In honor of byepocolypse I’m going to go with a few more sit/starts at each position so dividing this up into sit/start calls for running back, wide receiver, tight end, and streaming defense. Oh, and I do an exhaustive Superflex QB Sit/Start every week.
Teams on Bye: Vikings, Cowboys, Bills, Steelers, Jaguars, Chargers
As usual I’m trying to hit on players with legit question marks. Especially this week. If you have a quality starter you are starting him.
Wide Receiver Starts
Henry Ruggs vs the Eagles
Ruggs’s chemistry with Carr is improving steadily, and with Gruden gone maybe Bisaccia will start to actually use Ruggs the right way. Ruggs was way more than a deep threat in college and all it will take for everyone to see that is more of the underneath routes they threw to him at Bama to get him going.
Calvin Ridley vs the Dolphins
As mentioned in my RB column I’m telling people to sit Cordarelle Patterson for better options this week, if possible. I think Ridley starts to eat up more of the underneath routes, and think he will have a high number of targets but stay under 10 ypc. I could see 12 for 85 and a score.
AJ Green vs the Texans
It was a Hopkins week last week, is this AJ Green’s week? TY Hilton was clearly secondary to Pittman against the Texans and caught 4-80 on just 50% of the snaps. I think it should be Green’s week, at least one TD and 70+ yards.
Mike Evans vs the Bears
I don’t know how to express this in exact terms, but know it’s coming from roughly 33 years of watching the Bears. Evans has what it takes to score against the Bears. Not necessarily dominate in yardage, in fact he hasn’t cracked 70 against the Bears their last 2 meetings. But he did have a score last year. I think he’s good for at least one touchdown, and with the way Brady’s playing should get at least two sideline catch and runs, amassing about 80 yards.
Wide Receiver Sits Week 7
TY Hiltonvs the 49ers
50% snap share and he hurt himself. Given that he’s already coming back from an injury just after getting IR, the Colts will continue to be cautious with his snaps. 3-34 is my call.
Tyler Lockett vs the Saints
Over/under on this one is just 43.5, and I think most of that has to be betting on the Saints to score. Seattle’s offense is far too conservative to function well without a basically perfect quarterback, which Wilson has been. Geno Smith is not, so the offense grinds to a halt. Both Seattle WRs are risky plays with 30-50 yard scoreless floors. Lockett depended so much for his points on the moon-ball, and only one QB in the NFL can throw that pass.
Chris Godwin vs the Bears
Godwin’s targets are erratic and he isn’t making the most of them when he gets them. He won’t rebound against the Bears who are strong in pass defense over the middle. Godwin feasts on slant routes to the inside. Low yardage and no score.
In honor of byepocolypse I’m going to go with a few more sit/starts at each position so dividing this up into sit/start calls for running back, wide receiver, tight end, and streaming defense. Oh, and I do an exhaustive Superflex QB Sit/Start every week.
Teams on Bye: Vikings, Cowboys, Bills, Steelers, Jaguars, Chargers
As usual I’m trying to hit on players with legit question marks. Especially this week. If you have a quality starter you are starting him.
Running Back Starts for Week 7
Miles Sanders vs the Raiders
After last week the Eagles desperately need to stabilize their passing and Sanders is already getting a steady increase in snaps, but the attempts haven’t come. Only 9 rushes last week which doesn’t get it done. But their offense is too erratic, and focusing on the run and feeding Sanders to settle things down makes sense.
Darrell Henderson and Sony Michel vs the Lions
Henderson is a gimme in what should be an offensive explosion, but I think Michel will get enough carries in the 4th quarter to turn in a useful appearance. Something like 12 for 55 and 2 for 25 and maybe a score.
D’Andre Swift vs the Rams
The negative game script will help him as he has struggled as a runner and flourished as a pass-catcher. The Rams are 4th in sacks per game and got four in their last one. Goff is bad against any pass rush, but has never faced his old team before. The panic dump-offs will be flying.
Darrell Williams vs the Titans
The Titans did a good job of shutting down the Bills rushing attack last week, but a lot of that was self-inflicted on the Bills part. I think the Tennessee run defense is still beatable and Williams has another big low-efficiency day.
Running Back Sits
Latavius Murray vs the Bengals
There is no safe port in the Baltimore running back storm. Murray is TD dependent and the Bengals defensive unit is underrated. I think all Baltimore backs see about 35 yards a piece. Jackson should have about 90.
Myles Gaskin vs the Falcons
Favorable matchup but his usage dipped with Tua back. Sample size is too small but it looks like Tua is favoring Waddle over Gaskin as a short yardage target, understandable given Tua and Waddle’s chemistry. Gaskin’s lone spike game came on double-digit targets.
Cordarelle Patterson vs the Dolphins
This one is just a feeling. I think after the bye they feature Patterson a little less and start getting the ball to Ridley and Gage more at the expense of Patterson. Pitt’s targets are going to stay at a floor of 9-10 and occasionally flirt with 15. Good time to sell-high.
Welcome to the Byepocalypse. Allen, Prescott, Herbert, Cousins, and Lawrence are unavailable. Also Big Ben but who cares. The Superflex QB Sit/Start Week 7 is here to help you navigate and win without blowing up your squad.
Thoughts on the QB Landscape
We are a third of the way through the regular season. Week 6 saw some notable changes in the QB landscape. QB2 hopefuls Taylor Heinicke and Daniels Jones fell extremely flat, and Tua came roaring back from his IR stint with a great game for owners that hung with him or scooped him off the WW. Sam Darnold continued his slide.
In his first full-game as a starter, Geno Smith looked mostly awful, but more importantly he exposed just how dependent Seattle’s game plan is on Wilson’s unbelievable efficiency and accuracy. Carrol stayed conservative, running Alex Collins into the dirt late in the game and avoiding throws downfield.
Looking forward into week 7 and beyond, there is a really good chance that we see a changing of the guard back to Ryan Fitzpatrick in Washington. Seattle has been talking with Cam, and based on Patriots camp and preseason, it’s hard to see how he wouldn’t provide at least a modest upgrade over Geno Smith after he got at least a week to learn the playbook. It’s worth asking if Russel Wilson will come back and play at all this year. Right now he’s slated to be out until about week 11 or 12, at which point it’s hard to see Seattle in realistic competition for a wild-card spot in the NFC. His well publicized desire to be traded in the offseason and his obvious disgust with Carroll’s uber-conservative play calling are factors to consider.
Obvious QB1 Starts for Superflex Week 7
Patrick Mahomes vs the Titans: This is one of those games where Mahomes and Henry could both set career highs. The Titans passing game came to life in the second half Monday night, meaning there will be no reason to let off the gas, especially with KC’s terrible defense. Top start of the week.
Lamar Jackson vs the Bengals: I expect this game to go down to the last seconds, and it’s probably the best matchup of the week. Expect Lamar’s passing numbers to go back up into the 300s and at least two scores passing and one rushing.
Tom Brady vs the Bears: I’m a big fan of the Bears defense, but I think mostly they will just piss Tom off. There’s no way their secondary can account for all the weapons Tom has, and OJ Howard did enough last week to keep linebackers and safeties busy.
Matt Stafford vs the Lions: McVay has shown two things that Stafford’s fantasy owners love: a willingness to keep running up the score against inferior opponents, and a willingness to pass within the 10-yard line. If living well is the best revenge, this should be one hell of a revenge game for Stafford.
Aaron Rodgers vs WFT: Rodgers has not been as explosive as some of us originally thought in what should be The Last Dance in Green Bay. Maybe he’s saving it for the revenge game next year. However few teams elicit great QB performances like the WFT, so expect something more like his performance against Cincy than his game against the Bears.
Joe Burrow vs the Ravens: Yeah, I’m putting Burrow above Murray this week. Despite a negative game script last week against the Lions and letting Brandon Allen throw the last TD, Burrow finished as QB8 with only 29 attempts. I don’t think he’ll have that luxury against the Ravens, and we should see something closer to 35-40 which should push him above 350 passing and a few scores.
Kyler Murray vs the Texans: Kyler’s best fantasy finish among QBs in standard PPR the last three weeks? 6th. His other finishes were 9th and 22nd. I don’t think the Texans present enough of a challenge to bring out his best game.
Derek Carr vs the Eagles: Carr bounced back sans-Gruden with a solid line and gets a much softer defense than he’s faced in his last 2 (Bears and Broncos). His connection with Ruggs is building which adds a totally new dimension to his offense, and I think 350 and 3 is within his range of outcomes, but the floor is probably more like 280-1-1.
QB1/QB2 Superflex Starts with Caution
These guys have shown enough promise that they don’t warrant benching. It’s a short list this week as there are more question marks at QB than I remember anytime in the league recently. We are seeing a changing of the guard at the position, with all five (six?) rookies showing promise but also throwing as many head-scratchers as wow plays.
Jameis Winston vs the Seahawks: Something changed in week 5 with the Saints. They started actually passing the ball. This was the main thing holding Winston back (apart from being wildly inaccurate and making extremely questionable decisions with the ball that just happened to keep working out). Let’s take a look at the result of those sky-high 30 pass attempts in week 5:
The most important stat is the W in the Saints column. There is a chance that they simply lean on the run against an extremely beatable Seahawks team. The Seahawks without Wilson are probably what the Titans would be without Derrick Henry — non-functional. BUT there is also a chance that they continue to try and expand Winston’s role. He’s not a great QB1 start, but given the state of QB he’s better than most.
Jalen Hurts vs the Raiders: I love this kid. Absolutely love his story, his heart, his leadership. But anyone who watched the Thursday night game saw a liability under center for much of the game. He still finished as QB5 in standard ppr, but fantasy doesn’t matter to coaches, GMs, or fans, who are already calling for Flacco. Now, the fans are stupid. Flacco is not the answer. Minshew? Maybe. But putting an aging statue back there is not going to help this team. But they are right that Hurts was not good.
You don’t need advanced passing stats for this one. One glance at this chart and you get how bad it was. 44 yards rushing and two TDs kept fantasy managers happy, but the sell-high window might have passed unless you can find a manager who is only looking at the fantasy points and not the big picture. And I don’t think he’s going to do much better this week, at least not through the air. The Raiders picked off Teddy three times, and are likely to dare Hurts to pass. He’s a shaky start at best and will need to get it done with his legs.
Teddy Bridgewater vs the Browns: Teddy is becoming the Rodney Dangerfield of the NFL. How many QB1 performances does he need before being considered a QB1. He threw three picks against the Raiders but also threw 3 scores and over 300. That’s a great fantasy day. The only reason he is this low is he is playing with a foot injury against Myles Garrett, the only Browns starter left standing. Could be a negative game script as well. Still, better than most of the folks below. 280-2 with no ints.
Shaky QB2 Starts
Tua Tagovailoa vs the Falcons: Jesus this kid can not catch a break in fantasy or real life. Tua had a great first game back from injury. His reward? Rumors that he’s going to be traded so Miami can overspend on a guy that may not even play this year or next, or perhaps ever again. Probably just a team-friendly beat writer stirring the pot but still. He completed 70% of his passes for 329 and 2 touchdowns. In what universe is that a bad enough performance to immediately trade him?
Tua I think will silence critics this week. Start with confidence as a high-end QB2 or low-end QB1 and enjoy the 300+ yards and 2 scores once again.
Matt Ryan vs the Dolphins: Let’s just get him in lineups this week. The deep ball is never coming back for Ryan, that part of his game is gone and if you want proof here it is. But he can get it done still with short and intermediate passes to Pitts and Patterson. The Dolphins are a team on the ropes and I don’t think they will put up much resistance. I think Ryan is a solid play this week. I’d predict 280-3-1 on with his longest completion being 18 yards.
Ryan Tannehill vs the Chiefs: Tannehill finally started to break out in the second half against the Bills, hitting multiple deep throws to Brown. He remains a shaky start for multiple reasons, mostly that he is only beginning to find success, has turned in multiple shaky performances, and his offense is basically run by King Henry. He saved his fantasy day with a TD rush, but the rushing upside has not been there this season, as he has only 8 carries in his last three games. Even against a terrible Chiefs defense he’s a shaky QB2 start. I would not start him over guys like Matt Ryan, Jameis Winston, or Tua.
Jimmy G vs the Colts: Jimmy G is not an exciting option, but during the Byepocalypse he makes for a great QB2 start. At least he has the motivation of trying to salvage his starting job and gets to play against a beatable Colts secondary (allowing 71% completion percentage). You could do a lot worse.
Mac Jones vs the Jets: I wrote in my waiver wire week 7 column that Jones is a very unexciting prospect this week, as last time he faced the Jets he went for under 200 yards. But Wilson and Jones have both matured somewhat as passers since then, well, Wilson has managed a decent game or two that wasn’t a total embarrassment, and we could see more offensive output. Jones makes for a very risky start as the deep balls are still too few and far between.
Jared Goff: With six teams on bye, Goff should be in your starting lineup in a Superflex or 2QB league simply because narrative. If he’s going to play above his ability this year, big IF, it should be this week. Worth a shot, but don’t start him over anyone with actual talent and a decent team. Narrative doesn’t mean everything. 220-2-1 is likely.
Daniel Jones vs the Panthers: The thing that made Daniel Jones intriguing earlier in the season was his rushing ability. After getting concussed two weeks ago he rushed 3 times for 4 yards last week. He also lost his only interesting weapon in Toney for at least a week. Golladay is still injured and hasn’t done much when healthy. Avoid this dumpster-fire matchup of QBs if you can.
Case Keenum vs the Broncos: Ok, hear me out. Number 1, the Broncos are just not all that good. Over the last three games they are dead last in the league in yards per completion at a whopping 16.1! I don’t care who you are playing that is terrible. They are 8th in the league in completion percentage allowed over the same span, so clearly they are beatable deep. Keenum gets Landry back for this game and Peoples-Jones is playing great ball as well.
Carson Wentz vs 49ers: I refuse to waste time or pixels on this guy. Start if 220-1 is better than your other flex options.
Justin Fields vs the Bucs: This is a positive game script for Fields. The Bears, down to their third string running back, will be forced to allow Fields to show his true potential and he will finally have his breakout game. Sound familiar? That’s because that was the narrative last week, when he faced the exact same situation. The results?
Fields kept throwing to absolutely no one, unless you count Packers defenders. He should have had another interception but it was called back for reasons I protest even as a Bears fan. Fields is just a lot less ready than most of us thought. He has the arm, but the game is too fast for him and he’s making really poor decisions. Not a good start, find a more steady veteran to get you through the bye.
Respect Yourself, You Can Do Better
Sam Darnold vs the Giants: It’s the perennial disappointment bowl! Sam Darnold vs Daniel Jones, who will suck worse? At this point it’s really hard to say, I’m just really glad I own zero shares of these guys. Either one could bust out of their funk and lay down a great game, but I don’t think it’s Darnold this week. He hasn’t had a QBR north of 60 in two weeks and his Darnold spiral will continue. See what I did there? I think you did. Sit with confidence.
Taylor Heinicke vs Green Bay: Heinicke, we hardly knew ye. Hello Ryan Fitzpatrick after this upcoming disaster.
Zach Wilson vs the Patriots: Bill Belichik hates you and wants you to fail. Therefore, you will.
Geno Smith vs New Orleans: It ain’t happening, especially against the Saints. Cam Newton signs next week. Maybe at halftime.
Davis Mills vs Arizona: Honestly I’d rather just make giraffe jokes. I think his neck is taller than Kyler Murray.
Waiver wire week 7 dives are usually into a very shallow pool, which means head injuries. The guys I am listing this week are for the truly desperate, in other words, owners of shares of the Cleveland offense, the Seahawks passing game, or any Steelers other than Najee Harris.
While the FAAB percentages will be high, that is merely assuming that you have already spent most of it so you’ll have to spend a higer percentage to have a shot at these guys if you want them.
Waiver Wire Quarterbacks Week 7
Teddy Bridgewater, 20% rostered, 75% FAAB
If you are hurting for a QB, I would definitely grab Teddy if available, though it’s hard to imagine he is this available in Superflex leagues without roster limits on QBs. If he’s not available I would consider trading for him because he is coming off yet another great performance (334-3-3). The three interceptions are not great but also not indicative: he had only one on the season prior to this last game against Vegas and is known for taking care of the ball. He gets a banged up Browns team next week.
Jimmy Garropolo, 7% rostered, 25% FAAB
Lance is still not practicing and unlike the Bears I think there is a real chance that the Niners turn back to Jimmy at least temporarily. Lance has played well in relief but also looks very much a rookie at times and despite his incredible talent, Jimmy G might give this team a better chance to win, albeit with a less explosive offense.
Mac Jones, 17% rostered, 10% FAAB
Mac is trending into JAG territory in fantasy. He’s yet to crest 300 yards and he’s had favorable run/pass splits most of the season. He gets the Jets next week which gave him one of his worst fantasy days in their prior matchup.
Drops: Daniel Jones, Justin Fields,
Waiver Wire Running Backs Week 7
D’Earnest Johnson, 3% rostered, 35% FAAB
Chubb was listed as a non-participant Monday and Hunt is likely headed to IR. This potentially opens up Johnson as a great spot start against the Broncos even though they are tough against the run. Johnson should be the early down banger and get GL looks if Chubb can’t go.
Demetric Felton, 9% rostered, 45% FAAB
Felton has more long-term value as he’s projected to be the pass-catching back which means he should be fantasy-relevant as long as Hunt is injured, which should be a minimum of three weeks.
Rashaad Penny, 8% rostered, 35% FAAB
Penny is slated to come off IR this week, and though he has been a perennial no-show in fantasy, the Seahawks desperately need him to complement the plodding yet effective Alex Collins. He should have flex value as long as Carson is on IR, and with a neck issue one can never know how long that will be.
Drops: Trey Sermon, Kenny Gainwell
Waiver Wire Wide Receivers Week 7
Donovan Peoples Jones, 2% rostered, 50% FAAB
DPJ has seen 6 and 5 targets the last two weeks and had an incredibly efficient game last week (4-101-2) after catching 5 for 70 last week. OBJ is simply not trying and Landry sounds like he is not coming back for next week.
Kendrick Bourne, 2% rostered, 10% FAAB
Bourne basically got lucky on a perfect throw from Matt Jones for a touchdown last week. The volume is not there, but that’s true for everyone on the WW this week at WR. Worth a dart throw at a flex spot in your lineup if you are decimated by injuries or own Tyler Lockett.
Nico Collins, 1% rostered, 25% FAAB
The reason I am a little higher on Collins than Bourne is that his targets were solid in his first game back (6, 7% target share) and second on the team after Cooks. The Texans say that Tyrod is the starter when healthy which I think is bad for real life but good for fantasy. Taylor is a much better QB than Mills right now and I’d imagine the Texans feel the need to just put a better product out on the field.
Drops: Watkins, Devante Parker
Waiver Wire Tight Ends Week 7
Zach Ertz, 61% rostered, 75% FAAB
Ertz on the Cardinals is like getting a top 7 TE for free. Spend all you can to grab him, he’s still got juice and the Cardinals didn’t trade for him not to throw to him.
OJ Howard, 1% rostered, 10% FAAB
A total what the hell dart throw, but Howard got 7 targets which he turned into 41 yards and a score last week. Howard has always been a bit of a mystery both in college and the pros as he looks like a dominant athlete, but has never turned it into consistent production. He’s worth adding as long as Gronk is out.
Drops: David Njoku, Jonnu Smith
Streaming DSTs for Week 7
New Orleans @ Seattle, 41% rostered, 5% FAAB
Juicy matchup against a team that is utterly lost. Whether the Hawks bring in Cam or not, New Orleans is going to feast.
Las Vegas vs Philly, 14% rostered, 5% FAAB
Philadelphia is in a tailspin and fantasy value is about to lose out to real-life value soon. Hurts, I think, has this one game to right the ship, maybe two, and the Raiders just picked off Teddy three times after he threw only one interception all season.
Hopefully you didn’t start Kenneth Gainwell, Mike Evans, or Chris Godwin last night but if you did, hopefully you can get some help correcting those decisions here.
The Falcons, Saints, Jets, and Niners are on bye this week making tight end just that much thinner. But it does remove four potential sabotage starts at QB. By the way, since this is a site dedicated to superflex leagues I do a QB deep dive every week. You can find that here.
Running Back Sit/Start Week 6
There isn’t a ton of value in telling you to start Derek Henry, Dalvin Cook or CMC if they play. I’ll try and focus on riskier plays most players would be straddling the fence on.
Start These Guys
Zack Moss vs the Titans: Still splitting time with Singletary but doing a lot more with his touches. The Titans Defense is terrible all around and I expect the Bills to have a field day. They will likely jump out to a big lead early.
Alex Collins vs the Steelers: Carson’s neck issue is not going away and he’s not practicing, so Collins should get about 16 carries and turn that into about 75 yards a score.
Kareem Hunt vs the Cardinals: The Cards rank 31st in allowed yards per carry and Chubb hasn’t practice all week. Great start this week and a really solid DFS play ($6200 on DK).
Joe Mixon vs the Lions: Mixon is back at practice Friday after a rest day on Thursday, fire him up for what should be a positive game script.
DeAndre Swift vs the Bengals: Swift will benefit from an increase in targets once the Lions fall behind. I think 15-65 rushing and 9-78-1 receiving is achievable.
Sit These Guys
Josh Jacobs vs the Broncos: Averaging career lows in yards per attempt, I expect Jacobs to flounder against Denver’s 5th-ranked rushing defense.
Tony Pollard vs the Patriots: Zeke has been limited all week, but he’s going to play and the Pats are better against the run than people think. Sit Pollard this week.
Chase Edmonds/James Conner vs the Browns: The Browns are third in the league in yards per attempt allowed and give up the 7th fewest points to opposing running backs. Avoid like the plague.
Myles Gaskin vs the Jaguars: Tua is likely to start and when Tua was starting Myles was doing practically nothing. All his value last week came from receptions, give it a week to see how things shake out with Tua under center.
Wide Receiver Sit/Start Week 6
Start These Guys
Stefon Diggs vs the Titans: Monday night game, terrible pass defense, and it’s just waiting to happen for Diggs. I wrongly predicted a breakout game last week, but this is the week.
Robert Woods vs the Giants: Woods finally broke out last week and turned into Stafford’s security blanket. I think that will continue, but it might not come at Kupp’s expense.
Kadarius Toney vs the Rams: The Rams defense has not looked good, and I think Toney will tear them apart on underneath routes. Daniel Jones is going to play, which has to improve his outlook a little from Mike Glennon, though he seems QB proof.
Chase Claypool vs the Seahawks: The Hawks are giving up the second-most points to wide receivers in the league. Ben’s arm may be shot but he has enough juice to get Claypool involved, especially now that Juju is on the shelf for the year.
Jarvis Landry vs the Cardinals*: If activated by 4 pm Saturday, Landry is in a great spot against the leaky Cardinals. I just don’t get the impression OBJ gives a crap anymore, so that leaves a vacuum.
Sit These Guys
Courtland Sutton vs the Raiders: I keep wanting the Raiders to be bad at things and they keep surprising me. Stupid data. The Raiders are third in the league in passing yards allowed and give up the 4th fewest points to wide receivers. Go figure.
Tee Higgins vs the Lions: The Bengals won’t need him in this one, 55 scoreless yards.
Micheal Pittman vs the Texans: In another surprise, the Texans are currently giving up the third fewest points to wide receivers. Wentz doesn’t have another 400-yard game in him all season and Pittman’s TD was a terrible throw that required him grabbing the throw over a defender’s helmet.
Adam Thielen vs the Panthers: Panthers are good against the pass, and will be chasing Cousins around the pocket all day. Thielen will only be good for about 60 scoreless yards.
Tight End Sit/Start Week 6
Start These Guys
Mark Andrews vs the Chargers: As good as the Chargers have been at shutting down opposing QBs, somehow they are allowing the most fantasy points to tight ends. Start Mandrews with confidence, just don’t expect the league-destroying numbers he put up last week.
Mo Allie Cox vs the Texans: Cox is still seeing fewer snaps than Doyle for some reason, but he caught 3-4 targets for 50 yards, and the Texans are giving up the second-most points to tight ends.
Noah Fant vs the Raiders: Finally, proof that the Raiders actually suck: they give up the fifth-most points to tight ends, and Fant is seeing a 97% snap share. Unfortunately he isn’t getting targets, but given that the Raiders are good at taking away wide receivers, he’s a good bet to see increased targets and receptions.
Dawson Knox vs the Titans: The Titans do very few things well on defense, or offense for that matter…let’s face it it’s basically Derrick Henry and nothing else. But they are allowing the 5th fewest points to tight ends this year. Problem with that nugget is they have played the Cardinals, Seahawks, Colts, Jets, and Jaguars.
Sit These Guys
TJ Hockenson vs the Bengals: The Bengals are giving up the 7th fewest points to tight ends, and Hockenson is injured and hasn’t had a good day since week 2. This won’t be the week to get back on track.
David Njoku vs the Cardinals: Don’t chase the points. The Cardinals are tough on tight ends, allowing the second-fewest points to the position, which isn’t totally meaningless since that includes Tyler Higbee, and, well, little else. Does Ross Dwelly count? Anyway, chasing that performance is the road to hell in fantasy. Lighting won’t strike twice.
Streaming DSTs for Week 6
Bengals vs Lions: Worked for Minnesota last week, could work again.
Bears vs Packers: I feel insane writing this, especially as a lifelong Bears fan who has watched game after game of the Packers just brutalizing the Bears, especially with Rodgers at the helm. But I have a weird feeling that things change this week. I don’t know why, but I think the Bears pull together a great performance, harass Rodgers, and double the shit out of Adams.