth-most yards. If I knew that Ebron would be as involved as last week, he’s be a smash play. Ebron is only at fourth in targets on his own team and has all of one red zone target. He’s a fine play if you’re not spending up, but let’s see how the other options shake out.

D/ST – Of the higher end defenses, I do like Pittsburgh. They lead the league in pressure rate and Wentz has been brought down 14 times, tied for third-most in the league. Pittsburgh already has 15 sacks and five takeaways. They aren’t cheap but they shouldn’t be.

Cash – Ben, Conner, D/ST, Ebron

GPP – JuJu, Johnson, Claypool

Bengals at Ravens, O/U of 51 (Ravens -12)

Bengals

QB – Even in a game that the Bengals won, Joe Burrow still threw the ball 36 times and he continues to be among the leaders in attempts in the NFL. Only Dak Prescott has more attempts on the year and we have to love the volume that Burrow has going for him right now. Even better is he also sits second in red zone attempts, so the touchdown equity remains very high. This would project to be a game that the Bengals should trail and Burrow should see 40+ attempts. A significant chunk was from getting rolled by Patrick Mahomes but the Ravens have allowed the sixth-most passing yards in the league so far. Even the DVOA isn’t spectacular at just 14th. If Haskins can do it, Burrow should be on our radar despite the matchup.

RB – It took three weeks, but Joe Mixon has joined the 2020 season. Mixon did practically but we kept saying the volume and the pace of the Bengals defense would eventually come through. It did this past week, even though Mixon cropped up on the injury report on Saturday, typically a red flag. I certainly backed off and that didn’t end well for anyone. We kept pounding the fact that the Bengals offense was a top-five unit in pace and it finally paid off. It does need to be said that the Ravens are nasty to opposing running backs. They are third in DVOA, eighth in DK points allowed and rushing yards allowed. Mixon is third in rushing attempts with an 8.8% target share. He’s a volume play, but there is some floor here.

WR – This is going to be a fun matchup to watch. Tyler Boyd leads the team in targets with 34 and he’s taken over for A.J. Green. Boyd is still very fairly priced but he does have a tough matchup individually. Ravens slot corner Marlon Humphrey is a rich man now but his production hasn’t been shutdown. He’s been targeted 31 times and has allowed 21 receptions for 1.60 points per target. That’s not enough to stop me from using Boyd.

The player that might have his hands full is Tee Higgins. The rookie would see either Marcus Peters or Jimmy Smith, neither of who should have issues with Higgins. I’m not sure how Baltimore will handle Green, so the matchup is certainly not set in stone. I might just be on Boyd here and I wouldn’t be surprised if he saw 10 targets or more if Green and Higgins are scuffling.

TE – Oh sure, NOW Drew Sample gets some targets after I don’t play him. He is the red zone leader as far as targets on the Bengals and I wonder if it’s the same scenario for Boyd. If Green and Higgins are getting taken out of the game, Boyd and Sample could see extra work. Even Mixon should continue to get fed targets. Baltimore hasn’t been great to tight ends, with 243 yards (10th most) and two scores already. Sample is a fine option under $4,000 but you only have to rewind one week to see the potential floor.

D/ST – I tried to go against the Ravens offense last week and it didn’t work out all that well. Lamar Jackson is in the top 12 for pressure rate and has been brought down 11 times, but the Bengals have the fourth-lowest pressure rate of any team in football. We can find different cheap defenses.

Cash – Mixon, Boyd

GPP – Burrow, Sample, Higgins

Ravens

QB – It’s a rare slate where Jackson is under $8,000 anymore so he technically is a small bargain. He finally had a rushing touchdown last week and is back in the top two in rushing yards for quarterbacks. Jackson has been a little more inconsistent than last year. Two games have been over 26 DK and two games have been under 18 DK. He’s only 16th in on target rate and the volume is still quite low as he sits 28th in attempts. The Ravens didn’t pass much last year but Jackson did more on the ground last year as well. Cincinnati has already allowed the ninth-most rushing yards to the position (94 overall) so Jackson is a fine play in every format.

*Update* Jackson has yet to practice on Wednesday or Thursday, but it’s reported there’s no fear of him missing yet.

*Update Two* Jackson is ready to roll as expected.

RB – It’s still a miserable split in the Ravens backfield. Last week saw Mark Ingram with eight carries, Gus Edwards with nine and J.K. Dobbins with five. On the season, Ingram leads with 34 total and Dobbins is last with 15. There’s not enough meat on the bone for any back to stand out, especially when Jackson is in the mix. Baltimore ranks eighth in rushing attempts per game on the year, but until something changes in this backfield they are an easy fade in my eyes. The real shame is the Bengals have allowed the fourth-most rushing yards though they are 10th in DVOA. It won’t surprise me if someone has a good game but goodness knows who it is.

WR/TE – I’m lumping the two positions together because of how the Ravens are structured. Yes, Miles Boykin is third in targets but isn’t even averaging four per game and the air yards share is under 14%. The passing game mostly starts and ends with Marquise Brown and Mark Andrews. Brown owns the air yards lead at a massive 44.5% share in the offense and the target lead at 26. He’s going to see a good deal of William Jackson, who has allowed a 2.00 points per target rate and 12.6 yards per reception on 25 targets. He can’t be trusted in cash but he’s always squarely in the GPP conversation, although he’s a bit pricey.

Andrews is the man once the team enters the red zone, with four targets there and five end zone targets. The latter number is tied for third across the entire league, so it’s hard to say the touchdown equity isn’t massive for him. The Bengals have yet to allow a score to the position but they have allowed the eighth-most yards. I’m betting that after Sunday, Cincy has allowed a score to the tight ends.

*Update* There’s a lot of questionable tags on the Ravens offense, but there’s no reason to be worried at this point.

D/ST – With Joe Burrow being second in sacks already, the Ravens deserve their lofty price tag. Baltimore has just nine sacks so far but 19 hurries, tied for the seventh-most. Burrow hasn’t been a turnover factory so I would prefer the Steelers at $100 cheaper.

Cash – Jackson, Andrews

GPP – Brown, D/ST

Jaguars at Texans, O/U of 54 (Texans -6)

Jaguars

QB – The Mustache continued his great play for fantasy last Sunday, throwing two scores and for over 351 yards for right about 25 DK points. Houston is just 19th in passing DVOA and are a team in chaos right now, so this is a good spot for Minshew to attack. The Texans don’t have an interception yet although they have only allowed 912 passing yards. That’s just the seventh-fewest in the league but I don’t think this is a defense we need to fear.

Minshew is fifth across the league in on target rate and just outside the top 12 in intended air yards. That’s a really nice mix for fantasy production, especially when he’s ninth in attempts as well. Minshew is tied for sixth in touchdown passes and has upside past his price tag this week.

RB – James Robinson is certainly not Dalvin Cook, but he does get the same matchup and might well have a monster game himself here. He is at a season-high price but it’s tough to say it’s not warranted. He logged the most carries of his career last week with 17 and added in four receptions. Robinson is 12th in carries in the NFL, has 68.9% of the rushing attempts on the team and a 10.6% target share to boot. Houston has been smashed on the ground so far, leading the league at 651 yards to backs allowed and dead last at 181 rushing yards per game allowed. Robinson will be in the running for a Core Play spot for me.

WR – Welcome back D.J. Chark. He went bonkers on Sunday after missing the last game for the Jags, scoring twice and flirting with 30 DK points. He projects to face Bradley Roby who doesn’t look intimidating. Roby has allowed nearly a 70% catch rate, 2.00 points per target and a 121.5 passer rating. With Chark owning over 20% of the air yards even with a game missed, he’s a good play at the salary especially if they keep feeding him the ball.

The secondary receivers are really just a grab bag. Laviska Shenault saw six targets last week and produced what was easily a career-high 86 yards. He projects to face Vernon Hargreaves which isn’t anything that stops me from using him. Hargreaves is giving up a 1.90 points per target and 11.9 yards per reception. Keelan Cole and Chris Conley aren’t getting enough consistent work to really get behind.

TE – It continues to be a “TD or bust” season for Tyler Eifert. In the one game he’s scored, he was worth playing and in the three he hasn’t, he’s yet to crack 4.5 DK points. He does lead the team in red zone targets with five and is tied for the team lead in end zone targets but only has eight total receptions so far. That’s 32nd in the league. Houston is 16th in DK points given up to tight ends, which is impressive since they’ve faced off against Mark Andrews and Travis Kelce.

D/ST – The Texans do lead the league in sacks allowed and he’s the most pressured starter, so there would be some potential if the Jaguars had a pass rush. Maybe they deserve a bit more credit than I’m giving them with a 23.2% pressure rate but they only have four sacks and 13 hurries. If they were $2,200 or something, maybe but the price is too high for me.

*Update* The Jaguars have Josh Allen, Myles Jack, C.J. Henderson and Daniel Ekuale all questionable on defense. Yikes.

Cash – Robinson, Chark, Minshew

GPP – Shenault

Texans

QB – This is going to be a tough team to measure up this week. They have a new coach in Romeo Crennel, after mercifully firing Bill O’Brien. Deshaun Watson is 20th in passing attempts, which frankly is ridiculous and should have been enough to get O’Brien fired. To Watson’s credit, he is 12th in passing yards despite the mediocre attempts and is ninth in intended air yards. It really hurts that he’s only at 14 red zone attempts and only has five completions. That latter number is 30th in the league which is just brutal. I’m really torn here. I’d love to believe Crennel turns Watson loose and if he does, there’s plenty of value with the Jags being a bottom 10 team to the position. This isn’t a slam dunk pick at his price, however.

RB – Much like Watson, I don’t know what the plan is for David Johnson. It’s hard not to like him at his price, considering he has 63.8% of the team’s carries and 11.4% of the targets. We all watched Joe Mixon rip this defense to shreds and even though the talent gap is fairly wide, Johnson is cheap. Jacksonville is already 11th in rushing yards allowed and they’ve allowed four rushing scores. They are also the sixth-worst team against the position, so the opportunity is there. If Crennel thinks like O’Brien and wants to feed him the rock, DJ could have a flashback game with over 100 total yards and a score. Duke Johnson is really not the worst salary saver if he’s going to flirt with double-digit touches, but he is nothing more than a risky GPP option.

WR – Rookie C.J Henderson has been solid for the Jaguars, only allowing 154 yards so far on 23 targets. He can stick with Will Fuller from a speed perspective with a 4.39 40-yard dash but I still like Fuller here. He owns just over 25% of the air yards and barely has the target lead on the team. Fuller almost had a double-touchdown day last week and he has established chemistry with Watson. Outside of the weird/maybe injured Week 2, Fuller has recorded a touchdown or 100 yards receiving in all the other games this year.

I certainly wouldn’t trust him in cash (as about a quarter of the field learned on Sunday) but this isn’t the worst bounce back spot for Brandin Cooks. He projects to match against Tre Herndon, who hasn’t been that great so far for the Jags. He hasn’t been targeted a ton at just 12 but he’s giving up a 75% catch rate and 10.3 yards per reception. Cooks only has one fewer target than Fuller and a handful fewer air yards.

TE – I don’t particularly understand the pricing with Jordan Akins and Darren Fells. Akins has the lead in targets by five, air yards by 18 and the end zone targets are the same. The former has also been more consistent with a 9.2 DK average to 4.6 for Fells, and the price for Akins is cheaper. Jacksonville has already allowed the fourth-most yards to tight ends and three scores. Akins is long the favorites if spending down at the position.

D/ST – It’s Week 5 and the Texans don’t have a turnover. That has to change eventually, but with the defensive coordinator now stepping into the head coaching role it doesn’t give me much confidence. Houston does have 10 sacks and an average pressure rate and Minshew has been brought down 13 times but this isn’t a play for me.

Cash – Fuller, DJ is really close, Akins

GPP – Watson, Cooks, Duke Johnson

Raiders at Chiefs, O/U of 56 (Chiefs -12)

Radiers

QB – I’m about to say something weird and that’s I’m actually thinking about playing Derek Carr. Now, when I say consider it, it’s within a game stack and GPP only. The Chiefs are the number one passing defense in DVOA and they have Carr’s number over the years, holding him to a 59% completion rate and a 15:13 TD:INT ratio. That’s over the course of 12 games as well, so this isn’t just a small sample size. Still, Carr has been playing well this year and it should be recognized. He does have four fumbles but he’s still yet to throw a pick and he’s averaging two touchdowns per game. There’s value there in what should be a negative game script and at his price.

Carr ranks second in on target rate, which is a good thing because he’s only 22nd in intended air yards. Only Russell Wilson has a higher completion rate and Carr is outside the top 10 in yards by 26 yards. I’ve certainly taken my share of shots at Carr, but I don’t mind him here at all at this price. Just understand the Chiefs are only fifth in passing yards allowed to go along with the DVOA.

RB – Perhaps one spot that the Chiefs could be vulnerable is on the ground. They rank 27th in DVOA there and have allowed the sixth-most rushing yards. They’re only mid-pack as far as DK points allowed because running backs have only scored one touchdown, despite the eighth-most receiving yards as well. Enter a very low-priced Josh Jacobs, who had 18 touches even in a lopsided loss. The score wasn’t really indicative of how the Bills controlled the game last week. Jacobs has the carry lead in the NFL (because Derrick Henry hasn’t played the same amount of games yet) and he’s 13th in receptions. There’s no real reason for Jacobs to be this low in salary and he has my attention in all formats.

WR – The receiving corps is still a mess here. Bryan Edwards did not practice Wednesday, so the week already isn’t starting out well for him. Henry Ruggs was limited so there’s a least a glimmer that he could be back this week. Otherwise, it’s Hunter Renfrow and Nelson Agholor as the main targets. The Chiefs have been quite stingy to opposing receivers, ranking second in DK points given up. Considering the rank for passing defense in DVOA, that makes some sense. I’d have some interest in Ruggs if he manages to come back as a deep GPP option, but this corps is pretty much an easy pass for me. Even in garbage time, there leading receiver is at the next position.

*Update* Ruggs look like he may be able to suit up for this game.

TE – When you have the leader among tight ends in targets at under $6,000, you have to give him some heavy consideration. Darren Waller is up by every other tight end by at least seven targets and owns over 29% of the target share for the Raiders. He even has over 24% of the air yards, so it’s pretty clear who the number one option is in this offense. The Chiefs haven’t given up much production to tight ends yet, but that number should be worse is Mark Andrews could have caught a football in the Monday Night game. There could definitely be some garbage time production here if nothing else.

D/ST – Ha. Not a chance. They have all of four sacks, two turnovers and the fifth-lowest pressure rate in the league.

Cash – Waller

GPP – Jacobs, Carr, Ruggs, Renfrow

Chiefs

QB – The only real question about playing Patrick Mahomes is if he can have a true ceiling game against this team. He’s already eighth in passing yards despite not facing much of a challenge outside of one game yet. It’s a little odd to see him just 15th in intended air yards but it’s not that big of an aspect to get hung up on. The completion rate is over 67% and he’s yet to have a turnover while accounting for 12 total touchdowns. There’s no reason to not play him in any format you like.

RB – The price still isn’t high enough for Clyde Edwards-Helaire for this game. He’s fifth in carries for running backs and seventh in targets at the position. CEH is averaging over 18 DK points and he’s only scored once in four games. Only six backs have more red zone attempts and he does have two red zone targets. The snap percentage is over 67% and he’s racked up 63.4% of the carries for the Chiefs. The volume is stellar and by the way, the Raiders have allowed the most DK points to running backs this year. They are tied for the most rushing touchdowns, they have given up the third-most receptions and the second-most yards. This couldn’t be a better spot for him and I’m pretty sure he’s going to be in the Core Four.

WR – I’m not sure just how much the individual matchups matter here. For instance, Tyreek Hill has played 33% of his snaps in the slot. Sammy Watkins is at 30.7% and Mecole Hardman is at 47.5%. The point in highlighting that is Andy Reid, Eric Bieniemy and the Chiefs move their receivers all over. Watkins and Hill are virtually tied for second in targets, but Hill has a 34.5% share of the air yards to just 18.2% for Watkins. It’s clear what the roles are for each player and you always have the chance of Hill taking a carry to the house. Hardman is still playing right around 50% of the snaps so he’s only a GPP option. Watkins is an especially cheap option and is tied for the red zone target lead with five.

TE – We mention team’s ranks against positions a lot, but this is a good time to remind everyone it’s a data point, not a bible. The Raiders are the third-best team in DK points given up to the tight end but they’ve faced Jared Cook, Ian Thomas, Patriots Tight End and Dawson Knox so far. That’s…not exactly murderer’s row for matchups. Travis Kelce is coming off his worst game of the year, making only one splash play the entire game on a 45 catch and run. There’s no reason to fear the matchup against the Raiders and Kelce leads the Chiefs in targets and end zone targets. I slightly prefer George Kittle but you can’t go wrong with Kelce.

D/ST – Unless Julian Edelman is going to gift the KC defense another touchdown, I’m not fully interested here. It’s not like they’re a bad option, ranking as the fifth overall DVOA defense in football. However, Carr isn’t turning the football over a lot and he’s only been sacked seven times. The pressure rate is barely over 17% on the Raiders side so if you spend up, I’d prefer to find a couple hundred to get to the next tier.

Cash – CEH, Mahomes, Kelce, Hill

GPP – Hardman, Watkins

Dolphins at 49ers, O/U of 49.5 (49ers -9)

Dolphins

QB – The Dolphins have already announced that they don’t feel Tua Tagovailoa is ready to start, so it’s another week of Ryan Fitzpatrick. The route to get there last week was hideously ugly, but he did end up with 26.3 DK points. That marks the third straight week he exceeded 25 DK and would leave him as a value if we think that trend continues.

San Francisco has the sixth-best passing DVOA and they’ve only given up the eighth-fewest DK points so the matchup is tough. I would contend that they haven’t faced old quarterbacks however. The schedule has featured Sam Darnold, Daniel Jones, Carson Wentz (with no weapons) and Kyler Murray. They haven’t exactly been tested to this point of the season. Fitzpatrick is 13th in attempts but does not have a lot of red zone attempts with just 14. He is inside the top 10 in on target rate, so I think he’s a fine GPP play. We don’t know exactly how this defense looks without all their missing players quite yet.

RB – Just like the passing defense, the 49ers sit in the top 10 for rushing DVOA as well. That’s not exactly a great spot for Myles Gaskin but my goodness is he cheap. He’s handled 56.5% of the running back carries on the Dolphins and leads with 13 red zone attempts. Not only that, he’s earned himself a 14.3% target share as well. It’s rare that someone so involved at this price really isn’t going to be on my radar, but there will likely be games we want to use Gaskin in the near future.

WR – No less than five corners for the 49ers are on IR, doubtful or questionable in this game so we’ll have to look at the individual matchups a little later in the week. We do know that DeVante Parker leads the team in targets at 29 and air yards share at 24.8%. Checking in at under $6,000 is a nice bonus and I’d be fine with him in GPP.

What’s a little surprising is Preston Williams has virtually disappeared in this offense. He’s only caught six of his 17 targets and even in the best possible matchup last week, Williams had one reception for 15 yards. Miami is talking about getting him the ball more, but it’s been a tough scene for Williams so far. Isaiah Ford has stepped up to fill some of that void, as he’s second on the team in targets with 26. Ford is playing 61% of the snaps and plays in the slot almost 92% of the time so the role is set. You could do worse in this range of salary.

TE – Mike Gesicki…..what in the world, man? As much as I think Gesicki is absurdly talented and a difference maker, that really hasn’t been the case this year. Other than the one game where he went bonkers against the injured Bills defense, Gesicki has totaled 60 yards in the other three weeks. Only a touchdown against the Jaguars somewhat saved him in Week 3. He’s only got 11 targets in those three weeks with five receptions. The floor for Gesicki is much lower than I thought it might be this year. He’s too pricey for me in a bad matchup, although it should be noted that San Francisco haven’t faced any really good tight ends yet either.

D/ST – A lot of this depends on the starting QB for the 49ers. Miami does have nine sacks on the year but only 14 hurries. The five turnovers isn’t terrible but there may not be much reward if the 49ers get healthier.

Cash – Parker

GPP – Fitzpatrick, Gaskin, Ford, Gesicki

49ers

QB – This situation is fluid and Jimmy Garoppolo may well be able to return to the lineup. He was limited on Wednesday so we’ll see how things go he rest of the week. It’s possible C.J. Beathard is the starter after Nick Mullens got rage-benched on Sunday night. Whichever QB starts does offer us some potential salary relief. Miami has the 28th ranked passing DVOA and they have allowed the fourth-most passing yards so far, although it’s just six touchdowns. The 49ers have come up to about middle of the pack as far as passing attempts, so the volume hasn’t been as low as we may have thought coming into the season. Let’s check back when we have a confirmed starter.

*Update* Jimmy G is staring but it’s hard to see a path that he has the same upside as Bridgewater.

RB – Raheem Mostert is still unsure for this week as well and if he’s out, we can fire up Jerick McKinnon. He was a monster on Sunday night football and for once, Kyle Shanahan didn’t use multiple backs that much. McKinnon had 21 total touches including goal-line work, which is especially notable. Usually Jeff Wilson poaches that work but he only had three carries total and one target. I think the Dolphins can keep this game close, so McKinnon should be the man here. Miami has the 31st ranked rushing DVOA and have already allowed five rushing scores. They’re not much better through the air with 210 yards and a touchdown allowed either.

*Update* Mostert is a game-time call. That’s not exactly helpful as a late game.

WR – With the presence of George Kittle, the receivers are a bit limited for ceiling. Deebo Samuel cam back into the lineup and played just 15 snaps, so even at a higher rate this week he’s fairly expensive. I’d rather just keep playing Brandon Aiyuk for basically he same price tag. He does have just an 11.9% target rate but he’s missed some time and has four rushing attempts already. After his debut, he does have over 13 DK in both games and has scored in each game. Aiyuk hasn’t spent much time at all in the slot so he’s Miley to see some Xavien Howard, who hasn’t been great so far. He does have two interceptions, but he’s also allowing 20.5 yards per reception on 15 receptions and 2.10 points per target. Shanahan might be able to get Aiyuk behind Howard in this one, though he wouldn’t be a cash option for me.

TE – Kittle is the most expensive tight end but after Sunday night, I’m surprised he’s not over $7,000. Miami’s rank against the position is irrelevant given who they have faced. Kittle is already 11th in targets among tight end despite missing two full weeks and playing hurt through most of Week 1. It doesn’t matter who is the QB because Shanahan can scheme the ball to Kittle very clearly. If you spend up, may as well go to the highest spot possible and you should think of Kittle as a high-end receiver.

D/ST – The 49ers are likely a solid option if not spectacular. Fitzpatrick could melt down at any moment and it’s typically ugly when he does. They only have eight sacks but San Francisco does have the third-highest pressure rate in football and 23 QB hurries. Mistakes can be forced here for sure.

Cash – Kittle, McKinnon (if no Mostert)

GPP – Aiyuk, Mostert if active, Jimmy G

Giants at Cowboys, O/U of 54 (Cowboys -9.5)

Giants

QB –This is the perfect spot to test whether you believe the matchup is more important or the offensive performance is more important. Daniel Jones is the QB28 right now, behind Ben Roethlisberger and Ryan Tannehill who have played one fewer game. He has two touchdowns to seven turnovers and isn’t even averaging 225 passing yards. Jones is 28th in on target rate but does check in at 19th for intended air yards. Dallas is the 25th ranked passing DVOA defense and have allowed 11 touchdown passes, tied for third-most. I wish I could trust Jones for cash, but he does have some GPP appeal to load up elsewhere.

RB – The only back that’s of interest for the Giants is Devonta Freeman, coming off 15 touches last week. With the memories of Cleveland destroying Dallas on the ground last week, some might try and play Freeman this week since he’s under $5,000. I do understand that thought as Dallas is 23rd in run DVOA and have allowed the third-most rushing yards in the league. Freeman is just like Jones is there’s nothing in his personal profile that makes me want to play him. Freeman only has a 2.7 YPC behind the Giants offensive line and 20 total touches. He’s only in play if you think the Dallas defense is worse than the Giants offense.

WR – After Week 1 when Darius Slayton scorched the Steelers, he’s combined for nine reception, 134 yards and no scores in the next three weeks. He should draw Trevon Diggs who is allowing a 67.7% catch rate, 2.00 points per target and a 13.8 YPR. With Slayton leading the team in air yards share by a wide margin at 36.8%, this is a fantastic spot for him if Jones can get him the ball. Golden Tate has accounted for a 12.7% target share in just three games, so he’ll get some looks but he production has not been there so far. He’s living in the slot at 80.9% rate and Jourdan Lewis has gotten gashed for a 2.20 points per target. Dallas has allowed the seventh-most receiving yards and nine touchdowns to the position.

TE – There has to be a breakout game for Evan Engram coming and it very well could be here. He does lead the team in raw targets and receptions, which should mitigate the 4.5 aDOT so far. Slayton does own the red zone target lead with six but Engram is at four. Engram is under $5,000 since he’s had such a rough go so far but this is the point where his schedule opens up. He’s likely the closest to a cash option for me this week since Dallas has allowed three scores to tight ends so far and the seventh-most DK points as well.

D/ST – The Giants do have 10 sacks on the year but Dallas is the number one offense in pace and they rank third in points.

Cash – Engram

GPP – Slayton, Jones, Freeman, Tate

Dallas

QB – On paper, Dak Prescott should be the most expensive player on the slate. He’s on pace for over 6,000 yards and 36 touchdowns, not to mention the three rushing touchdowns he has. He has the attempt lead by 24 and even though the Giants have the 11th best DVOA passing defense, there’s absolutely zero fear with Dak. The only small question is if he has to go bus if the Giants can’t keep pace. It could wind up being more of a running game late, but that wouldn’t really stop Prescott from being efficient.

*Update* Left Tackle Tyron Smith is out for the year, but neither Zeke nor Dak have seen a statistical drop-off with him out. In fact, they are slightly better stat-wise. It’s a little bit of a small sample but still, it doesn’t concern me with playing anyone.

RB – DK seems to not really like Ezekiel Elliott this year. He’s sixth in carries and trails only Alvin Kamara in targets at the position. Zeke is third in PPR setting and yet, he’s under $8,000. The consistency has been there with only one game below 18 DK. The Giants are 24th in rushing DVOA and there’s no reason to not look at Zeke in all formats. Tony Pollard scored last week but he has all of 12 touches over four games so there’s no reason to really chase the score.

WR – Amari Cooper leads the league in targets and almost has to be in play until that changes. He doesn’t have the scariest matchup on the other side against James Bradberry with a 72.4% catch rate allowed, 1.80 points per target and a 9.4 YPR. I don’t know if you need to spend all the way up since the game isn’t a projected shootout and CeeDee Lamb is $1,400 cheaper. After Cooper’s 51 targets, the mix of Lamb, Zeke, Michael Gallup and Dalton Schultz all are between 30 and 24 targets. Lamb lags in air yard share at 16.7% but he’s operating out of the slot at nearly 90%. He’s taken over as the number two option over Gallup as far as safety, although Gallup is a deep threat with over 24% of the air yards.

TE – I think I would rather play Engram on the other side, but Schultz shouldn’t be totally ignored. You do have to wonder how much of the production Schultz has had has come with game scripts. Will he continue to see at least six targets if Dallas is coasting in this game? The answer is likely no but that’s about the only nitpick we have here. He actually leads the team in red zone targets on the season. I do prefer other cheaper options however unless you think this one goes back and forth.

D/ST – If they were cheaper, I’d take a flyer on the Cowboys defense. It’s not like Daniel Jones suddenly won’t turn over the ball. Dallas somehow has the 17th ranked overall DVOA but is allowing the most points per game in the league and only has two turnovers to go with eight sacks. Even the pressure rate is barely over 20%.

Cash – Zeke, Dak, Lamb, Cooper

GPP – Schultz, Gallup

Colts at Browns, O/U of 46 (Colts -2)

Colts

QB – Philip Rivers is barely inside of the top 30 QB’s for fantasy this year and he’s become a total game-manager to this point. He’s 22nd in attempts, 23rd in intended air yards and 14th in on target rate. That’s not a great mix for fantasy, especially when Indy is fifth in rushing attempts per game and 30th in pace. Cleveland is only 20th in passing DVOA and they have allowed the third-most passing yards so far. You just can’t trust Rivers and the Colts to really attack that based on how they’ve played so far.

RB – I want to hit the lock button on Jonathan Taylor with his salary, but the Colts usage the past two weeks has been infuriating. In the last two games, Taylor has 32 touches, Nyheim Hines has 23 and Jordan Wilkins has 20. I’m not sure why you took Taylor so high if he’s going to split work this much. Taylor does lead the team in red zone carries at 16 but the other two have totaled 12, so the lead isn’t that large. Hines also has three red zone targets to one for Taylor. Cleveland is top 10 in rushing DVOA and has allowed the fifth-fewest rushing yards. With the split, Taylor is in play but not quite as attractive as I thought.

WR – I can’t see much of a pathway for T.Y. Hilton to do much here. Not only does he draw Denzel Ward from the Browns, Ward has only allowed a 42.9% catch rate and 1.20 points per target. Hilton has been roundly useless for fantasy with no games over 7.6 DK points. The target share is only 17.7% and even the 31.1% of the air yards isn’t that attractive. If I’m playing anyone from the pass catchers, it’s Zach Pascal. He’s running over 52% of his snaps from the slot and he’s already racked up the second-most targets on the team. Additionally, he has the lead in red zone targets with five.

TE – Many might think the TE to play is Mo Alie-Cox after another touchdown last week but I’m not sure that’s the route to take. Trey Burton came off the IR and led the tight end group in targets with five. Alie-Cox only had two and Jack Doyle had one. Burton’s metrics were a 17.9% target share and 16% of the air yards (third on the team). He and Hilton tied with five each while Pascal had eight targets himself. I’d rather go Burton at cost given how he looked last week.

D/ST – The Browns only have four turnovers on the year and have allowed Baker Mayfield to be sacked just six times. The Colts do have the best overall defense in DVOA and they are relatively cheap so they’re in play, even if I’d rather find some money to move up a tier. In fairness, the Colts do have seven turnovers, two safeties, two touchdowns and 10 sacks themselves.

Cash – Pascal, Taylor

GPP – Burton, Rivers, Hines

Browns

QB – Baker Mayfield took what is among the best possible matchups last week and scored exactly 15.2 DK points. He’s yet to go over 16.26 DK points and is relatively expensive for his output. Mayfield is only 23rd in passing attempts and is under 30 per game. 27 more quarterbacks have more yards than Mayfield does and he’s 30th in on target rate. Going against the second-best passing DVOA defense just isn’t the spot for me with Mayfield.

RB – With the loss of Nick Chubb for multiple weeks, Kareem Hunt is going to be on the forefront for the foreseeable future. Chubb was responsible for 45% of the Browns running back carries and 37% of the red zone carries. That’s a lot to replace and even if Hunt just gets half of that, he’s likely a value at his current salary. The Colts do have the fifth-best rushing DVOA and allowed the sixth-fewest rushing yards on the season. Hunt is still perfectly viable as a volume play and in the best rushing attack in football with 204.5 yards per game and the second-most attempts per game. Relative unknown D’Ernest Johnson looks to be the next man in the rotation with 13 carries last game. He didn’t have a target so Hunt is still the far better play, but Johnson is on the radar.

*Update* Hunt does not have an injury designation, and really has my eyes despite a poor matchup on paper.

WR – If folks want to chase Odell Beckham after his monster game, I’m more than willing to let them. He had a 50-yard reverse for a touchdown to put him way over the top and two touchdowns on just five receptions (one on a trick play). When it takes those kind of plays to have a big game in a fantastic matchup, I’m for sure a little leery the following week. The good news for Beckham is he has a 43.5% air yards share and 28.9% of the targets. Corner Xavier Rhodes has found some new life in Indy, with a 47.1% catch rate and eight receptions on 17 targets.

With such a low volume passing attack, Jarvis Landry has totally fallen off the fantasy map. He’s barely over 10 DK points per game and the only time he’s been over 11.1 is when he threw a TD pass to Beckham. Landry does not have a game over five receptions or 61 yards this year, so I’ll be passing.

TE – If it wasn’t for the touchdown last week, I’m not sure I’d know that Austin Hooper was playing. With David Njoku ready to come off the IR, it makes the target share for Hooper even thinner. Before he saw seven looks against the Cowboys, he was under 13% in this offense. I can’t see much of a reason to play Hooper when Ebron is $100 cheaper, among others. The Colts are the best team to tight ends in football, having allowed 71 total yards and zero scores. It should be noted they have faced very little challenge at the position so far.

D/ST – The Browns do boast Myles Garrett who has been a wrecking machine so far, but Rivers is 30th in pressure rate. He’s only been sacked three times and Cleveland is allowing over 30 points per game. They do lead the league in turnovers forced at 10 and are the only team in double-digits. They are in play, but not a slam dunk.

Cash – Hunt

GPP – Johnson, Beckham, Baker, D/ST

Core Four (Cash Game Based)

Clyde Edwards-Helaire, Robby Anderson, Ezekiel Elliott, James Robinson

So the Core this week is sort of expensive so I’ll cheat a bit and say that I’m building with Zaccheaus right now. I don’t believe Julio plays, so I’ll take Anderson and Zaccheaus to get cheap passing game exposure to the Panthers/Falcons game. If that changes, I will update for Sunday morning. Kareem Hunt was in strong consideration, but I’ll take the much softer matchup with Robinson.

Game Stacks

Panthers/Falcons – Teddy B, Anderson, Mike Davis, Ridley, Zaccheaus, Gurley, Anderson, Ryan

Jaguars/Texans – Watson, Fuller, Chark, Robinson, Shenault, David Johnson, Cooks, Minshew

Giants/Cowboys – Dak, Zeke, Lamb, Slayton, Engram, Cooper, Schultz, Jones, Tate

Raiders/Chiefs – CEH, Mahomes, Hill, Kelce, Waller, Jacobs, Carr, Ruggs

Team Stacks

Ravens – Jackson, Hollywood, Andrews – Run Back with Boyd or Higgins

Steelers – Ben, JuJu, Conner, Ebron, Johnson – Run Back with Ertz (don’t love the Eagles here)

Cardinals – Kyler, Nuk, Drake – Run Back with Smith or Crowder

49ers – Kittle, McKinnon (if Mostert is out), Jimmy G – Run Back with Parker

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 4 Fantasy Recap

Nick and Michael discuss the NFL Week 4 Fantasy recap! Where we were right, where we were wrong, and some season long plays that might be waiver claims. You can sign up for our Gold Membership at WinDailySports.com and start winning big like we did this week!

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To quote the great Michael Rasile, “It’s a great day to be alive.” NFL DFS GPP season is here and it’s time for us to stay hot. We’ve absolutely smashed Weeks One, Two, and Three… and will continue to do so this week! For those who haven’t read it yet, please check out the Week 4 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.


*This week, due to crazy amounts of work and late week cancellations/injuries, I’m just going to list out the players I have interest in. Be sure to tune in to the Sunday NFL Livestream tomorrow morning at 11AM EST for further explanations*

NFL DFS GPP Quarterbacks

  • DeShaun Watson – Great for cash, great for GPPs. He’s going to be popular, but we’ve been picking on this Minnesota defense all season long. No need to stop now.
  • Josh Allen – not much to say, he’s been going nuts and this Las Vegas defense does not scare me away from Allen at all. I do question Vegas’ ability to keep this one close, but Allen is always in play.
  • Matthew Stafford – there’s simply no one healthy in this New Orleans’ secondary. Lattimore and Jenkins are both out and somehow that leads to PJ Williams being their top corner. Yikes.
  • Kyler Murray – Everyone wanted to jam him in last week but now no one is playing him against 28th ranked defense in pass defense DVOA?
  • Joe Burrow – Zac Taylor’s offense throws the ball over 45 times a game… Jacksonville is ranked dead last in pass defense DVOA. All of the Bengals pass-catchers are healthy. Let’s go Joe for NFL DFS GPP lineups.

    Honorable Mention: Russell Wilson, Kirk Cousins

Running Backs

  • Alvin Kamara – don’t care about his ownership. The dude is the only offensive weapon on this New Orleans’ offense posting a 7.5 reception prop… That’s wonderful. It’s hard to fade this guy in any lineup.
  • Dalvin Cook – On the other side of Houston stacks, it makes a lot of sense to roster the lead back in one of the most potent running schemes in the NFL.
  • Nick Chubb – Not sure this game actually shoots out at all. Chubb is always in my player pool… even more so if Hunt misses this game.
  • Josh Jacobs – The Raiders don’t have many other weapons healthy in this offense right now. Jacobs’ workload is likely to be second to nobody against the Bills’ defense that ranks 26th in run defense DVOA.
  • Jonathan Taylor – I mention it every week, you can run all over Chicago. Taylor’s price is in an awkward spot with Henderson and Drake below him, but I’ll have a lineup or two with Taylor.
  • Darrell Henderson Jr. – 13-point home favorite. The Giants have actually been rather stout against the run, but with no Akers, I’ll trust the talent and the Vegas numbers.
  • Kenyan Drake – he’s a running back going up against the Panthers… don’t get too cute and forget about him.

    Honorable Mention: Joe Mixon, David Montgomery, Devin Singletary

Wide Receivers

  • DeAndre Hopkins – Ownership projections for ~5%? I know he’s questionable, but if he’s a go tomorrow, you’ll need some Hopkins.
  • DK Metcalf / Tyler Lockett – they’re the top WRs on this slate in a cake matchup.
  • Mike Evans – Always interested in a sub-10% owned Mike Evans. Chris Godwin is out, so Evans should be heavily relied on.
  • Kenny Golladay – see Stafford writeup.
  • Jarvis Landry
  • CeeDee Lamb
  • Will Fuller / Brandin Cooks / Randall Cobb – see writeup on Watson.
  • Tyler Boyd / AJ Green
  • Justin Jefferson
  • Hunter Renfrow

NFL DFS GPP Tight Ends

  • Mark Andrews
  • Mike Gesicki
  • Logan Thomas
  • Evan Engram

Good luck to all this week in your NFL DFS GPP lineups! Make sure to tune into the Livestream for in-depth reviews of each game and all of the plays above.

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

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NFL Week 4 Fantasy Preview

Nick (@StixPicks) and Michael (@MichaelRasile1) breakdown the week 4 slate and are notified about the Chiefs Pats game being postponed mid conversation! We find a couple ways to get different with two different games being canceled this week. Here is our NFL Week 4 Fantasy Preview!

Be on the lookout for the Sunday Morning Live Stream at 11am on the Win Daily Sports home page! It can also be found on our Twitter, YouTube, and Twitch pages as well!

Make sure to check out the Win Daily Sports Betting Membership for even more shark plays and always be on top of the best lines on our Betting Lines page!

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Hopefully everyone enjoyed ANOTHER huge week of cashing in Week 3 NFL DFS Cash Games! It’s officially NFL DFS Season. The purpose of this article is to identify my top plays for a NFL DFS Cash Games 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 4, please see below for my notes on roster construction:

  • The player pool is starting to slim down with all of these injuries. There are a ton of great value plays at QB/WR/RB, but TE is getting slim. There should be a lot of different optimal builds this weekend.
  • Looks like a safe week for your Quarterback. Don’t get too cute when Mahomes, Jackson, Prescott, Murray, Allen, Watson, and Wilson are all on the same slate.
  • It’s Alvin Kamara chalk week – MUST PLAYS in 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 for any additions/revisions!!

NFL DFS Cash Games Quaterbacks

  1. Russell Wilson ($7,800 DK / $9,000 FD) – Another week of backing Russell Wilson. The dude is on another planet right now and the model likes him (as everyone’s does this week). Wilson has a whole boatload of weapons at his disposal and faces up against a brutal pass defense (25th in pass defense DVOA) with Miami.

    Regardless of Miami’s ability to keep it close, Wilson is going to have a solid floor. He’s quite pricey though…
    AETY Projection: 25.38 points
  2. Patrick Mahomes ($7,400 DK / $8,700 FD) – It’s Patrick Mahomes and he’s not the most expensive (or the second most expensive) quarterback on the slate. No need to dive into this one in great detail.
    AETY Projection: 23.50 points

  3. Josh Allen ($7,300 / $8,600 FD) – I don’t know when Josh Allen is not going to be in play this year. Similar to Wilson, Josh Allen is a man on a mission this season and offers DFS players one of the highest floors in NFL DFS Cash Games. Ride him against this Las Vegas secondary.
    AETY Projection: 23.03 points
  4. Kyler Murray ($7,000 DK / $8,400 FD) – He’s damn near a running back and goes up against the 28th ranked pass defense DVOA in Carolina. There aren’t many safer plays than Murray on a weekly basis.
    AETY Projection: 24.02 points
  5. DeShaun Watson ($6,600 DK / $7,800 FD) – I’ve talked about this Minnesota secondary (or lack thereof) on a weekly basis every week this season as one of the best matchups for opposing quarterbacks. Fire up Watson in this smash spot in a must-win game for a motivated Houston team at home. The rushing upside paired with the matchup make this price-point the best value at the QB position.
    AETY Projection: 24.32 points

    Honorable Mention: Lamar Jackson, Cam Newton, DeShaun Watson, Matthew Stafford

Running Backs

  1. Alvin Kamara ($8,000 DK / $8,800 FD) – Over 40% of the field is going to roster Alvin Kamara in cash games this weekend. There’s absolutely no reason to fade that in cash. Hell, it’s hard to fade him in GPPs.

    Update: NO MICHAEL THOMAS = MORE KAMARA. Lock him in for cash games.
    AETY Projection: 25.27 DK / 22.18 FD
  2. Joe Mixon ($5,800 DK / $6,800 FD) – Good lord the price on Joe Mixon is way too low. I get that he hasn’t done much at all this season, but he’s still Joe Mixon. Mixon finally received over 70% of the snaps last week (Ghost and I called that on the Livestream… boom) but the production hasn’t shown up yet. Mixon is likely in for a big game soon and at this price and chalk-ownership, lock him into your cash game lineup.
    AETY Projection: 17.81 DK / 16.57 FD


    Injury concerns
  3. Dalvin Cook ($7,600 DK / $8,700 FD) – Hello, my boy, Dalvin Cook. Thank you for the points last week! The AETY Model really likes Dalvin Cook again this week as you can run all over the Texans who rank 24th in run defense DVOA. Pair that with a Gary Kubiak outside-zone running scheme and you’re in for another big day.
    AETY Projection: 23.01 DK / 21.32 FD
  4. Kenyan Drake ($6,000 DK / $7,000 FD) – We always lock in the RB1 against the Panthers. Week in, week out, it is the nuts matchup and I don’t see that changing this week. If your build can afford him, use him. Reminder: don’t pair him up with Kyler Murray in cash.
    AETY Projection: 18.01 DK / 16.90 FD
  5. David Johnson ($5,600 DK / $6,700 FD) – Everything about Minnesota’s defense is dreadful and we need some value on this slate. I’m not in love with anything in David Johnson’s game, but he offers us salary relief and a decent floor in PPR with all of the pass catching. I don’t see either defenses being able to stop one another, so DJ should have a solid workload. I don’t love it, but he’s in play for cash.
    AETY Projection: 17.49 DK / 15.96 FD
  6. Darrell Henderson Jr. ($5,800 DK / $6,400 FD) – If Cam Akers is out, I’ll certainly have some interest in Henderson at home as a 13-point favorite. We don’t need to get too deep here, that’s a great spot for home-favorite running backs.
    AETY Projection: 15.31 DK / 14.16 FD

    Honorable Mention: Mike Davis, Ezekiel Elliott, Devin Singletary (lock in cash if Moss is out), Myles Gaskin, Josh Jacobs, Jonathan Taylor, James Robinson, Carlos Hyde (if Carson is out)

Wide Receivers

  1. DeAndre Hopkins ($8,500 DK / $8,700 FD) – Super expensive, but always in play for cash games with this target share. I probably cannot afford him in NFL DFS Cash Games, but I won’t tell you not to use him.
    AETY Projection: 20.96 DK / 16.75 FD
  2. DK Metcalf ($6,800 DK / $6,900 FD) / Tyler Lockett ($7,000 DK / $7,500 FD) – They are both in absolute smash spots against Miami’s secondary in a game with a total over 54 points. I’m likely to ride with Metcalf due to the price savings, but they’re both in incredible spots.
    Metcalf AETY Projection: 18.25 DK / 15.42 FD
    Lockett AETY Projection: 19.38 DK / 15.81 FD
  3. DJ Moore ($5,600 DK / $6,800 FD) – He’s simply way too cheap on DraftKings in a game with a total of 51 points and a gamescript where the Panthers should be chasing points. I’m not worried about this Arizona secondary whatsoever. Carolina is a pass-first offense and Moore is being fed with targets on a weekly basis. He’s likely everyone’s pay-down receiver in cash games.
    AETY Projection: 17.37 DK / 14.21 FD
  4. Odell Beckham Jr. ($5,800 DK / $6,600 FD) – This Dallas secondary is in absolute shambles. Literally every wide receiving core is tearing them to shreds. I know Cleveland is one of the best run offenses in the NFL, but there will be plenty to go around for Beckham against Dallas corners’ Jourdan Lewis, Daryl Worley, and Trevon Diggs.
    AETY Projection: 16.82 DK / 13.42 FD

    *If Odell misses this game or is limited in any capacity, Jarvis Landry ($5,100 DK / $5,700 FD) is certainly in play.
  5. Kenny Golladay ($6,000 DK / $7,300 FD) – This is the cheapest we’ll ever see Golladay again, so I’m likely to jam him in my cash game lineup. Allen Lazard and banged up Green Bay pass catchers just torched this New Orleans secondary. This is a matchup we used to fear, but this defense is not what it used to be.

    UPDATE: Janoris Jenkins and Marshon Lattimore both OUT. Advantage Golladay.
    AETY Projection: 15.46 DK / 12.76 FD
  6. Tyler Boyd ($6,100 DK / $6,000 FD) – Always in for rostering Tyler Boyd in NFL DFS Cash Games. The price hiked up a bit from last week when we smashed him into our GPP lineups, but the matchup is just as pristine this week against DJ Hayden on the inside of Jacksonville’s secondary.
    AETY Projection: 13.65 DK / 10.90 FD
  7. Hunter Renfrow ($4,600 DK / $5,300 FD) – They literally have no one else healthy besides Nelson Agholor and Zay Jones. Renfrow is really only in play for DraftKings with the full-point PPR setup, but you all know how much I love to pick on Buffalo’s slot-corner, Taron Johnson.

    Honorable Mention: Stefon Diggs, Will Fuller, Brandin Cooks, Justin Jefferson, AJ Green, Zach Pascal, Preston Williams

Tight Ends

  1. Travis Kelce ($6,800 DK / $7,600 FD) – Best pass-catching tight-end in football. Play him if you can afford him.
    AETY Projection: 16.58 DK / 13.79 FD
  2. Hunter Henry ($4,600 DK / $6,100 FD) – No idea why he’s priced under $5K. This one looks like a layup with the rapport Henry and Herbert have showed us thus far.
    AETY Projection: 12.59 DK / 10.07 FD
  3. Logan Thomas ($3,500 DK / $4,900 FD) – Washington is going to be chasing points early and often in this game against Baltimore. Tight ends have had a lot of success against Baltimore this season and you know we’re likely to need salary relief this week. Logan is an excellent punt-play for NFL DFS Cash Games.
    AETY Projection: 10.07 DK / 7.97 FD

    Honorable Mention: Mike Gesicki, Evan Engram, Jimmy Graham

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 Rams
  2. Baltimore Ravens
  3. Indianapolis Colts
  4. Cincinatti Bengals
  5. Tampa Bay Bucs

NFL DFS Cash Game Sample Lineup (DK)

QB: DeShaun Watson
RB: Alvin Kamara
RB: Mike Davis
WR: Kenny Golladay
WR: DK Metcalf
WR: Hunter Renfrow
TE: Logan Thomas
FLEX: Darrell Henderson Jr.
DST: Bengals

Good luck to all!

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

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NFL Game by Game Breakdown: Week 4

Week 3 was another great week for the Win Daily family with plenty of screenshots! The team is on fire with their calls and we’re moving onto Week 4. There’s a TON of games with high totals and we’re down to a 12 game slate. We have got a ton of work to do so let’s dig right in and start working on NFL Game by Game Breakdown: Week 4 to keep the good times going!

Saints vs Lions, O/U of 54 (Saints -4)

Saints

QB – I was totally ready to mostly skip Drew Brees on this slate until I saw that he was priced as the QB16. Does Brees have some issues? Absolutely. He might still be without star receiver Michael Thomas, which makes his job much harder. The prime issue with Brees is the unwillingness to push to ball down the field so far, allowing defenses to continue to creep up. He does rank fifth in red zone attempts at 18, so that helps a bit.

Brees ranks 29th in intended air yards so far and is the only qualifying quarterback to be under 5.0 yards for intended air yards per passing attempt. Every other quarterback is above 6.0 while Brees is at 4.6. Just by the eye test, he loaded up to throw a deep ball two or three times Sunday night and pulled it back. I’m not quite sure what the issue is, but it’s undeniable. In three games, Brees has exactly three passes of 20+ yards downfield. The price is tempting, but you have to understand what you get into.

RB – Is DK serious with this price tag? Alvin Kamara has the most disrespectful salary of the entire slate. He’s the Saints entire offense right now. Only DeAndre Hopkins has more receptions on the season at 32, while Kamara is second at 27. Kamara ranks fifth in receiving yards and already has six total touchdowns. That’s not even counting the 31 rushing attempts. Detroit has allowed the third-most rushing yards alone. This might be just the second player we’ve talked about, but Kamara is a cash lock and is going to be a scary fade in GPP at this salary. Latavius Murray is in the MME conversation with 30 rush attempts himself. If he scores a short TD, he’s going to pay off even though he’s not super cheap.

WR – Given the issues for Brees, the ceiling for the receivers has been lower as well. That could change with Michael Thomas back at practice. As long as he’s healthy, he has to be considered at under $8,000 and I wouldn’t look at Tre’Quan Smith or Emmanuel Sanders. Thomas has no corner that should scare you and he and Kamara should eat up the majority of targets. Sometimes, the matchup is irrelevant when we get this kind of salary play.

*Update* Thomas is out, but that doesn’t mean I’m playing Sanders or Smith in this spot. It just means Kamara still has incredible ceiling here.

TE – We’ll have to see if Jared Cook plays this week after an injury Sunday night, but even if he does the price doesn’t do much for me. He’s the fourth-most expensive option despite having all of nine receptions and under 120 yards on the season. Even without Thomas, he’s managed eight targets for under 12% of the share. About the only redeeming factor is two red zone targets and one end zone target. That’s just not enticing enough for a limping Cook at his price.

*Update* Cook is out and one play I maybe overlooked a bit is Adam Trautman. He should see more snaps and targets. The Saints traded just about all their draft picks to move up to draft him. He’s quite volatile, but at $2,500 it won’t take a whole lot to make it worth playing him.

D/ST – I don’t mind the Saints defense, despite just giving up nearly 40 to Aaron Rodgers and company. Matt Stafford hasn’t been pressured a ton at just 15.8% so far but the Saints do have seven sacks already to go with four turnovers. The pricing doesn’t do a lot for me considering who else they are around.

Cash – Kamara (lock on DK at least)

GPP – Brees, Trautman

Lions

QB – Matthew Stafford is under $6,000 and in play, but I have my eye on a sub-$5,500 QB this week that I might be heavy on. Stafford is top 12 in intended air yards so far, and that’s fairly impressive since he’s only played with receiver Kenny Golladay for one game so far. He’s also in the top 12 in passing attempts to go with ninth in yardage so the volume has pretty much been there so far and should continue this week. New Orleans has gotten hit for over 800 yards through the air so far and an 8:2 TD:INT ratio. The one nitpick could be he accuracy so far. Stafford sits 30th in on target rate, which is poor. I’m willing to overlook that a little with no Golladay. The Lions sit eighth in pace while New Orleans is 16th, so the higher O/U has a good chance of hitting and Stafford is the engine for this offense.

RB – This backfield is beyond annoying. Detroit has spent two top 45 draft picks on Kerryon Johnson and D’Andre Swift. Yet, those two backs combined for five touches on Sunday while approximately 276 year old Adrian Peterson accounted for 23 touches. When you can grind out 3.4 yards per carry, you just have to do it. This is a backfield where the snaps are mostly irrelevant. When the touches are that far apart, Peterson is the clear lead dog. I’m not very interested in him, even though he does save some salary. He does have touchdown appeal with nine red zone carries, while Swift is averaging four targets a game. If you think the Saints can win this game handily, maybe Swift gets a few targets in this game but it’s hard to play based on that alone. New Orleans have allowed 272 rushing yards to running backs, a top 12 mark in the league.

WR – Now that Golladay has a game under his belt and reportedly didn’t aggravate the injury, it could be all systems go here. He’s quite cheap for his upside and already led the Lions in targets and yards in his first game. Saints corner Marshon Lattimore hasn’t been targeted often yet with just 10 targets but he’s allowed 2.6 fantasy points per target. He’s not someone that scares me off a cheap Golladay. Stafford isn’t going to not throw the ball that way either, and the 10.9 aDOT for Golladay would rank first on the team.

I had thought that the return of Golladay would benefit Marvin Jones but for one week, it didn’t help at all. Jones finished fourth in targets on the day with just three. Now he came down with all three of them but he didn’t get a red zone look which is part of his appeal. If Golladay draws plenty of Lattimore, Jones should see some of Janoris Jenkins who has a 1.3 fantasy point allowed per target mark. I’ll stick with Golladay in this passing game. Danny Amendola would be an MME option out of the slot against P.J. Williams of the Saints, but nothing more.

*Update* Both Lattimore and Jenkins are out for the Saints. Golladay becomes one of the better plays on the board in my eyes. He was underpriced with Lattimore.

TE – I’m not sure where the random Jesse James game rolled in from but he had zero targets coming into Week 3. Make no mistake that TJ Hockenson is still the man at this position even though James scored. The Saints got smoked by Darren Waller to skew the numbers a bit, but they have given up the most DK points per game to the tight end through three weeks. No team has given up more yardage or receptions and they are tied for last with four touchdowns surrendered. That didn’t all come from Waller. Hockenson has carved out a solid role with a 13.3% air yard share and a 15.7% target share. The red zone targets have been pretty spread out and Jones leads with just three. Hockenson is still under $5,000 and is on the field for right about 70% of the snaps. He’s got my interest this week.

D/ST – I’m not sure what to make of the Saints but I’m not exactly looking at the Lions defense either. Brees has only been sacked three times, which matches the amount of sacks Detroit has. Additionally, they’ve forced three turnovers while New Orleans has only one turnover that didn’t come from Taysom Hill being on the field for no reason.

Cash – Stafford, Golladay, Hockenson

GPP – Jones, Amendola, Peterson

Colts at Bears, O/U of 43 (Colts -2.5)

Colts

QB – Playing Philip Rivers really doesn’t make a ton of sense to me. He’s not thrown over 25 passes in the past two games as he Colts have rolled to a combined 64-18 scoring differential. Even though the Bears offense should be better now, I don’t see a reason Rivers suddenly airs it out like crazy. He’s also been under 220 passing yards the past two weeks, and is in the top 12 on the back of nearly 400 yards in Week 1. The Colts are playing at the fourth-slowest pace in the league, and the Bears rank 24th. This projects to be a slogfest and not one where I’m looking to play a quarterback who’s down two receivers as well. It’s tied for the lowest O/U on the main slate as of Tuesday.

RB – Can someone tell me what this backfield is going to be week to week? We saw the Colts saddle up Jonathan Taylor for 25+ touches in Week 2, just to see him fall to 14 this week. That meant that Nyheim Hines went from one touch to 11, and Jordan Wilkins went for 10. The scores of each week were somewhat similar too so chalking it up to blowout likely isn’t the reasoning. The good news is between the two weeks, Taylor still has 55% of the carries and 84.6% of the red zone rushes. If he has to give a little work between the 20’s, he can make up for it with this amount of red zone work. Chicago hasn’t been a daunting matchup yet either with 301 rushing yards given up to go with four rushing touchdowns. Hines does have some appeal on DK since the Colts are missing two receivers.

WR – Now that Parris Campbell and Michael Pittman are out for the foreseeable future, Zach Pascal enters as a cheap receiver who could get some work. The two that are missing combined for about 21% of the targets so far with a 27% air yards share, so there is some slack to be picked up. T.Y. Hilton has been awfully silent this year as well so maybe this will help get him going. Some of his metrics are encouraging. He owns 35.8% of the air yards in the Colts offense for a 13.7 aDOT but his target share is just 17.7%. Hilton only has 10 receptions on the season on just 17 targets.

Rivers is spreading the ball out to everyone through the first three weeks. If Hilton can’t get something going this week, it might be tough to trust him at all.

TE – Another potential beneficiary from the receivers missing is Mo Alie-Cox. He saw another solid fantasy game with 14 DK points but that was just on three targets. He was on the field for 60% of the snaps even though Jack Doyle was active this week, a good sign for the athletic tight end. Additionally, he saw the only end zone target in the offense so this could be Alie-Cox securing a bigger role in the offense. I can’t say I’d trust him but he’s still under $4,000 himself.

D/ST – I’m not saying Nick Foles is a world beater, but I would’ve preferred the Colts defense if Mitchell Trubisky was under center. Foles should at least stay away from the mistakes that can plague Trubisky and I’m not sure we should chase the Colts coming off scoring two defensive touchdowns. The good news is they’re only $3,300 but it’s tough to tell if the nine sacks (sixth-most) and six turnovers forced (tied for second-most) are real or based on a soft schedule for the first three weeks.

Cash – Taylor

GPP – Hilton, Pascal, Hines, Alie-Cox, D/ST

Bears

QB – The Bears finally yanked Trubisky for Foles, who now gets a full week of reps in practice to get ready. He’s plenty cheap after putting up three scores in limited playing time last week, but I’m not sold on this is the cheap quarterback you need. He has some of the same concerns that Rivers does in a low O/U game and playing in a slow offense. You can argue that the offense moves quicker and is better with Foles, but we’ve only seen him in comeback mode this year. The funny thing is Foles has a lower intended air yards per attempt than Trubisky, 9.2 to 10.0. If we desperately needed the savings at quarterback, maybe I’d be more excited here but we don’t. So I’m not really looking at Foles this week.

RB – I liked David Montgomery last week but it did not work out at all. He wasn’t very involved in the passing game despite the game script and losing Tarik Cohen, which was pretty disappointing. The bright side is he totaled another 16 touches and has 49 through three weeks. His price is pretty cheap for that volume, even though the matchup is not great. Indy has shut down running backs for the most part, only allowing the eighth-fewest rushing yards of 231. Montgomery did respond a bit to the QB change because he was averaging under 2.0 yards per carry with Trubisky. Overall, this price isn’t bad but it’s not a matchup I’m looking to attack. The Colts check in as a top five DVOA defense to this juncture.

*Update* I noticed after hitting publish that after Cohen was lost last week, Montgomery played 19-of-21 snaps. That’s an awful lot and he is underpriced for that role. He’s a much better GPP play than I originally thought.

WR – One man that’s happy about the QB change is Allen Robinson. He went for what was easily his best game of the year with 10/123/1 on 13 targets for over 30 DK points. He’s the clear number one option in the offense with a 31.6% share of the air yards and a 27.7% target share. The 11.0 aDOT is plenty good enough and perhaps the only “knock” is he’s third in red zone and end zone targets on the team. He plays under 25% in the slot, so he’ll see Indy corner Rock Ya-Sin and Xavier Rhodes. Before the Jets game, Rhodes was getting tagged for over five fantasy points per target and allowed a perfect passer rating. Ya-Sin is the tougher corner, but 1.60 points per target with a 92.7 passer rating isn’t scary either. I’m believing these numbers more than what comes out of the Jets game for obvious reasons.

Anthony Miller has lived in the slot almost exclusively which leaves him on Kenny Moore. By the numbers Moore would be the tougher matchup with just a 62.4 passer rating allowed. However, he has allowed a catch rate of 64.7%. Miller has just a 12.5% target share but I won’t be surprised to see that climb a little with Foles. This is a good case of the red number for a bad matchup being slightly misleading. The individual matchups look better for both receivers diving in, but they would be more GPP than cash for me. You can play Robinson in cash but he won’t be a prime target in that format for me.

TE – Jimmy Graham might be old, but he’s been the man in the red zone for the Bears and in fact, is second in the league in that category with seven. Only Falcons receiver Calvin Ridley has more end zone targets with seven to Graham’s five. Old Man Strength Graham sits in the top 12 in targets among tight ends as well, so even though his air yards resemble a running back’s aDOT, the touchdown equity is there in spades. When you’re not paying full price for a tight end, that’s all you can hope for.

Graham is still not even $4,000 at this point so this isn’t even just a chase of a big game last week. The 16% target share is nice and even if Miller comes up a bit, there’s meat on the bone for Graham. It does have to be noted the Colts have been the best team against the position with just 6/32/0 allowed through three weeks. However, they haven’t played a single tight end of repute yet. No, Kyle Rudolph doesn’t count. I think he’s viable in all formats and credit to the Rocker for being on him last week.

D/ST – There is some value of defense in low scoring games but do the Bears have any upside? They do have seven sacks but a bottom-eight pressure rate of just 17.9%. Given that Rivers sits at the 31st pressure rate of just 12.6%, the sack upside is hard to see. With both teams playing slow, the turnovers might not be there either. Indy only has three turnovers so the Bears are likely fine, but nothing great.

Cash – Robinson, Graham

GPP – Miller, Foles, Montgomery

Cardinals at Panthers, O/U of 51 (Cardinals -3)

Cardinals

QB – Perhaps the scariest thing with Kyler Murray is he’s averaging over 28 DK and has yet to be below 24.7 and he’s sporting a 4:5 TD:INT ratio with only 262 yards per game passing. That’s right, he’s 15thin passing yards and has more picks than touchdowns and is still an elite fantasy option. He’s been saved by 62 rushing yards per game and four scores on the ground already. Murray also has the seventh-most intended air yards, so the passing upside seems just out of reach right now.

Something else that sort of undercuts the production is the utter lack of red zone passing. Now, he makes up for it with four rushing touchdowns but that pace is unlikely to keep up. Murray has vastly improved by the numbers, completing eight of nine passes in the red zone and four of five inside the 10. Last year that was where he scuffled the most. The Panthers are about average with 786 passing yards given up. They’ve faced Derek Carr, Tom Brady and Justin Herbert. Considering Brady was plagued by drops, it could be way worse. Carolina is 30th in DVOA and we could see the explosion game for Kyler here.

RB – I am so unbelievably torn here. We’ve attacked the Panthers with running backs for well over a year now. They were the stone worst last year and rank as the second-worst team this year. They’ve given up the seventh-most yards rushing to backs and seven touchdowns to lead the league. Additionally, they’ve allowed the most receptions to the position for the third-most yards. It’s the nuts matchup. However, Kenyan Drake has been anything but the nuts running back in 2020.

One issue is only having five targets in the passing game. Chase Edmonds has really bit into that facet, with 11 targets himself. Drake is still getting 56.4% of the red zone carries, but only has one red zone touchdown. Kyler has two and two other scores came from right outside the 20. The volume hasn’t been an issue since Drake has the fifth-most carries in football. I wonder if the field backs away after being burned last week by him. Drake is an elite GPP back who like Kyler, has likely been on the wrong side of some luck so far. Edmonds is an MME option that has an outcome of 5 DK squarely in his sights.

WR – It took three weeks but DeAndre Hopkins is over $8,000 and he should be. He co-leads the league in targets at 37 which is a 35.9% target share with the Cardinals. The aDOT is 6.6 but with the amount of targets, that’s not something to worry about in the least, especially on DK. He also leads the team with three red zone targets and has the most receiving yards in the NFL. He’s someone who I don’t even look at cornerback matchups that much, because it doesn’t particularly matter.

Andy Isabella paid off in a monster way this past week, but we (I) got extremely lucky with that call. He played under 30 snaps, fourth among receivers on his own team. I don’t particularly understand that with Christian Kirk out, but we need to recognize that’s how the Cardinals coaches treat him. He’s still worth a GPP shot without Kirk, but that’s about it. Kirk himself is moderately interesting as a deep threat but this passing game is so concentrated right now that I don’t want a piece of it outside Nuk.

*Update* Hopkins and Kirk are both game time decisions and Hopkins hasn’t practiced all week. Kirk has been limited but if they’re both our Isabella vaults up the value receiver ranks. The Cardinals won’t have a choice but to play him with both receivers out at that point.

TE – There’s rarely a time where Dan Arnold is a big piece of the game plan. With so many mouths to feed and Kyler’s ability to run it in, I can’t justify playing a tight end with a 7.8% target share and zero red zone targets.

D/ST – The Carolina offensive line has given up eight sacks, but that doesn’t exactly jive with the 15.4% pressure rate given up. Arizona has generated a 21.8% pressure rate and turned it into 11 sacks, which is fourth in the league. The turnovers are lacking with just two fumble recoveries so far and I’m looking at them like a slightly overpriced unit for this slate.

Cash – Kyler, Nuk

GPP – Drake, Edmonds, Kirk or Isabella

Panthers

QB – It appears that Teddy Bridgwater is morphing back into “Checkdown Teddy” with being just 23rd intended air yards per attempt. The offense that planned to feature Christian McCaffrey was always going to have plenty of short targets involved, but this isn’t the best sign for Bridgewater’s fantasy appeal. The good news is he’s eighth in accuracy but only 15 red zone attempts isn’t doing him any favors. His receivers are doing good work because Bridgewater is seventh in passing yards this year, despite the 14th most attempts. He has a talented cast and is cheap. You hope he’s playing catchup all game but he’s not my favorite option in this range. I’d only use him in a game stack myself.

RB – Coming into last week, I was fairly hesitant a Mike Davis getting the volume worth playing him at his salary. I was 100% wrong, as he touched the ball 21 times, racked up 90 yards and scored. The yardage isn’t going to blow you away but if we can get 21 touches for under $6,000, it’s a good play already. It’s better on DK where he’s already tied for second in receptions among running backs. Davis played 76% of the snaps and is roughly about 20% of the target share. Arizona has already been tagged for the fifth-most yards receiving by running backs. Davis is mis-priced by around $800 in my view and is viable in all formats.

WR – After an offseason where every analyst seemed to love D.J. Moore, Robby Anderson continued to be his equal for the third straight week as far as production. Anderson has a much lower aDOT of 8.5 compared to 13.5 for Moore, and has six more receptions. He also has the lead in red zone targets with four. Both players have played most of their snaps on the outside, but Cardinals corner Patrick Peterson isn’t someone to fear anymore with a 2.20 fantasy point per target on 13 targets.

One facet that Moore has over Anderson in spades is air yards. Moore is sixth in the NFL in that metric, and has a 49% share of his team’s air yards. That’s second in NFL so the breakout game really does seem right around the corner here. The Cardinals losing safety Budda Baker to a thumb injury isn’t going to help that secondary one bit. I believe that Anderson is slightly safer for cash, but after three pretty quiet weeks Moore is an explosion play waiting to happen. Curtis Samuel is the fourth man in the pecking order and doesn’t do much for your roster.

TE – Ian Thomas has been a total non-factor with just a 4.7% target share and no red zone targets. There’s not realistic reason to play him.

D/ST – This unit is so devoid of talent that it’s hard to get behind them. Their pressure rate is under 15% and they have two sacks all season long (32nd in the league). Four of the six turnovers have been fumbles, and one of the interceptions was a bad throw by a rookie quarterback. Even with Murray being a little careless with the ball, it’s a tough sell for me.

Cash – Davis, Anderson

GPP – Moore, Bridgewater

Ravens at Washington, O/U of 45.5 (Ravens -13)

Ravens

QB – The final product didn’t look good but Lamar Jackson was a few inches away and a couple key drops away from putting up a big game Monday. As it stands, he didn’t pass for 100 yards and if that worries anyone, so be it. Jackson and the Ravens still have to answer if they can win a big game, especially if they trail but this game doesn’t project to be that. Jackson is at his normal price and we might get a slate where people aren’t eager to roster him coming off a poor island game.

Jackson is still just five yards off the rushing lead among quarterbacks, behind only Kyler. He hasn’t scored a rushing touchdown yet which isn’t likely to continue for much longer. He leads the team in red zone attempts with a 42.9% share and that’s not counting his passing numbers. He sits fifth in intended air yards per completion and Washington enters this game banged up. Rookie lineman Chase Young is questionable and that could effect the pass rush. An unpopular Jackson has to be appealing in GPP, if nothing else.

RB – I’m not sure how you can possibly want to play any of these running backs right now. We can typically handle and try to project two-headed monsters in a backfield. The Ravens are rotating three backs in about the worst way possible. Let’s break this down for touches –

Mark Ingram – 26 attempts, 4 RZ, 4 targets, 2 RZ targets, 36.7% snaps

Gus Edwards – 18 attempts, 1 RZ, 0 targets, 26.7% snaps

JK Dobbins – 10 attempts, 2 RZ, 5 targets, 0 RZ targets, 37.2% snaps

I mean….what are we supposed to do with that? I tend to doubt the Ravens need to throw the ball a lot, so I’m not sure Dobbins is the answer. Ingram is too expensive in my eyes in a game that could blow out fairly easily. Mike Davis is the far superior play in my view with a much higher floor/ceiling combo. My “favorite” might well be Edwards. He’s running back minimum and he could get some run in a blowout game. Since he’s not being used in the passing game, his role appears mostly set. It’s best to just fade this situation in everything but MME. Any back that gets under 40% of the snaps has a dangerously low floor.

WR – With the Ravens being one of the lowest volume passing attacks (tied for last), Marquise Brown is the lone play I’m targeting and even then, he’s a GPP only play. The metrics certainly don’t look bad. He has the team lead at a 24% target share and 36.1% of the air yards. The issue is he’s averaging just six targets a game, which is impossible to trust in cash games. He’ll see a mix of Kendall Fuller and Ronald Darby so there’s some upside against Darby, who can turn to toast on any given play. He’s allowing a passer rating over 99 and 1.90 points per target so far. Miles Boykin is the only other receiver into the double digits for targets but offers little ceiling unless he catches a touchdown (he does have two end zone targets).

TE – Woof, Mark Andrews had a tough scene on Monday night. He had multiple drops and just overall played very poorly. The good news is he leads the team with end zone targets, red zone targets and only has one fewer target than Brown. His 17 total targets don’t rank well among tight ends but he’s third in air yards which makes up some of the difference. Washington has given up three touchdowns, tied for second-most to tight ends already. Andrews falls into the same category as Jackson. He’s a great GPP play that folks might not want to go after. One bad game doesn’t change the role or talent.

D/ST – Baltimore is the highest salaried defense this week and it’s tough to argue that. Washington is short their best offensive lineman and have given up 10 sacks, tied for fourth-most. Even after getting Mahomes’d, they’ve given up under 19 points a game and have two takeaways per game. If you spend up, this is a great place to do it.

Cash – Jackson, D/ST

GPP – Andrews, Brown

Washington

QB – Dwayne Haskins is the cheapest starter on the board but I can’t see a reason to play him this week. Haskins is dead last in on target rate at 66%, not to mention a bad throw rate of 27%. He already has five turnovers total, is under 210 passing yards per game and hasn’t even climbed over a 57% completion rate. Aside from the Chiefs game, Baltimore has only allowed two passing touchdowns and nearly 400 of the 849 passing yards allowed came from that game as well. Haskins continues to be a hard pass.

RB – Against a lot of other teams, I’d be looking to play Antonio Gibson. He continues to take over the backfield and is up to 31 carries on the season. Peyton Barber is next with 21 but Gibson has 140 rushing yard to just 36 for Barber. He managed to get three targets last week so we’re hoping that involvement continues. The problem is the matchup, since the Ravens are top 10 in rushing yards allowed to running backs. They’ve only given up one touchdown combined to backs, so we need to keep an eye on Gibson and understand that his week is coming.

WR – As much as I love Terry McLaurin, this spot is tough as well. He owns a 25% target share and 33.9% of the air yards, but the Ravens corners aren’t a fun matchup. Having a total of 25 targets is solid and he has the talent to burn Marcus Peters or Jimmy Smith on a double move but the salary is unappealing on DK. There’s a plethora of cheaper receivers that have my eye and I would only have McLaurin in MME formats. Dontrelle Inman dodged a serious wrist injury, but barely five targets a game doesn’t do a lot against a tough defense.

TE – Logan Thomas doesn’t have the production that we love, but he’s got a lot of other metrics that lead to being a great fantasy tight end. He’s on the field 83% of the time and runs a route on over 90% of drop backs for Haskins. Earning a 24.6% target rate is fantastic too, but he’s only scored a 12/124/1 line through three games. With the lead in red zone targets and tied for end zone targets, he’s still a prime value at the position. Baltimore has allowed the fourth-most DK points to the position. That rank got helped by tackle Eric Fisher and fullback Anthony Sherman catching a touchdown instead of Travis Kelce Monday. Yes, I did bet Kelce to score. Why do you ask?

D/ST – I’m…sort of interested? I mean, Washington does have the second-most sacks on the year but it’s tough to get home on Jackson. Their price really helps and they’re worth some chances in GPP, but not much else. I’d feel less inclined to play them if Young is out.

*Update* Young is out so I’ll pass

Cash – Thomas

GPP – Gibson, D/ST

Chargers at Buccaneers, O/U of 43 (Buccaneers -7)

Chargers

QB – It’s been a pretty admirable start for Justin Herbert’s career rough two games. He’s flirting with a 70% complexion rate and is 10th in on target rate, a plus for a rookie. The 7.1 intended air yards per attempt isn’t anything special but when you have a back like Austin Ekeler, you let him do the work. Herbert has even hit the 300 yard bonus in both games and is 24th in yards despite one fewer game than every quarterback in front of him.

Herbert has been pressured over 23% of the time and the front seven for the Bucs does pose a threat. They’re blitzing over 43% and have 12 sacks already as well. That’s helped their rank against the position with the fourth-fewest yards allowed and more interceptions than touchdowns. I would stay away from Herbert in this one, traveling to a tough spot.

RB – One change that’s been notable with Herbert under center is the targets for Ekeler. He’s recorded 15 total targets and 11 came just last week when the Chargers were in catch-up mode through a good bit of the game. Ekeler now trails only Kamara for receptions among running backs. Additionally, Ekeler is still 12th in the league in carries so this is the volume that everyone had been hoping for in the offseason.

The receiving work might be super important in this game. Tampa’s weakness against the backs is the receiving game. They’ve surrendered 24 receptions, tied for the third-most in the league. Only three teams have allowed more yardage as well. Tampa has been nasty on the ground with the third-fewest yards given up. Ekeler is too expensive to play just for receiving work, and this is not a Joshua Kelley game to me. Just think that Kamara is $900 more in the far superior spot. I don’t think LA wins and it’s a terrible matchup for him, with just five targets in the passing game.

*Update* With the weather looking awful, I’m a little more willing to play Ekeler. If the passing game is struggling, he could see double-digit targets.

WR – After a disappointing Week 1, Keenan Allen has been a monster the past two weeks. He’s racked up a ridiculous 29 targets for 20 receptions, over 200 yards and a score. Herbert loves him and with the rookie throwing to him, Allen has a 36.7% target share and 46.5% of the air yards. That’s a massive share and there’s no real reason to think it’s stopping. His price is just a hair under where it should be to my eyes.

The flip side of that coin is Mike Williams has been invisible. In two weeks, he has all of five targets for a 6.3% share. For perspective, Jalen Guyton has the same amount of targets and basically the same air yards. With Herbert, it’s been a three man band for the passing game and Williams doesn’t have a backstage pass.

*Update* Willams is out and I wish the weather was better because Allen could GOAT. We’ll see what Sunday brings us.

TE – The third member of that band is Hunter Henry. He’s got 15 targets as well with Herbert and a perfectly fine 8.3 aDOT. The one aspect missing so far is is the red zone work, as he’s had zero targets in that portion of the field. I don’t think he’s the most spectacular option at his price, since the upside is potentially limited. For instance, Hockenson is my preferred play at only $200 more. Tampa has only allowed 12 receptions for 139 yards to the position. They’ve face Noah Fant and Jared Cook in two of three games, so that mark does carry a little bit of weight.

D/ST – Tom Brady is the least pressured QB in football and the Chargers pass rush has only generated six sacks with just two turnovers. They also just lost corner Chris Harris so they are down yet another member of their starting secondary. The price is just right in the middle but I’ll likely pass.

Cash – Allen

GPP – Ekeler, Henry, Herbert

Buccaneers

QB – The price continues to be really appealing for Tom Brady. He’s looking more comfortable in the system with each passing week and scored 23.9 DK this past week in a game that wasn’t all that competitive. Tampa has come down to 13th in passing attempts which is a change from last year. However, they are a lot better than last year and don’t need to throw quite as much.

Brady is only 14th in on target rate so far, which is something that I bet will continue to climb the next 13 weeks. He’s also 12th in intended air yards so a huge game does feel like it’s within the realm. The main issues are going to be A. can the Chargers hang in to force a ceiling game and B. how does the absence of Chris Godwin hurt the ceiling? Brady is fine in all formats, but isn’t a major target right now for me.

RB – Sigh….this backfield has been tilting so far. Every week it’s been someone different, with Ronald Jones taking the lead on snaps again in Week 3. He out-snapped Leonard Fournette 35-25 on Sunday and held a 15-9 touch advantage. On the season, Jones is now enjoying a 13 carry lead to go along with an 8-5 ratio of carries in the red zone. Even noting the work in Week 3, neither back was able to score double-digit DK points. With these two splitting carries week-to-week and LeSean McCoy hoarding the targets, no back seems like an optimal play.

*Update* Fournette is out and while I can’t trust RoJo in cash, he should have a ton of work to himself and is way too cheap for his potential role. I do worry we get a McCoy game because that would be just our luck.

WR – Now we get to the fun part because Mike Evans is pretty cheap without Godwin in the lineup. Charger corner Casey Hayward waits on the other side and he’s been sharp so far this year. He’s been targeted 23 times but is giving up under a point per target. The volume might just be too much to ignore at this price. Godwin has been in and out of the lineup so far but has a 12.4% target share and 12.7% of the air yards. It’s been a spread out offense so far with no receiver earning over 17.1% of the targets so far (Evans does lead).

It’s been an adjustment for Evans with his aDOT going from 15.1 in 2019 to 8.6 this year. I can’t say it’s a huge surprise but the upside isn’t exactly the same unless he scores. Evans has a better chance of doing that this week, with three red zone targets for Godwin out of the lineup. I feel perfectly fine with Evans in any format and Scotty Miller is a fine salary play if he’s healthy. As it is, he owns the highest share of air yards in this offense at 26.5%.

TE – The question this week is what you’re buying for the tight end usage. After the week was spent discussing the role for Rob Gronkowski and how he was just here to play tight end, his snaps went up over 90% and he drew seven of his 11 targets on the season. O.J. Howard dropped to a season-low 49% of the snaps but he’s normally only around the 55% mark. With Godwin out, I can see a lot of two tight end sets in this game. Howard still has the red zone lead on Gronkowski and that could have been the squeaky wheel getting the grease style game. Also, Howard is cheaper and might be a touch easier to fit.

D/ST – I really like the play for the defense at their salary. They’ve been a wrecking crew, racking up 12 sacks and getting pressure over 24% of the time. Their blitz rate is second highest in the NFL behind Pittsburgh and I really believe they force a couple mistakes from a rookie QB.

Cash – Evans, D/ST, Howard

GPP – Brady, Miller, Gronkowski

Seahawks at Dolphins, O/U of 53.5 (Seahawks -6.5)

Seahawks

QB – It’s Russell Wilson’s world and we’re just hanging out in it. He technically could have 15 touchdown passes if D.K. Metcalf wasn’t a goof, but the 14 he does have is the NFL record for the first three games of a season. I would argue that he should be the most expensive option at the position and when he’s not, he’s a bargain right now. Only Rivers has a higher completion rate than Wilson but those players are plying different sports right now. Wilson is eighth in intended air yards and leads the league in on target rate. This isn’t even counting the 30 yards he’s averaging on the ground. Lastly, Miami has already given up the fourth-most DK points per game to the position even though they’ve only surrendered four touchdown passes. Giddy. Up.

RB – DK did a solid job in pricing because if Chris Carson misses this game, Carlos Hyde is not just a plug and play option. He’s over $5,000 and that has to make you think a little bit. Hyde only has 16 carries on the season and 25.9% of the snaps. Carson is third in targets on the team, which does help a little bit. Seattle is only 22nd in rush attempts per game and we should expect Travis Homer to be involved as well. I’d just as soon fade Hyde even if Carson is out and find the $400 for Mike Davis.

*Update* Carson looks like he’ll be active but I’d be concerned about re-injury or the Seahawks being careful with him.

WR – One of the more awesome parts about Russ Cooking is we know exactly who to play with him, making him easy to stack (not including salary). Both Metcalf and Tyler Lockett have combined for about a 52% target share and a massive 77% of the air yards. Lockett does own the lead in targets at 29 but Metcalf has a sizable lead in air yards at 47%. That’s translated to a 17.2 aDOT for Metcalf so far, fifth among receivers who have at least 10 targets.

What’s a little weird is Metcalf does not have a red zone target and all of his touchdowns have come from outside the 20. Both players come with immense upside every slate, this one included. The Miami secondary is not good and injured right now. Lockett is the cash play, Metcalf is the GPP play since he should face Xavien Howard (1.70 point per target) but I’ll have them both in at least a couple lineups.

TE – Dallas was able to get a pass rush on Wilson and that led to Greg Olsen being a little bit more involved in Week 3. Miami has shown the ability to get pressure at a 25% rate so it’s possible he could replicate his six targets from last week. I don’t love the 77 air yards on 11 targets since he’s not a primary red zone target with just two. There’s better paths to take even with a very affordable salary.

D/ST – Seattle might well be without Jamal Adams, in addition to multiple other members of their secondary. Not only is the price tough to swallow but they are banged up in a major way. I will happily play the Bucs at the same price.

Cash – Russ, Lockett

GPP – GoatCalf, Olsen, Hyde

Dolphins

QB – Dollar for dollar, I believe that Ryan Fitzpatrick is one of the best plays on the board this week. Seattle has given up the most passing yards in the league at 1,319. The next closest team? Atlanta…at 1,088. Only the Falcons have allowed more DK points per game because they are tied for the league lead in touchdowns allowed. Fitzpatrick is fifth in on target rate this season, 82.3%. The raw yards don’t look great due to matchups against the Patriots in Week 1 and not throwing a ton against Jacksonville. That’s not going to be the case this week.

Seattle is the second-highest scoring team in the league. Their defense has faced the most passing attempts because they score so much in addition to it being a weakness. The Beard is sixth in completion rate and has a 7.3 intended air yards per attempt, 20th in the league. He is ridiculously cheap and should be throwing 40+ times in this game. He’s likely to be my cash game QB to allow me whatever else I want.

RB – I think he’s only in consideration if Adams misses, but suddenly Myles Gaskin is the man in the Dolphins backfield. He’s just outside the top 20 in carries and averaging over 12 per game. His 16 targets means even if this game plays fast and the Dolphins have to air it out, he should stay involved. Jordan Howard doesn’t even have a target and Matt Breida has two. Gaskin is over a 67% snap share and has relegated the other two to irrelevancy. For all their issues against the run, Seattle has been tough on running backs on the ground. Only the Steelers have allowed fewer rushing yards so they are the definition of a pass funnel. Adams plays a big role in that defense so if he’s out, Gaskin could be really sneaky if his receiving role gets overlooked.

WR – Unsurprisingly, Seattle is the worst team to the receiver position. They are averaging 79.2 DK points against them every game. Dallas is the next closest team at 52.7. Not only are the Seahawks the worst, they are the worst be a country mile. No other team is over 750 yards allowed to receivers, except Seattle at 1,136. If we like FitzMagic, we have to like some of his receiving options as well.

DeVante Parker and Preston Williams have really been neck and neck so far. They have 17 and 14 targets, they have 24% and 22% of the air yards but Parker holds the edge in receptions at 14 to just five for Williams. This is really the perfect game to change that and Williams is so cheap that I’ll have exposure all over the board. Parker comes at a steeper price but there’s no reason to not play him either. Seattle corner Tre Flowers has gotten smacked for a 2.10 points per target and a 13.4 yards per reception. We’ll see how the injuries shake out, but the Seahawks secondary could be without 3-4 starters from Week 1 already. This is a such a smash spot on paper, even Isaiah Ford is on the map. He’s garnered a 15.8% target share and has double-digit receptions already.

TE – If I seemed a little lackluster on the receivers, it’s because of Mike Gesicki. Don’t be fooled by the red “6th” on the DK matchup. Seattle has faced Hayden Hurst, New England tight end and Dalton Schultz so far. Gesicki has spent 69% of his snaps in the slot so far, leads the team in targets, air yard share a 30.8%, red zone targets and end zone targets. He’s been the best player in the passing game and even though he’s over $5,000, the salary saved with Fitzpatrick makes this a prime stack for the week.

D/ST – Even though Russ is getting pressured at a top five rate in football, Miami is likely to give up at least 30 points. They’d need multiple turnovers and sacks to pay off even the lowest price and I won’t go that route.

Cash – Fitzpatrick, Gesicki, Parker

GPP – Williams (close to cash), Ford, Gaskin

Jaguars at Bengals, O/U of 49 (Bengals -3)

Jaguars

QB – The last time we saw Gardner Minshew, he was leaving a bad taste in everyone’s mouth with an 11.2 DK point game against Miami. Don’t discount D.J. Chark missing that game. The Jags can’t afford to be without their number one receiver and just not miss a beat. Minshew is still completing 73.8% of his passes on an 82.9% accuracy rate, fifth in the league. Minshew is right about average for intended air yards at 15th and he’s 19th for intended air yards per completion.

Getting Chark back will help, but the Bengals have actually been fairly solid to opponent passing games. Not only are they top-six in DK points given up, their defense overall is a top 10 DVOA unit. There’s better options in my eyes, though Minshew is capable of a three touchdown game every week in potential garbage time.

RB – Many of us (including myself) didn’t really know who James Robinson was before the Jags released Leonard Fournette. We all know now, as Jacksonville was being totally honest when they said Robinson was part of the reason Fournette was released. He has 64.2% of the team’s rushing attempts at 43 (tied for 12th in the league) and has earned a 10.5% target share. Robinson has five red zone carries and the team only has six total, so he’s the man where it matters most.

One of the reasons I’m liking Fitzpatrick so much outside of his actual matchup is because his salary allows you to fit so much. Robinson is an excellent play since the biggest weakness for the Bengals defense is against running backs. Only the Texans have given up more rushing yards to the position and the four touchdowns are tied for the third-most. Robinson is likely a Core Play this week.

WR – I mentioned the Bengals being a top 10 DVOA defense and it has shown up against the receivers. They’ve allowed the fifth-fewest DK points to the position and just two scores for 402 yards. Bengals corner William Jackson has allowed a touchdown and 2.00 points per target, which doesn’t jive with the overall rank. Darius Phillips has been better with just six receptions allowed on 10 targets for 91 yards.

There’s a good chance that Chark is back but the targets have been really spread out so far. Granted, Chark missed a week but he only has seven targets in the two games he did play. The ball is being spread to Keelan Cole, Laviska Shnault and even Chris Conley. Chark is the alpha but it’s not the best spot and the targets haven’t been massive. I don’t think any player from this corps is must play this week.

TE – Tyler Eifert doesn’t have a huge target share with just 10 through three games, but he does have the red zone to equalize things. He leads with four red zone targets and three end zone targets. It’s fairly easy to see he’s touchdown or bust. He’s scored once for 12.6 DK and his other two games have been under 4.0 DK. He’s the same price as Logan Thomas and Jimmy Graham is $300 more. Both those players have much higher upside than Eifert.

D/ST – I’m a little tempted by Jacksonville. The production isn’t quite there with just three sacks, but the pressure rate is in the top half of the league at 24.2%. The Bengals have given up the most sacks in football already so I can see Jacksonville adding to that mark. I just wish they weren’t $3,000.

Cash – Robinson

GPP – Minshew, D/ST

Bengals

QB – If DK keeps pricing him at the lower end of $6,000, I’m going to keep playing Joe Burrow. He plays in the fifth-fastest offense in football, he’s ninth in passing yards on the second-most attempts and he’s sporting a 5:1 TD:INT ratio through three games. Honestly, what’s not to like with this kid? Provided he can stay upright, he looks like the absolute real deal and has two games above 23 DK already.

He does rank 28th for on target rate, but some of that can still be charged to his missed connections with A.J. Green. There’s going to be bumps in the road for a rookie but with the volume you get, it’s easy to live with some missed throws. Burrow ranks third in attempts inside the 20 and fourth in attempts inside the 10, great for touchdown upside. The Jags have already allowed 762 passing yards and seven passing touchdowns. Burrow is in another great spot.

RB – Joe Mixon is a big question mark on this slate. He’s playing in the same fast offense and he has the sixth-most carries in the league with seven receptions thrown in. Yet, the production has been putrid at under 10 DK points per game. His offensive line is not good at all and he’s only grinding out 3.2 yards per carry. He is so cheap though it’s tough to not like him to some extent. Running backs don’t get this type of volume and just produce bad game after bad game, especially one as talented as Mixon. I have to give Jacksonville a little credit. They’ve faced the sixth-most attempts on the ground but only sit at 257 yards given up. They have surrendered the fifth-most receptions, so Mixon checks in as a great GPP play that hasn’t got it going yet.

WR – By the numbers, Tyler Boyd is priced accurately and is the play from the receiving corps. He has almost caught up to Green for the target lead and he easily leads the team in receptions at 21. Boyd also has racked up 230 yards, with Green being he next closest at 116. The aDOT of 8.3 is more than fine as well. What gets interesting is the potential emergence of Tee Higgins, who popped off for two scores last week.

His workload has increased every week to the point where he played the most snaps of any receiver last week. He also now co-leads in red zone targets and is second on the team for end zone targets. He’s already second on the team in air yards, despite being targeted just 15 times. If he’s on the way up, Higgins is far too cheap. He’s moving all over the field, playing just 20% in the slot. Both Tre Herndon and C.J. Henderson for the Jaguars are at 1.20 points per target or higher. I rank the receivers Boyd, Higgins and Green for this week with salaries included.

TE – Drew Sample broke my heart last week with one reception for one yard. I was ready to just assume he blocked all day and had no opportunity but that actually wasn’t the case. He played over 60 snaps, ran 34 routes and was out in the slot or further 15 times. He just didn’t get the ball whatsoever. It makes sense to put together Higgins coming on as a prime reason for Sample heading down in involvement, so I don’t see myself going back to the well this week.

D/ST – I can’t do it, even with the flaws Jacksonville has. Cincinnati has a pressure rate under 15% with just an 11% hurry rate on the quarterback. Minshew has been pressured just an average amount at 22.8% so this play doesn’t make a ton of sense.

Cash – Burrow, Boyd

GPP – Higgins, Mixon, Green

Browns at Cowboys, O/U of 56 (Cowboys -4.5)

Browns

QB – Could we actually get a game where Baker Mayfield throws the ball a little bit? After Week 1 where they got beat down, Mayfield has thrown 23 passing attempts in both of the next two games. This game could force him to let it loose a little bit and it’s a great spot to do it. Cleveland doesn’t play fast with just the 25th offense in pace, but Dallas is first and can hang points. They rank eighth coming into this one.

Mayfield is only 14th in play action passing attempts and 14th in yards at 167. That’s surprising with how good their running game has been but that’s the way it’s gone with this offense. Mayfield is only 28th in passing yards but that comes with the 27th rank in attempts. The Cowboys are the third-worst team to the position and tied for the most touchdown passes given up. You have to pick a game script here. If you think Cleveland has to run and gun a bit to keep up, Mayfield is a value. If you think they ground and pound the Cowboys, it’s best to skip him again.

RB – When you sit seventh in attempts and fourth in rushing yards on the season, you have to be in play just about every week. Nick Chubb is $7,000 flat and there’s really no reason he shouldn’t be. He’s not without his flaws, as Kareem Hunt has more red zone carries by one and targets by an 11-3 margin. Chubb has made the most of his red zone chances with four rushing scores already and he’s ripping off nearly a 6.0 yards per carry.

Dallas has already allowed the 10th most rushing yards to backs on the season and Chubb is in a prime spot. If they can, Cleveland is likely to run the ball a ton in this game. Just like Mayfield, picking a game script is key. If they have to pass, Hunt is likely the better choice. Chubb won’t be totally uninvolved and if the Browns can control the game, he’s got 100+ yards and at leas a touchdown in his sights.

WR – If Odell Beckham can’t get it done here…. The Cowboys are down two linebackers (another checkmark for Chubb) and multiple corners. On a normal season that didn’t involve a nearly historically bad Seahawks defense, Dallas would be the worst team against receivers. OBJ likely squares off against Trevon Diggs, who has given up 235 yards on 23 targets so far. As a team, they’ve given up over 600 yards and seven scores (most in football). Beckham has over 43% of the team’s air yards and has a 28.2% target share. The aDOT is 14.2 and this is the game for him. I’m on the fence for cash games, but $5,800 is too cheap for the ceiling in this game.

I sort of like Jarvis Landry, but I don’t believe he has nearly the same ceiling and we might want to come up $700 for Beckham. Landry is under 70% of the snaps and has just 13 targets on the season with just 16.7% of the air yards. He does have the lead in receptions at 12 but has yet to see a red zone target. With the Cowboys down Chidobe Awuzie, the passing game has potential that he really hasn’t seen yet.

TE – I just can’t with Austin Hooper. I mean, he’s just been such an afterthought in this offense. His target share is under 13% and he has one red zone and end zone target. Hunt has more targets than he does. He’s not even that cheap so I’ll take my chances and full fade him without much of a thought.

D/ST – With Cleveland generating a 22.3% pressure rate and a 13.7% hurry rate, I sort of understand the argument. Prescott has only been brought down six times even though they have missed Tyron Smith and La’el Collins recently. I’ll likely skip the Browns here.

Cash – Chubb, Hunt

GPP – Beckham, Mayfield, Landry

Cowboys

QB – Dak Prescott is always going to be in play since he’s the league leader in passing yards and always has the ability to run the ball in for a score as well. What’s a bit surprising is Dak leads the league even though he’s 21st in on target rate (he does lead in attempts). Until Dallas stops being the fastest offense in the league, it’s hard to find reasons not to play Dak. Even at his salary, 3x is only about 22 DK and he’s been under that once, Week 1. His defense is not great and they are still 18th in rushing attempts, speaking to the pace they are playing at. Cleveland is in the bottom 10 against quarterbacks in DK points with eight passing scores allowed already. Dak is a fine play in all formats.

RB – I’ve mentioned the pace for Dallas multiple times because it might seem like I’m only about the passing game this week and that’s really not true. Ezekiel Elliott ranks third in carries across the league and is just under 20 a game. He trails only Kamara in targets for running backs and is tied for third in receptions. Even in a crowded offense, Zeke is second in targets. It comes as no surprise, but Zeke has 15 red zone carries which is far and away the lead on the team. Much like Dak, Zeke is a fine play and is under $8,000 for once.

WR – I’m sorry but I’m flat out not buying the Cedrick Wilson game meaning anything going forward. He played under 30% of the snaps and there’s no real reason to chase him since he had a combined seven snaps the first two weeks. The only way that changes is if CeeDee Lamb happens to miss this game. He was a little banged up in the Seattle game but it doesn’t appear Lamb will miss this week right now.

We have to assume that Amari Cooper will see Browns corner Denzel Ward through a significant chunk of this game. Ward has been targeted 18 times but only allowed seven receptions for a 1.00 point per target. On those seven receptions, he’s allowed under 50 yards so maybe it’s a Michael Gallup game again. Greedy Williams could make his debut after a shoulder injury has held him out the first three weeks. In 2019, he allowed a 1.40 point per target so he would be the slightly easier matchup. Gallup has 30% of the air yards in the Dallas offense and is 10th in the NFL. I’d rank them Gallup, Cooper, Lamb for this spot.

TE – Color me shocked that Dalton Schultz didn’t catch another nine passes in Week 3. Look, he’s going to be a part of this passing game but there are so many mouths to feed it’s hard to get excited. In fairness, Schultz has carved out a 14.4% target share but that’s with a 10 target game under his belt. Half of his 20 came in one game, and I’m always wary about that. Cleveland is poor to the position, with three scores already allowed. The only good tight end they’ve played has been Mark Andrews and the Bengals tight ends ripped them. Schultz is in play but not likely a target for me.

D/ST – Dallas is just missing too many pieces for me to take seriously, especially at the price.

Cash – Dak, Zeke, Lamb

GPP – Gallup, Cooper, Schultz

Vikings at Texans, O/U of 54.5 (Texans -4.5)

Vikings

QB – I can’t ever really find a reason to play Kirk Cousins. He sits 29th in attempts on the season, four attempts behind Justin Herbert. That’s the same Herbert that has played one fewer game than Cousins. He’s 26th in passing yards and is on the wrong side of a 5:6 D:INT ratio. I mean, this man is averaging 207 yards per game. I can’t possibly get behind playing him this week. The 21.4 DK points he scored last week seems like his absolute ceiling. That’s technically about a 4x score but the ceiling just doesn’t match other options.

RB – Someone explain what in the world this price is for Dalvin Cook. He’s the exact same price as last week despite a 29.9 DK point game from Cook. The Texans are the only team who has given up over 500 yards rushing to backs already this season with three touchdowns. My goal might well be to fit Kamara, Cook and a value back that we haven’t hit yet. It would be tough to not get after James Robinson in a great spot, but Cook is far too cheap here. This isn’t a game that should get away from the Vikings, leading to a full workload for Cook.

WR – One aspect we need to figure out is how real the Justin Jefferson game from last week was. Jefferson’s snaps were the career high mark, just under 80%. He’s kicked into the slot almost 49% of the time so far which lines up with how Adam Thielen and Stefon Diggs meshed last year. Jefferson does have a 24.2% of the air yards but it’s still under 200. The aDOT is 12.1 but I still worry about the volume here. Given the few opportunities in this offense, the floor is so low for both he and Thielen. Even last week, Thielen needed a touchdown to save his day from not being under six DK points. I would rather fade if Jefferson is going to be at all chalky and Thielen just doesn’t appeal to me that much.

TE – Just like the receivers, I have no interest in Kyle Rudolph. He has six targets on the season. Even at a low price you need a touchdown and he’s still likely to be under 10 DK points.

D/ST – If the Vikings had something resembling the full strength of their defense, I might be interested. They are down a star linebacker, a star lineman and multiple cornerbacks. Minnesota has all of three sacks on the season so even with the Texans giving up he highest pressure rate in the league and 13 sacks, I’m going to pass.

Cash – Cook

GPP – Thielen, Jefferson

Texans

QB – We don’t always want to base everything off three games, because if we did Deshaun Watson would be pretty overpriced. He’s not putting up a ton of stats with Nuk in Arizona, sitting with just four passing touchdowns and one rushing through three weeks. The on target rate hasn’t been anything special either, just 75.8% for 23rd in the league. He is 10th for intended air yards, which leads us to think hopefully better days will be ahead.

The gameplans haven’t helped him a whole lot yet. He’s 22nd in attempts with only 95 total. Houston is 27th in passing attempts so far, which makes perfect sense when you sign a quarterback to a monster extension. I mean, you already traded his best receiver away so I guess this is par for the course. Houston is a least league average in pace but Watson has all of nine attempts in the red zone. That’s also 27th. About the only positive for Watson is Minnesota has given up the third-most passing yards in the league. He’s faced a gauntlet so far, if it doesn’t happen this week we need to sound some alarms.

RB – The question with David Johnson is just of he’s going to be efficient enough to roster this week. The volume has been here as much as it can be for a 0-3 team with 35 carries. Heck, last week he averaged 1.8 yards per carry and sill got 13 attempts. Duke Johnson might be back this week which could cut into the work just a bit, but not enough for me to be worried about. Da. Johnson is priced under $6,000 but he’s really just a guy so far. He’s a great GPP play with the other backs in great spots in this range, but I can’t see myself playing him. Minnesota has been ripped on the ground as well with over 400 yards allowed, but I’m not sure I’m clicking Johnson this week.

WR – One route that I’m interested in for GPP is to stack the receivers. We talked earlier the Vikings are likely to miss some of their corners from Week 1, and that was easily a weak spot even before injuries. Both Mike Hughes and Cameron Dantzler sat at 2.80 points per target before injuries. Holton Hill is better but is at 2.00 flat.

This is a great spot for Will Fuller, rebounding in Week 3 after a goose egg in Week 2. He actually trails Brandin Cooks in targets at an 18-15 rate and air yards by 30 yards, but I do prefer Fuller. He recorded no stats in Week 2 so it’s like he missed a game. He is still the number one receiver in this offense. Randall Cobb is third in targets, but I’d prefer to swing for upside with Fuller and Cooks. I don’t think mixing in a double stack here is the worst idea. We’d be shooting to be on the front edge of a Houston passing game explosion.

TE – I’d roll the dice with Jordan Akins ahead of Kyle Rudolph at the exact same price. He’s not a target hog in this offense, but that happens when it’s a low volume unit. Akins is the lead dog at the position with a 78.2% snap rate to 44.2% for Darren Fells. The Vikings have allowed the seventh-most yards to tight ends but no touchdowns yet. That’s got to change at some point.

D/ST – Kirk Cousins isn’t that far behind Watson in pressure rate at 34.4% and the Texans do have seven sacks. They are under a 20% pressure rate on a 35% blitz rate, eighth-highest in the league. They’ve faced Patrick Mahomes, Lamar Jackson and Ben Roethlisberger to start the year. They’re better than the 1.7 DK points per game they average.

Cash – Fuller

GPP – Watson, Cooks, Akins, Johnson, D/ST

Giants at Rams, O/U of 48 (Rams -12.5)

Giants

QB – Wow, what an egg laid by the Giants last week. San Francisco was playing the second straight East Coast game (they did stay on the East Coast, but still). They were practically a JV team, down to their second-string players in many positions. Yet Daniel Jones and the Giants couldn’t even muster up a fight. Jones himself continues to just be hounded by turnovers, already accounting for six this year and he hasn’t scored a touchdown of any sort since Week 3.

The Rams haven’t exactly shut down quarterbacks so far with 819 passing yards allowed. It should be noted that they’ve faced Dak Prescott and Josh Allen already, not an easy time. I didn’t forget Carson Wentz, I deliberately left him off the list. Jones himself is buried at 27th in on target rate and 17th for intended air yards. The only thing that could save him is he’s fourth in red zone attempts, but has a 9-20 performance. I’ll find $300 for Fitzpatrick.

RB – I believe this is going to be changing, but he running back situation for the Giants was sort of a mess last week. Devonta Freeman was brought in as a free agent with some money on the deal, so he’s going to be the man to play. We just don’t know if it’s this week. He only played 15 snaps last week and had five attempts. That was only one behind Wayne Gallman for the lead in touches for the backs, and that’s a sad state of affairs right there. I’m not ready to dive into this dysfunctional of an offense where the floor is under five DK points.

WR – If I don’t like the quarterback, I’m not likely to want the receivers either. Jalen Ramsey of the Rams hasn’t been elite with a 1.60 points per target given up, but can you say you feel good about Darius Slayton? I certainly can’t. Slayton is the clear leader in air yards for New York with a 34.7% mark while no other player is over 14.4%. Slayton only has 12 receptions despite 22 targets for the team lead and has a tough spot.

Golden Tate has lived in the slot but the aDOT of 6.8 isn’t anything spectacular. To make that work, you need a ton of targets and Tate is averaging six per game. He should match up against Troy Hill, who has been targeted 25 times and allows a 1.90 point per target. If Tate scores, he should pay off his salary. Just remember that the Giants have scored 12.7 points a game, 31st in the league ahead of only the Jets.

TE – I’ll admit I’m lost with Evan Engram. He’s tied for sixth in targets among all tight ends. That’s the volume we always love. He’s 14th in receptions with no scores and has a grand total of 96 yards on those 20 targets. That’s abysmal. He’s the TE25 in PPR settings! That’s about rock bottom for a healthy Engram. It’s not all on Jones either as 14 of his 20 targets have been deemed catchable. He’s still inside the top 10 in pricing and he’s not someone I’m looking at strongly here.

D/ST – They just got mauled by Nick Mullens, Jerick McKinnon, Jeff Wilson and rookie Brandon Aiyuk. No thank you.

Cash – None

GPP – Tate, maybe Engram

Rams

QB – Jared Goff might only rank 20th for on target rate, but he’s completing about 70% of his passes and averaging close to 290 passing yards a game so far. Only Dak Prescott and Drew Brees have had more of their passing yards come from YAC from the receivers. However, that’s not a bad thing. Goff is the ball distributor and leads the league on play action attempts. Only Josh Allen has more yards in that play type, so everything is working for the Rams offense. They are seventh in the league in points and Goff is driving that bus. New York might be about middle of the road in passing yards allowed, but they also just got shredded by Nick Mullens. Goff’s price is a hair high just because I don’t believe he’s going to have to push the envelope in this one.

RB – The best way to get exposure to this offense is an underpriced Darrell Henderson. With Cam Akers not practicing with a rib injury, Henderson has seized the reins in this backfield. He’s had 36 touches combined the past two games and is at a 5.7 YPC. The second-year player seems to have a much better grasp of the system in 2020. After Week 1, Henderson has out-carried Malcolm Brown 32-18 and has the edge in red zone carries 8-3. Even targets are slanted to Henderson at 6-2. This is a great example of being able to deal with a two-headed monster in the backfield. Sure, Brown will get some touches. Henderson is the man we want in every facet and is underpriced to a severe degree in this role and this matchup.

*Update* Akers is out, full steam ahead on Henderson

WR – The Giants have four members of their secondary on IR and three more that are questionable. The duo of Cooper Kupp and Robert Woods should be able to have their way with just about anyone on that side of the field. Kupp plays the slot far more than Woods, so that likely leaves Woods on James Bradberry a bit more. Considering Bradberry has allowed 193 yards and two touchdowns on 24 targets, I wouldn’t shy away from Woods.

In fact, he’s actually cheaper on DK which is interesting. Kupp holds the slight advantage in targets at 21-19 but they both have two red zone targets. Both aDOTS are under 6.0 but Woods does have the slight rushing upside too. He has seven attempts to Kupp’s two. I slightly prefer Woods on DK just for price, but you can’t go wrong with either player here. The only concern is the same as Goff – do the Giants put up enough of a fight to force a ceiling game?

TE – I’m having a tough time getting behind Tyler Higbee as a play. Yes, he has monster upside. He showed it against the Eagles with three touchdowns. However, he’s totaled 15 DK points in his other two games combined and we don’t have to go too far to understand why. He’s not running a whole lot of routes with only a 56.7% rate. That ranks 26th among tight ends and isn’t a great sign for week-to-week playability. Combine that with just a 12.9% target share and Higbee is GPP only. The Giants have only allowed 123 yards to tight ends, but Jimmy Graham is the best one they’ve played so far. Higbee’s price is too high for me.

D/ST – The Rams are right with the Ravens as far as the best spend-up option. We know that Jones coughs up the ball routinely. The only small knock is the Rams aren’t getting a ton of pressure at 19.8%. They have seven sacks so I don’t think the pressure rate is super important here. We know that turnover upside is massive and the Rams could score a defensive TD.

Cash – Henderson, Woods, Kupp

GPP – Goff

Bills at Raiders, O/U of 52.5 (Bills -3)

Bills

QB – If it wasn’t for Russell Wilson, Josh Allen would be the front-runner for MVP right now. He has been beyond what anyone could have thought with over 1,000 passing yards and a 10:1 TD:INT ratio. Sure, he needs to hold onto the ball a little more as far as fumbles since he has three. That’s minor compliant with his play to this point. The rushing has actually come down a little bit after Week 1 with just 27 yards combined the last two weeks. It doesn’t matter with how he’s throwing the ball. Allen is fourth in on target rate and fifth in air yards. He’s earned that lofty salary.

RB – With Zack Moss looking like he’ll be back in the fold this week, we’re back to not really wanting to play either him or Devin Singletary. With the pricing difference, I’d rather just take Moss and hope he scores once or twice. Moss is only 10 carries behind Singletary for the team lead and only one carry behind for the red zone lead. Singletary does hold a sizable lead for the target share at 15-4 but that’s not enough to want to pay $5,900 for him. Singletary has only played 66% of the snaps to 45.3% for Moss and that’s skewed with the game missed. Moss would be my favorite, but I likely continue to avoid it since Allen has six red zone rushes himself.

WR – With the chance that John Brown could miss this game, that leaves us with a value choice and a top shelf choice. Stefon Diggs is under $7,000 and already leads the team with a 25% target share. He and Brown are in a virtual tie for air yards at about 29% and Diggs is being used in the red zone with a team-leading five targets. It’s hard to see those numbers going down with the absence of Brown.

You can turn to Cole Beasley, who is in the slot about 81% of the time. Beasley saw seven targets and turned it into 100 yards, so there is some safety there. He’s already at a 17.9% target share with Brown in. Beasley is likely the comfort blanket for Allen in this game. We also saw Gabriel Davis burst onto the scene last week and he’s barely above minimum. He only saw four targets but he played 74% of the snaps and has a week to get into the game plan. He’d likely see Trayvon Mullen on the other side, who has allowed a 1.60 point per target. He could be a great way to save some salary this week, though Beasley is the better cash play.

TE – The fact that Tyler Kroft caught two touchdowns last week is just randomness of football. There’s no real need to go after he or Dawson Knox. Kroft does have four red zone looks but he has five total targets. He is the stricter definition of “touchdown or bust” tight end. I suppose Knox could earn more of a role if Brown is out, but it would be very thin ice to stand on. He only has six targets though two games and one red zone look.

D/ST – Buffalo is a fine defense, but they haven’t been quite as good as last year. They’re giving up over 25 points a game but they do have six sacks. I don’t always love playing defenses against the Raiders because they’re safe with the ball. The Rams at $200 more vs Daniel “Turnover” Jones just makes so much more sense.

Cash – Allen, Diggs, Beasley (if no Brown)

GPP – Moss, Davis (if no Brown)

Radiers

QB – I really almost never click the button next to Derek Carr’s name. There’s just such limited upside as evidenced he’s been under 18 DK points in two games and has yet to exceed 22.6. He’s got the second best on target rate in the league but he’s 24th in intended air yards. He just doesn’t push the ball down the field and his receivers are banged up again. Buffalo has been surprisingly leaky against QB’s so far with the fourth-most passing yards given up. Still, they’ve only allowed five touchdown passes and I don’ think Carr score more than the normal 18-22 range.

RB – Buffalo has actually slipped to 24th in defensive DVOA but they have been good to the running backs so far. They have only allowed a total of 356 yards on the ground and through the air with three total scores. That’s been good for 11th against the position but I can’t argue that Josh Jacobs won’t get the touches. Even in a pretty horrible spot against the Patriots, he still had 19 touches. If he had found the end zone, his day would have been much more palatable. We honestly won’t get Jacobs under $7,000 all that often so he’s well in play for GPP with 78 total touches already through three games.

WR – Last week, we exploited the slot with Cooper Kupp as a way to avoid Tre White and it worked out very well. Hunter Renfrow isn’t nearly as good as Kupp, but he plays the slot almost 73% of the time so far this year with three red zone targets. Taron Johnson patrols that area for Buffalo and he’s allowed 18 receptions on 28 targets for 250 yards and a score. That’s translated to a 1.80 point per target and Renfrow shapes up to lead the Raiders receivers. Henry Ruggs and Bryan Edwards are both doubtful and Nelson Agholor is…..well, Nelson Agholor. Renfrow turned nine targets last week into a 6/84/1 line. He has similar upside this week and is a really cheap play for a Raiders team that is likely playing from behind.

TE – Nobody should be surprised that the Patriots shut down Darren Waller. They always make the effort to take away your best weapon. He gets a bit of an easier time based on points against this week, but be a little careful. Most of the production against the Bills came from Mike Gesicki going bonkers. However, linebackers Matt Milano and Tremaine Edmunds were out that game. Milano is not on the injury report and Edmunds is questionable. If they’re both in, I’d leave Waller more for GPP. If Edmunds is out, you can move Waller into cash games. He easily leads the team with 28 targets and four red zone looks.

D/ST – Allen might fumble the ball a bit, but there is zero upside here. Vegas has the fourth-worst pressure rate and just three sacks all year.

Cash – Renfrow

GPP – Jacobs, Waller

Patriots at Chiefs, O/U of 53 (Chiefs -7)

Patriots

QB – This could well be the late day hammer game with Cam Newton and his offense traveling to Kansas City. Cam was pretty quiet last week with just 12 DK points and under 164 passing yards. The running backs did all the work, but this game shouldn’t follow suit. I’d be surprised if the script didn’t follow more of the Seattle game, where there’s plenty of points and Newton has to throw a good bit. Newton really hasn’t had to push the ball very much yet, as he’s 28th for intended air yards. His accuracy leaves something to be desired as well sitting at 24, but he makes up for it being third in rushing yards among QB’s. With the price drop and the projected game script, Newton is in play in all formats.

RB – James White is back with the team and he has to be the favorite play out of the backfield. The monster Rex Burkhead game was partly just due to circumstance and White is the man when it comes to the passing game. It’s a little difficult to go over snaps. White only played one week and the Patriots were in control of the whole game. Now that they face a more formidable opponent, you would have to assume White and Burkhead do no worse than split the snaps. If that happens, White should take the target lead out of the backfield. To his credit, Burkhead does have 16 targets but I’m just not thinking that was the plan. I truly believe it’s buyer beware with him. KC has only faced 16 targets from the backs but have given up 174 yards, seventh-most.

WR – With Newton not needing to throw the ball a whole lot so far, the receiver production has been volatile. Julian Edelman has had one monster game and two very poor games, but this one should tilt to the good side. Edelman is playing mostly in the slot like usual and has 53% of his team’s air yards. That is the highest mark in the league and he’s the only player with over a 50% share. He will likely face some Tyrann Mathieu out of the slot, which is no easy task. I still think he gets his and am totally fine in any format.

On the outside, N’Keal Harry will square off with Rashad Fenton who has been targeted 14 times, but has only allowed eight receptions for 88 yards. Harry is the leading target in the red zone as well with six targets for a 35% share. The air yards aren’t impressive but 24% isn’t terrible with Edelman hogging everything. He is cheap enough to take a stab and the wild card is Damiere Byrd. The only time he’s shown up is the Seattle game, but he leads with an 89.8% snap share.

TE – Ryan Izzo has five targets on the year. That’s about all I can say there.

D/ST – I don’t play defenses against Patrick Mahomes, especially over $3,000.

Cash – Cam, Edelman

GPP – White, Harry, Byrd

Chiefs

QB – Mahomes and his weapons (I’m talking directly to Eric Fisher and Anthony Sherman) destroyed the vaunted Ravens defense on Monday night and there’s no real reason to let the Patriots scare you here. Mahomes isn’t even $7,500 this week and that’s just a mis-price. He shouldn’t be under $8,000 on any slate and New England has lost some important pieces in that defense. When they’ve faced a good offense, they got scorched. Mahomes is already fifth in passing yards and he’s thrown nine touchdowns with no picks, even adding a rushing score. Play him at will in this matchup.

RB – The volume has been incredible for Clyde Edwards-Helaire as he sits fourth in carries and tied for third in targets. He’s also fifth in red zone carries, so he’s getting everything we could have hoped as a rookie. His price has come down $1,000 since the last time we saw him on a main slate and if James Robinson winds up being very popular, Clyde is an incredible pivot right off him. Even in a very tough spot against Baltimore, he ground out 18.4 DK without a touchdown. The crowded offense is a concern for the scoring but he volume is among the fantasy elite and the price is too low.

WR – Now comes a fun matchup. Tyreek Hill should see the majority of Pats corner Stephon Gilmore, the reigning Defensive Player of the Year. Now, Gilmore doesn’t look great by the numbers this year. He’s allowed 14 receptions, 210 yards and a TD. The core game from Metcalf but under 90 yards came from him. Gilmore is averaging 2.10 points per target so far and he might have a tough time with the speed of Hill. He owns 33.4% of the air yards in this offense so he’s an absolutely elite GPP play this week.

Sammy Watkins really seems cheap as well here with a 74.6% snap share, including missing some time in the Chargers game. He’s third in targets and leads in red zone targets. Watkins does draw what looks to be a tougher assignment with J.C. Jackson. He’s allowed a 1.90 points per target but has only been targeted 14 times. With Kansas City, I’m not sweating the matchups all that much. MeCole Hardman and Demarcus Robinson are both around 50% of the snaps and can’t be trusted in anything but large-field GPP.

TE – There’s nothing wrong with playing Travis Kelce, but I’m not super likely to pay up unless it’s in a stack. He does lead the team with a 23% target share and is second in air yards at about 20%. The Patriots giving up the fifth-fewest DK points per game to tight ends does carry some weight. They’ve faced Gesicki and Waller, but the Chiefs offense is a far more varied attack than the other ones. Kelce is still a good play, but not needed in cash at all.

D/ST – If I’d play either defense, it’s the Chiefs. They do have the fourth-highest pressure rate and they blitz 38.9% of the time, which could confuse Cam a little here and there. It could also just flush him out of the pocket, so I’ll find other options.

Cash – Mahomes, CEH

GPP – Hill, Kelce, Watkins

Core Four (Cash Game Based)

Kamara, Henderson, Fitzpatrick, Renfrow

Renfrow is the salary saver in this lineup and I’m torn for my third running back spot. It’s down to Robinson or Cook, and then it depends on how to build the receiving corps after that. Renfrow opens things up in a great game script and stays away from White. One thing that sticks out this week is the amount of games that are over 50 for the over/under. It should be a fun week.

Game Stacks

Seahawks/Dolphins – Russ, DK, Lockett, Fitzpatrick, Parker, Gesicki, Williams

Saints/Lions – Kamara, Golladay, possibly Michael Thomas, Brees, Jones, Stafford

Patriots/Chiefs – Mahomes, Hill, CEH, Edelman, Kelce, White, Watkins, Cam

Vikings/Texans – Watson, Fuller, Cook, Thielen, Cooks, Jefferson, Cobb

Browns/Cowboys – Dak, Beckham, Gallup, Zeke, Chubb, Hunt, Lamb, Cooper, Baker

Jaguars/Bengals – Burrow, Boyd, Higgins, Robinson, Mixon, AJG, Minshew

Team Stacks

Bills – Allen, Diggs, Beasley or Brown – Runback with Renfrow

Cardinals – Kyler, Nuk, Drake – Runback with Davis or Moore

Ravens – Jackson, Andrews, Brown – Runback with Thomas

Buccaneers – Brady, Evans, Howard maybe RoJo or Miller – Runback with Allen

Let’s get after it this week my friends! 

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NFL Week 3 Fantasy Recap

Nick and Michael discuss the NFL Week 3 Fantasy recap! Where we were right, where we were wrong, and some season long plays that might be waiver claims. You can sign up for our Gold Membership at WinDailySports.com and start winning big like we did this week!

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