The Week 8 Waiver Wire is basically bone-dry, so this will be a short column. I am assuming guys like D’Ernest Johnson and Khalil Herbert were gobbled up weeks ago, but if not they are both priority adds.
Waiver Wire Quarterbacks Week 8
Mac Jones, 31% rostered, 80% FAAB
Jones had his best yardage total of the season going over 300 and adding two scores and no ints. Jones has looked like the best rookie quarterback all season and at this point I don’t see that changing, though Trevor is looking like he could challenge for the title by season’s end. Jones has the advantage in head coach and overall team, and I think could start to see more aggressive play calling in the rest of the season.
Deshaun Watson, 18% rostered, 80% FAAB
Apparently the NFL has taken the position that Watson will not be suspended if traded this season, an extremely nuanced position even for the NFL. This is ostensibly because Watson has not had criminal charges filed against him. Decent bet ahead of the trade deadline and one that could cash in huge if it comes to bear. I’d say there is a small chance he’s traded to the Eagles ahead of the deadline.
Tyrod Taylor, 4% rostered, 50% FAAB
Why the Texans are going back to Taylor in what is already a lost season is a mystery to me, but he will instantly improve the offense and all the skill players. Definitely worth an add if you are desperate but don’t expect much production – Taylor takes care of the ball and doesn’t take big risks.
Gardner Minshew, 0% rostered, 25% FAAB
If you own Jalen Hurts or if you are content with letting this guy sit on your bench for a while, could be a key add right now before word gets out that the Eagles are turning the page on Hurts. Seems like it’s coming soon.
Ryan Fitzpatrick, 0% rostered, 15% FAAB
Taylor Heinicke probably showed enough to get one more shot before the WFT goes on bye in week 9, but Fitz is not a bad stash just in case things don’t go well. Allen is said to be the next man up, but we all know Allen sucks, and the WFT would be better off with Heinicke and his turn overs because at least he has upside.
Drops: Zach Wilson, Davis Mills
Waiver Wire Running Backs Week 8
Samaje Perine, 7% rostered, 10% FAAB
Not exciting, but probably lined up for decent touches with Mixon in the lineup, and an instant starter if Mixon goes out.
Boston Scott, 2% rostered, 5% FAAB
Check Miles Sanders’s injury status before putting in a claim, but if Sanders is going to miss time, Scott would fill in with Gainwell retaining his passing back role.
Drops: Booker, Dillon
Waiver Wire Wide Receivers Week 8
Russel Gage, 10% rostered, 30% FAAB
Ridley simply is not commanding a major target share and is only getting the short-to-intermediate throws. Gage could at least deliver comparable value as Ridley the rest of the way as Pitts takes over the passing game. Also Ryan looked really sharp coming out of the bye and was looking much better with his deep ball.
Van Jefferson, 9% rostered, 30% FAAB
Much like Gage, Jefferson at least has the chance of matching the production of Robert Woods the rest of the season. One of the better offenses in football and spreading the ball around, Jefferson should have flex appeal the rest of the way.
Kalif Raymond, 3% rostered, 30% FAAB
Raymond has the least name recognition but is probably the best candidate on this list. The Lions showed some signs of life against the Rams, and Raymond is their best wide receiver and is getting the targets.
Drops: OBJ, Callaway, Robbie Anderson
Waiver Wire Tight Ends Week 8
Evan Engram, 31% rostered, 20% FAAB
Engram is terrible but he is getting targets on a team that is decimated by injuries at receiver. Expect little and you should be ok with your returns. He might have 1-2 spike games in him this season.
Drop: Jonnu Smith
Streaming DSTs for Week 8
Bengals vs the Jets, 21% rostered, 5% FAAB
Likely dropped due to the matchup with Baltimore, Cincy was actually one of the high-scoring options last week. Against the Flacco-led Jets (which is likely an improvement) they should deliver again.
Falcons vs the Panthers, 7% rostered, 4% FAAB
The Falcons are a terrible defense, but at this point you should start any defense against the Panthers in their #DarnoldSpiral (I’m determined to make this a thing).
Cowboys vs the Vikings, 40% rostered, 4% FAAB
I like the Vikings as an offense, I just really like what Quinn has been able to do to the Cowboys defense and I’m a believer. They managed to hold Herbert in check week 2 who is the closest Cousins profile.
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.
This column is expressly designed for those of us playing in Superflex and 2QB leagues and is a deeper look at quarterback options, specifically for the second slot. It focuses primarily on sit/start decisions, sell-high-buy-low decisions, and analytics and patterns emerging at the QB position.
Obvious QB Starts Week 5
Josh Allen vs Chiefs: Bad defense, good QB, high scoring game.
Patrick Mahomes vs Bills: Bills have a good pass defense but nothing Mahomes can’t handle.
Lamar Jackson vs Colts: No reason to think too hard about this one. Lamar is on a tear right now and should be getting Bateman back this week.
Kyler Murray vs 49ers: With Lance under center this should be more of a game, but as we saw last week lack of competition is about the only thing that can limit Kyler’s fantasy potential.
Aaron Rodgers vs Bengals: This should be more of a fight with the Bengals unleashing the passing attack last week against and Mixon potentially gimpy.
Dak Prescottvs Giants: The Cowboys are running more and passing less, but Daniel Jones’s 400-yard outburst last week gives some hope that the Cowboys will need to pass to win this one.
Mathew Stafford vs Seahawks: Even on a down week with poor accuracy and terribe coaching, Stafford still delivered a decent day albeit in garbage time.
Russel Wilson vs Rams: The deteriorating play of Chris Carson likely means that the Seahwaks pass more.
Jalen Hurts vs Panthers: Jalen has now delivered QB1 numbers for two straight weeks and seems to rise to the level of his competition. I’m not worried about the Panthers defense shutting him down.
Tom Brady vs Dolphins: Brandy should rebound after a nasty night in driving rain against the Patriots. I don’t expect the Dolphins to put up much of a fight.
Justin Herbert vs Browns: I actually expect this to be another down game for Herbert as the Browns are just killing opposing QBs since they teed off on Fields in week 3.
Kirk Cousins vs Lions: A down game against the Browns shouldn’t stop you from rolling out Cousins against the Lions D.
Questionable QB Starts Week 5
Joe Burrow vs Packers
I almost put Burrow in the obvious section this week due to his stellar play and passing volume in week 4 against the Jaguars, but he did have a pretty rough first half. Regardless he had the highest rating of all QBs week 4 and had the third fewest yards on the 10th fewest attempts of all QBs playing 4 quarters.
Burrow is slowly becoming one of the best QBs in the league. He should get Tee Higgins back which should come at the expense of CJ Uzomah’s breakout role, but helps the passing game overall nonetheless. The Packers are not a tough defense and Rodgers and company will keep this game tight. Burrow is a great start this week.
Taylor Heinicke vs Saints
Daniel Jones showed that the Saints defense is beatable, but I don’t know if Heinicke possesses the tools that Jones used to do so. He delivered last week as expected against Atlanta, engineering a late game comeback to win 34-30 and a 290-3-0 line with 5-43 rushing. His chart shows good deep ball ability and he is keying on McLaurin who gives him the best shot at long completions.
I think Heinicke is a great start at QB2 and could outperform a few of the guys above in the QB1 index.
Trey Lance vs Cardinals
Jimmy G’s calf injury finally opened the door for Lance, and he responded with over 20 fantasy points in a half. There’s no question Lance is going to be good at some point, and there’s no questioning his physical ability, but I would pump the breaks just a bit before starting him over more established QBs. He did throw for 157 yards and a TD in just one half of action, but check out how he got 77 of those yards and the TD. Any quarterback in the league would have completed that pass. Hell I probably could have completed that pass. I think Lance is going to have just as much of his share of rookie bumps as the other rookie QBs, so start with some caution and realize it won’t necessarily be pretty.
Daniel Jones vs Cowboys
Will lightning strike twice? Daniel Jones was the top performing QB in the league week 4, racking up 402 yards passing and 2 TDs and 4 for 27 rushing against the Saints. Payton’s defense didn’t record a single sack against Jones, and the lack of pressure led to only a single interception from Jones, and no fumbles. 203 of his yards came after the catch, suggesting that the Saints did not rise to their usual level of defense in this game.
It’s hard to argue with this chart, as Jones was completing deep passes for touchdowns and hitting receivers regularly 15 yards behind the line of scrimmage, but I wouldn’t expect a repeat performance. The Cowboys are an underrated unit and have one of the best corners in the league in Travon Diggs. I expect he and Micah Parsons will disrupt Jones early and get him back to his normal output.
Matt Ryan vs Jets (UK)
Another guy I don’t expect to repeat his performance is Matt Ryan, who had his best game of the season in a losing effort against WFT (283-4). His completed air yards shot up to 7.8, much closer to his season average, but his deep ball is still lacking zip and he got lucky that Patterson was lost by the defense. As you can see from his chart, he’s still bunching most of his throws underneath.
The Jets are still one of the worst teams in the NFL, but they did hold Tannehill sans Julio and AJ to an 85 passer rating and a single passing TD. These UK games always seem to under deliver, so start with caution.
Zach Wilson vs Falcons (UK)
Ryan’s opponent had his coming out party against the pathetic Tennessee defense, throwing for 297-2-1 and notching a QBR that almost broke 100. The Falcons are bottom 10 in sack percentage so Wilson should be able to perform if he can shake off the rust that always comes with London games.
Wilson’s ability to make throws has never been in question, and he made some good ones in this game, directing his receivers and buying time in the pocket. But I would not bet on a repeat performance here. Expect a low-scoring, boring game, and under 250 yards passing with a pair of picks.
Sam Darnold vs Eagles
I actually expected Darnold to have a down week against the Cowboys, and in some respects he did. He had an 85 QBR but ended up getting it down with his legs again, rushing for two more scores and maintaining the NFL lead in rushing touchdowns by a QB. However his two passing touchdowns didn’t come until the fourth quarter, when the game was pretty much decided and the Cowboys let off the gas. Still, his owners have to be thrilled with the early returns even if they are unsustainable. 301-2-2 along with 6-35-2 will do that to you.
The Eagles are struggling and badly need a win. They are dead middle in both sack percentage and yards per completion. But I think the team rallies for a win here and you have to think a focus will be keeping Darnold out of the end zone. Still Darnold is a solid start in a start-two league.
Mac Jones vs Texans
What better way to rebound after a painful loss than to play the Texans? Mac played well in terrible conditions and did much better than Brady, completing 31 of 40 passes for 275 yards for 2 touchdowns and a pick. McDaniels has said their pass-run ratio is unsustainable, so expect fewer passes and more runs against a reeling Texans team. Moss and Singletary both had good days, so I think this will be similar to his game against the Jets in week 2: lots of running, very little passing, and an easy win. Sit Mac for better options this week.
Justin Fields vs Raiders
Fields had an incredible game against the Lions (irony noted) but had a terrible fantasy day. 11-17 for 209 and a pick is not going to win anyone a week as a QB2, but the potential is there. Lazor called a run-heavy game script that minimized the weakness of the offensive line and ended up buying Fields enough time in the pocket to connect with Mooney on several deep throws. Nagy announced today that Fields is the starter going forward, and I’d bet money he was told to start Fields or start working on his resumé. However it got done, it means good things for the offense now and in the future.
With more attempts and more time to hone his game, Fields will emerge as viable every-week starter at QB2 and could ascend to a low-end QB1 this year. Las Vegas is no slouch against the pass, in the top half of passing yards allowed but in the bottom half in sack percentage. Fields is still a risky starter but is worth a shot to see if Montgomery’s injury affords him more passing opportunities.
Ryan Tannehill vs Jaguars
As I noted last week, Tannehill is not well. It was happening before both Julio and AJ Brown went down with injuries, and it got worse against the Jets. Yes, he almost broke 300 yards, but he had an 85 QBR and only 3.8 completed air yards per completion. It’s obvious from his passing chart, 9 passes at or behind the line of scrimmage.
Furthermore everything beyond 20 yards deep was an incompletion. That can’t all be on the receivers. He also took 7 sacks. Something besides running Derek Henry 30+ times per game is going to have to start working for this offense. I wouldn’t start Tannehill unless both Julio and Brown are back, even against the Jags. Now is the time to trade Tannehill for a younger prospect with more potential like Lawrence, Fields, Jones, or Wilson. I doubt you can get Lance, that hype train is at full speed.
Trevor Lawrence vs Titans
BUY NOW. Buy before he goes against the team that just made Zach Wilson look like a competent quarterback. If you are holding an underperforming vet with good name recognition, like say Tannehill, make the offer today. Throw in a WR4 if you have to. Urban Meyer is quite obviously one to two losses away from eiher quitting or being fired. He obviously doesn’t care about coaching for the Jaguars. Losing Meyer will be addition by subtraction and allow Lawrence to flourish. Granted, he did not have a great fantasy day against the Bengals but that was easy to call. Despite the low numbers he was getting it done with his arms and his legs in the first half and if Meyer hadn’t flubbed the calls they probably would have won. Run, don’t walk to make an offer if you are in need of a solid QB2 or QB3 the rest of the way.
Bench Until Further Notice
Jared Goff: The Bears put on the breaks big time on defense last week and Goff gobbled up garbage time points. I don’t think that happens this week against a rising Minnesota defense.
Jacoby Brissett vs Bucs: Just not getting it done on any level.
Davis Mills: Not NFL ready, may never be.
Jameis Winston: It’s just not gonna happen this year for Jameis.
Drew Lock: If forced into action, won’t be starter material vs the Steelers.
Ben Roethlisberger: Nope.
Baker Mayfield vs Chargers: The Chargers are tough on opposing QBs this year, just ask Derek Carr. Mayfield is at best a game manager in the Browns offense and there are better options out there.
Since this is a Superflex/2QB site, I decided to stop doing rankings for the time being and focus instead on deep dives into QB decisions (that article is here) and a separate article for thoughts on non-QB skill players. Here are some of my less obvious plays and sits in my non-qb sit/start for week 4.
Running Back Starts
Zack Moss vs Houston
Moss’s involvement and fantasy points have increased from week 2 to week 3 since he was a scratch in week 1. Last weekend we saw him take the lead in carries (13-11) and ypc (4.6-2.4) over Singletary. He also saw 3 targets to Singletary’s 2 and turned them into 3 catches for 31 yards and a touchdown. He appears to be set to take over the dominant share of this backfield and should have little resistance from Houston (ranked 15th in ypc allowed).
DeAndre Swift vs Bears
We just witnessed both Browns running backs absolutely destroy the Bears, with Hunt (the RB2) doing by far the most damage. The Bears are absolutely lost as a franchise right now. Nagy seems like he is asking the press what the Bears should do rather than the other way around. It’s week 4 and he doesn’t know who to start at QB, and it’s not because of injuries. I think both Lions RBs are good starts, but Swift is the best start because his coach basically told us to start him.
Nyhiem Hines vs Dolphins
Taylor was a DNP on Thursday and the Dolphins are looking like an easy matchup. If Taylor sits expect Hines to see 12-15 carries along with about 10 targets.
Running Back Sits
David Montgomery vs Lions
The Lions are not a good run defense, and the Bears should lean on Montgomery. But have we seen any evidence that the Bears can actually put their players in a place to succeed? There are rumors that Nagy will once again surrender playcalling duties which if it happens will help the entire Bears offense. If there is clear signal on that, Montgomery again becomes a safe play.
Saquon Barkley vs Saints
I’m really not loving this matchup against the 2nd-ranked Saints run defense. They completely shut down Damien Harris, held CMC to a 3.0 ypc average, and held Aaron Jones to 1.8 ypc. They won’t have a problem shutting down Saquon.
Wide Receiver Starts
Deebo Samuel vs Seahawks
The Hawks are bottom ten in allowed QBR and allowed passing yards but middle of the road in yards per completion. That plays directly to Deebo’s strengths, and I think he rebounds after a rough game of drops against the Packers.
Antonio Brown vs Patriots
Fresh off of COVID protocol, primetime game, revenge game, I’m betting Brown leads all Pats receivers in yardage with around 110 and a score. Gronk will lead in TDs with two.
Terry McLaurin vs Falcons
Terry should get open easily against the Falcons and we know Heinicke can get him the ball against inferior secondaries. The Falcons showed out well against the Giants because they lost both Shepard and Slayton during the game.
DK Metcalfvs 49ers
Metcalf is an every week starter but thought it was worth calling out that Tyler Lockett missed Thursday’s practice with a hip issue. As we saw last week, Metcalf thrived with all of Russel Wilson’s attention pointed in his direction. He could be a moon-shot if Lockett can’t go.
Wide Receiver Sits
Calvin Ridley vs WFT
Ryan’s arm is shot. He can’t throw deep with accuracy or velocity anymore which takes away the best part of Ridley’s game. I also expect WFT to get to Ryan a lot in a pride game. Think this is going to be a floor game for Ridley that features more short to intermediate targets, something like 7-72 with no TD.
Marquise Brown vs Broncos
Brown will bounce back, but likely not this week against the Bronco’s monster secondary.
Brandin Cooks vs Bills
Cooks has been matchup proof but that ends this weekend against the Bills who held McLaurin to 61 yards last week, shut out the Dolphins, and shut down all three Steelers receivers.
Tight End Starts
Kyle Pitts vs WFT
A broken clock is right twice a day. I will continue to be a broken clock on Kyle Pitts. Ryan and the Falcons need his YAC ability more than ever against WFT’s pass rush.
Rob Gronkowski vs Patriots
Maintain the faith given a clean bill of health. He will be a huge part of the Bucs plan against the Patriots and I don’t think there is really anyway the Patriots can sell out to stop him.
Tight End Sits
Mike Gesicki vs Colts
To be honest this one is more of a gut feeling than anything about his opponent or Miami’s game plan. After every game I’m which he eclipsed 80 yards last year he followed up with a game under 40 yards receiving. Darius Leonard is questionable. If he sits then Gesicki could be a better play.
Logan Thomas vs Falcons
Unfortunately Thomas has materialized as a low volume, touchdown dependent tight end this year. He caught one last week, playing him this week seems iffy.
I decided to stop doing weekly rankings. The focus of this site is helping fantasy managers navigate superflex and 2QB leagues and while rankings are fun, I don’t feel like doing them adds value to the fantasy community. Sites like fantasypros.com already aggregate weekly rankings from tons of experts, and if you are a serious fan I would definitely recommend paying for a season-long subscription to footballguys.com, the best dedicated football fantasy site on the planet.
In place of rankings every week I will be taking a deep dive into QB performance, with a focus on the QBs that have questions. I won’t spend too much time on guys like Kyler Murray, Josh Allen, Lamar Jackson, and other obvious every-week starts unless their play deviates to the point that there are legitimate questions about the value they provider to your fantasy team.
Instead this column will focus on QBs with questions, and will serve as a combined sit-start/buy-low-sell-high for those QBs. I’ll do a separate column on non-QB skill players starts for the week.
QB Starts with Few to No Questions
These are in order, but if you are playing superflex you’re starting all these guys unless you play in a 4-team league.
Josh Allen vs Texans: Bad defense, bad team, great QB on the ascension. Don’t expect something equal to last week as they will lean on run in 4th quarter.
Kyler Murray vs Rams: Needs to rely less on talent and more on game plan, but great play.
Tom Brady vs Patriots: What more can be said. Expect Tom’s best game. New England has faced Tua, Zach Wilson, and Jameis, so any defensive stats don’t apply.
Lamar Jackson vs Broncos: Bateman back, will be eased in but Lamar needs another target. Will get a lot done with his legs.
Patrick Mahomes vs Philly: Didn’t stop Dak, won’t stop Patrick.
Rodgers vs Steelers: If Watt plays expect more sacks and dump offs, still QB1.
Stafford vs Cardinals: Stafford is a top-five QB over Rodgers rest of season.
Justin Herbert vs Raiders: No reason to think about this going against a middling pass defense.
Derek Carr vs Chargers: Yardage will come down this game against 7th-ranked pass D but no reason to sit.
Russel Wilson vs 49ers: Low volume passing efficiency – 28th in attempts, 9th in yards.
Dak Prescott vs Panthers: Panthers could spell trouble in pass rush and Chargers shut him down week 2. Even with questions he is starting unless you have two of the above.
Jalen Hurts vs Chiefs: He showed he can overcome adversity and deliver a good fantasy day. No reason to sit him against the Chiefs.
Kirk Cousins vs Browns: Ride the lightning. The TDs are going to come down, likely this week facing Myles Garrett, but no reason to sit him.
QBs with Major Questions
These are not in any particular order, just looking into issues facing QBs and trying to find answers.
Joe Burrow vs Jaguars
The Bengals currently have the second-fewest pass attempts per game in the league through three weeks, behind only the New Orleans Saints. This is extremely troubling for Burrow’s prospects as this is one game away from being a solid trend in the league.
This compares with the Bengals having the 2nd-most pass attempts per game last year with Burrow behind center. The Bengals are currently 2-1. That is the same number of wins they had last year in the ten games where Burrow was averaging 42 attempts per game.
Last week against the Steelers he had a season-low 18 pass attempts and was incredibly efficient with those passes even though he did throw a pick (14-18, 78%, 3-1, 172).
Most likely, unless the Jaguars turn into a different team, they will not provide Zac Taylor any reason to turn away from a formula that is working better than last year. We often just see fantasy potential and forget that the only thing that the players and coaches care about is the W/L column. I don’t expect more than 25 pass attempts vs the Jags.
The worst part about this is that Burrow has improved in every possible measurement: he’s gone from 26th to 2nd against the blitz according to PFF. Except for his head-scratching 3-int game against the Bears (in three pass attempts) his grades are above 120. Completed air yards are up as well. He’s showing incredible chemistry with Jamaar Chase.
Burrow is not a solid start this week according to the trend. Jacksonville is a middling rush defense and leaning on Mixon once again should work. If you are looking to offload Burrow, wait until after his game next week against the Packers where the Bengals will have to keep up with the Packers offense.
Trevor Lawrence vs Bengals
When you draft a rookie QB, you expect turnovers. Most leagues only penalize interceptions to the tune of -1 or -2 points. They are absorbable if your QB is getting you massive yardage and touchdowns. See Jameis Winston 2019.
Trouble is, for the past two games, Lawrence’s yardage and TD output have taken a massive hit, making him a fantasy dud to the point you would be better in most leagues starting a decent WR3, RB3, or TE2 over him in your superflex spot. After hitting for 332-3-3 in week 1 he’s gone 118-1-2 and 219-1-2.
Furthermore, he’s on an 0-3 team about to be 0-4. Meyer has absolutely no business coaching in the NFL. But there are reasons for hope. Just probably not this week.
The attempts, deep throws, and deep completion rate are all there, meaning after this game Trevor could be a good buy low. Cincinnati is 8th against the the run and 14th against the pass, mostly because they gave up 351 to Cousins week 1 in an overtime game and basically allowed Ben to dink and dunk his way to 318 in a game the controlled all the way. Trevor is a sit this week if you have decent options.
Taylor Heinicke vs Falcons
Heinicke was flat out bad against the Bills. A completion rate below 60% and 212-2-2 in a game that was never close. No one should have expected that he would duplicate his Thursday night effort against the Giants, but even to realistic owners this was a poor passing effort. He saved his day with a rushing TD leading to a decent QB9 finish.
Without the rushing TD he would have finished around QB20 in a down week for QB scoring. The Falcons managed to limit Daniel Jones’s rushing so be aware of that, but I think he makes for a good start against a limited Falcons defense.
Matt Ryan vs Redskins
If you want an in-depth look at what’s going on with Ryan just check out my article on the ATL passing game. For this game I expect the Washington pass rush to have a pride game and fluster Ryan, causing a lot of sacks and dump off passes. Pitts should have a decent game if Smith ever decides to feature his first-round investment. 10 targets should be a minimum. Ryan is a potential sit for skill players.
Sam Darnold vs Cowboys
Just because the Cowboys are 31st against the pass this year doesn’t mean Darnold is automatically in for a big game. Dallas is second in the league with 2 interceptions per game, and tied for 6th in fumbles recovered per game. The 3-0 Panthers have yet to face a dominant defense (the Saints were without multiple defenders in their week 2 game) so it’s fair to say Darnold hasn’t really been tested yet.
Darnold is getting a lot of his points with his legs, a trend I expect to disappear when CMC gets back. It just doesn’t feel sustainable. He’s a sell high candidate for someone who might be getting worried about Hurts. Might be best to do it before this weekend as Dallas largely held Hurts in check before he got himself into a rhythm with his legs. Darnold can’t do that.
Daniel Jones vs New Orleans
Jones has the third most rushing yards by a QB behind only Jackson and Hurts. We all talk about how a safe rushing floor is what we want in fantasy. Why is Jones only 34% rostered when he has the most passing yards out of the 3 and only 1 fewer passing TD than Lamar?
Well, probably because anyone playing in a superflex or 2qb league has been burned by Jones at least once in the past three years. And he’s a turnover machine right? Not so far. 1 lost fumble and zero interceptions through three weeks. Well he’s going in the wrong direction right? Wrong again: completion percentage is improving, interception % is going down, yards/completion are up, air yards per completion are up. And looking back to that amazing chart from JJ above, who has the 4th highest completion percentage on deep passes, after Herbert, Murray, and Brady? Daniel Jones.
So what the hell? He played Denver in week 1. Granted Denver hasn’t played anyone, but every QB who has played Denver has sucked. He had a 68-yard TD called back on a penalty in week 2 against Washington, had a deep TD bounce off Slayton’s hands, and even so he finished as QB4 in fantasy. Last week Atlanta limited his rushing, and he lost his top two receivers in game.
Now, is New Orleans at full strength the right defense for a breakout game after a disappointing showing against the Falcons? No. But if you are sitting on Ben Roethlisberger, Zach Wilson, or even Justin Fields and he’s sitting there on the wire, what exactly do you need to see?
Jimmy Garoppolo vs Seahawks
The question here just continues to be when. When does Jimmy get the hook? He almost led his team to a win over the Niners and a perfect 3-0 record. He’s playing well enough to where no one should really consider benching him, not even for a potential rookie phenom.
But his chart shows one thing pretty clearly: he’s not going to lose the game for his team, but he limits their offense. No completions over 15 yards. Two attempts over 20, one incomplete, one intercepted. Plus a fumble lost on a backwards pass he never should have made.
Jimmy has not played badly enough to lose the job. And he should perform well against a Seahawks that is allowing a 71% completion rate and has three sacks this year. So the answer to when Jimmy loses his job to Lance is not this week. He’s a decent QB2 start.
Mac Jones vs Patriots
This is the game I have had circled on the calendar for Mac’s breakout game all year. While New England has the 10th highest percentage of passing plays, they are 26th in yards per pass attempt. Whether McDaniels is calling a conservative game plan, or Mac is going away from deep reads, I don’t think either will be an option this week.
From this chart, it doesn’t look like Mac is afraid to throw it deep, but he isn’t connecting for whatever reason. I count 7 total attempts beyond the 30. If he connects on just one of those he goes for over 300 in this game. Also, I just watched each of his interceptions. The first one was absolutely his fault. The second should have been a catch by Jonnu Smith. The third came at the end of the game when the outcome wasn’t in doubt and they were just tossing it into the end zone. So this line could have easily looked like 300-1-2 instead.
The Bucs are first in the NFL in sacks and I think they absolutely pin their ears back and go after Jones. His time in the pocket is 2.4 secs, just .1 second longer than Brady, and he’s 19th in the NFL in times being sacked at 6.
In other words, I still think this could be his coming out party. The Pats finally took the training wheels off against the Saints and while the results weren’t great, they were not disastrous either. I’d fire up Mac as a QB2 with confidence this week and grab him off the WW for lesser options if available.
Ben Roethlisberger vs Packers
Matt LeFleur doesn’t strike me as stupid, which means he is seeing the same things on film the rest of the fantasy community is seeing: Ben is completely cooked and shouldn’t finish the season. In case you need video evidence there is plenty on twitter:
Despite the obvious decline, Ben is third in the league in pass attempts and delivered a solid fantasy day on Sunday. I expect LaFleur to put everyone up at the line and try and take away the short and intermediate passes and dare Ben to throw deep. And I expect the Steelers offense to totally unravel when he does. If you can turn Ben into an asset with potential based on his week 3 numbers do so immediately. The wheels are about to fall off the bus.
Teddy Bridgewater vs Ravens
The Broncos have absolutely feasted on three of the worst teams in the NFL. Bridge didn’t have to do much against the Jets to win, which makes him a potential buy from an owner not paying that much attention. 235-0 is a terrible fantasy day so now would be the time to offer. You can remind them that Teddy has always been average and you don’t have to share that his air yards per completed pass and attempt are way up this year.
I expect a much more inspired performance against the Ravens and attempts back in the mid-thirties which could push him back above 300. His completion percentage has been mid-70s and he has three games with ratings north of 100. Denver is 22nd in pass attempts after tilts against inferior teams. Their schedule gets considerably tougher from here.
Baltimore remains a bottom-three pass defense so he’s a solid start this week and likely this is the last opportunity to buy low.
Ryan Tannehill vs Jets
Tannehill had a very Burrow-eqsue game last week, throwing for 3 touchdowns on only 197 yards and also coughing up 2 picks. He did have a great rushing day, rushing 5-56. AJ Brown is out for this game and Julio could be as well, but thus far Tannehill has been able to generate yards without much help from Brown. Losing both starting wide receivers would be bad for him, Derrick Henry, and the entire offense. I’m not liking his week 3 chart or his prospects against a Jets team that seems completely lost.
It would be hard to trade Tannehill to anyone who pays attention to injury reports but I wouldn’t be shy in throwing out offers on name recognition for guys like Daniel Jones and Bridgewater. Both Julio and Brown have extensive injury histories and both are already hurt, and the cupboard is bare after them at receiver. Plus all Tannehill’s measurables are down from last year: completion %, TD %, adjusted yards per attempt, and QB rating.
Baker Mayfield vs Vikings
Baker isn’t so much a question as he is a tease. This team is just not built around the pass and never has been. If he gets you yards he doesn’t get you a touchdown. If he gets a TD he doesn’t get yards. Minnesota isn’t particularly good at anything defensively. So don’t expect anything more than a low-end QB2 performance against them as the Browns once again lean on their league-best rushing attack.
Low-volume, low touchdowns, low ability. Not what you want for fantasy.
Jameis Winston vs Giants:
Speaking of teases, Sean Payton is keeping the Saints to a league-low 21.3 passing attempts per game. That’s 4 fewer than Cincinnati. Given Jameis’s horrible showing against the Panthers and his TD prayer last week, I think this is a case of trust. We know Payton likes to have a dynamic passing offense. Looks like he doesn’t think he has the personnel for it.
I will eat some crow here. I hyped Winston all offseason. The pieces all appeared to be there for a monster season that you could get for a minimal 10th round investment, even in 2QB and Superflex leagues. This is what happens when you try and outsmart the system – you make yourself believe things that could be there, but certainly aren’t, at least not yet. And sometimes those things never materialize.
Even on few attempts, Winston has proved wildly inaccurate the past two weeks. His longer TD to Callaway should have been an interception, but as Winston told Payton, God intervened. I can’t imagine this response inspired more trust from Payton.
With Burrow, you can start him knowing that even on low volume you get quality. Winston is a horrible combo of low-quantity and low-quality. Just watch the practice reports for Taysom Hill appearances with the first team at this point. I would sit Winston for good options at other positions like Zack Moss.
Abandon All Hope Ye Who Start These Guys
The order here is meaningless as starting these guys is fantasy suicide.
Carson Wentz vs Dolphins: Even with two good ankles he’s not good. With two bad ankles I’d rather start almost anyone.
Jacoby Brissett vs Colts: Just not a good QB.
Zach Wilson vs Titans: Capable of the occasional good throw but clearly not NFL ready. They really should have traded for Foles…not too late.
Davis Mills vs Buffalo: Looked better than expected last week but not an NFL QB yet.
Jared Goff vs Bears: He will have decent weeks. This week won’t be one of them.
Dalton/Fields vs Lions: Dalton returned to a limited practice Wednesday and I believe Nagy when he says Dalton is his starter when healthy. I think Fields heads back to the bench and Dalton barely beats the Lions and unfortunately saves Nagy’s job.