I'm a college and professional sports nut from the Chicago area. Follow me on Twitter @Shawn_Foss
Welcome back to the Rookie Report! Week one was one of those NFL weeks that reminds us just how little we actually know about this game. Raise your hand if you expected Desmond Ridder and CJ Stroud to have more receptions last weekend than Tee Higgins and Drake London (Put your hands down, no you didn’t). Some things did go as planned, like the Vikings throwing 40+ times and Jordan Addison benefitting as a result, and Zay Flowers being a top target in the Ravens’ passing game, but many of the other top rookies saw smaller week 1 roles than we were hoping for.
Top running backs Bijan Robinson and Jahmyr Gibbs both looked excellent in their debuts, but both saw lower usage than we’d like. Bijan finished the week as an RB1, but he ceded 15 carries and 2 goal-line TDs to Tyler Allgeier. Gibbs would’ve finished as a fringe RB1 as well if he hadn’t tripped over his own feet on a red zone carry that should’ve gone for a score, but he was on the field for just 19 offensive snaps while David Montgomery played 55.
Other rookie top performers of the week included Puka Nacua and Anthony Richardson. Nacua had a massive debut with 10 catches for 119 yards on 15 targets as the Rams played without Cooper Kupp. The Rams’ strong overall performance was one of the more surprising storylines of the opening weekend. Fantasy players who took the plunge on Anthony Richardson as a QB1 look like they’re going to be handsomely rewarded this season. The Colts let Richardson throw the ball 37 times in week 1 while he also rushed for 40 yards and a TD. It’s hard to lean on the running game when your top back finishes with 14 yards on 13 carries. Richardson is going to be asked to do it all while JT sits out, and in week one that meant high-end QB1 production.
Rookie tight ends Luke Musgrave and Sam LaPorta played well in their openers, but neither cracked double-digit fantasy points. LaPorta was still able to finish as a TE1 for the week as tight end scoring was abysmal league wide.
My biggest tip after week 1 is this – Don’t let a 1-week sample cause you to completely abandon your priors. You should use the info from week 1 to make decisions going forward, but don’t overreact to it. Don’t drop players like Tee Higgins or Drake London after one bad game. There are ebbs and flows in fantasy. There will be better weeks for those guys. This is especially true for the rookies that were quiet in week 1. Rarely do we see rookies dominate right out of the gate, but they’ll often help you a ton in the back half of the season.
A couple of housekeeping notes for the players listed below – All players listed under the same header at the same position are listed in the order that I would play them this week, and all references to fantasy points and points allowed rankings are based on half-PPR scoring unless otherwise noted.
Let’s get into week 2…
Rookies You Already Know You Should Start:
QB Anthony Richardson, IND (Wk. 2: @Hou.): Richardson finished his first NFL week as the fantasy QB4, and there were a lot of numbers beyond that to like as well. Richardson is inexperienced as a passer with fewer than 400 career pass attempts in college, so it’s a great sign that Shane Steichen trusted him to drop back to pass 45 times in week one (including 4 sacks and 4 scrambles). The Colts are going to struggle to run the football without Jonathan Taylor, so passing volume is going to be much higher for this offense than any of us expected coming in. That passing volume paired with huge rushing upside (he handled 27% of the Colts’ designed rushes in week 1) means Richardson could be a top-5 QB all year. He’s an every-week fantasy starter until further notice.
RB Bijan Robinson, ATL (Wk. 2: vs. GB): Bijan didn’t play the dominant workhorse role we were hoping for in week 1. He was on the field for 65% of the offensive snaps but handled just 38% of the rushing attempts as Tyler Allgeier had the bigger rushing workload and scored a pair of short TDs. Luckily for Bijan and for us, he was a focal point in the passing game, earning a 35% target share and scoring a receiving TD en route to a PPR RB7 finish for the week. The TD reception was especially impressive, showing off Bijan’s elusiveness after the catch. This offense is going to be run-heavy enough to make both Robinson and Allgeier viable fantasy starters every week, even if it’s not quite the usage we envisioned for Robinson. In week 2 this backfield takes on a Green Bay defense that allowed the 9th-most RB points per game in 2022 and allowed the 5th-most points to the position in week 1. The Bears’ backfield racked up 143 scrimmage yards, 11 receptions, and a TD against the Packers last Sunday. Bijan should be locked into starting lineups again in week 2.
Borderline Rookies I’d Lean Toward Starting:
RB Jahmyr Gibbs, DET (Wk. 2: vs. Sea.): Gibbs usage in week 1 was far from what we were hoping for. He played just 19 snaps compared to 55 for David Montgomery, but he was explosive with his opportunities and should see his role grow as the season goes on. This week’s opponent, the Seahawks, allowed the 4th-most running back points last season, and coughed up 3 TDs to Cam Akers and Kyren Williams in week 1. The Lions open the week with the 3rd-highest implied point total in the league, so this is an offense that you want to target for lineups. I’m less confident in Gibbs as an auto-start given his week 1 usage, but Dan Campbell emphatically said on Thursday that Gibbs is going to get more touches going forward, and this is a matchup where he should be able to finish as an RB2 even if that usage doesn’t improve much.
WR Zay Flowers, BAL (Wk. 2: @Cin.): Game one of the Todd Monken era in Baltimore didn’t go according to plan with just 22 passing attempts for Lamar Jackson, but that didn’t stop Flowers from piling up 9-78 on 10 targets. The 50% target share for Flowers isn’t going to continue when Mark Andrews returns (likely this week), but the Ravens will have to throw much more this week to keep pace with the Bengals. Cincy’s passing game was awful last weekend, but they should get back on track against a banged-up Baltimore secondary that will be missing Marcus Williams and probably Marlon Humphrey as well. This game has shootout potential, and I’d look for the Ravens to throw the ball 35+ times this week, and for them to continue to find ways to get the ball into Flowers’ hands. Flowers was Lamar’s first read often last Sunday, and that should continue in week 2. I’d expect something like 8+ targets this weekend and would be firing Flowers up as a PPR WR3.
WR Puka Nacua, LAR (Wk. 2: vs. SF): Nacua started to get some hype late last week when it became apparent that Cooper Kupp would be out for the opener, but I don’t think any of us expected the WR9 finish he posted in a surprising upset win over Seattle. Matt Stafford looked much closer to the guy who led the Rams to a Super Bowl two years ago, and Nacua and teammate Tutu Atwell were big beneficiaries of Stafford’s bounce back. Nacua led the team with a 39% target share and 35% air yardage share, and he seems to be the player who has stepped into Cooper Kupp’s target hog role while the star is on injured reserve. The matchup this week looks much tougher at first glance, but the 49ers allowed the 6th-most WR points per game in 2022 and the 14th-most in week 1. I wouldn’t go into this game expecting another top-10 finish for the rookie, but he should be a solid WR3 play.
WR Jordan Addison, MIN (Wk. 2: @Phi.): Addison had a strong NFL debut, posting 4 catches, 61 yards, and a touchdown on 6 targets vs the Bucs last weekend. The 6 targets accounted for just a 13.6% target share, but the Vikings figure to be one of the pass-heaviest teams in the league and Addison should see 6+ targets more weeks than not. The Vikings should be even more inclined to throw than usual this week as 6-point underdogs, and the Eagles will be missing starting corner James Bradberry and just gave up over 300 passing yards to Mac Jones and the Patriots last weekend. This could be a TJ Hockenson week with the Vikings o-line banged up and Kirk Cousins needing to get the ball out quickly, but there should still be plenty of volume for Addison to have a WR3 week.
TE Sam LaPorta, DET (Wk. 2: vs. Sea.): LaPorta didn’t finish with a crooked stat line in week 1, but he was in a route for 72% of the Lions’ dropbacks and still finished the week as the PPR TE8. This week he faces a Seattle defense that was absolutely shredded by tight ends in 2022, allowing a dozen or more PPR points to the position 9 times, including 39.9 points to TJ Hockenson playing in this Lions’ offense. The Seahawks didn’t allow a 12-point scorer in week 1 this year, but they did allow the 2nd-most TE receiving yards of any team in the opening week, coughing up 70 combined yards to Tyler Higbee and Brycen Hopkins on 14 yards per target. This is a premium matchup for tight ends, and LaPorta should be primed to take advantage of it as the full-time TE1 in Detroit. There are elite TEs who should be back in action this week, but I still like LaPorta’s chances to duplicate his top-8 finish from a week ago.
TE Luke Musgrave, GB (Wk. 2: @Atl.): Musgrave’s preseason usage carried over to week 1 as he logged an 80% route participation rate and a 25% air yard share in week 1 against the Bears. He gets a favorable matchup in week 2 against an Atlanta defense that allowed the 3rd-most tight end points in the league last year and surrendered a 5-41-1 line to Hayden Hurst last Sunday, good for a TE2 finish on the week. Green Bay’s pass catching group should get a little more crowded this week with the likely return of Christian Watson, but I expect more than the 27 passing attempts we saw from the Packers last week. The TE options after the elite guys remain uninspiring, so give me the freak athlete (Musgrave boasts a 9.78 out of 10 Relative Athletic Score) who has a full-time role and a good matchup. I like Musgrave this week if you’re searching for a streaming tight end.
Borderline Rookies I’d Lean Toward Sitting:
QB CJ Stroud, HOU (Wk. 2: vs. Ind.): Stroud still has some developing to do before he’s a trustworthy weekly option, but the Texans are content to let him drop back and throw the ball a lot. Stroud attempted 44 passes in week 1 and could push for 40 attempts again this week. He could have some extra time to throw this week – the Colts’ defense had the lowest blitz rate and 4th-lowest pressure rate in week 1 – but their game plan might look a little different facing off with a rookie QB rather than Trevor Lawrence. The high passing volume makes Stroud a viable QB2 option in superflex leagues, but he’s still got a low floor and I’d recommend playing a safer QB2 candidate if you can.
RB Roschon Johnson, CHI (Wk. 2: @TB): Johnson had a busy week 1 if you judge by the stat sheet alone. He led the backfield in snaps, tied for the team lead in targets, and found the end zone in the opener, but the vast majority of that happened in the 4th quarter when the Bears were down by 3 scores. Roschon’s performance was promising, and his role will increase if he keeps playing well, but you shouldn’t overreact to his week 1 totals. Khalil Herbert remains the Bears’ RB1, and D’Onta Foreman will continue to be involved as well. Johnson remains a part-time player this week facing off with a defense that allowed the 6th-fewest running back points and 4th-fewest RB receiving yards in 2022. I’d view him as a dicey RB3 option this week.
RB Kendre Miller, NO (Wk. 2: @Car.): Miller returned to practice on Wednesday after missing week 1 with a hamstring injury, but I’d be inclined to sit him Monday even if he plays. At first glance, it looks like a great spot to fire him up. Alvin Kamara is still suspended, Jamaal Williams was wildly inefficient in week 1 with 18 carries for 45 yards, and this week’s opponent coughed up more running back points than any other team in the league last weekend. This seems like a spot where Miller could seize a significant role in a plus matchup, right? As Lee Corso would say, not so fast my friends. The crooked point total the Falcons RBs put on the Panthers was an aberration. Atlanta added Bijan Robinson to an offense that was already a top-4 rushing offense in the NFL last season. They’re going to make a lot of defenses look bad. The Panthers aren’t an elite run defense, but they aren’t as bad as the Falcons made them look. This was a middling unit last season, allowing the 17th-most RB points per game, and the Saints were a bottom half rushing offense even with Alvin Kamara. Don’t expect a blowup game from Miller here in a role where he’s sharing the backfield with Williams. He may still finish with a useful fantasy day if he can find his way into the end zone but starting him in a middling matchup when he has injury concerns and an uncertain role doesn’t sound like a good time to me. The fact that the Saints play Monday night is another knock against Miller. If you plan to start him and he winds up inactive, you’ll be scrambling for a replacement.
RB Tank Bigsby, JAX (Wk. 2: vs. KC): Bigsby found the end zone in week one and his week 2 opponent coughed up 116 running back rushing yards to the Lions last week, but Bigsby’s role isn’t big enough to rely on this week. Travis Etienne dominated the Jaguars’ backfield workload in the opener, playing 80% of the snaps, but Bigsby got the two carries when the Jags got in close. There’s a chance that goal line role continues for Tank, so he does have some fringe value since this matchup has the highest Vegas point total of the week, but if Tank doesn’t find the end zone, you’re going to be bummed if you started him.
WR Jaxon Smith-Njigba, SEA (Wk. 2: @Det.): As expected, JSN functioned as the clear WR3 for Seattle in week 1. He was in a route on 66% of the team passing dropbacks while DK Metcalf and Tyler Lockett were both at 90% or better, and while JSN did tie for a team-high 5 targets, he saw a measly 3% of the team air yards. Smith-Njigba turned those short targets into just 3 catches and 13 yards. You’d like to see more downfield usage from him, but the reality is that the Seahawks’ pass protection just wasn’t very good in the opener, forcing a lot of quick throws from Geno Smith. Smith faced the 8th-highest pressure rate in week 1 and will be without both of his starting tackles in week 2 due to injury. Part of the plan to replace those tackles was signing 41-year-old free agent Jason Peters off the street. Aidan Hutchinson could have a field day in this game, and JSN should be in line for more short targets. A big game isn’t out of the question as the Seahawks have scored 48 and 51 points in their last two meetings with the Lions, but these aren’t the same Lions. I’d probably keep JSN benched another week unless you’re desperate in a deeper PPR league.
WR Josh Downs, IND (Wk. 2: @Hou.): Week one included a lot of positive takeaways for Josh Downs. He was in a route on 77% of the Colts’ dropbacks and earned 5 targets in an offense that was much more pass-heavy than expected in the opener. The problem for Downs was his 3.4-yard aDOT. It would take a lot of targets or a lot of yards after the catch to compile a solid fantasy day on those kinds of short passes. The Texans allowed the 12th-fewest wide receiver points last season, but they’re likely to be missing both of their starting safeties. I’d still probably avoid Downs this week in anything but deep PPR leagues. 10 PPR points would be a pleasant surprise.
WR Rashee Rice, KC (Wk. 2: @Jax.): Rice impressed in week 1, tying for a team-high 5 targets and turning it into a 3-29-1 performance on Thursday night. He’s going to earn more opportunities going forward if he keeps making the most of his chances, but his 27% route participation rate in the opener isn’t going to lead to sustainable production, especially with Travis Kelce likely back to hog targets this week. Jacksonville was just a middling WR defense a year ago, but the Chiefs have too many WRs that they’ll try to get involved for you to rely on any of them for fantasy right now. You’d be best served playing the waiting game until we really know what everyone’s role will look like.
WR Jayden Reed, GB (Wk. 2: @Atl.): The final stat line didn’t look pretty for Reed as he turned 5 targets and a rushing attempt into just 6.6 PPR points, but a deeper look shows more positives than the surface level stats. Reed was targeted on 25% of his routes run and had a team-high 32% air yardage share. You’d prefer to see more than 2 catches on 5 targets, but just 3 of those targets were catchable and Jordan Love constantly looked for Reed on the money downs. 40% of Love’s 3rd and 4th down targets were intended for the rookie. The unfortunate thing for Reed is the impending return of Christian Watson. Watson is hoping to return this week, and if it happens, he’ll likely cut into Reed’s opportunities a bit. I do expect the Packers to have to throw more this week in a game that shouldn’t be as lopsided, but Reed will be hard to trust if the Packers’ WR1 is healthy. I’d keep Reed benched this week if Watson plays. If Watson sits again, Reed will have a great chance to at least match the 6 opportunities he got in week 1, so keep an eye on the injury report here.
WR Jonathan Mingo, CAR (Wk. 2: vs. NO): Mingo was a full-time player in week one, running a route on 93% of the team’s passing dropbacks and earning 5 targets, but he’s going to have to endure some growing pains from teammate Bryce Young who posted the lowest PFF passing grade of any QB in week 1. Those 5 targets for Mingo turned into 2 catches and 17 yards, and the Saints are a better defense than the Falcons. There’s a chance for improved performance from Young and more production for Mingo this week, but I wouldn’t want to rely on it.
TE Dalton Kincaid, BUF (Wk. 2: vs. LV): Entering the season there was a lingering question about what the snap share would look like between Buffalo’s TE2 Dalton Kincaid and WR3 Deonte Harty, and the week 1 returns overwhelmingly favored Kincaid as he logged a 76% route participation rate compared to just 26% for Harty. Kincaid is close to a full-time player, but a troubling development in week 1 was his lack of downfield usage. Kincaid was targeted 4 times against the Jets, but his average target depth was just a yard and a half downfield. The deeper targets were mostly reserved for Gabe Davis and Stefon Diggs. That could change as the season goes on, but I’d prefer one of the other rookie starting tight ends over Kincaid this week as both have better matchups. The Raiders did allow the 12th-most TE points last season, but Kincaid is splitting the TE work with Dawson Knox and Las Vegas allowed the 7th-fewest yards per catch to the position in 2022. If you can live with a ‘5 catches for 30 yards’ type of stat line from your tight end, Kincaid might be up your alley this week, but I’d aim higher in week 2.
Rookies You Already Know You Should Sit:
QB Bryce Young, CAR (Wk. 2: vs. NO): As I mentioned above, no QB earned a lower passing grade from Pro Football Focus in week 1 than Bryce Young. He’s got a learning curve ahead of him and faces what should be a brutal matchup in week 2. The Saints picked off Ryan Tannehill 3 times, sacked him 3 times, and held him to just a 28.8 passer rating in week 1. Expecting a bounce back from Young this week against that defense is just asking for a single-digit point total from your QB spot.
RB Sean Tucker, TB (Wk. 2: vs. Chi.): Tucker took a distant back seat to Rachaad White in the opener, handling just 15% of the snaps, but White looked like the same inefficient back we saw in 2022 as he rushed for just 39 yards on 17 carries. White should continue to get the bulk of the backfield work for now, relegating Tucker to benches in fantasy leagues, but if Rachaad doesn’t start to show signs of improvement, Tucker’s time is coming.
RB Zach Charbonnet, SEA (Wk. 2: @Det.): Two of my biggest misses of week 1 were expecting the Seahawks to beat the Rams without much difficulty and expecting Seattle to ease Kenneth Walker III back into the lineup after his preseason groin injury. Instead, the Seahawks were rolled by the Rams and KW3 dominated the backfield work, playing 65% of the snaps and handling 71% of the team rushing attempts. Charbonnet didn’t even have the rest of the workload to himself, he shared it with DeeJay Dallas. This matchup might look enticing considering that Seattle has scored 51 and 48 points in their two meetings with the Lions in the last 2 years, but these aren’t the same old Lions and Charbonnet won’t see the field enough to be trusted in fantasy lineups.
WR Quentin Johnston, LAC (Wk. 2: @Ten.): Johnston earned more targets than Joshua Palmer in week one, but he ran about half as many routes as his teammate as he operated as the team’s WR4. The Chargers were more run-heavy than we expected in week 1, which limits Johston’s upside even more, but that may change in week 2 with Austin Ekeler banged up and LA facing a much tougher run defense in Tennessee. I’d keep waiting for Johnston’s role to grow before considering him in lineups.
WR Michael Wilson, ARI (Wk. 2: vs. NYG): If you watched Josh Dobbs and the Arizona offense in week 1, you don’t need me to tell you that starting the pass-catchers in that offense isn’t a great idea. There were some promising numbers in Wilson’s debut, including a 91% route participation rate and a 39% air yardage share, but it resulted in just 2 catches for 19 yards. Dobbs is trying to get by with dink & dunk throws (he averaged just 6.3 yards per completion last weekend), and Wilson just isn’t going to produce much if this passing game can’t threaten the intermediate level.
WR Trey Palmer, TB (Wk. 2: vs. Chi.): Palmer scored a TD in week 1, but he totaled just 2 catches for 8 yards on 3 targets. The passing targets in this offense are going to be funneled to Chris Godwin and Mike Evans. Palmer is going to battle for scraps with Cade Otton, Deven Thompkins and the running backs each week. He’s no more than a TD dart throw.
WR Marvin Mims Jr., DEN (Wk. 2: vs. Was.): Mims was expected to operate as the Broncos WR2 in the opener with Jerry Jeudy sidelined, and instead he worked as the WR4 behind both Lil’Jordan Humphrey and Brandon Johnson. Russell Wilson spread the targets around in week 1 with 8 different players seeing multiple targets, and nobody seeing more than 6, but 2-3 targets for Mims on limited snaps isn’t going to make him fantasy viable.
WR Jalin Hyatt, NYG (Wk. 2: @Ari.): Hyatt was in a route on 39% of the Giants’ passing dropbacks in week 1, but he saw just 1 target that he didn’t catch. Your hope if you play him is that he catches a deep TD against a bad Arizona defense, but the Cardinals allowed just one completion of 20 or more yards in week 1. Another goose egg is entirely possible here.
TE Darnell Washington, PIT (Wk. 2: vs. Cle.): Pat Freiermuth exited the Steelers’ week 1 game with a chest injury, but don’t let that fool you into thinking that Washington is a sleeper this week. It was Connor Heyward who stepped in and earned 4 second half targets. Washington was in a route on 31% of the team passing dropbacks (compared to just 25% for Heyward), but the ball didn’t come his way at all. Whether Muth plays or not, Washington isn’t much more than a TD dart throw.
Players to sit who are injured or had very limited or non-existent week 1 roles: RB Evan Hull, IND, RB Jaleel McLaughlin, DEN, RB Chase Brown, CIN, RB Israel Abanikanda, NYJ, RB De’Von Achane, MIA, RB Chris Rodriguez, WAS, WR Xavier Hutchinson, HOU, WR Tyler Scott, CHI, WR Cedric Tillman, CLE, WR Tre Tucker, LV, TE Michael Mayer, LV
Deep League Sleepers, Stashes, and Cheap DFS Options:
RB Tyjae Spears, TEN (Wk. 2: vs. LAC): Spears didn’t put up a big fantasy point number in week 1, but his usage is worth taking note of. Spears actually out-snapped Derrick Henry in week 1. Henry still handled 79% of the rushing workload, but Spears was in a route on 50% of the Titans’ passing drop backs and led all running backs in air yards in week 1. Spears isn’t just the passing-down complement to Derrick Henry. The Titans are making an active effort to get him involved in the offense. This might not be the best spot to get him into the lineup as the Chargers allowed fewer than 4 receptions per game to opposing running backs last year, but Spears shouldn’t be a free agent in 12-team PPR leagues. He’s worth a stash if you can make room for him.
WR Tank Dell, HOU (Wk. 2: vs. Ind.): Dell ran a route on just 46% of the Texans’ dropbacks in week 1, but Houston placed starting receiver Noah Brown on IR this week, and John Metchie’s status is still uncertain for week 2. That could mean Dell is in line to play a full complement of snaps, and I already mentioned that this offense may push for 40 pass attempts again this week. Robert Woods and Nico Collins dominated targets last week, but with more playing time we could see Dell reach 6-7 targets, and he has the kind of speed and run-after-catch skills that could turn any reception into a TD. He’s mostly an option for the deepest leagues and DFS lineups this week, but Dell has an intriguing ceiling against the Colts.
WRs Demario Douglas & Kayshon Boutte, NE (Wk. 2: vs. Mia.): With DeVante Parker sidelined in week 1, Boutte was second on the team in routes run and Douglas was tied for second on the team in targets (both behind Kendrick Bourne). Both are worth a stash in deep leagues while the Patriots try to work out their receiver pecking order. JuJu Smith-Schuster is the highest paid WR on the team, but he was standing on the sideline during the Pats comeback effort last weekend. Of the two rookies, I’d prioritize Douglas since he was able to earn targets, but both have the chance to earn a substantial role if they make the most of their opportunities. Boutte was viewed as an elite WR prospect once upon a time, but Douglas had the higher day 3 draft capital of the two.
That’s all I’ve got for this week. Hopefully it helps you sort through your lineup decisions this week. Feel free to hit me up on Twitter (@Shawn_Foss) if you have any questions or want to yell at me about anything written above, and always make sure to apply what’s written in the context of your own league rules and roster. Keep a close eye on the injury report throughout the week if you have any guys who are questionable and do a final pre-game check to make sure you don’t start any inactive players. As always: Good luck, trust your gut and have fun. It’s just a game.
Welcome back to the Rookie Report! Months of anticipation have finally brought us to the precipice of another NFL season. Your fantasy drafts are done, and now it’s time to start setting weekly lineups and watch the fantasy points roll in. If you’re new to the Rookie Report, my task each week is to help you figure out what to do with the players that are hardest to predict in fantasy – the rookies. If you don’t spend your summer grinding college film or closely monitoring NFL training camp reports, you might struggle to know what to expect from the rookies you’ve drafted on a weekly basis. Luckily, I’m here to help.
Each week I’ll group the fantasy-relevant rookies into 5 categories – The rookies you know you should start, the rookies you know you should sit, the borderline rookies I’d lean toward starting, the borderline rookies I’d lean toward sitting, and some deep league sleepers, stashes, and cheap DFS options. For each player, I'll provide some additional stats or context to help you make the decision that works best for your team. I can’t stress enough that you should read the specifics and not just what header a player is listed under, and then apply it to your own roster and league settings before making your own decision of who to start. I’m not here to tell you what to do. I’m here to give you info to help you decide what to do for yourself.
For week 1, this task is especially difficult. I try to be more conservative with rookies early in the season until we have some NFL stats and usage data to judge them by, but that doesn’t mean that we can’t use any rookies this weekend. We can still lean on preseason usage and 2022 defensive stats of their opponents to help determine which rookies are usable this weekend. Defenses change from year to year, so take the defensive rankings with a grain of salt, but it’s unlikely that a team that was awful against the run a year ago will suddenly be good against it this year unless they made major changes.
A couple of housekeeping notes for the players listed below – All players listed under the same header at the same position are listed in the order that I would play them this week, and all references to fantasy points and points allowed rankings are based on half-PPR scoring unless otherwise noted.
That’s enough preamble for this week. Let’s dive into week 1…
Rookies You Already Know You Should Start:
RB Bijan Robinson, ATL (Wk. 1: vs. Car.): You’re not sitting your first-round pick in week 1. The Panthers were a middling run defense last year (ranked 18th in Football Outsiders’ run defense DVOA), but no team was more efficient running the football than the Atlanta Falcons last season, and Bijan is an upgrade over every back who toted the rock for them in ’22. Week one should be his coming out party in a game where the Falcons are 3.5-point favorites. Fire him up with confidence.
RB Jahmyr Gibbs, DET (Wk. 1: @KC): Like Bijan above, you drafted Gibbs too high to sit him in week one. With Jameson Williams sidelined for the first 6 weeks of the season, the Lions’ running backs will likely see even more receiving work than usual early in the season. The Detroit backfield had a 21% target share last season, and no team in the league allowed more running back catches per game in ‘22 than the Chiefs. Gibbs is a great bet for 5+ catches in his debut, and if the Lions can keep this game competitive, he’s got top-10 running back upside this week, especially in PPR formats.
Borderline Rookies I’d Lean Toward Starting:
QB Bryce Young, CAR (Wk. 1: @Atl.): Before I dive in on Young, I want to clarify that I’d lean towards starting the Panthers’ rookie signal caller in Superflex leagues only. In 1-QB leagues, I’d leave him on the bench this week. The matchup is good but not great (Atlanta allowed the 13th-most QB points in 2022), and Carolina is short-handed at wide receiver this week with DJ Chark likely out, and both Terrace Marshall and Adam Thielen limited in practice this week by injury. If you’re looking for reasons to be confident in Young this week, look no further than the Falcons’ blitz rates and pressure rates from last season. The Falcons had the 4th-lowest blitz rate in the league and were dead last in QB pressure rate. They changed defensive coordinators this offseason, bringing in Ryan Nielsen from the Saints, but the Saints had the 6th-lowest blitz rate and 4th-lowest pressure rate in ’22. If Bryce has time in the pocket to pick apart the Falcons’ defense, I like his chances of turning in a mid-range QB2 performance in his debut.
RB Zach Charbonnet, SEA (Wk. 1: vs. LAR): It may be hard to make room in your lineup for Charbonnet this week given that there are no byes, and you probably didn’t draft him as a starter, but he’s got a great opportunity to make a splash in week 1 if you’re in deeper leagues or need a stand-in for Alvin Kamara or JT this week. The Rams stripped down their defense around Aaron Donald, and they’re going to struggle to slow down most competent offenses. The Seahawks certainly have a competent offense (they ranked 9th in points scored and 13th in total yards in ’22), and they may look to ease Kenneth Walker III in as he comes back from a preseason groin injury. Walker should be able to play in week 1, but Charbonnet will likely get more chances to spell him than you’d expect, especially if the Seahawks are able to pull away on the scoreboard. Seattle is a 5-point favorite, but I think this could be more lopsided than that. 15+ touches against a bad defense isn’t out of the question for Charbs in week 1.
WR Jordan Addison, MIN (Wk. 1: vs. TB): The Vikings aren’t playing the same games with Addison that they did with Justin Jefferson in his rookie year. There’s no pretense about Addison sitting to start the year behind a veteran like Bisi Johnson. Addison sat out the entire preseason along with the rest of the starters and should be locked in as the WR2 to open the season. The Vikings are a team that figures to throw the ball a lot this season, and the Buccaneers allowed the 8th-most PPR points per game to wide receivers last year. There’s an element of the unknown here since we haven’t seen the Vikings’ first-string offense at all this preseason, but I like Addison and an upside WR3/flex option this week. The Vikings are tied for the 4th-highest implied point total this week in Vegas odds.
WR Marvin Mims, DEN (Wk. 1: vs. LV): Mims was an intriguing late pick in drafts coming into the preseason, but injuries to Tim Patrick and Jerry Jeudy have made him the opening day WR2 in what should be a much-improved offense under Sean Payton. The Raiders ranked 31st in pass defense DVOA in 2022, and while they brought in Marcus Peters to improve the secondary, Mims should mostly avoid his coverage. Courtland Sutton figures to be the top target earner in week 1, but things are wide open beyond that in this passing game. 6+ targets is very possible for Mims, and he’s an upside WR4 this week in a good matchup.
Borderline Rookies I’d Lean Toward Sitting:
QB Anthony Richardson, IND (Wk. 1: vs. Jax.): Richardson gets the starting nod for week 1 and his expected rushing output will give him top-12 upside every single week, but I would be cautious with him in his NFL debut. We’ve seen 8 prominent mobile QBs make their first NFL start in the last 5 years (Lamar Jackson, Josh Allen, Kyler Murray, Jalen Hurts, Justin Fields, Trey Lance, Desmond Ridder, and Malik Willis). None of them have finished as a top-10 QB in their first start. Kyler finished as QB11, Hurts as QB12, and Lamar as QB13, and none of the others finished higher than QB20. I like Richardson’s chances to post double-digit rushing attempts in this game against a Jacksonville defense that allowed the 3rd-most QB rush yards per game last year, but I just don’t know that he has the ceiling to outweigh the potential downside in 1-QB formats this week. You should absolutely be starting him in Superflex leagues, but I’d look for safer options in 1-QB formats.
QB CJ Stroud, HOU (Wk. 1: @Bal.): Stroud gets the starting nod for week 1, but the preseason showed us that he’s still got some work to do before he should be plugged into lineups. The Ravens were just a middling QB defense last season (14th-fewest QB points allowed in ’22), but they ranked 5th in the league in sacks last season and should have no problem getting after Stroud with the Texans missing starting tackle Tytus Howard. You might not have better options in Superflex leagues, but I’d lean towards starting a different QB2 ahead of him if you can.
RB Tank Bigsby, JAX (Wk. 1: @Ind.): Bigsby should open the season in a backfield committee with Travis Etienne, but he’s on the wrong side of the committee. Etienne handled two-thirds of the short down & distance snaps with the first-team offense and ran more than 3 times as many receiving routes as Bigsby this preseason. Goal line work and receiving work are the high-value touches for fantasy, and those should go to Etienne at least early on this season. The Colts would be a favorable matchup if we knew Bigsby would get significant usage (they allowed the 8th-most PPR points to running backs last season), but as the Jaguars’ clear RB2, I’d keep him sidelined this week.
RB Evan Hull, IND (Wk. 1: vs. Jax.): Hull may have some appeal to you this week if you have him in deeper leagues. The Colts will be without Jonathan Taylor and Zack Moss as they take on the Jaguars, leaving just Deon Jackson and Hull in the backfield. I expect the Colts will elevate Jake Funk from the practice squad to serve as the RB3, but Jackson and Hull should see the bulk of the work. If we knew for sure that Jackson would handle the early-down work and Hull would handle the passing-down work, I’d like Hull a bit more in week 1 - the Colts are 5-point underdogs who should have to throw more than they want to, and the Jaguars allowed the 2nd-most RB catches per game last year – but I don’t think the workload split will be that clean. In the team’s final preseason game, Jackson and Hull both worked full drives while the first team offense was in the game, with Jackson playing 2 or 3 drives for every 1 that Hull played. That kind of workload isn’t going to get him to fantasy relevance in week 1. Take a wait-and-see approach and keep him in mind for week 2 vs. the Texans if his usage looks good this week and Moss remains out.
WR Zay Flowers, BAL (Wk. 1: vs. Hou.): There’s a lot of excitement this season about the new-look Ravens’ offense under Todd Monken. They should throw the ball significantly more than they have in years past, but I’m not sure they’ll need to throw a ton in week 1. The Ravens are 10-point favorites in this game, and the Texans were significantly better at defending the pass than the run last season. The defensive scheme could look a lot different this year under new head coach DeMeco Ryans. Former coach Lovie Smith is one of the godfathers of the Tampa-2 defense. Ryans figures to call more cover-3 and cover-4 and be more aggressive with blitzing. The Texans had the third-lowest blitz rate in the league last year. Those new coverage schemes could open up the short middle of the field for Zay to work some magic, but I’d still prefer to wait until we see how targets are distributed in this offense before getting Flowers into any lineups, especially since game script should keep the Ravens running the ball this week.
WR Jaxon Smith-Njigba, SEA (Wk. 1: vs. LAR): JSN suffered a wrist injury in camp that made it look like he might be sidelined for the first game or two of the season, but he returned to practice this week and has a very real chance of playing in the opener Sunday. If he’s able to go, I’d expect that the Seahawks don’t immediately throw him into a full workload after he got such limited practice time in camp. If he draws even a handful of targets in the opener, I’d see that as a win. Smith-Njigba is eventually going to make his presence felt in this offense, but I wouldn’t trust him to do it in week 1, even in a plus matchup against a Rams defense that allowed the 12th-most WR points per game last year and got substantially worse in the offseason.
WR Jonathan Mingo, CAR (Wk. 1: @Atl.): Mingo enters week 1 as the Panthers’ WR2 behind Adam Thielen if preseason usage is to be trusted. Mingo was in a route on 94% of Bryce Young’s preseason dropbacks, and he earned a 20% target rate on those routes. What concerns me is that only 50% of those targets were catchable. He and Bryce were just not fully on the same page. Mingo’s got a little extra upside this week with the rest of the WR group battling injuries, but I wouldn’t treat him as anything more than a WR4 this week who is a better play in non-PPR and half-PPR formats rather than full PPR. That WR4 designation would only apply if Adam Thielen sits this one out. I’d slide Mingo lower if Thielen is able to play. The former Viking had a 35% target share from Young in the preseason, and all those targets were catchable.
WR Quentin Johnston, LAC (Wk. 1: vs. Mia.): Johnston has a ton of potential this year in what should be a high-powered, high-volume Chargers passing game, but that potential will likely wait a few weeks to shine through. The Chargers sat their starters in the final preseason game, and at wide receiver that meant Keenan Allen, Mike Williams, and Joshua Palmer. Johnston was on the field for that game, signaling that he’s not yet a starter in this offense. The talent will eventually win out and he’ll leapfrog Palmer for the WR3 role, but it may take a few weeks for that to happen. For now, you should leave Johnston parked on your bench.
WR Michael Wilson, ARI (Wk. 1: @Was.): Wilson will open the season as the WR2 for the Cardinals behind Marquise Brown, but this is not an offense that you want to target for fantasy lineups. Whether it’s Josh Dobbs or Clayton Tune under center, this team figures to struggle badly on offense. They have the lowest implied point total of week 1 at just 15.5 points. Wilson should get plenty of playing time and a healthy number of targets this season, but he’ll likely be a fringe flex play until Kyler Murray returns (IF Kyler Murray returns). In week 1, Wilson faces a Washington defense that allowed the 9th-fewest PPR points to wide receivers lined up out wide in 2022.
TE Dalton Kincaid, BUF (Wk. 1: @NYJ): Kincaid has been one of the more polarizing players in this year’s draft class. On the one hand, the Bills already have a pretty solid young tight end in Dawson Knox and rookie tight ends rarely ever produce in fantasy. On the other hand, all reports out of camp are that Kincaid will be used all over the formation and that he’s been a perfect fit in the offense and has a nice rapport with Josh Allen. I think Kincaid is going to be a fringe TE1 as a rookie and wouldn’t fault you if you wanted to start him this week, but I don’t love this matchup for him. The Jets ranked 4th in pass defense DVOA last season and returned pretty much everyone, and while they were worse against tight ends last year than against wide receivers, they were mostly susceptible to in-line tight ends, which is the role Dawson Knox will play most often. Don’t be surprised if Knox finds the end zone and outscores Kincaid on Monday night.
Rookies You Already Know You Should Sit:
QB Clayton Tune, ARI (Wk. 1: @Was.): Tune has a chance to be the starter in week 1 (Jonathan Gannon has declined to name a starter in hopes of keeping some sort of strategic advantage), but even if he gets the nod, you shouldn’t consider starting Tune unless forced to. The Commanders ranked 13th in pass defense DVOA, and were 10th in QB pressure rate in 2022, and there’s a chance they get Chase Young back for the opener. The Cardinals look like one of the worst teams in the league and have an implied point total of just 15.5 points in this game. Tune is probably a bottom-3 starting option among all starting QBs if he gets the start in week 1.
RB Roschon Johnson, CHI (Wk. 1: vs. GB): Johnson will have a ton of upside as the season progresses in what should be a very run-heavy offense for Chicago, but Khalil Herbert has entrenched himself as the RB1 on this team to open the season after seeing two-thirds of the team rushing attempts with the first team offense this preseason. Roschon needs to work his way into a bigger role before you can consider him in lineups.
RB Tyjae Spears, TEN (Wk. 1: @NO): Spears has earned the Titans’ RB2 job in training camp and is electric with the ball in hands, but the problem is that his RB2 spot is behind RB1 Derrick Henry, who dominates backfield touches in Tennessee. In the games he played, Henry handled 89% of the running back rushing attempts and 51% of the running back targets for the Titans in 2022. Maybe that changes since Spears is an upgrade over Hassan Haskins, Dontrell Hilliard, and Julius Chestnut, but the likeliest place for Spears to contribute is in the passing game, and the Saints allowed the 5th-fewest running back receiving yards in 2022. Keep Tyjae benched for week one.
RB Kendre Miller, NO (Wk. 1: vs. Ten.): Miller is battling a hamstring injury that could keep him sidelined in week 1. Even if he plays, I’d expect him to function as the clear RB2 behind Jamaal Williams. It’s a huge blow for Miller, who likely loses out on an opportunity to make an impression while Alvin Kamara is suspended.
RB Israel Abanikanda, NYJ (Wk. 1: vs. Buf.): The addition of Dalvin Cook has relegated Abanikanda to RB3 on this team. There was hope that the rookie would get some work in the early part of the season as Breece Hall works his way back to full strength, but with Cook on board he’ll be limited to scraps during that period, and even less work as the season wears on and Breece hits 100%. He’ll likely need an injury ahead of him to be fantasy relevant.
RB Chase Brown, CIN (Wk. 1: @Cle.): Brown struggled to make any movement up the Bengals’ depth chart this preseason. He may open the season behind all of Joe Mixon, Trayveon Williams, and Chris Evans. He should be on the waiver wire in any non-dynasty leagues.
RB Zach Evans, LAR (Wk. 1: @Sea.): Evans looks likely to open the season as the Rams’ RB3 behind Cam Akers and Kyren Williams. There’s no need to consider him this week.
RB Chris Rodriguez Jr., WAS (Wk. 1: vs. Ari.): Rodriguez is the RB3 in Washington behind Brian Robinson Jr. and Antonio Gibson. His skill-set mirrors Robinson pretty well, so he may get some run if anything were to happen to B-Rob, but for now, he’s an afterthought in this offense.
WR Josh Downs, IND (Wk. 1: vs. Jax.): Downs opens the season as the Colts’ WR3, but this figures to be a run-first offense with a potentially narrow target tree. Downs saw just a 7% target share with the first-team offense in the preseason. Jacksonville did allow the 6th-most PPR points to slot wide receivers last season, but I wouldn’t count on a big debut from Downs even in this matchup. He may develop into a valuable PPR receiver later in the season, but there could be some growing pains for this offense early on.
WR Trey Palmer, TB (Wk. 1: @Min.): Palmer enters the season as the WR3 for the Bucs, but he may be as low as 5th in line for targets in this offense that figures to play slower and be more balanced than it was a year ago. They could throw the ball nearly 200 fewer times than they did last year, and it wouldn’t be shocking. The Vikings are a burnable defense, but Palmer likely won’t see enough week 1 opportunities to make a fantasy impact.
WR Jalin Hyatt, NYG (Wk. 1: vs. Dal.): The Giants’ depth chart at WR is going to be fluid this year, but I expect it’ll take time for Hyatt to develop into anything more than a situational deep threat. The Cowboys’ secondary has a reputation for being aggressive and giving up big plays when they get burned by it, but that reputation is largely a remnant from 2021. The Cowboys allowed 22 completions of 35+ yards in 2021, but cut that number nearly in half to 13 in 2022 while ranking 3rd in pass defense DVOA. Hyatt’s chances at cashing in a deep ball in week 1 on limited snaps aren’t high.
WRs Xavier Hutchinson & Tank Dell, HOU (Wk. 1: @Bal.): The WR depth chart is fluid in Houston, and Hutchinson & Dell both impressed in camp and in the preseason, but the Texans will open the season with Nico Collins, Noah Brown, and Robert Woods as starters in 3-WR sets. If you have the rookies or John Metchie rostered, the hope is that they make the most of limited opportunities early on and earn a bigger role as the season progresses.
WR Cedric Tillman, CLE (Wk. 1: vs. Cin.): Tillman has flashed in camp, but he’ll undoubtedly open the season as no better than the team’s WR4 behind Amari Cooper, Donovan Peoples-Jones, and Elijah Moore.
WR Rashee Rice, KC (Wk. 1: vs. Det.): Rice will start his career in Kansas City in a similar place on the depth chart to where Skyy Moore started his a year ago – as a sub package player who will only see a handful of snaps each week. Moore didn’t reach 50% of the snaps in any game last year, and he reached double-digit PPR points just once all season. Rice has even more competition for playing time than Moore had last year.
WR Kayshon Boutte, NE (Wk. 1: vs. Phi.): Boutte did well just to make the Patriots opening 53-man roster, but getting playing time will be another challenge altogether. Kayshon may have a sliver of opportunity with Tyquan Thornton opening the season on IR, but the starting WRs in 3-wide sets for week 1 figures to be DeVante Parker, JuJu Smith-Schuster, and Kendrick Bourne. Boutte will have to work his way up the depth chart.
TE Michael Mayer, LV (Wk. 1: @Den.): Mayer should take the starting TE job soon in Vegas, but preseason usage says that Austin Hooper will open the season as the starter. There are too many quality TE options available for week 1 to consider throwing a dart at Mayer when we don’t know how much he’ll actually play.
TE Darnell Washington, PIT (Wk. 1: vs. SF): You don’t need me to tell you that Washington is playing behind Pat Freiermuth in this offense. I wouldn’t be surprised if we see the Steelers try to work the rookie onto the field in goal line situations since he’s a good blocker and a match-up nightmare at 6’7”, but that’ll make him no more than a weekly TD dart throw unless something happens to Muth.
Deep League Sleepers, Stashes, and Cheap DFS Options:
RB Devon Achane, MIA (Wk. 1: @LAC): Achane’s prospects for week 1 got an unexpected boost when Jeff Wilson Jr. was placed on IR last week. There’s still some uncertainty about his workload with Raheem Mostert and Salvon Ahmed still around, but this looks like a great opportunity for the speedy Achane to make a splash in his debut. The Chargers have ranked in the bottom-6 in the league in rushing yards and yards per carry allowed in each of the last 2 seasons, and they return 6 of their starting front 7 from a year ago and promoted from within for their new defensive coordinator. The one new addition up front, Eric Kendricks, should help with an 81.1 run defense grade from PFF, but this should still be a burnable run defense. The Chargers allowed 12.2% of rushing attempts against them last year to go for 10+ yards. Who better to punish that defense than Achane, who runs a 4.32 second 40-yard dash? There is sneaky upside here in deep leagues and DFS formats.
RB Sean Tucker, TB (Wk. 1: @Min.): Tucker looks poised to enter the season as the Bucs RB2 behind Rachaad White, and if White doesn’t improve on his abysmal efficiency numbers from last season, we could slowly see Tucker evolve from change-of-pace back into the starter as the season wears on. I wouldn’t plug him in for the opener, but he’s a great bench stash if you have room for him on your roster. He could be a workhorse back by the back half of the season that you can acquire for free right now.
RB Jaleel McLaughlin, DEN (Wk. 1: vs. LAR): McLaughlin hasn’t been talked about a ton this preseason, but he’s notable as an undrafted free agent who made the Broncos opening roster. McLaughlin is undersized at 5’7”, 187 lbs., but he’s an explosive athlete who rushed for nearly 1,600 yards at Youngstown State last year, and the Broncos’ offense may have a fantasy relevant role for him. Head coach Sean Payton’s offenses have utilized what he calls a ‘Joker’ role that gets heavily used in the passing game. Payton describes it as “either a running back or tight end with exceptional ball skills, and then you can work matchups.” He’s used running backs Reggie Bush, Darren Sproles, and Alvin Kamara all in that role with great success in the past. He’s mentioned McLaughlin and tight end Greg Dulcich as candidates for the role this year. McLaughlin is nothing more than a stash in deeper leagues right now (especially dynasty leagues), but there’s a chance he has a meaningful role as a receiving back this year, and even an outside shot that he supplants Samaje Perine for the RB2 role behind Javonte Williams.
WR Puka Nacua, LAR (Wk. 1: @Sea.): It’s sounding like a long shot that Cooper Kupp will suit up for week 1 at this point. If Kupp sits out, Nacua seems like a lock to start in 3-WR sets along with Van Jefferson and Tutu Atwell. The most important detail in determining which WR in this offense you want to start is pre-snap alignment. Which guy is going to play the slot? The Seahawks allowed just 89 PPR points all season in 2022 to wide receivers lined up on the perimeter. No other team allowed fewer than 140. The Seahawks allowed 327 PPR points to receivers lined up in the slot. Typically, Cooper Kupp is the Rams’ slot WR. Van Jefferson played just 17.5% of his snaps from the slot in 2022, and the diminutive Atwell played just 22.7% of his snaps there. Pay attention to reports this week to see if you can discern who will line up in the slot most often. My guess would be Atwell, but if it turns out to be Nacua, the rookie could have big upside in his debut for deeper PPR leagues.
WR Jayden Reed, GB (Wk. 1: @Chi.): Reed could have a sizable week one role for the Packers if Romeo Doubs misses the opener. Reed is already set to open the season as the Packers’ WR3, but he’d be elevated to WR2 for this game if Doubs misses. We still don’t really know what the target distribution will look like here, but the Bears ranked dead last in pass defense DVOA last season despite limiting tight ends to the 4th-fewest PPR points. WRs and RBs carved them up last season in the passing game. The addition of Tremaine Edmunds and his 88.1 PFF coverage grade should help them slow down the running backs, but it should open things up for Reed and Christian Watson to have a nice week 1. Reed could draw 6+ targets on Sunday.
TE Sam LaPorta, DET (Wk. 1: @KC): LaPorta dominated first team TE reps throughout the preseason, and he enters week 1 as the clear cut starting tight. The Lions are without game-breaking wide receiver Jameson Williams for the first 6 weeks of the season so LaPorta might be as high as 3rd or 4th in the target pecking order to open the season. The Lions are likely to be chasing points on Thursday night as 4.5-point underdogs to the defending champs, so game script should lead to a solid amount of passing volume. LaPorta should be in line for 5+ targets in the opener against a defense that allowed 9 tight end touchdowns last season. He’s a good option for DFS lineups this week and could be a valuable fill-in if your starter is Travis Kelce or you’re stuck without a top-10 tight end.
TE Luke Musgrave, GB (Wk. 1: @Chi.): I mention Musgrave here as more of a stash than an immediate starter, but he’s going to play a meaningful role in this offense from day one. Jordan Love had 37 dropbacks in the preseason, and Musgrave was in a route on 84% of them and earned a 22% target share. Musgrave could be start-able in fantasy leagues sooner rather than later, but I don’t love his week one matchup – as I mentioned above the Bears allowed the 4th-fewest TE PPR points last season. Take a wait-and-see approach before inserting Musgrave into lineups.
That’s all I’ve got for week 1. Hopefully, it helps you pull out a victory in your season opener. Feel free to hit me up on Twitter (@Shawn_Foss) if you have any questions or want to yell at me about anything written above, and always make sure to apply what’s written in the context of your own league rules and roster. Keep a close eye on the injury report throughout the week if you have any guys who are already banged up entering week 1 and do a final pre-game check to make sure you don’t start any inactive players. As always: Good luck, trust your gut, and have fun. It’s just a game.
Welcome back to the Rookie Report! We’ve arrived at the final week of the NFL season. Most fantasy leagues have already wrapped up for the year, but some of you may play in leagues with week 18 title games, and after the Bills/Bengals game was cancelled last week, your league may have decided to include week 18 scores as part of your contingency plan to settle a disputed championship. I’m still here to help you figure out what to do with your rookies if you still have to set a lineup. There are also plenty of fun DFS contests and prop bets you can get involved in for week 18 as well, and I want to provide some insights into those as well.
Week 18 is typically a chaotic one for fantasy stats with a bunch of unexpected names populating the leaderboard. If you don’t believe me, here are some of last season’s top performers from week 18…
QB – Davis Mills (QB4), Drew Lock (QB9)
RB – Brandon Bolden (RB8), D’Ernest Johnson (RB9), Duke Johnson (RB10), Kenneth Gainwell (RB11), Corey Clement (RB13), Ameer Abdullah (RB15), Chris Evans (RB17), Jerick McKinnon (RB19), Patrick Taylor (RB20), KeShawn Vaughn (RB24), Demetric Felton (RB25), JaQuan Hardy (RB33)
WR – Danny Amendola (WR1), Cedrick Wilson (WR3), Jauan Jennings (WR5), Kalif Raymond (WR16), Ihmir Smith-Marsette (WR20), Tre’Quan Smith (WR22)
TE – Josiah Deguara (TE5), Brock Wright (TE10), Tyree Jackson (TE13), Zach Gentry (TE17)
The biggest key to unlocking week 18 is deciphering which teams actually care about winning. It’s critical to understand the seeding implications for any teams that are in the playoff picture this week. Know which teams can’t improve or hurt their seeding at all – the Bucs, the Giants, and possibly the Chargers if the Bengals win in the early afternoon. Know which teams could move up but need unlikely help and would get minimal benefit – the Vikings and possibly the Cowboys. And know which teams desperately need a win to keep their playoff hopes alive - the Steelers, Seahawks, Packers, Dolphins, Patriots, Titans, Jaguars and possibly the Lions can all either clinch a playoff spot or keep their playoff hopes alive with a win.
This week’s outlooks will lean heavily on team motivation, and will have more of a slant toward DFS and prop bets than usual with most regular fantasy leagues already done. There are fewer trustworthy starts among the rookies this week, but there are more fun sleepers to talk about that usual as some rookies who have been backups all year get an extended opportunity.
A couple of housekeeping notes for the players listed below – All players listed under the same header at the same position are listed in the order that I would play them this week, and all references to fantasy points and points allowed rankings are based on half-PPR scoring unless otherwise noted. Any data on route participation, air yards, and other usage rates are per Dwain McFarland’s Utilization Report on Pro Football Focus.
Let’s dive into the fun of week 18…
Rookies You Already Know You Should Start:
RB Kenneth Walker III, SEA (Wk. 18: vs. LAR): Walker has tallied 11.9 PPR points in each of his last 10 healthy games, and the Seahawks shouldn’t deviate from their normal game plan since they need to win this game to keep their playoff hopes alive. The Rams rank 13th in Football Outsiders’ run defense DVOA and have allowed 19+ PPR points to 4 different running backs in their past 4 games. KW3 has his usual outlook as a solid RB2, and Seattle is a 6.5-point favorite who should be able to run the ball. Walker comes into the week 64 yards short of 1,000 rushing yards for the season. I’d expect the Seahawks to make sure he gets there if he has a chance.
Borderline Rookies I’d Lean Toward Starting:
QB Brock Purdy, SF (Wk. 18: vs. Ari.): Purdy has thrown for at least 2 touchdowns in 5 straight games, and for 200+ yards in 4 of those games. The Cardinals have limited 3 of the last 4 QBs they’ve faced to fewer than 10 fantasy points, but those 3 QBs were Mac Jones, Brett Rypien, and Desmond Ridder. The Cardinals have still lost 6 straight games, and the 49ers have a Vegas implied total of 27 points this week. There are volume concerns for Purdy since the 49ers are 2-TD favorites and likely won’t have to throw a ton, but Purdy should be a good bet to finish as a solid QB2 again this week. The 49ers can still earn a playoff bye with a little help, so they’re not going to hold back.
RB Tyler Allgeier, ATL (Wk. 18: vs. TB): Allgeier is one of my favorite running back plays of the week. The Bucs have nothing to play for, and the Falcons would love to go out on a high note. Allgeier has averaged just over 20 touches per game and 18.3 PPR points per game over the last 3 weeks, and he enters week 18 just 100 rushing yards away from 1,000 for the season, and 123 away from the Falcons’ rookie rushing record. I expect Allgeier to get a lot of run in this game, and if he gets it going early, the Falcons are going to make an effort to get him to 100 yards and possibly that rookie record. He’s a prime option for the captain spot in showdown contests, and I’d look at betting overs on his player props this week as well. He has true top-12 upside this week.
RB Isiah Pacheco, KC (Wk. 18: @LV): Pacheco’s streak of 7 straight games with 80+ scrimmage yards came to an end last weekend, but he should be in line for a solid performance in week 18. The Chiefs are 9-point favorites and have the highest implied point total of the week at just over 31. Kansas City needs to win this game to clinch a first round bye, so they should play it pretty close to normal. The Raiders have allowed the 5th-most RB points per game and rank 21st in run defense DVOA. Pacheco’s usage near the goal line remains too inconsistent to view him as more than an RB2 option, but I like his chances of getting above 80 yards again.
RB James Cook, BUF (Wk. 18: vs. NE): Cook set his season-highs in snap share, carries, and targets in Buffalo’s first meeting with the Patriots, and he was effective in that contest. The rookie topped 100 scrimmage yards, and I wouldn’t be surprised if the Bills turn to him for an expanded role once again this weekend. Cook has played his 4 highest snap shares of the season in the last 4 games. There’s a low floor here but Cook has a higher ceiling this week than Isiah Pacheco.
WR Christian Watson, GB (Wk. 18: vs. Det.): Watson has been Aaron Rodgers’ favorite target for much of the second half of the season. He didn’t put up much of a stat line last weekend as he was limited by a hip injury, but he still earned a target on 29% of his routes run. He’s a week healthier this week and should play closer to a full-time role Sunday night. The matchup this week is as good as it gets for a deep threat like Watson. No team has allowed as many completed air yards per completion as the Lions this year. In fact, no team even comes close. Pass defense is the weakest part of the Lions’ football team, and Watson is the most likely Packers’ pass catcher to take advantage of that. We’ve seen him score multiple touchdowns 3 times this year, and he has a real chance to do it for a 4th time in this one. There’s still a boom-or-bust element here, but Watson has a top-5 WR ceiling this week. He should be a staple in DFS tournament lineups.
WRs Chris Olave & Rashid Shaheed, NO (Wk. 18: vs. Car.): Both the Panthers and Saints are eliminated from playoff contention, which means they’ll likely play this out like a normal game and try to end their seasons on a high note. The Panthers have already been one of the worst WR defenses in the league, allowing the 3rd-most fantasy points per game to the position and ranking 27th in pass defense DVOA, but their pass defense could be even worse this week with star EDGE rusher Brian Burns popping up as questionable late in the week with an ankle injury. Taysom Hill and Juwan Johnson are questionable for the Saints as well. If Taysom misses this game, it could mean more overall passing volume and more red zone opportunities for Olave and Shaheed. If Juwan Johnson sits, that means less target competition for the WR duo. Both receivers have top-15 upside in a game where the Saints may as well let it all hang out. The Panthers allowed 10-207-3 to Mike Evans and 9-120 to Chris Godwin last weekend with Jaycee Horn now on IR. There’s a big ceiling for the receivers if the Saints want to press the issue. Olave is 155 yards away from Michael Thomas’ franchise rookie receiving record. Don’t be surprised if the Saints make a push to get him there if he gets off to a fast start in this game.
WR Garrett Wilson, NYJ (Wk. 18: @Mia.): The Jets announced that it will be Joe Flacco starting the finale this week, and that means Wilson will probably be a safe WR3 even with the Jets eliminated from playoff contention. The Dolphins rank 25th in pass defense DVOA, and in Flacco’s 3 starts early this season Wilson averaged 11 targets per game and put up stat lines of 4-52, 8-102-2, and 6-60. It’s possible that the Jets cut back on his playing time a bit with their season fate decided, but I think there’s too much ceiling here to sit him if you’re in an actual fantasy matchup this week.
WR Drake London, ATL (Wk. 18: vs. TB): London’s usage has exploded over the last month. He’s averaged 10 targets and 77 receiving yards per game in his last 4 games, and he’s put those numbers up in spite of Atlanta remaining the run-heaviest offense in the league. 47% of the team’s passing yards have gone to London in those 4 games. Atlanta is favored this week, so they could be even more run-heavy than usual, but London is a good bet for 7-8 targets against a Tampa defense that will be missing several key players this weekend, including their CB1 Carlton Davis and team sack leader Vita Vea. The low passing volume caps London’s ceiling, but he should be a solid WR3 again this week.
Borderline Rookies I’d Lean Toward Sitting:
RB Jaylen Warren, PIT (Wk. 18: vs. Cle.): Warren has been handling an increased workload in recent weeks, averaging 11 touches per game in the last 3 contests, and the Browns are one of the worst run defenses in the league, ranking 29th in run defense DVOA. Najee Harris has averaged 23 touches per game over that same span. This is a do-or-die game for the Steelers’ playoff chances, so they should still rely heavily on Najee. There’s upside for Warren, but his workload is far from safe, and you’ll likely be disappointed by his output if he doesn’t get into the end zone. The Steelers have an implied point total of just 21 points this week. I’d view Warren as a dicey RB3.
RB Zonovan Knight, NYJ (Wk. 18: @Mia.): Knight’s poor performance against the Jaguars in week 16 resulted in a big dent in his playing time last Sunday. Bam was on the field for just 21% of the offensive snaps against Seattle, the first time he’s played fewer than 40% of the snaps in any of the 6 games he’s been active for. Ty Johnson operated as the lead back in the committee, and there’s no way you can count on Knight stepping back into that lead role this Sunday. The Dolphins rank 6th in run defense DVOA, and I wouldn’t expect much more production from Bam than we saw last week (44 scrimmage yards).
RB Rachaad White, TB (Wk. 18: @Atl.): Tampa Bay has nothing to gain by winning this week, so I wouldn’t expect to see much of Rachaad or Leonard Fournette in this game. It’s likely to be a Ke’Shawn Vaughn game in the backfield, just like week 18 last year. I’d expect the starters to play a few series to stay fresh for the postseason, but I’d be surprised if White gets to double-digit touches.
RB Brian Robinson, WAS (Wk. 18: vs. Dal.): The Commanders bowed out of playoff contention with a whimper last weekend, barely showing up against a mediocre Browns’ team. Dallas has reason to be motivated to win this game with a division title and possible 1 seed still in play, and the Commanders have none. Washington has turned to rookie Sam Howell at QB, so it could be a shaky day for the offense as a whole. There’s no guarantee that Robinson sees his usual workload – he could give way to Jonathan Williams more often – and game script should prevent the Commanders from running a bunch as a touchdown underdog. The Cowboys allow the 2nd-fewest RB points per game, and rank 5th in run defense DVOA. It all adds up to a probable floor game for Robinson.
Update: Brian Robinson Jr. has been ruled out for week 18
WR George Pickens, PIT (Wk. 18: vs. Cle.): Pickens has 50+ yards in 3 of his last 4 games, but he hasn’t shown much ceiling since the Steelers shifted to a more run-heavy offensive approach in the second half of the season. Starting in week 12, the Steelers made a commitment to the run game that has gotten their season turned around. The Steelers averaged 36.7 pass attempts per game prior to week 12, and just 29.1 per game since. Pickens’ volume has taken a hit as a result. The rookie saw 6+ targets come his way in 6 of the first 10 games this season (more than 6 in three of them), and he’s reached 6 targets just once in the last 6 games. His targets are typically far enough downfield that he can still post respectable stat lines on 4-5 targets, but it’s hard to get to double-digit points that way unless you score a touchdown. For the season, the Browns have allowed the 6th-fewest WR points per game, and most of the guys who have hurt them are truly elite receivers. In their past 10 games, only 7 receivers have reached 12 fantasy points (half-PPR) against Cleveland. Three of those receivers rank in the top 7 in fantasy points per game this year (Tyreek, Ja’Marr Chase, Stefon Diggs), and another 2 rank in the top-18 (Tee Higgins, Chris Godwin). If Pickens gets to double-digit points, it would be a successful day.
WR Jahan Dotson, WAS (Wk. 18: vs. Dal.): Dotson has earned 6+ targets in 4 straight games, and tallied at least 50 yards and a TD in 3 of them, and Dallas has been bleeding points to wide receivers since starting CB Anthony Brown went on IR. They’ve allowed 8 different receivers to score 12+ PPR points in the last 4 games, but Dotson’s QB situation could prove to be a problem. The Commanders will turn to Sam Howell to make his first career start this weekend, and the uncertainty that comes with that means Dotson is a very risky option in fantasy lineups this week. The Commanders are officially eliminated from playoff contention, so don’t be surprised if they don’t play their starters a full complement of snaps alongside the rookie QB.
WR Tyquan Thornton, NE (Wk. 18: @Buf.): Thornton has quietly moved into full-time role for the Patriots in recent weeks. He’s played at least 88% of the offensive snaps in 4 straight games, but it hasn’t led to huge production. Last week was the first time in any of those games that he topped 30 receiving yards. The rookie has big play upside, but he’s unlikely to cash in on it with Mac Jones throwing him the ball against a Buffalo defense that ranks 9th in pass defense DVOA. Tre’Davious White has been back in a full-time role for 4 games for the Bills, and in that time the only receivers to reach 11+ fantasy points against them (half-PPR) have been Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle.
WR Romeo Doubs, GB (Wk. 18: vs. Det.): As the games have gotten more important for Green Bay, Doubs’ playing time has dwindled. He’s operated as the WR4 in this offense over the past few weeks with Christian Watson and Randall Cobb healthy. That doesn’t mean he can’t have a productive day against the Lions, who allow the 4th-most WR points per game and rank 22nd in pass defense DVOA, but his limited playing time makes him much more volatile than the other Green Bay receivers. Doubs has tallied at least 4 targets in each of the last 3 games, but Watson left one of those games early and was given a lighter workload last week as he recovered. Doubs’ prices on DraftKings ($4,400 in full slate contests and $5,200 for showdown contests) are a little high given that there isn’t much of a floor for the rookie. I’d expect Rodgers to lean on the receivers he trusts most with the playoffs on the line.
TE Cade Otton, TB (Wk. 18: @Atl.): The Falcons have allowed the 4th-most tight end points per game, and rank 30th in pass defense DVOA, but I can’t imagine Otton plays a ton in a game that Bucs have no need to win. Otton hasn’t made the most of his opportunities in the last couple weeks anyway, pulling in just 4 catches for 29 yards on 13 targets in the last two games. I’m not sure I’d consider him even a TE2 in this game. It could be a Ko Kieft week at tight end for the Bucs.
Rookies You Already Know You Should Sit:
QB Kenny Pickett, PIT (Wk. 18: vs. Cle.): There are no surprises with Pickett this week. He still hasn’t put up 2 or more TDs in any game he’s started this season, and he’s thrown for fewer than 200 yards in 5 of his last 7 full games played. The Steelers should be going all-out this weekend with their playoff hopes still alive, but Pickett has consistently shown us that he doesn’t have much upside beyond the low-end QB2 range, and the Browns have allowed the 2nd-fewest QB points per game.
QB Desmond Ridder, ATL (Wk. 18: vs. TB): You might be tempted to consider Ridder in DFS lineups since he’s facing a Tampa Bay team that will be resting a lot of starters, but Atlanta just doesn’t throw the ball much when they’re winning. In their 6 wins this season, the Falcons have attempted more than 20 passes in just 2 of them, and thrown for 200+ yards in just 2 of them. If the game goes the way Vegas thinks it will (Atlanta is favored by 4 points), there just isn’t any extra passing upside for Ridder. He’s not a top-20 QB option this week.
RB Keaontay Ingram, ARI (Wk. 18: @SF): James Conner has been ruled out for week 18, so Ingram should be on the field for more than the 1 snap he played last week, but it was Corey Clement who took over the backfield after Conner was knocked out last week. The 49ers rank 1st in run defense DVOA and allow the fewest RB points per game, so Ingram has little hope of a productive day unless he gets a workhorse role, and that just seems highly unlikely.
RB Kyren Williams, LAR (Wk. 18: @Sea.): The Seahawks allow the 2nd-most RB points per game, but Kyren has averaged fewer than 4 touches per game in his last five games, and the Rams haven’t played a meaningful game in several weeks. Having nothing to play for this week shouldn’t mean a bigger workload for Williams.
RB Raheem Blackshear, CAR (Wk. 18: @NO): Blackshear could see some extra playing time this week with the team now eliminated from the division title hunt, but it’s impossible to count on it being a significant amount of extra playing time. Blackshear played 6 or fewer snaps in 4 of the last 5 games.
RBs Hassan Haskins & Julius Chestnut, TEN (Wk. 18: @Jax.): Derrick Henry is ready to go for week 18, and that means he’s going to carry the load this week. The Titans’ season is on the line and no one other than Henry is likely to get more than a few touches in this backfield.
WR Jameson Williams, DET (Wk. 18: @GB): Williams has now been active for 5 games this season, but he has just 2 touches to show for it (though both of those touches went for at least 40 yards). The rookie’s playing time has been climbing – he set season-highs last week with a 31% route participation rate and 3 targets – but he remains nothing more than a big play dart throw. The Packers have allowed 4 completions of 35+ yards in their last 2 games, and those big plays are what you need to hope for from Williams if you start him in any format.
WR Skyy Moore, KC (Wk. 18: @LV): Kansas City needs a win this weekend to ensure they get a 1st round playoff bye, so I wouldn’t expect any big changes to the game plan or player usage unless this game gets out of hand. Kansas City is a 9-point favorite, so it very well could get out of hand, but last weekend is the only time since the start of December that Moore tallied 10+ receiving yards. I’d be surprised if he exceeds the 3-33 stat line he put up last Sunday.
WR Alec Pierce, IND (Wk. 18: vs. Hou.): Pierce’s playing time took a step forward when Jeff Saturday took over as head coach, but his production went backwards. Pierce played at least 70% of the offensive snaps just twice in 8 games under Frank Reich, but he topped 35 receiving yards in 6 of them and posted 60+ yards 4 times. He’s been at 70% or more of the snaps played in 6 of 7 games since Saturday took over, but he’s reached 30 yards just once, and put up a goose egg 3 times. The Texans allow the 3rd-fewest WR points per game. Don’t expect a turnaround for Pierce here.
WR David Bell, CLE (Wk. 18: @Pit.): Bell is no more likely to have a breakout performance this week than fellow Browns’ rookie receivers Daylen Baldwin and Michael Woods II. The trio has a combined 11 targets in the last 4 weeks, and none has earned more than 3 targets in any one game in that span. They’re all just low-upside dart throws.
TE Jelani Woods, IND (Wk. 18: vs. Hou.): Nick Foles suffered a rib injury last week and will miss the season finale. The Colts will turn back to Sam Ehlinger at QB in this game. In Ehlinger’s two starts this season, he averaged 152 passing yards per game, and only 8.5% of those yards went to tight ends. Woods has caught for 35+ yards just 3 times this season, and I wouldn’t put money on him getting there a 4th time this week.
TE Daniel Bellinger, NYG (Wk. 18: @Phi.): The Giants don’t figure to play their starters a whole lot with the team locked in as the 6-seed, so we could see a bit more of Chris Myarick and Nick Vannett this week while Bellinger spends more time on the bench. There isn’t enough upside to consider Bellinger.
Rookies who may as well be on byes: RB Trestan Ebner, CHI, RB Snoop Conner, JAX, RBs Pierre Strong & Kevin Harris, NE, WR Khalil Shakir, BUF, WR Velus Jones Jr., CHI, TE Isaiah Likely, BAL, TEs Jake Ferguson & Peyton Hendershot, DAL
Deep League Sleepers, Stashes, and Cheap DFS Options:
QB Skylar Thompson, MIA (Wk. 18: vs. NYJ): Thompson will get the start this weekend, and although this matchup looks tough on paper, the Jets don’t have much to play for this week. Thompson has struggled when he’s been used in relief, but he was off to a strong start in his only start of the season before leaving that game with injury (he threw for 89 yards on the first 2 drives of the game vs Minnesota). Thompson is a risky play in any format, but he has electric weapons, the Dolphins need to win this game, and the Jets might not play with their usual defensive vigor. Thompson costs just $4,800 on DraftKings, and just $6,000 for showdown contests. This feels like a spot where we could see a surprise top-10 performance.
QB Sam Howell, WAS (Wk. 18: vs. Dal.): Howell will make his first career start on Sunday, and it comes in a tough spot against a good Dallas team that needs to win to keep hopes of a division title alive. The Cowboys rank 3rd in pass defense DVOA and have allowed the 7th-fewest QB points per game for the year, but they’ve also been struggling since losing cornerback Anthony Brown for the season. Over the last 4 games without him, Dallas has allowed an average of 280 passing yards and 2 passing scores per game to the following combination of QBs: Davis Mills, Jeff Driskel, Trevor Lawrence, Gardner Minshew, and Joshua Dobbs. Howell has good enough weapons that he could have a passable fantasy performance in his debut. I don’t really know what that means for where you could use him this week, but don’t be surprised if Howell winds up as a high-end QB2 this week.
RBs Tyrion Davis-Price & Jordan Mason, SF (Wk. 18: vs. Ari.): The 49ers need to win this week to keep their hopes of a 1st-round bye alive, and Arizona has nothing to play for and will be missing their QB1, RB1, and WR1 for this game. This game has the makings of a huge rout, and if that comes to fruition the 49ers will be handing off to their backup running backs a lot in the 2nd half. Elijah Mitchell returns from injury this week, so he should get a good handful of carries to shake off the rust before the playoffs, but it should be either Mason or TDP handling the bulk of the 2nd half carries if the game is a blowout. Arizona allows the 4th-most RB points per game, so there’s an opportunity for a productive day on just those second half carries. Pay attention to who is inactive here. One of Mason or TDP could be inactive with Elijah back. If both are active, I’d prioritize Mason.
RB Isaiah Spiller, LAC (Wk. 18: @Den.): You need to keep your head on a swivel if you’re planning to use Spiller anywhere…his viability depends entirely on the Ravens/Bengals game in the early afternoon. If the Bengals win that game, the Chargers would be 100% locked into the 5th seed and have no need to win this game. If the Ravens win, the door is still open for the Chargers to fall to 6th with a loss, and there’s no way the Chargers want that to happen. As the 5-seed, they’d be facing either the Jaguars or Titans, both of whom will come up short of 10 wins this season. As the 6-seed, they’d likely face one of the Bills, Bengals, or Chiefs. If Baltimore wins early, you can’t start Spiller. The Chargers will likely play their normal starters. If the Bengals win, it opens the door for Spiller to get a lead back workload against a Denver defense that allows the 9th-most RB points per game and ranks 22nd in run defense DVOA. Spiller costs just $4,800 on DraftKings for full slate contests, and just $400 for showdown contests. There is some added risk here since the Chargers have 3 backup running backs who could get some run. Joshua Kelley has been the RB2 whenever he’s healthy, and Larry Rountree has been active ahead of Spiller each of the last two weeks as the RB3. I’ve got a hunch that the Chargers will sit Kelley along with Ekeler if their playoff fate is already decided, and that Rountree has only been playing ahead of Spiller because he’s a better special teamer. Make sure to check the team inactives before finalizing any lineups with a Chargers’ RB in them.
RB Zamir White, LV (Wk. 18: vs. KC): The Raiders don’t have a good reason to continue to run Josh Jacobs into the ground now that they’ve been eliminated from the playoff hunt, and that means White could finally get a real opportunity at playing time against a middling Chiefs’ defense. Kansas City ranks 17th in run defense DVOA and has allowed the 16th-most RB points per game. Josh Jacobs hasn’t practiced all week and is listed as questionable for this game, and I wouldn’t be surprised if he winds up inactive. White doesn’t have huge upside in a game where the Raiders should be facing negative game script for much of the day, but he can certainly provide a positive return at his DFS prices. He costs the minimum on DraftKings for multi-game slates, and just $200 in showdown contests. If Jacobs sits, White probably sees double-digit touches.
WR Treylon Burks, TEN (Wk. 18: @Jax.): Burks was a focal point in the passing game in Josh Dobbs’ first start last week, tallying 4-66 on 8 targets and adding a 20-yard rush against Dallas. The Jaguars rank 29th in pass defense DVOA, and I expect the Titans to throw a little more than they want to as 6.5-point underdogs. We’ve seen Burks produce when given opportunities, and he should get plenty of them this week against the Jaguars. Joshua Dobbs may have more success in the passing game with Derrick Henry back to draw defensive attention as well. I like Burks to finish as a top-30 WR this week.
WR Jalen Nailor, MIN (Wk. 18: @Chi.): Nailor made a splash in garbage time against the Packers last weekend, pulling in 3 catches for 89 yards and a score on just 9 snaps. Minnesota is still in contention for the 2-seed, but they’d need the 49ers to lose as a 2-touchdown favorite for that to become a reality. The smart play would be to rest their starters, and that means Nailor could see some extended playing time against a defense that ranks 31st in pass defense DVOA. Nailor was a downfield weapon at Michigan State, averaging more than 18 yards per catch in each of his last 2 college seasons, and the Bears allow the 3rd-highest yards per completion in the league. If it sounds like the Vikings are going to rest their starters, Nailor is going to be a steal in all DFS formats. He costs the minimum for the main slate on DraftKings, and just $1,200 for showdown contests.
TE Chig Okonkwo, TEN (Wk. 18: @Jax.): The switch from Malik Willis to Joshua Dobbs at QB returns relevance to the Titans’ pass catchers for week 18. The Titans need to win this game to make the playoffs and win the division, and Dobbs gives them a better chance to do that than Willis. Tennessee will undoubtedly lean on their workhorse Derrick Henry in this game, but they’re a touchdown underdog, and game script may dictate that they have to throw more than they’d like to. The Jaguars allow the 9th-most TE points per game and rank 29th in pass defense DVOA, and Okonkwo posted a line of 6-46-1 in the first meeting with Jacksonville. Okonkwo’s playing time was limited last week, but he was targeted on nearly 40% of his routes run with Dobbs at QB. If he plays a more normal complement of snaps this week, he’s got top-10 TE upside, and costs just $4,800 for showdown contests. He’s a playmaker the Titans should look to get involved.
TE Trey McBride, ARI (Wk. 18: @SF): McBride had easily his best game of the season last week, putting up 7-71-1 on 10 targets against the Falcons. It was the only game this season that David Blough has started at QB, and it’ll be Blough under center again this week. The 49ers are a significantly tougher matchup for tight ends than the Falcons were last week, but Arizona will have to throw to someone and DeAndre Hopkins has been ruled out again. There should be plenty of targets coming McBride’s way again this week, and even with the tough matchup McBride has top-10 upside on Sunday.
That’s all I’ve got for this season. Hopefully this info helps you for week 18, and hopefully it’s been a help to you in sorting out what to do with your rookies throughout the season. Feel free to hit me up on Twitter (@Shawn_Foss) if you have any questions or want to yell at me about anything written above, and always make sure to apply what’s written in the context of your own league rules and roster. Keep a close eye on the injury report throughout the week and do a final pre-game check to make sure you don’t start any inactive players. As always: Good luck, trust your gut and have fun. It’s just a game.
Welcome back to the Rookie Report! We’ve made it to championship week, and honestly, you deserve a title if you survived last week’s slate of ice bowls. The weather wreaked havoc on lineups and fantasy performances last weekend as a number of key players posted duds with everything on the line. Justin Herbert, Derek Carr, Rhamondre Stevenson, Cordarrelle Patterson, D’Andre Swift, Josh Jacobs, Stefon Diggs, Davante Adams, Garrett Wilson, Adam Thielen, Mark Andrews, and DeAndre Hopkins were all among the players who could’ve sabotaged your chances of advancing. You’re in luck this week as the weather appears to be much more favorable. As of right now, not one game in week 17 is projected to have winds higher than 11 mph, and only one game is projected to have a temperature below 40 degrees (Vikings at Packers). All-in-all, weather shouldn’t be much of a consideration this week unless things change drastically between now and Sunday.
The bigger concern this week is with teams that have nothing to play for – most notably the Titans and Raiders. The Titans are sitting Derrick Henry and Malik Willis this week since the only game that matters for their playoff hopes is next week against the Jaguars, and the Raiders have benched Derek Carr, likely torpedoing the values of Josh Jacobs, Davante Adams, and Darren Waller in championship week. Make sure you know if any of your players are at risk of reduced workloads in inconsequential games and adjust accordingly.
Odds are if you’ve made it this far, you’ve had at least one rookie contribute along the way. I can’t remember another season with quite so many important fantasy rookies, and that means there are a lot of them in consideration for championship week lineups. I’m here to help you navigate what to do with them once again, and hopefully help you guide your squad to a title.y
A couple of housekeeping notes for the players listed below – All players listed under the same header at the same position are listed in the order that I would play them this week, and all references to fantasy points and points allowed rankings are based on half-PPR scoring unless otherwise noted. Any data on route participation, air yards, and other usage rates are per Dwain McFarland’s Utilization Report on Pro Football Focus.
Let’s jump into week 17…
Rookies You Already Know You Should Start:
RB Kenneth Walker III, SEA (Wk. 17: vs. NYJ): Walker doesn’t always put up crooked rushing production (he’s been held below 50 rushing yards in 4 of his last 5 games), but he’s tallied at least 11.9 PPR points in each of his last 9 healthy games. I wouldn’t be excited to use him in DFS contests since the Jets rank 8th in Football Outsiders’ run defense DVOA and allow the 9th-fewest RB points per game, but Walker has consistently finished as an RB2 this season, and his workload is safe. You can’t sit him in championship games unless you have safe studs ahead of him.
WR Garrett Wilson, NYJ (Wk. 17: @Sea.): Wilson gets Mike White back at QB this week, and that should mean good things for his production. The Seahawks have allowed just the 3rd-fewest WR points per game, but they also rank 21st in pass defense DVOA. Wilson has scored 12 or more PPR points in each of the last 5 games that were not started by Zach Wilson, and he’s been targeted at least 7 times in all of them. He’s got top-12 upside every time Mike White is under center, and Seattle isn’t as daunting of a matchup as their points allowed ranking would indicate.
Borderline Rookies I’d Lean Toward Starting:
QB Brock Purdy, SF (Wk. 17: @LV): Purdy has finished as the QB14 or better in all 3 of his starts so far this season, and he should be a fine high-end QB2 again this week. The Raiders have limited 5 of the last 6 QBs they’ve faced to fewer than 2 total touchdowns, but only one QB all year has fallen short of 220 passing yards against them. Purdy continues to keep the 49ers’ offense on schedule and make plays in the passing game when asked to. I wouldn’t be plugging him into fantasy lineups ahead of obvious top-10 QB plays, but he’s a steady QB2 once again this week.
RB Tyler Allgeier, ATL (Wk. 17: vs. Ari.): Allgeier has been on a true heater over the past couple months, and he appears to have wrestled the lead back role away from Cordarrelle Patterson in this offense. He had been consistently topping 50 yards on around 10 carries per week in November, and that efficient running led to a rise in playing time in the last two games, and Allgeier has kept up his strong play. He’s tallied 253 scrimmage yards and a TD over the last two weeks on 40 touches, and this week he faces an Arizona defense that ranks 27th in run defense DVOA and has allowed the 8th-most RB points per game. The most promising development last week was that Allgeier set season-highs with 5 targets and 4 receptions in Desmond Ridder’s second start. Allgeier should be a reasonable RB2 this week on rushing upside alone, but if the passing usage continues, he could have even more untapped ceiling.
RB Brian Robinson Jr., WAS (Wk. 17: vs. Cle.): Robinson has piled up 80+ rushing yards in 4 of his past 6 games, and this week faces one of the worst run defenses in the NFL. The Browns rank 30th in run defense DVOA and have allowed the 3rd-most RB points per game. Cleveland has allowed a 70-yard rusher in 6 of their last 7 games, and Antonio Gibson might be inactive this week, leaving a bigger share of the workload for the rookie. Robinson is a top-20 RB play this week.
RB Isiah Pacheco, KC (Wk. 17: vs. Den.): Pacheco hasn’t consistently shown an exciting fantasy ceiling, scoring 15+ fantasy points just twice all year, but he’s been a rock-solid floor play with 7 straight games of 80+ scrimmage yards. Denver looked like they’ve given up on 2022 last week, surrendering 51 points to the Rams and allowing Cam Akers to bulldoze them for 118 yards and 3 scores. The Broncos rank just 22nd in run defense DVOA, and Pacheco put up 93 scrimmage yards against them in the first meeting back in week 14. Denver did dismiss head coach Nathaniel Hackett this week, and teams often see a bump in performance in the game after firing a coach in-season, but I don’t think that bump is enough to overcome a two-touchdown point spread this week. The Chiefs should still win easily, and Pacheco should roll up another 80 yards and a possible score. He’s a floor RB2/3 again this week.
RB Zonovan Knight, NYJ (Wk. 17: @Sea.): Knight is a risky play this week, but he’s a risky play in a good matchup. He had an abysmal performance last Thursday night against the Jaguars in the rain. He looked indecisive as a runner and finished with negative rushing yards on his 6 carries. The workload was disappointing, but Knight still handled 60% of the running back rushing attempts and should get another crack as lead back this week. The Seahawks allow the 2nd-most RB points per game, and rank 25th in run defense DVOA. Seattle has allowed 12+ PPR points to 7 different running backs in the past 5 games. If Knight functions as the RB1 again this week, he should be a fantasy RB2. The biggest concern would be that he could lose carries after his poor performance last week. Keep tabs on team reports if you’re considering Knight this week.
WR Christian Watson, GB (Wk. 17: vs. Min.): Watson is questionable for this week with a hip injury that knocked him out of the Christmas Day game with the Dolphins, but if he’s able to play he’s got a mountain of upside. Watson has emerged as Aaron Rodgers’ favorite target in this passing game. He was targeted 8 times on Rodgers’ first 16 pass attempts last weekend before exiting with injury, and that kind of workload against a bad Vikings secondary could mean top-12 upside this week. The Vikings allow the 2nd-most WR points per game. Keep an eye on the injury report to see if he’s limited at all, but if it sounds like Watson will be at full strength, he should be in your lineup.
WR Chris Olave, NO (Wk. 17: @Phi.): Olave has returned to practice this week after missing last Sunday’s game with a hamstring injury. The Eagles have strong perimeter cornerbacks and have allowed just the 10th-fewest WR points per game, but Olave has been matchup-proof for much of the season. Jarvis Landry has gone on IR this week, and in the games Landry’s missed this year Olave has averaged 9 targets per game. Olave hasn’t shown WR1 upside in a while, but he should be a safe WR3 if he’s active.
WR Jahan Dotson, WAS (Wk. 17: vs. Cle.): The Commanders are going back to Carson Wentz at QB this week, but Dotson has shown this season that he’s capable of producing no matter who is under center. The conventional wisdom this season has been that Heinicke only had eyes for Terry McLaurin, and the switch to Wentz should be a good thing for Dotson, but Dotson has done a great job of establishing himself with Heinicke in recent weeks. Dotson had earned a 26% target share from Heinicke in the last 3 games. Jahan has shown he’s a touchdown machine when healthy. He scored 4 touchdowns in the first 4 games of the season with Wentz before going on IR, and after a few weeks of getting his playing time ramped up and getting acclimated to Heinicke after his return, Dotson has rattled off 3 straight games with a score. The Browns have allowed just the 8th-fewest WR points per game, but I’d bet on Dotson keeping his hot streak alive. The team has been more pass-heavy when Carson Wentz is under center (Wentz attempted 38+ passes in each of the first 5 games of the year, and Heinicke has thrown more than 33 attempts just once), and the biggest concern with Wentz is that he crumbles when pressured. The Browns’ defense has the 6th-lowest pressure rate in the league. Dotson is more TD-reliant than the other WRs listed in this section, but I like him as a WR3 this week.
WR Drake London, ATL (Wk. 17: vs. Ari.): London appears to have finally turned the corner after showing some consistency over the past 3 weeks. He’s put up receiving lines of 6-95, 7-70, and 7-96 despite the team totaling fewer than 500 passing yards total in those 3 games. Arizona allows the 11th-fewest WR points per game, but they also allow the 8th-most passing yards per game, and London has been the bulk of the Atlanta passing attack in recent weeks. I wouldn’t bank on enough volume for London to have a true blow-up game this week, but he should keep the string of solid performances going as he continues to build a rapport with Desmond Ridder.
TE Greg Dulcich, DEN (Wk. 17: @KC): Dulcich has 8 targets in each of Russell Wilson’s last 3 starts, and the Broncos should be throwing a bunch again this week as two-TD underdogs in Kansas City. KC isn’t a great matchup for Dulcich, but the volume should have him firmly in-play as a low-end TE1. Dulcich plays from the slot as much as any tight end in the league (5th among all tight ends in slot snaps despite not playing until week 6), but 66% of his PPR fantasy points have come when aligned as an in-line tight end according to Sports Info Solutions. The Chiefs have allowed more fantasy points to tight ends lined up in the slot than any other team in the league, but they’ve allowed the fewest points in the league to in-line tight ends. Dulcich is going to have to make the most of his slot opportunities to out-perform that fringe TE1 range. He tallied 3 catches for 42 yards on 8 targets in his first meeting with the Chiefs.
Borderline Rookies I’d Lean Toward Sitting:
RB Rachaad White, TB (Wk. 17: vs. Car.): White finished last week as the RB14 thanks to a 4th quarter TD, but he took a clear back seat to Leonard Fournette in backfield usage in that game. Lenny handled 20 carries and 10 targets against the Cardinals compared to just 7 carries and 4 targets for White. There’s no guarantee that White bounces back to a more even split this week. The Bucs need to win to take control of the division race, and they’ve typically leaned more on Fournette when they need to win. The Panthers have been a solid defense against running backs this year. They’ve allowed the 15th fewest RB points per game, but that number is skewed a bit by a 5-TD game for Joe Mixon. If we remove the Bengals game, Carolina has allowed the 8th-fewest RB points per game, and they gave up only 58 combined yards and no TDs to Fournette and White in the first meeting with Tampa. You could potentially get away with starting White again this week, but he carries a bit more risk than usual with a tough matchup and a less certain role.
RB James Cook, BUF (Wk. 17: @Cin.): Cook made you look smart if you took a chance on him against the Bears at frigid Soldier Field last weekend, but I wouldn’t count on a repeat performance here. Cook has been productive when the Bills have gone run-heavy, something they did against the Browns, Patriots and Bears, but it’s not the approach I expect them to take this week. The Bengals have allowed the 8th-fewest RB points per game and the 6th-fewest RB rushing yards per game. The Bills would be wise to lean into their strengths in this one and let Josh Allen do the heavy lifting. I’d expect just a handful of carries and a few targets for Cook, which means he’ll need a TD to return value. The Bengals have coughed up just 1 running back score in their past 5 games.
WR George Pickens, PIT (Wk. 17: @Bal.): Pickens has been playing well in recent weeks, putting up 50+ yards in 5 of his last 6 games, including a 3-78 line on 3 targets against these Ravens in the first meeting a few weeks ago, but he hasn’t put up more than 6 targets in a game since week 5. The Ravens have allowed the 11th-most WR points per game this season, but only 3 receivers in the last 12 games have tallied a dozen fantasy points against them (half-PPR). All 3 of them either scored a TD or earned double-digit targets. Pickens isn’t getting to 10+ targets, so you need the TD, and the Ravens’ defense has allowed just 6 total touchdowns in their last 6 games. If you’re happy with 8-10 PPR points, Pickens is a fine option, but if you’re hoping for more, I’d probably look elsewhere.
WR Romeo Doubs, GB (Wk. 17: vs. Min.): This recommendation changes if Christian Watson’s hip injury keeps him from playing this week. The Vikings’ pass defense has been porous this season, and Doubs would step into a prominent role if Watson is sidelined. Doubs has been targeted 11 times in the last two games and would see an uptick there if Watson were to sit, and the Vikings allow the 7th-highest completion % and 4th-highest yards per completion in the league. Doubs has WR2 upside in this matchup if Watson is unable to play, but he’s a dicey WR4 if Watson suits up. Watson is practicing in a limited capacity as of Thursday.
WR Rashid Shaheed, NO (Wk. 17: @Phi.): Shaheed is a big play waiting to happen every week, but he’s hasn’t had more than 4 targets come his way in any game that Chris Olave has been active for, and the Eagles rank 1st in pass defense DVOA and allow the 10th-fewest WR points per game. Shaheed is now the WR2 in this offense with Jarvis Landry on IR, so you could take a swing if you’re in big need of upside, but Shaheed is a boom-or-bust WR4 option. With Andy Dalton as his QB, the ‘boom’ side of that is always a longer shot than it should be.
WR Treylon Burks, TEN (Wk. 17: vs. Dal.): Burks was targeted just twice in his first game played with Malik Willis at QB and didn’t record a single reception. He could see more usage this week with Josh Dobbs taking over and an expected negative game script, but it’s hard to count on any pass catchers in this offense without Ryan Tannehill at QB. The matchup this week is more favorable than you’d think given that the Cowboys rank 2nd in pass defense DVOA. They’ve allowed the 4th-most WR points per game and have allowed 4 different receivers to catch for 100+ yards in the last 3 weeks since CB Anthony Brown went on IR. Burks is an intriguing play in DFS tournaments this week, but he shouldn’t be anywhere near your championship lineups unless you’re desperate.
WR Jameson Williams, DET (Wk. 17: vs. Chi.): Williams has big-play upside, but the Lions have been unwilling to unleash him for more than a handful of plays each week, and comments Dan Campbell made this week make me believe any changes there will be incremental. When asked about ramping up Jameson’s usage, Campbell said: “We’ll get him a couple more plays this week. He’s coming. It takes work. We just can’t throw him out there and say, ‘You’re taking 65 plays.’ There’s a trust that has to be built. But he’s working through that, and it’s good.” I touted Jameson as a potential league-winner down the stretch, but it sounds like he’s going to remain a part-time player through the remainder of the regular season. He could have some success on limited snaps against the Bears’ barely there defense (29th in pass defense DVOA), but you can’t count on that in championship week lineups.
TE Cade Otton, TB (Wk. 17: vs. Car.): I made the mistake last week of betting against the Cam Brate corollary with Otton. The rule is that if Brate is active, you should sit Otton, and if Brate sits, you should fire him up. Otton has now failed to reach 10 PPR points in all 9 games that Brate has been active for. He’s 4-for-5 at hitting that mark when Brate sits. For what it’s worth, Otton did play a full-time role last week. He was in a route on 84% of Tom Brady’s dropbacks and was targeted 7 times, but he turned that into just 2 catches for 12 yards. He’s got low-end TE1 upside if he sees that kind of usage again this week, but there are less risky streaming options out there. The Panthers allow the 11th-fewest TE points per game.
TE Chig Okonkwo, TEN (Wk. 17: vs. Dal.): Okonkwo has earned just 7 targets in the 3 games Ryan Tannehill didn’t play, and Dallas allows the 3rd-fewest TE points per game. The rookie still has big-play upside, but if he gets more than just a couple catches it would be a surprise. The team announced Thursday that Josh Dobbs is going to get the start at QB, but Dobbs has just 45 career passing yards to his name. You’d be taking a huge leap of faith if you start Okonkwo in a championship game with Dobbs at QB.
TE Daniel Bellinger, NYG (Wk. 17: vs. Ind.): Bellinger has been on the field for 97% or more of the Giants’ offensive snaps in 3 of the past 4 games, but he isn’t getting the ball enough to be useful in championship week. Any tight end that plays a full-time role is capable of putting up a fringe TE1 performance, but Bellinger hasn’t tallied more than 40 yards in any game this season, and the Colts have allowed just 1 tight end score in the last 11 games.
Rookies You Already Know You Should Sit:
QB Kenny Pickett, PIT (Wk. 17: @Bal.): Pickett still hasn’t posted two total touchdowns in any game he’s started this season, and the Ravens have only allowed two QBs to score 14+ fantasy points in their last 10 games (Tom Brady and Trevor Lawrence). There isn’t a good reason to expect more from Pickett this week than what we’ve seen over the past 3 months. He remains an uninspiring QB2 option.
QB Skylar Thompson, MIA (Wk. 17: @NE): I’d be very surprised if Tua Tagovailoa ends up playing this week after going into the concussion protocol for the third time this season, so that means either Skylar Thompson or Teddy Bridgewater would get the starting nod in his place. If Thompson gets the nod, there is some upside with the weapons he’ll have at his disposal, but the Patriots are always a tough matchup against inexperienced QBs, especially in Foxboro. New England has held 3 of the 7 QBs they’ve faced at home this season below 8 fantasy points, including Zach Wilson and Sam Ehlinger. Thompson is nothing more than a prayer QB2 this week, even if he does get the start.
Update: Teddy Bridgewater is expected to get the start in Tua’s place
QB Malik Willis, TEN (Wk. 17: vs. Dal.): If you missed the news on Thursday, Josh Dobbs is expected to get the start for the Titans, not Willis. With Derrick Henry expected to sit, the team likely feels that they need someone who could have success throwing the ball, and that isn’t Willis right now. Dobbs isn’t exactly a proven option. He’s attempted just 17 passes in his 5+ year NFL career, but he flashed this past preseason with the Browns.
RB Zamir White, LV (Wk. 17: vs. SF): The Raiders have thrown in the towel for 2022 after their loss to the Steelers last week ended their realistic playoff hopes. They’ve already announced that Derek Carr has been benched for Jarrett Stidham for the remainder of the season, and they’ll likely limit Josh Jacobs and Davante Adams a bit as well to get a look at younger players on the roster. That means Zamir White will probably set a career-high in touches this week, but I wouldn’t expect much success against a San Francisco defense that allows the fewest RB points per game. The Raiders’ offense as a whole is likely to struggle.
RB Jaylen Warren, PIT (Wk. 17: @Bal.): Warren’s spike in usage in week 15 didn’t carry over to last Sunday, and he’s now handled 8+ touches in just 4 games this season. He isn’t playing enough for you to rely on him in your championship lineup, especially against a Baltimore defense that ranks 4th in run defense DVOA.
WR Alec Pierce, IND (Wk. 17: @NYG): The Colts’ passing game is just too much of a mess to consider an inconsistent target like Pierce. Nick Foles threw for fewer than 150 yards in his first start, and Pierce has 30+ receiving yards just once in 6 games since Jeff Saturday took over as head coach, and he’s put up a goose egg in 3 of them. The floor here is zero.
TE Trey McBride, ARI (Wk. 17: @Atl.): McBride has played at least 70% of the offensive snaps in each of Arizona’s past 6 games, and he has just one game of 6+ PPR points to show for it. He’s a low-end TE2 whether it’s Colt McCoy or Trace McSorley under center.
Rookies who may as well be on byes: RB Raheem Blackshear, CAR, RBs Pierre Strong Jr. and Kevin Harris, NE, RB Isaiah Spiller, LAC, RB Kyren Williams, LAR, RB Keaontay Ingram, ARI, Trestan Ebner, CHI, WR Skyy Moore, KC, WR David Bell, CLE, WR Khalil Shakir, BUF, WR Tyquan Thornton, NE, TE Isaiah Likely, BAL, TEs Peyton Hendershot & Jake Ferguson, DAL, TE James Mitchell, DET
Deep League Sleepers, Stashes, and Cheap DFS Options:
QB Desmond Ridder, ATL (Wk. 17: vs. Ari.): Ridder showed progress throwing the ball last week, completing two-thirds of his attempts and accounting for more than 200 passing yards, something Marcus Mariota did just once in his final 10 starts. Atlanta is out of the playoff picture, but don’t look for them to hold anything back this week. The Cardinals allow the 9th-most QB points per game and have allowed more than 195 passing yards to every QB they’ve faced this year, including some pretty mediocre opponents – Brett Rypien, John Wolford, and Carolina Baker Mayfield. Ridder has some extra upside this week as another 200-yard passing performance feels likely. You could do worse than Ridder if you’re desperate for a QB2 this week.
RBs Tyrion Davis-Price & Jordan Mason, SF (Wk. 17: @LV): The 49ers have rattled off 8 straight wins, and everything points to them likely making it 9 straight in relatively easy fashion this week against the Raiders. Las Vegas has benched Derek Carr and will probably scale back playing time for other stars as well, which should lead to a ho-hum 49ers victory. The Niners are already a run-heavy offense, and positive game script should push them even further in that direction in this one. Christian McCaffrey has only about 63% of the team’s running back rushing yards over the past 4 games, so that leaves plenty of room for one of the back-ups to step up and be a valuable DFS play, especially if there is garbage time like I expect. Davis-Price surprisingly carried the ball 9 times last week, but Mason was dealing with a hamstring injury that limited him to just special teams work. He’s reportedly doing better this week. Pay attention to the injury updates on Mason – I’d prioritize him over TDP this week unless you hear that he’ll be limited again. The Raiders rank just 20th in run defense DVOA, and Mason has averaged 5 yards per carry or more in each of his last 4 games where he recorded a touch. Mason costs just $2,000 on DraftKings for showdown contests.
RBs Hassan Haskins & Julius Chestnut, TEN (Wk. 17: vs. Dal.): Derrick Henry is listed as doubtful for this week, and Dontrell Hilliard is on IR. That leaves Haskins and Chestnut as the top two backs for this week’s game. Neither player has the kind of outlook that you should be excited to get into a championship week lineup, but both have some upside as cheap DFS plays. Haskins costs just $3,000 and Chestnut just $1,800 for showdown contests on DraftKings. Dallas has allowed the 3rd-fewest RB points per game and ranks 5th in run defense DVOA, but the Titans will continue to pound the ball with Josh Dobbs at QB. Haskins should be the primary ballcarrier on early downs, and Chestnut should handle passing-down work, but both should be involved quite a bit. The Titans are double-digit underdogs, so negative game script could mean Chestnut is the guy who plays more. At least with Dobbs there is a better chance of Chestnut catching a handful of dump-off passes than he’d have with Willis.
WR Velus Jones Jr., CHI (Wk. 17: @Det.): Last Sunday was the first time all year that Jones recorded 2 receptions in a game, so the floor here is very low, but don’t be surprised if Jones cashes in a splash play or two. Jones has served as the team’s WR3 behind Byron Pringle and Dante Pettis the last two weeks with Chase Claypool and Equanimeous St. Brown sidelined with injury. Both injured receivers got their first limited practice of the week on Thursday and are listed as questionable again. Jones showed off his deep-ball skills last week with a 44-yard catch, and this week’s opponent is especially vulnerable to deep passes. The Lions rank 28th in pass defense DVOA and have allowed 10 completions of 30+ yards in their last 3 games. If ESB and Claypool are out again, Jones will get a couple opportunities to hit a big play or two, and he costs just $800 on DraftKings for showdown contests.
TE Jelani Woods, IND (Wk. 17: @NYG): Kylen Granson has missed two games this season, and those have been Woods’ two best games of the year. Woods posted 8-98 on 9 targets back in week 12 against the Steelers, and then 3-43 on 5 targets last week against the Chargers in Nick Foles’ first start. Granson isn’t practicing as of Thursday, so Jelani could have strong upside against the Giants, who allow the 6th-most TE points per game. The Colts’ overall passing game is a mess, but it can’t get much worse than what we saw from Foles last week, and it doesn’t take much from a tight end for him to have top-12 upside. Woods could be a nice streaming option if you’re desperate at tight end this week, and he costs just $2,800 on DraftKings.
That’s all I’ve got for this week. Hopefully it helps you bring home a fantasy championship. Feel free to hit me up on Twitter (@Shawn_Foss) if you have any questions or want to yell at me about anything written above, and always make sure to apply what’s written in the context of your own league rules and roster. Keep a close eye on the injury report throughout the week and do a final pre-game check to make sure you don’t start any inactive players. As always: Good luck, trust your gut and have fun. It’s just a game.