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  Seahawks @ 49ers 
                - (Caron)
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: Coming off 
                the best game of his young career, Seattle’s Russell Wilson 
                has to be riding high. He and the Seahawks battled back from a 
                13-point deficit in the fourth quarter to shock the world by defeating 
                Tom Brady and the New England Patriots. In the victory, Wilson 
                threw for 293 yards and three touchdown passes - both career highs 
                - while throwing no interceptions. Though no receiver caught more 
                than two passes during the game, Wilson has shown the ability 
                to take over a game if called upon to do so. Wilson exploited the Patriots defense and hopes to continue that 
                streak against much stiffer competition in the 49ers. San Francisco, 
                who currently ranks 6th in the league in points per game allowed 
                to opposing quarterbacks, has allowed just one passing touchdown 
                in the past three weeks combined. One could argue that one of 
                the major reasons for that is that the Giants got out to an early 
                lead against them last week and didn’t end up throwing the 
                ball much, but the opposite argument could be made for the previous 
                two games when the 49ers completely thumped the Jets and Bills 
                but still held both teams to under 130 yards passing with zero 
                touchdowns. Wilson is coming off the hottest game of his career 
                and there may be a temptation to give him a chance in your lineup 
                this week, but there will be better opportunities for him going 
                forward. Let’s see him prove it before we rely on him in 
                our fantasy lineups.  Running Game Thoughts: In a surprising turn of events, it was 
                running back Marshawn Lynch who took a backseat to the suddenly 
                high-powered Seattle passing game in Week 6. Lynch, who carried 
                the ball a season-low 15 times, managed only 41 yards and failed 
                to get into the endzone for the second straight week. Although 
                he was a touchdown machine during the 2011 season, Lynch has scored 
                just twice through the first six games of the 2012 season, putting 
                him on pace for a measly five touchdowns on the year. In a year 
                with so many backfields splitting carries, Lynch remains an every-week 
                starter in most leagues given that he has averaged 21 carries 
                per game.  Prior to suffering a beatdown at the hands of Ahmad Bradshaw 
                and the New York Giants last week, the 49ers had allowed only 
                one running back to eclipse the 100-yard mark in the past 21 games 
                straight. That running back? Seattle’s Marshawn Lynch. Lynch 
                did it in Week 16 last season when he ran for 121 yards and a 
                touchdown during his impressive nine-game touchdown streak. Then 
                again, it’s also worth noting that he failed to rush for 
                35 yards in either of his previous two outings against the 49ers. 
                They might have stumbled a bit last week, but look for the 49ers 
                to bounce back this week against a struggling Seattle running 
                game. Lynch could be productive, but don’t expect him to 
                match what Ahmad Bradshaw did in Week 6.  Projections:Russell Wilson: 190 pass yds, 2 TD, 2 INT
 Sidney Rice: 50 rec yds, 1 TD
 Doug Baldwin: 40 rec yds
 Braylon Edwards: 25 rec yds
 Zach Miller: 20 rec yds
 Marshawn Lynch: 60 rush yds, 10 rec yds
  Passing Game Thoughts: After crushing the Bills and Jets in back-to-back 
                weeks, the 49ers finally got a taste of their own medicine as 
                they were blown out by the Giants in Week 6. The game was Alex 
                Smith’s worst of the season as he failed to throw a touchdown 
                while tossing three interceptions, leaving him with negative fantasy 
                points in some leagues. Smith has mostly taken care of the ball 
                this season and had only thrown one interception prior to the 
                abysmal start against the Giants, so fantasy owners shouldn’t 
                be expecting more where that came from. Still, it is a bit concerning 
                that tight end Vernon Davis has now gone three straight games 
                without a touchdown and PPR specialist Michael Crabtree has caught 
                three or fewer passes in two of his past three games.
 We’d typically be looking for a bounce back week from Smith 
                and the 49ers offense, but against Seattle, one of the league’s 
                best defenses, it’s hard to expect too much. The Seahawks 
                have terrorized opposing quarterbacks this season, intercepting 
                five passes while only allowing four touchdowns against. Tom Brady 
                did throw for nearly 400 yards against them with two touchdowns 
                in Week 6, but Alex Smith is not Tom Brady. In fact, he has failed 
                to throw a touchdown against Seattle in either of the team’s 
                meetings in 2011.  Running Game Thoughts: Given how quickly they were down during 
                their game against the Giants in Week 6, it’s hard to fault 
                the 49ers coaching staff for not running the ball more. Still, 
                the eight carries that Gore did get were a major disappointment 
                for those who were hoping that he continue his surprisingly high-scoring 
                start to the season. Gore ran for just 36 yards in the loss while 
                backup running back Kendall Hunter added only 26 yards. It’s 
                worth noting that Hunter has been significantly more productive 
                than Gore on a per-touch basis this year, but there still doesn’t 
                seem to be any signs that the 49ers will begin looking in a new 
                direction at the running back position. The Week 6 performance by the 49ers has to be considered a mirage 
                given how strong they’ve been this season, but things don’t 
                get any easier this week as Gore and Hunter will test the league’s 
                most efficient run defense. The Seahawks have been dominant this 
                season, holding opposing running backs to just 2.8 yards per carry 
                while allowing just two touchdowns on the ground. Not even the 
                trio of New England running backs could get things going in Week 
                6 as they were held to just 87 yards rushing and without a score. 
                San Francisco’s running game has been effective this season, 
                so this could be a matchup of strength versus strength.  Projections:Alex Smith: 200 pass yds, 1 TD, 1 INT
 Michael Crabtree: 60 rec yds
 Randy Moss: 30 rec yds
 Mario Manningham: 30 rec yds
 Vernon Davis: 50 rec yds, 1 TD
 Frank Gore: 55 rush yds, 10 rec yds
 Kendall Hunter: 40 rush yds
 Prediction: 
                49ers 19, Seahawks 17 ^ Top 
 Saints @ Buccaneers 
                - (Smith)
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Drew Brees continues to light up fantasy 
                scoreboards, and is among the league leaders in all passing stats, 
                despite having a bye week when most other players have not. He’s 
                had three touchdown passes or more in four of his five games this 
                season, and no less than 19 fantasy points in any contest. He 
                could be without a major weapon this week in tight end Jimmy Graham, 
                who was questionable as of this writing, but has plenty of other 
                options to attack the Buccaneers with. 
 Tampa Bay is 31st in the NFL in pass defense, and is one of just 
                two teams giving up at least 300 yards per game through the air. 
                However, they’ve allowed just four passing scores, which 
                are tied for fewest in the league, and three of those came to 
                Eli Manning in Week 2. Still, every quarterback they’ve 
                played not named Brady Quinn has thrown for at least 280 yards 
                against them, four different receivers have gained at least 100 
                receiving yards and three tight ends have compiled 50 or more 
                yards.
 Running Game Thoughts: The Saints 
                continue to rely on Darren Sproles, Mark Ingram and Pierre Thomas, 
                with only Sproles being much of a fantasy option, and that’s 
                because of his receiving prowess and not his rushing numbers. 
                Sproles leads all running backs in receptions and receiving yards, 
                which should come as no surprise to any fantasy owners. He should 
                be able to get his hands on the ball plenty of times this week 
                against Tampa, whose below-average pass defense we’ve already 
                discussed.
 
 The Bucs have been solid against the run, ranking fourth in the 
                league in rushing defense and tied for 15th in rushing scores 
                allowed. No team is giving up fewer yards per carry than Tampa 
                (3.1), who has allowed the 10th-fewest fantasy points per game 
                to running backs. Only one team has run for at least 100 yards 
                as a team when facing the Bucs, who held DeMarco Murray to 38 
                yards on 18 carries in Week 2 and held Jamaal Charles to 40 yards 
                on 12 carries last week.
 
 Projections:
 Drew 
                Brees: 340 pass yds, 3 TD
 Marques 
                Colston: 105 rec yds, 1 TD
 Lance 
                Moore: 85 rec yds, 1 TD
 Jimmy 
                Graham: 30 rec yds
 Devery 
                Henderson: 25 rec yds
 Pierre 
                Thomas: 40 rush yds / 15 rec yds
 Mark 
                Ingram: 35 rush yds, 1 TD
 Darren 
                Sproles: 15 rush yds / 70 rec yds, 1 TD
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: You have to go all the way to number 26 
                to see Tampa quarterback Josh Freeman’s name on the fantasy 
                leaderboard at quarterback. He’s had a pair of games with 
                less than 140 passing yards, but over the last two weeks has thrown 
                for 299 or more yards in both. He has a pair of options at receiver 
                that fantasy owners will want to play this week. Mike Williams 
                has more than 110 receiving yards in each of his last two games, 
                and Vincent Jackson had accumulated at least 16 fantasy points 
                in three of his last four contests. Each should have their share 
                of opportunities to put up points for their fantasy owners against 
                the Saints. 
 New Orleans has been a train wreck against the pass this year, 
                ranking 26th in the league in pass defense, tied for 19th in touchdown 
                passes given up, and 29th in opponents completion percentage allowed. 
                They are allowing the sixth-most fantasy points per game to quarterbacks 
                and third-most to wide receivers, though they’ve somehow 
                given-up the second-fewest FPPG to tight ends. Go figure. Three 
                of the five quarterbacks they’ve faced have thrown for 319 
                or more yards and five wideouts have compiled at least 90 receiving 
                yards when facing the Saints.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: Doug Martin 
                has been okay for the Bucs, with four games of at least 55 rushing 
                yards. But he’s scored just once on the ground, and has 
                seen LeGarrette Blount’s number of carries increase each 
                of the last three weeks, and score twice. Nonetheless, we would 
                consider both players this week against New Orleans, if only because 
                of the high number of teams on byes.
 
 Though only one running back has had a 100-yard rushing game against 
                the Saints (Jamaal Charles with 233), that doesn’t tell 
                nearly the whole story of how pliable their rush defense has been. 
                They rank 30th in the NFL against the run, tied for 24th in rushing 
                scores given up, 30th in yards per carry allowed, and no team 
                is giving up more fantasy points per game to running backs than 
                they are. New Orleans has allowed four different running backs 
                to gain at least 80 yards, and have been vulnerable to backs catching 
                the ball, with just six teams having allowed more receiving yards 
                to players out of the backfield.
 
 Projections:
 Josh 
                Freeman: 225 pass yds, 1 TD, 2 INT
 Vincent 
                Jackson: 75 rec yds, 1 TD
 Mike 
                Williams: 70 rec yds
 Tiquan 
                Underwood: 40 rec yds
 Dallas 
                Clark: 15 rec yds
 Doug 
                Martin: rush yds, 1 TD / 15 rec yds
 LeGarrette 
                Blount: rush yds, 1 TD
 
 Prediction: Saints 34, Buccaneers 
                24
 
 Cowboys @ Panthers 
                - (Smith)
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Twenty-seven. That’s how many quarterbacks 
                have amassed more fantasy points than Tony Romo this season. He’s 
                second in the NFL in interceptions, and has fewer scoring passes 
                than the likes of Kevin Kolb and Russell Wilson. The team’s 
                receiving corps has still been valuable to fantasy owners, though. 
                Miles Austin started the season with four straight games of double-digit 
                fantasy points, Dez Bryant has had 33 fantasy points over his 
                last two games, and Jason Witten has amassed 25 fantasy points 
                in the same span. Unfortunately, all three usually can’t 
                have big games at the same time, so for fantasy owners, it’s 
                a game of chance, though this week we think Witten will have a 
                good day due to Carolina’s iffy play versus tight ends. 
 The Panthers have been somewhat of a mixed bag defensively against 
                the pass; they rank 19th in the league in passing yards per game 
                allowed, but 30th in opponents completion percentage given up. 
                Elite quarterbacks have shredded them, with Drew Brees, Eli Manning 
                and Matt Ryan each throwing for at least 288 yards, and though 
                they’ve held receivers down with the exception of huge games 
                by Ramses Barden and Roddy White, four tight ends have amassed 
                at least 50 receiving yards against them, and they are tied for 
                11th most fantasy points per game allowed to players at that position.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: DeMarco Murray 
                is out this week, leaving the duties to Felix Jones. A former 
                first-round pick who never quite lived up to the billing, Jones 
                did well against the Ravens last week, running for 92 yards on 
                18 carries. It was the first time this season that he had more 
                than a single carry in a game, but we liked what we saw, and the 
                Panthers don’t have a vicious run defense by any means, 
                so consider Jones a solid flex option this week.
 
 Carolina is 23rd in the league against the run as well as in yards 
                per carry allowed, and just four teams have given up more fantasy 
                points per game to running backs. They have allowed more fantasy 
                points per game to running backs than all but four other teams, 
                and every starting running back they’ve faced has picked 
                up at least 85 rushing yards.
 
 Projections:
 Tony 
                Romo: 240 pass yds, 2 TD, 1 INT
 Jason 
                Witten: 90 rec yds, 1 TD
 Dez 
                Bryant: 80 rec yds, 1 TD
 Miles 
                Austin: 40 rec yds
 Felix 
                Jones: 85 rush yds, 1 TD / 20 rec yds
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Cam Newton has to be driving his fantasy 
                owners mad, doing things like compiling 30 fantasy points in Week 
                4 but only seven points in Week 5. He has just five interceptions 
                this season but only four touchdown passes, and it’s a good 
                thing he’s rushing the ball well, though not at the pace 
                he was last season. His struggles throwing the ball have affected 
                Steve Smith the most, who has not caught a touchdown pass, and 
                whose receiving yardage since Week 1 has echoed Newton’s 
                passing yards during that time – ebbing each game. Unfortunately, 
                things don’t seem to be looking up for them against a tough 
                Dallas pass defense. 
 No team in the NFL has allowed fewer passing yards per game than 
                the Cowboys, at 182 yards per, and they’re tied for seventh 
                in passing scores allowed. They are tied for fifth-fewest fantasy 
                points per game allowed to quarterbacks, with only one throwing 
                for at least 235 yards. Dallas has been even better against wideouts, 
                with just three amassing 60 or more receiving yards versus them, 
                and only four teams having allowed fewer FPPG to receivers.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: Cam Newton 
                leads a rushing attack that can be frustrating for fantasy owners, 
                at least when it comes to Carolina’s running backs. Jonathan 
                Stewart or DeAngelo Williams? Nobody really knows the answer to 
                that on a weekly basis, and that probably includes the Carolina 
                coaching staff. You know how some colleges use a two-quarterback 
                system and you hear analysts say that if you have two quarterbacks, 
                you don’t have any? Well, we will apply that here in fantasy 
                terms, as neither Stewart or Williams should be more than a flex 
                play.
 
 Dallas is 13th in the league in run defense, tied for 15th in 
                rushing scores given up, and 12th in yards per carry allowed. 
                They’re middle-of-the road in terms of fantasy points allowed 
                to running backs, but just one player has gained 65 or more yards 
                against them on the ground, and just four teams in the league 
                have allowed fewer receiving yards to running backs.
 
 Projections:
 Cam 
                Newton: 215 pass yds, 1 TD, 1 INT / 55 rush yds, 1 TD
 Steve 
                Smith: 80 rec yds
 Brandon 
                LaFell: 50 rec yds
 Greg 
                Olsen: 40 rec yds, 1 TD
 Jonathan 
                Stewart: 50 rush yds, 1 TD / 15 rec yds
 DeAngelo 
                Williams: 25 rush yds / 20 rec yds
 
 Prediction: Cowboys 27, Panthers 
                24
 
 Ravens @ Texans 
                - (Smith)
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: There’s a lot of debate about whether 
                or not Joe Flacco is an elite quarterback, and we suppose it’s 
                valid. But in fantasy terms, there’s no debate – he’s 
                solid, but in the second tier. He’s 10th in fantasy points 
                among quarterbacks, and though he’s thrown for plenty of 
                yards, has just eight touchdowns. Half of those have gone to Torrey 
                Smith, and though he’s 12th at receiver in fantasy points, 
                more than a third of those came during Week 3, and he’s 
                had eight or fewer points in four of his six games. Tight end 
                Dennis Pitta started out with a bang as well, but has disappeared, 
                with only five fantasy points over his last three games. If he’s 
                going to turn it back up, the Texans defense is friendly to opposing 
                tight ends. 
 Houston is seventh in the league in pass defense, but Aaron Rodgers’ 
                six touchdown throws last week accounts for half of the passing 
                scores they’ve allowed this season, and that pushed them 
                to 25th in the league in touchdown throws given up. Before last 
                week, they had only allowed more than 10 fantasy points to quarterbacks 
                once, and just two touchdowns to wide receivers, a number surpassed 
                by Jordy Nelson and equaled by James Jones for Green Bay. But 
                the Texans have been vulnerable to tight ends on a consistent 
                basis, allowing the 10th-most fantasy points per game to players 
                at the position and have given up a touchdown to a tight end in 
                four consecutive contests.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: There wasn’t 
                necessarily a clear-cut number one choice in fantasy drafts this 
                season, and a guy that was a popular pick in that spot was Ray 
                Rice. The fantasy owners that selected him haven’t regretted 
                it, as he’s second at the position in fantasy points. He’s 
                also seventh in the league in rushing yards, tied for second in 
                rushing scores, and second among running backs in receiving yards. 
                Houston is a tough match-up, but that shouldn’t stop fantasy 
                owners from installing Rice.
 
 The Texans have been very good stopping the run this season, ranking 
                seventh in the NFL in rush defense and 11th in yards per carry 
                allowed, but they’re the only team in the league who has 
                yet to give up a rushing score and one of two who has not allowed 
                a run of at least 20 yards. Only five teams have allowed fewer 
                fantasy points to running backs than Houston, who have allowed 
                just one runner to gain at least 70 yards.
 
 Projections:
 Joe 
                Flacco: 200 pass yds, 2 TD, 1 INT
 Torrey 
                Smith: 80 rec yds, 1 TD
 Anquan 
                Boldin: 60 rec yds, 1 TD
 Dennis 
                Pitta: 25 rec yds
 Ray 
                Rice: 65 rush yds, 1 TD / 25 rec yds
 Bernard 
                Pierce: 15 rush yds
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Matt Schaub is an interesting fantasy quarterback 
                – some weeks he looks like definite starter material, and 
                other weeks you wish he was sitting on the bench. He has yet to 
                throw for 300 yards this season, and just twice in six games has 
                tossed multiple touchdowns, with half of his eight touchdowns 
                coming in Week 3 against Denver. Andre Johnson doesn’t seem 
                to be quite what he used to be, and his numbers are proving it, 
                as he has just two games with more than seven fantasy points this 
                season. That does mean that Owen Daniels has gotten more looks 
                at tight end, and he’s currently fourth at the position 
                in fantasy points, having caught a touchdown in three of his last 
                four games. 
 Baltimore is 22nd in the NFL against the pass, but tied for fewest 
                passing scores allowed. Due to that, they have allowed the fourth-fewest 
                fantasy points per game to quarterbacks, despite three different 
                quarterbacks tossing for 320 or more yards against them. Nine 
                different wideouts or tight ends have had games with at least 
                70 receiving yards when facing the Ravens, but they’ve managed 
                to be one of the five teams in the league who has yet to allow 
                a touchdown to a tight end.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: Arian Foster 
                is simply a fantasy beast. He leads all running backs in fantasy 
                points and touchdown runs, is second in the NFL in rushing yards, 
                and though he’s not catching the ball as much as he did 
                last season, is still effective in that area. What else is there 
                to say? He’s a RB1 with no thought whatsoever.
 
 The Ravens are an atypical 26th in the league in run defense, 
                and are now missing their leader, Ray Lewis, to injury. They’re 
                also tied for 24th in rushing scores allowed and tied for eighth-most 
                fantasy points per game given up. Both DeMarco Murray and Felix 
                Jones rushed for 90+ yards against them last week, and they are 
                two of the five backs who have gained at least 80 yards when facing 
                Baltimore.
 
 Projections:
 Matt 
                Schaub: 205 pass yds, 1 TD
 Andre 
                Johnson: 75 rec yds
 Owen 
                Daniels: 60 rec yds, 1 TD
 Kevin 
                Walter: 30 rec yds
 James 
                Casey: 15 rec yds
 Arian 
                Foster: 110 rush yds, 2 TD / 15 rec yds
 Ben 
                Tate: 20 rush yds / 10 rec yds
 
 Prediction: Texans 24, Ravens 21
 
 Browns @ Colts 
                - (Smith)
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Brandon Weeden has certainly had his struggles 
                this season, and leads the NFL in interceptions, but he’s 
                also 10th in the league in passing yards, having thrown for 290 
                or more yards and two touchdowns three times from Week 2 on. He 
                doesn’t have a whole lot to work with, though the most intriguing 
                option is wideout Josh Gordon. He’s made big plays and scored 
                in each of the past two weeks, but has yet to catch more than 
                three balls in a game, and had a total of eight fantasy points 
                through his first four contests. 
 The Colts are third in the league in pass defense, but are tied 
                for 21st in touchdown throws given up and tied for 28th in interceptions, 
                which has hampered their fantasy prowess, and they are tied for 
                12th in fantasy points per game allowed to quarterbacks and eighth 
                in FPPG allowed to receivers, though no team has given up fewer 
                FPPG to tight ends than Indy. While not a single tight end has 
                gained more than 35 yards against them, four of the five starting 
                quarterbacks they’ve faced have thrown multiple touchdown 
                passes, five different receivers have registered 80 or more yards 
                against them, and just four teams have allowed more receiving 
                scores to wideouts.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: Trent Richardson 
                has been battling a rib injury, but should play this week. He’s 
                been a solid player for his fantasy owners, despite only rushing 
                for at least 50 yards twice. But his four rushing scores are tied 
                for third among running backs, and he’s been catching the 
                ball well, with the fourth-most receiving yards at his position.
 
 Porous is a good word to describe Indianapolis’ run defense. 
                They’re 30th in the league in that stat, and 29th in both 
                rushing scores and yards per carry allowed. Add it all up and 
                you have a team which has allowed the second-most fantasy points 
                per game in the league to running backs. They’ve played 
                five games, but have already allowed two separate backs to gain 
                160 or more yards, including last week when the Jets Shonn Greene 
                made his fantasy owners delirious with 161 rushing yards and three 
                scores against the Colts.
 
 Projections:
 Brandon 
                Weeden: 205 pass yds, 2 TD, 2 INT
 Josh 
                Gordon: 65 rec yds, 1 TD
 Greg 
                Little: 60 rec yds, 1 TD
 Jordan 
                Cameron: 30 rec yds
 Ben 
                Watson: 15 rec yds
 Trent 
                Richardson: 75 rush yds, 1 TD / 25 rec yds
 Montario 
                Hardesty: 20 rush yds
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Andrew Luck hasn’t gotten the recognition 
                of Robert Griffin III, mostly because Griffin is a more dynamic 
                player, but Luck has had good moments this season. He’s 
                thrown for 280 or more yards in all but one game, and has thrown 
                a pair of touchdowns in three of his five games. He’s also 
                helped rejuvenate the fantasy status of Reggie Wayne, who is sixth 
                among wideouts in fantasy scoring, third in receiving yards and 
                first in targets. The Colts also have an interesting young tight 
                end tandem in Coby Fleener and Dwayne Allen, who are still developing 
                but are a pair fantasy owners will be utilizing for years. 
 The Browns have had all kinds of problems defending the pass this 
                year – they are 30th in the league in pass defense, tied 
                for last in passing scores allowed, tied for fourth-most fantasy 
                points per game allowed to quarterbacks and are giving up the 
                second-most FPPG to wideouts. In six games, Cleveland has allowed 
                four different quarterbacks to throw for 315 or more yards, two 
                to throw for at least 355 yards, and four to throw a trio of touchdowns. 
                No team in the league has allowed more touchdown catches to wide 
                receivers, and a whopping 12 wideouts have compiled 50 or more 
                yards against them.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: Donald Brown 
                is injured and will be out for the second straight game, leaving 
                the running duties to Vick Ballard and Delone Carter. Though neither 
                had an impact last week, with Ballard running for 25 yards and 
                Carter for 13, we expect this contest to be much closer, and with 
                the way the Browns run defense is, Ballard should be considered 
                as a flex option.
 
 Cleveland stinks against the pass, and though they’ve been 
                better against the run, it’s only marginal. They’re 
                25th in rush defense and yards per carry allowed, but tied for 
                ninth in rushing scores given up, but that can be attributed in 
                part because of how many touchdowns they allow through the air. 
                The Browns are 13th in fantasy points per game allowed to running 
                backs, but have given up 75 or more yards to four different rushers, 
                with Ahmad Bradshaw’s 200-yard game in Week 5 the most damaging.
 
 Projections:
 Andrew 
                Luck: 265 pass yds, 2 TD
 Reggie 
                Wayne: 105 rec yds
 Donnie 
                Avery: 65 rec yds
 Coby 
                Fleener: 40 rec yds
 Dwayne 
                Allen: 30 rec yds
 Vick 
                Ballard: 65 rush yds, 1 TD / 15 rec yds
 Delone 
                Carter: 20 rush yds
 
 Prediction: Colts 21, Browns 17
 
 Cardinals @ Vikings 
                - (Anderson)
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: This unit is one of the ugliest passing 
                attacks in the league, both in terms of fantasy and on-field production. 
                The Cardinals quarterbacks have been sacked a league high 28 times 
                and rank in the bottom eight in completion percentage, quarterback 
                rating, passing yards per attempt, and passing yards per game. 
                Although it may not exactly be bad news from a fantasy perspective, 
                the waters sure got cloudier when Kevin Kolb suffered a rib injury 
                in last week’s game and is out for this week’s matchup 
                in Minnesota. Since nobody except the most desperate are even 
                considering starting a Cardinals quarterback anyway, let’s 
                instead focus on the receiving corps. Larry Fitzgerald, in spite 
                of terrible quarterback play, has actually put up very respectable 
                numbers (430 yds, 3 TDs), thanks in large part to the high amount 
                of targets he gets each game (65 on average, fifth in the NFL). 
                While the matchup versus the Vikings is not ideal, Fitzgerald 
                is a must-start because of his talent, the high amount of throws 
                he should see once again, and perhaps a little more motivation 
                for him back in Minnesota since he was once a Vikings ball boy 
                as a teenager. As for the rest of the receivers, Andre Roberts 
                is really the only other guy on the fantasy radar, but he is nothing 
                more than a WR4 at this point because of the inconsistency at 
                the quarterback position. As for the Vikings pass defense, they 
                rank in the upper half of the league in most stats but do not 
                really stand out in any of them. I expect Minnesota, in a home 
                matchup coming off a big loss, to get to the quarterback a lot 
                and limit what the Arizona passing attack is capable of doing, 
                which is not much to begin with. 
 Running Game Thoughts: As ugly as 
                the Arizona passing game is, the run game is not much better. 
                The Cardinals rank in the bottom five in rush yards per game and 
                are second worst in rush yards per attempt, with a laughable 3.4 
                average. The offensive line surely deserves a lot of the blame, 
                but between three different starters at the position (Wells, Williams, 
                and Stephens-Howling) the running backs have just been awful on 
                the field—and from a fantasy perspective. There may be a 
                small ray of light in all of this mess, as William Powell managed 
                a very respectable 70 yards on just 13 carries (5.4 avg) last 
                week. Look for Powell to be given more touches this week, as Stephens-Howling, 
                the starter last week, managed just 22 yards on 11 carries. The 
                bad news for the Arizona run game is that the Vikings present 
                quite a challenge defensively. Not only do they rank in the top 
                11 in rush yards allowed per game and rush yards allowed per attempt, 
                they are the second toughest defense in terms of fantasy points 
                allowed to opposing RBs. While the Cardinals defense is good enough 
                to keep them in this game and allow for 20-plus rushing attempts, 
                it would be very risky to start any Arizona RB this week because 
                of the matchup and uncertainty on how the carries will be divided. 
                I would avoid the Cardinals run game as a whole until further 
                notice.
 
 Projections:
 John 
                Skelton: 195 pass yds, 1 TD, 2 INT
 Larry 
                Fitzgerald: 90 rec yds, 1 TD
 Andre 
                Roberts: 40 rec yds
 Michael 
                Floyd: 40 rec yds
 William 
                Powell: 70 rush yds, 10 rec yds
 LaRod 
                Stephens-Howling: 40 rush yds, 15 rec yds
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: The more I watch the Vikings passing attack, 
                the more excited I get about its prospects, at least in terms 
                of fantasy production. Against a weak Redskins defense, Christian 
                Ponder threw for 352 yards and two touchdowns (with two picks) 
                and made four different receivers fantasy relevant last week. 
                While the Arizona defense should present a much bigger challenge, 
                I still see Harvin and Rudolph as every-week starters and Jerome 
                Simpson (out last week) and Christian Ponder as intriguing fill-ins 
                with great upside. As a team, the Vikings have crept up into the 
                top half of the league in many passing categories, and are actually 
                second in the NFL in completion percentage with a very healthy 
                68.6 percent. On the other side of the ball, the Cardinals pass 
                defense has allowed the third lowest completion percentage in 
                the NFL, so this battle will be very interesting to see which 
                side gives way. Because Minnesota checks down to guys like Harvin 
                and Rudolph so much, I would expect the Vikings to be a bit more 
                successful in this matchup compared to other teams the Cardinals 
                may have faced. The Cardinals also get to the quarterback a great 
                deal, as they rank third in sacks. Still, Minnesota is right around 
                the league average in sacks given up, and Ponder has above-average 
                mobility, so I would not expect huge sack numbers in this matchup. 
                The one other thing that may hinder the Vikings passing attack 
                this week is a more conservative game plan, as the Cardinals run 
                defense is worse than their pass defense. All in all, I would 
                not hesitate to start Harvin (NFL’s reception leader) and 
                Rudolph (fourth in the league in touchdowns) and perhaps consider 
                Ponder as a bye-week fill-in, since he should be good for at least 
                200 yards and one touchdown in a home matchup coming off a tough 
                loss. 
 Running Game Thoughts: Just two 
                months ago, Adrian Peterson was falling into the late second round 
                of many drafts because of the fear he would miss extended time 
                or have a slow start coming back from his injury. Flash-forward 
                to Week 7, and he is sixth in the NFL in rushing and a top 10 
                fantasy RB once again. Against the Redskins last week, Peterson 
                did not have an amazing day but he still managed 79 yards on just 
                17 carries (4.6 ypc), mostly because the Vikings had to play catch-up 
                for most of the afternoon, so they relied on the pass. Against 
                the Cardinals this week, there is very little chance the Vikings 
                will fall behind far enough to abandon the run, so I expect easily 
                20 or more carries from Peterson. While Arizona’s run defense 
                is letting up less than four yards per carry, they are being run 
                on a lot and are 19th in the league in rushing yards allowed (113.3 
                per game), so there is certainly the possibility for a big day 
                from the Vikings rush attack. Start Peterson with confidence in 
                this matchup, as the sheer volume of touches alone should make 
                him an easy top 10 RB option.
 
 Projections:
 Christian 
                Ponder: 225 pass yds, 1 TD, 1 INT, 25 rush yds
 Percy 
                Harvin: 80 rec yds
 Kyle 
                Rudolph: 40 rec yds, 1 TD
 Jerome 
                Simpson: 40 rec yds
 Adrian 
                Peterson: 95 rush yds, 1 TD, 25 rec yds
 
 Prediction: Vikings 23, Cardinals 
                17
 
 Steelers @ Bengals 
                - (Anderson)
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: It's definitely official, whether they like 
                it or not: the Steelers are a passing team. Currently they rank 
                seventh in the league in pass yards per game and rank in the top 
                12 in completion percentage, passing touchdowns, and passing yards 
                per attempt. Despite passing the ball so much, Roethlisberger 
                actually has thrown the least interceptions in the league (2) 
                among full-time starting quarterbacks. The Pittsburgh receivers, 
                led by Mike Wallace, Antonio Brown, and Heath Miller, have put 
                together a fine start to the season as a whole, although each 
                has been a bit inconsistent from game to game. This week’s 
                matchup provides both good opportunities and tough challenges 
                for the passing game...but let's start with the good news. The 
                Bengals pass defense has been below average this season, giving 
                up 228 yards per game and allowing a 99.6 passer rating. They 
                also rank in the bottom eight in terms of completion percentage 
                allowed (66.1) and yards per pass attempt (7.9). With the volume 
                of passes the Steelers are throwing, this matchup should, at the 
                very least, mean a high yardage total and an efficient performance 
                from Big Ben. On the downside, this is an away game at a division 
                rival, and the Bengals secondary is finally getting healthy after 
                missing several of its starters throughout the first six weeks. 
                In addition, the Bengals rank second in the league in sacks, and 
                the Steelers offensive line is a mess, with both right tackle 
                Marcus Gilbert and center Maurkice Pouncey out with injuries this 
                week. While Roethlisberger is one of the very best at escaping 
                pressure, expect the Bengals to get to him at least a couple of 
                times and pressure him throughout the game, especially without 
                a big threat in the running game. Big Ben still remains a very 
                safe start as a low-end QB1 option because he will throw all day—just 
                don't expect a career day, or anything close to it. At WR, both 
                Wallace and Brown are very startable options as low-end WR1 and 
                high-end WR3 options, respectively. Miller is a good bye week 
                fill-in at TE, though most of his value lies in the hopes that 
                he catches a touchdown, as his yardage totals have been just average 
                so far. 
 Running Game Thoughts: Pittsburgh 
                is very lucky the passing attack has been effective, because the 
                running attack is not only terrible, it may be historically terrible. 
                Thus far, the Steelers are not only dead last in rushing yards 
                (374) but dead last in yards per carry (3.0) and longest rush 
                (17 yards). Add this to the fact that they have only two rushing 
                touchdowns, and you could easily say there are 15 or more individual 
                running backs in the league that are having better seasons than 
                the Steelers running game as a unit! In fact, quarterback—yes, 
                quarterback—Robert Griffin III alone has five more rushing 
                yards and four more rushing touchdowns than the whole Steelers 
                team, in 71 less attempts! This unit is awful and should obviously 
                be avoided in fantasy football at all costs. The only thing I 
                would keep in the back of my mind as a fantasy owner is to watch 
                Mendenhall down the line in case somehow he gets healthy and the 
                team re-commits to the run game, but that is a long shot. The 
                Bengals run defense is certainly below average, but the poor health/lack 
                of talent/lack of production/split of carries issues that the 
                Pittsburgh run game has makes the Steelers RBs totally avoidable 
                even in a dream matchup, which this is not.
 
 Projections:
 Ben 
                Roethlisberger: 310 pass yds, 2 TD, 1 INT, 10 rush yds
 Mike 
                Wallace: 80 rec yds, 1 TD
 Antonio 
                Brown: 70 rec yds
 Heath 
                Miller: 40 rec yd, 1 TD
 Emmanuel 
                Sanders: 45 rec yds
 Rashard 
                Mendenhall: 30 rush yds
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: The Bengals passing game is firing on all 
                cylinders right now, ranking in the top 10 in the NFL in passing 
                yards (fourth), completion percentage (ninth), passing yards per 
                attempt (third), and passing touchdowns (fifth). Andy Dalton has 
                certainly made some questionable decisions this year (9 INTs) 
                but is racking up the yards and touchdowns, so his fantasy owners 
                can certainly forgive him. Even better, Dalton has helped make 
                A.J. Green fantasy’s top WR in standard leagues, as he leads 
                the league in receiving yardage and is tied for second in receiving 
                touchdowns. While I certainly think Dalton, and especially Green, 
                are talented, I also see an early-season schedule that may have 
                inflated their numbers to some extent, as Baltimore in Week 1 
                has been the only above-average pass defense that they have faced 
                thus far. This week may be the true measure of just how legit 
                this Bengals pass defense is, as the Steelers have given up the 
                third least amount of pass yards in the NFL. On the bright side 
                for the Bengals, Troy Polamalu is out this week, and while both 
                James Harrison and LaMarr Woodley are expected to play, they have 
                been hampered by injuries this season. Also, while not giving 
                up very many yards through the air, the Steelers pass defense 
                is giving up nearly two passing touchdowns per game, and both 
                Green and Gresham are nice red-zone threats. While I do expect 
                a downtick in production from the Bengals pass game this week, 
                it is a home game and they are on fire right now, so it is hard 
                to totally avoid them as fantasy plays. I would certainly start 
                Green, as he has become matchup-proof and should be force fed 
                10 targets, minimum. As for the rest of the Bengals pass game, 
                I would look for better options but would not feel terrible about 
                starting Dalton as a bye-week fill-in or low-end QB2 in this matchup, 
                as he is very likely to hit 200 yards and at least one touchdown, 
                even if he does throw an INT or two. 
 Running Game Thoughts: The Bengals 
                are getting just enough out of their run game to keep defenses 
                semi-honest, and so far that formula has worked pretty effectively, 
                as their total offense currently ranks seventh in the league. 
                Green-Ellis continues to stumble along, putting up decent yardage 
                numbers (62 last week) but not really making any big plays or 
                getting anyone too excited about his potential. The good news 
                for his owners continues to be that he is the only Cincinnati 
                running back getting a significant amount of carries, so that 
                makes him at least semi-valuable in most leagues. The Steelers 
                run defense is once again very good (10th in rush yards allowed 
                per game), although not as elite as in recent years, as they surprisingly 
                gave up 91 yards on the ground to a struggling Chris Johnson last 
                week. In a home game that should be close throughout, the Bengals 
                should be able to rush the ball at least 20 times, probably enough 
                to at consider BJGE as a decent flex play or solid RB3; just don’t 
                expect much more than what he has already been doing, which is 
                about 60 yards a game. No other Bengals RB has gotten enough touches 
                to be fantasy relevant yet, although deep PPR leagues may want 
                to watch Cedric Peerman closely, as he caught eight balls for 
                76 yards last week as Bernard Scott’s replacement as No. 
                2 running back.
 
 Projections:
 Andy 
                Dalton: 245 pass yds, 2 TDs, 2 INTs
 A.J. 
                Green: 90 rec yds, 1 TD
 Jermaine 
                Gresham: 40 rec yds, 1 TD
 Andrew 
                Hawkins: 55 rec yds
 BenJarvus 
                Green-Ellis: 55 rush yds, 15 rec yds
 
 Prediction: Bengals 24, Steelers 
                23
 
 Lions @ Bears 
                - (Anderson)
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: While the Lions passing game is putting 
                up very respectable numbers overall (second in the NFL in pass 
                yards per game), the lack of touchdowns (6, tied for third worst) 
                is a concern, especially for Matthew Stafford and Calvin Johnson 
                owners. Other than that, the passing game looks much like it did 
                last year: Stafford is not getting sacked a lot (just 9 times), 
                his completion percentage is fine (63.2), and the yards per attempt 
                are adequate (7.2) as well. Sometimes touchdowns can be a bit 
                fluky, so a big outburst might just happen any week now; however, 
                I’m betting it will not be this week. The Chicago Bears 
                pass defense has thus far given up only five passing touchdowns, 
                good for second in the league (tied). Add that to their league-high 
                interception numbers (13) and their 18 sacks (tied for fourth) 
                and you have a recipe for lackluster numbers this week from the 
                Detroit passing attack. As for the Lions receiving corps, we all 
                know Johnson is matchup-proof, so you must start him, even in 
                a tough matchup. The rest of the guys, however, are hard to read. 
                Titus Young got a lot of hype this offseason but has failed to 
                do much of anything, save for a Week 3 where he caught six balls 
                for 75 yards and a touchdown. He should be firmly on your bench 
                until he has at least one more decent game. Pettigrew has been 
                fairly consistent yardage-wise but has found the end zone only 
                once. In a PPR league, he is a decent start this week, but otherwise 
                he is not a top 10 option against the Bears. The only other guy 
                on the radar is Nate Burleson, who actually has the team lead 
                in receiving touchdowns and is second in catches and third in 
                receiving yards. I would personally not start him unless I were 
                desperate, but with a lot of guys on bye weeks, he may be a decent 
                WR3 this week. As for Stafford, if you have him on your team, 
                you drafted him high and probably do not have a much better option, 
                so it is hard to sit him. While the Bears do not give up many 
                touchdowns, they generally give up a healthy amount of yardage 
                through the air (225 per game), so Stafford will get his yards, 
                just don't expect him to carry your whole team this week. 
 Running Game Thoughts: With the 
                announcement coming this week that Jahvid Best is not going to 
                play this season, the Lions running back committee became a little 
                less crowded and probably a lot less explosive. While the Lions 
                are certainly a pass-heavy team to begin with, Best was supposed 
                to give the team something that their other running backs have 
                not: big-play ability. Led by Kevin Smith, Mikel Leshoure and 
                Joique Bell, the Lions currently rank in the bottom half of the 
                league in total rush yards, while averaging a meager 3.9 yards 
                per carry, and are tied for second worst in the NFL, with 19 yards 
                as their longest run to date. There have been small glimpses of 
                hope—like Leshoure’s first game back from suspension, 
                where he ran for 100 yards and a touchdown—but consistency 
                has been a big issue for this running attack. At the present time, 
                Leshoure looks like the workhorse back, with Bell coming in on 
                most third downs and to occasionally spell Leshoure. Smith looks 
                like an afterthought but has performed relatively well in the 
                past, so he may get a few carries here and there if the other 
                guys in front of him struggle. Speaking of struggle, the Lions 
                run game has a very tough matchup this week, as the Bears have 
                given up the least amount of rushing yards in the NFL so far. 
                They are also in the top 10 in opponents' rush yards per attempt 
                (3.6), and have given up only one rushing touchdown. Add this 
                all to the fact that opposing fantasy RBs are scoring the fourth 
                fewest points against the Bears, and you can envision a long day 
                for the Lions rushing attack. The only Lions RB I would even consider 
                starting is Leshoure, and he is not much more than a mediocre 
                RB3 or flex play in this very difficult road game.
 
 Projections:
 Matthew 
                Stafford: 270 pass yds, 1 TD, 2 INT
 Calvin 
                Johnson: 95 rec yds, 1 TD
 Brandon 
                Pettigrew: 55 rec yds
 Nate 
                Burleson: 50 rec yds
 Mikel 
                Leshoure: 45 rush yds, 20 rec yds
 Joique 
                Bell: 20 rush yds, 10 rec yds
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Despite a winning record and some decent 
                talent, the Bears passing game has been below the league average 
                in most statistics. Their pass yards per game, completion percentage, 
                touchdowns, and quarterback rating are all in the bottom 10, and 
                other than Brandon Marshall, the receiving corps has failed to 
                produce consistently. Alshon Jeffery was the only other receiver 
                showing any consistency, but he fractured his hand and will miss 
                at least the next few weeks. Despite all this doom and gloom surrounding 
                the passing attack, there are a few things that work in the Bears' 
                favor this week. One is the return of Earl Bennett, one of Cutler’s 
                favorite targets in the past, and a nice possession receiver who 
                should complement Marshall’s big-play ability. The other 
                thing is a home game against a passing defense that is statistically 
                below average, and now banged up in the secondary. The Lions rank 
                in the bottom 10 in opponents' completion percentage (64.7) and 
                quarterback rating (94.8) and have thus far picked off just two 
                passes in 170 attempts. With two of their top three corners banged 
                up and questionable, the Lions may very well be vulnerable in 
                the secondary, and there is no doubt that Cutler can expose weaknesses 
                when he is on. While I expect the Lions to play the Bears tough, 
                as they normally do, I also see a great opportunity for an above-average 
                day for Cutler and Marshall (both top 12 options at their positions 
                this week). I would easily start the dynamic duo, but unless you 
                are feeling very lucky with Bennett as a low-end WR3, I would 
                avoid all other Bears receivers, as they are just too inconsistent 
                with the distribution of targets so far. 
 Running Game Thoughts: With two 
                fully healthy and talented running backs, the Bears run game is 
                already clicking and should probably even improve over the course 
                of the season. Currently, the Bears are top 12 in the league in 
                rush yards per game (123.6), yards per rush (4.1) and rushing 
                touchdowns (5), in addition to being just one of four teams not 
                to fumble the football yet (rushing). Coming off a bye week, well 
                rested and back to health, Matt Forte will resume his role as 
                feature ball carrier and be in on most passing downs. Michael 
                Bush will occasionally spell Forte, as well as carry the rock 
                in most goal-line situations. As a team rushing defense, Detroit 
                has actually been pretty solid, ranking 12th in rush yards allowed 
                per game (96.4), and tied for second in rushing touchdowns allowed 
                (1). I believe this matchup, a good run offense versus a good 
                run defense, may well determine the game, and in this case I think 
                Chicago pulls slightly ahead. The combination of Chicago's coming 
                off a bye, being at home, and Detroit's having played two tough 
                road games in a row really favors Chicago, especially since they 
                have two quality running backs that can pound and wear out the 
                defense. I would easily start Forte as a mid-range RB1 and expect 
                his final numbers to be pretty decent, even if his yards per carry 
                are not that impressive. As for Bush, I would probably bench him 
                this week, as most of his value (except in cake matchups) will 
                come on touchdown chances, which are very hard to predict.
 
 Projections:
 Jay 
                Cutler: 280 pass yds, 2 TD, 1 INT
 Brandon 
                Marshall: 100 rec yds, 1 TD
 Earl 
                Bennett: 55 rec yds
 Matt 
                Forte: 85 rush yds, 35 rec yds
 Michael 
                Bush: 40 rush yds, 15 rec yds
 
 Prediction: Bears 28, Lions 24
 
 Jets @ Patriots 
                - (Marcoccio)
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Mark Sanchez was efficient last week, completing 
                61 percent of his passes with two touchdowns and no interceptions. 
                However, he finished with only 82 yards passing, as the Jets offense 
                dominated Indianapolis on the ground. Wide receiver Stephen Hill 
                returned to the lineup after missing two games with a hamstring 
                pull and caught one of Sanchez’s touchdown passes. The other 
                was caught by another Hill, the recently signed Jason. The performance 
                by Sanchez broke a four-game string where he failed to complete 
                even 50 percent of his passes. With Hill and tight end Dustin 
                Keller now both recovered from their hamstring issues, Sanchez 
                finally has some weapons at his disposal in a week where more 
                will be required out of the passing offense if the Jets hope to 
                keep pace with the high-powered Patriots in Foxboro. 
 The Patriots have once again struggled with their pass defense 
                in 2012, after finishing 2011 as one of the worst teams in the 
                league defending the pass. They have allowed 288.8 ypg and have 
                given up 15 passing touchdowns through six weeks. The team brought 
                in a pair of rookie pass rushers to apply pressure on opposing 
                quarterbacks, and while defensive end Chandler Jones has lived 
                up to his end of the bargain with five sacks on the season, linebacker 
                Dont'a Hightower has struggled through injuries and has missed 
                the last two games.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: The Jets 
                running game was going nowhere fast behind the pedestrian Shonn 
                Greene, until the anemic Colts run defense allowed him 161 yards 
                and three touchdowns last Sunday in New Jersey. Greene had some 
                running room, but he also looked a little more explosive as he 
                spun out of and broke tackles on his way to his best game as a 
                professional. It’s unlikely that this game is a harbinger 
                of things to come, but perhaps he gained enough confidence to 
                at least be effective in favorable matchups going forward. Backup 
                running back Bilal Powell suffered a separated shoulder against 
                the Colts, and fellow backup Joe McKnight suffered a high ankle 
                sprain, leaving the team perilously thin in the backfield. Only 
                rookie Jonathan Grimes, who was recently signed off of the Texans 
                practice squad, and fullback Lex Hilliard are available behind 
                Greene if the Jets do not add a warm body this week. This may 
                be the week that Tim Tebow becomes more involved running the ball 
                in the Jets offense.
 
 Meanwhile, the Patriots run defense has been very effective. The 
                team has allowed only 82.7 ypg on the ground and just two rushing 
                touchdowns on the season. Greene owners will be tempted to get 
                him back in their lineups after his Week 6 performance, but this 
                tough matchup and his performance in his prior four games scream 
                against it.
 Projections:Mark Sanchez: 285 pass yds, 2 TDs, 1 INT / 25 rush yds
 Tim Tebow: 35 rush yds, 1 TD
 Stephen Hill: 65 rec yds, 1 TD
 Jeremy Kerley: 55 rec yds, 1 TD
 Dustin Keller: 30 rec yds
 Shonn Greene: 45 rush yds / 15 rec yds
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Tom Brady has not been as dominant in 2012 
                as he has in recent seasons, due in large part to the Patriots’ 
                newfound reliance on the running game. However, he’s still 
                one of the better fantasy options on a weekly basis, as he’s 
                averaging 307 passing yards per game and has thrown for 10 touchdowns 
                while rushing for two. Aaron Hernandez returned last week but 
                was only slowly worked into the offense. His role should grow, 
                and he’s a unique talent who presents a difficult matchup 
                for most defenders. Wes Welker thrived while Hernandez was out 
                of the lineup and should continue to see a good share of targets, 
                despite it's looking as though the team was trying to phase him 
                out of the offense during the early part of the season. With Rob 
                Gronkowski and Brandon Lloyd also in the mix, the Jets secondary, 
                missing their top cover corner, should have difficulties slowing 
                down an angry Brady, who was allegedly taunted by the Seattle 
                defensive backs after last week’s loss. 
 Last week, the Jets made Andrew Luck look how a rookie quarterback 
                is supposed to look, as Antonio Cromartie did a good job limiting 
                Luck's go-to wide receiver, Reggie Wayne. On the season, the Jets 
                have been a top 5 pass defense—despite losing Darrelle Revis—allowing 
                only 209.3 passing yards per game. The competition becomes a little 
                more intense this week, however.
 Running Game Thoughts: Former LSU 
                running back Steven Ridley has given the Patriots offense something 
                it hasn’t had in quite some time—a feature back. Danny 
                Woodhead and rookie Brandon Bolden do see some snaps in the backfield, 
                but Ridley has carried the rushing load for an offense that has 
                been very balanced this season. He has 524 yards and four touchdowns 
                on the ground through six games. Expect the Patriots to look to 
                exploit the Jets’ weakness in stopping the run by featuring 
                a heavy amount of rushing attempts.
 
 The Jets have struggled every week but two in trying to stop opposing 
                runners. Last week the Colts never got a chance to establish a 
                running game after falling behind early, but on the season the 
                Jets defense has allowed 150.5 ypg and eight touchdowns on the 
                ground. Bill Belichick can smell the blood in the water as you 
                read this.
 
 Projections:
 Tom 
                Brady: 305 pass yds 3 TDs / 1 INT
 Brandon 
                Lloyd: 65 rec yds
 Wes 
                Welker: 80 rec yds, 1 TD
 Rob 
                Gronkowski: 60 rec yds, 2 TDs
 Aaron 
                Hernandez: 60 rec yds
 Stevan 
                Ridley: 115 rush yds, 1 TD / 10 rec yds
 Danny 
                Woodhead: 15 rush yds / 15 rec yds
 Brandon 
                Bolden: 35 rush yards, 1 TD
 
 Prediction: Patriots 41, Jets 24
 
 Redskins @ Giants 
                - (Marcoccio)
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Robert Griffin III suffered a "mild" 
                concussion in Week 5, which likely caused a lot of owners to move 
                him to their bench for Week 6. Those owners missed out on his 
                138 rushing yards and two touchdowns on the ground. Griffin also 
                threw for 186 yards and a score as well. Sometimes the process 
                is right, but the results just don’t work out. Griffin obviously 
                was not gun-shy about taking off on the run after a big hit on 
                the sidelines knocked him out the game in the fourth quarter against 
                Minnesota. His 76-yard run showed the elite speed that made him 
                such an interesting prospect. Pierre Garcon was once again inactive 
                due to his foot injury, and it appears this just may be a lost 
                season for him. Owners in shallow leagues should keep abreast 
                of the latest news and decide if he’s worth a roster spot. 
                With Garcon banged up, it’s difficult to find the go-to 
                option in the Skins passing game, as Griffin looks to spread the 
                ball around. No Washington pass catcher is consistent enough at 
                the moment to start with confidence.
 Since Prince Amukamara returned from injury, the Giants secondary 
                has looked much better. But last week against San Francisco, in 
                a game where the Giants defense was smothering, the star of the 
                show was veteran Antrel Rolle, who picked off Alex Smith twice. 
                The Giants’ bread and butter on defense is of course their 
                ability to rush the passer, and it was Jason Pierre-Paul (2 sacks) 
                leading the way on a six-sack effort in San Francisco. The Giants 
                have done fairly well containing Michael Vick during his three 
                seasons as Philly's starter, which could help them in their preparation 
                for RGIII.  Running Game Thoughts: Rookie back Alfred Morris continued his 
                stellar start to the season last week, rushing for 47 yards and 
                his fifth touchdown of the year. Morris runs with tremendous leg 
                drive and has proven to be one of the more difficult backs in 
                the league to take down on initial contact. The Skins O-line has 
                done a good job with their version of the zone blocking scheme, 
                and Morris has hit the holes hard. The surprise running back of 
                the season so far, Morris looks poised to be an effective producer 
                all season.The Giants have played the run relatively tough, allowing 106.2 
                ypg and only three touchdowns through six weeks, but they may 
                be vulnerable against an attack featuring Washington's two rookies—one 
                with blazing speed and the other that will run right over you. 
                Expect the Giants to move a safety or two into the box in order 
                to limit the running game and force Griffin to beat them through 
                the air.
 
 Projections:
 Robert Griffin III: 235 pass yds 1 TD, 1 INT / 45 rush yds, 1 
                TD
 Leonard Hankerson: 45 rec yds
 Santana Moss: 25 rec yds, 1 TD
 Josh Morgan: 30 rec yds
 Fred Davis: 55 rec yds
 Alfred Morris: 75 rush yds, 1 TD
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Eli Manning and the passing offense got 
                the Giants off to a fast start last week in San Francisco, but 
                it took a back seat to Ahmad Bradshaw and the running game in 
                the second half. Tight end Martellus Bennett has been extremely 
                quiet after his torrid first three weeks, but he was suffering 
                from a knee injury he sustained in Week 4 and is supposedly now 
                fully recovered. Victor Cruz hasn’t been making the big 
                plays that made his 2011 season so special, but his owners can’t 
                be disappointed with his production in 2012 so far. Due to the 
                absence of Hakeem Nicks, who returned to the lineup last week 
                but was still hampered by his foot and knee injuries, opposing 
                defenses have been throwing double teams and bracket coverage 
                at Cruz. As a result, Manning has had to find Cruz mostly on underneath 
                routes—but find him, he has. Cruz has 43 receptions and 
                six touchdowns already this season, albeit while averaging only 
                11.6 yards per catch.
 Manning, Cruz, Nicks, Bennett, and even Dominick Dixon owners 
                have to be happy to see the Redskins’ league worst pass 
                defense on the schedule this week. The team has allowed an incredible 
                328.3 ypg through the air and 15 passing touchdowns in the six 
                games the team has played.  Running Game Thoughts: Ahmad Bradshaw is coming off the best 
                two-game stretch of his career. After gashing the Browns for 200 
                yards in Week 5, he racked up over 100 yards rushing and a touchdown 
                against the vaunted 49er defense—a defense that does not 
                give up many 100-yard efforts or rushing touchdowns to anyone. 
                Bradshaw sat out of Wednesday’s practice with a sore foot, 
                which should be noted is an injury that has plagued him throughout 
                his career, but it could just be precautionary after two high-carry 
                efforts for the Giants’ lead back. He was back at practice 
                on Thursday. Bradshaw faces another tough matchup with the Redskins this week. 
                They have been able to limit opposing runners so far this season, 
                allowing only 88.8 ypg with three rushing touchdowns on the season. 
               Projections: Eli Manning: 365 pass yds 3 TDs
 Hakeem Nicks: 65 rec yds
 Victor Cruz: 105 rec yds, 1 TD
 Domenik Hixon: 50 rec yds, 1 TD
 Martellus Bennett: 55 rec yds, 1 TD
 Ahmad Bradshaw: 85 rush yds / 30 rec yds
 Andre Brown: 20 rush yds
 Prediction: Giants 27, Redskins 24
 Titans @ Bills 
                - (Marcoccio)
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Matt Hasselbeck will get another start, 
                with Jake Locker still at least a week away from returning from 
                his shoulder injury. Hasselbeck’s arm strength and mobility 
                are practically non-existent at this point in his career, but 
                he’s still a smart and fiery leader. He looked more than 
                adequate leading the Titans to an upset victory over the Steelers, 
                even if his diminished arm strength got him in trouble at times 
                and could have led to some bad results if the Steelers made a 
                few more plays. Kenny Britt finally looked healthy in that game, 
                but he continued to show why he’s been such a tease during 
                his brief career. While he has immense talent, Britt ran a few 
                bad routes and showed some immaturity between the lines (something 
                he’s often done outside the lines, as well, during his professional 
                career). Kendall Wright is having a nice rookie season, displaying 
                elite quickness and sure hands, if not the downfield speed and 
                ability that made him an intriguing college prospect. Veteran 
                Nate Washington rounds out a very talented and dangerous wide 
                receiver corps. When you add the talented but underused tight 
                end Jared Cook to the mix, this team could have a very dangerous 
                passing unit, provided it gets more consistent quarterback play 
                down the road. 
 The Bills have allowed 283.2 passing ypg, while also giving up 
                13 passing touchdowns. Last week the offseason additions of Mario 
                Williams and Mark Anderson finally created a dangerous pass rush, 
                but that could have had a lot to do with lining up over one of 
                the worst pair of offensive tackles in the league. Facing a soft 
                matchup that could allow him to put up big numbers in western 
                New York, Hasselbeck has a nice opportunity to give the Titans’ 
                coaching staff something to think about if Locker is ready next 
                week.
 Running Game Thoughts: Surprisingly, Chris Johnson has performed 
                well only in his two most difficult matchups, against Houston 
                and last week against Pittsburgh. In his other four games he looked 
                like trash, dancing in the backfield and failing to hit hard any 
                holes that did exist. Johnson’s inconsistent season makes 
                life difficult for his fantasy owners each week, as his biggest 
                games have likely come when many owners said “enough is 
                enough” and moved him to their benches.
 
 The Bills present an easy matchup for Johnson, but as stated above, 
                that has not meant success this year for the artist formerly known 
                as CJ2K. The Bills have allowed a league worst 173.5 rushing ypg 
                with nine rushing touchdowns. Tempting.
 
 Projections:
 Matt Hasselbeck: 265 pass yds 2 TDs, 1 INT
 Kenny Britt: 85 rec yds, 1 TD
 Nate Washington: 40 rec yds, 1 TD
 Kendall Wright: 45 rec yds
 Jared Cook: 35 rec yds
 Chris Johnson: 85 rush yds / 30 rec yds
 Jamie Harper: 15 rush yds, 1 TD / 5 rec yds
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Ryan Fitzpatrick proves to be a below-average 
                NFL starting quarterback each week, despite at times putting up 
                some decent fantasy stats. He lacks the arm strength to put many 
                throws where they need to be, and for a Harvard graduate, he makes 
                some incredibly stupid decisions with the football. Fitzpatrick 
                is a gutsy player and can gain yards with his legs when the pocket 
                collapses, but his costly mistakes limit the Bills' ability to 
                get to the next level. Stevie Johnson looked to be on the verge 
                of superstardom heading into this season, but he has been limited 
                by a strained groin, by Fitzpatrick’s lack of ability, and 
                by his own lack of discipline. Johnson still hasn’t learned 
                to be a great route runner, and at times he seems disinterested 
                on the field. As the weather gets colder in Buffalo, the odds 
                of the team turning around its passing game declines sharply. Like the Bills, the Titans have also given up 13 passing touchdowns 
                and have struggled to stop opposing passing offenses, so this 
                game has some shootout potential, despite its two middling quarterbacks. 
                The Titans allow 292.3 passing ypg and their secondary really 
                misses departed free agent Cortland Finnegan.
 Running Game Thoughts: The Bills have decided on a running back 
                rotation which gives Fred Jackson and then C.J. Spiller two series 
                each to carry the load. This may frustrate fantasy owners, but 
                the Bills have little choice, since both backs are still effective 
                and deserve some share of the workload. It worked well last week 
                when Jackson gained 53 yards on his 16 carries, and Spiller 88 
                on his 12. Both backs also found the end zone. Spiller has shown 
                rare explosion and big-play ability, so limiting his touches is 
                not necessarily a bad thing if it helps keep him healthy. Jackson 
                is more of a grinder at this stage of his career, so his owners 
                cannot be pleased during the weeks where the carries to be split 
                are not plentiful. The Bills O-line, which was once a disaster, 
                has developed into a very solid unit, and Chan Gailey knows that, 
                with a porous defense and a mistake-prone quarterback, the running 
                game is his only real chance of competing for the AFC East title. The Titans defense also struggles against the run (129.5 ypg 
                and 7 rushing touchdowns), so the Bills can attack the Titans 
                on the ground with confidence. The soft matchup combined with 
                the potential heavy workload makes staring either Buffalo back 
                a good option this week.
 Projections:
 Ryan Fitzpatrick: 245 pass yds 2 TDs, 2 INTs / 25 rush yds
 Steve Johnson: 85 rec yds, 1 TD
 Donald Jones: 40 rec yds
 T.J. Graham: 35 rec yds
 Scott Chandler: 45 rec yds, 1 TD
 Fred Jackson: 60 rush yds, 1 TD / 5 yds receiving
 C.J. Spiller: 105 rush yds, 1 TD / 15 yds receiving
 
 Prediction: Bills 34, Titans 27
 
 Packers @ Rams 
                - (Caron)
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Never bench your studs. We hear it time 
                and time again and for some reason there always seems to be a 
                fraction of fantasy owners who complain when their benched “stud” 
                blows up while their lower-ranked player with a “better 
                matchup” throws up a dud. Consensus top-5 pick Aaron Rodgers 
                hasn’t had the amazing start to the season that many expected 
                but he made up for it on Monday night when he tossed a ridiculous 
                six touchdown passes against the highly-touted Texans defense, 
                proving once again that the Packers offense can still function 
                at a high level, even without Greg Jennings. With Jennings expected to miss Week 7 with a lingering groin 
                injury, Aaron Rodgers will be relying on Jordy Nelson and the 
                emerging James Jones to step up again. Jones and Nelson combined 
                for five of Rodgers’ six touchdowns against the Texans but 
                things could be a bit tougher this week as they go up against 
                a Rams pass defense that has allowed just two touchdown passes 
                against them in the past five weeks combined. Much of that success 
                can be attributed to Chris Long, Robert Quinn and the Rams pass-rush. 
                The Packers have struggled to protect Rodgers at times, so this 
                could be something to worry about, but it’s hard to bench 
                anyone in this passing attack when they’re coming off of 
                such an unbelievable performance.  Running Game Thoughts: With injuries to Cedric Benson and Brandon 
                Saine, the job as Green Bay’s primary ball carrier seems 
                to be firmly in the hands of rookie tailback Alex Green. Green, 
                who ran for 65 yards on 22 carries in Week 6, struggled to get 
                things going, but it didn’t particularly matter as the Packers 
                passing game was practically unstoppable. If 22 carries becomes 
                the norm, Green could very well become one of the league’s 
                best sleeper pickups. Still, fantasy owners should temper their 
                expectations as the Packers remain a pass-first offense and it 
                is more likely that Green will get somewhere around of 15 carries 
                per game. Still, if the Packers offense is back to being what 
                it was in 2011, that could mean some big games are in store for 
                this waiver wire pickup.  Green’s first chance at a nice fantasy day could come in 
                Week 7 as he goes up against the Rams run defense that hasn’t 
                been as great as its pass defense. They’ve done a solid 
                job against the run over the past two weeks, allowing just 57 
                yards combined on the ground to the Cardinals and Dolphins backs. 
                The Packers running game hasn’t been particularly impressive 
                thus far in 2012 so it’s hard to imagine that Alex Green 
                is suddenly going to break away into fantasy stardom, but for 
                those in a pinch with bye weeks, Green could be a decent fill-in 
                in your RB2 or FLEX spots.  Projections:Aaron Rodgers: 305 pass yds, 3 TD, 1 INT
 Jordy Nelson: 110 rec yds, 1 TD
 James Jones: 60 rec yds, 1 TD
 Randall Cobb: 45 rec yds
 Jermichael Finley: 30 rec yds, 1 TD
 Alex Green: 60 rush yds, 10 rec yds
 James Starks: 20 rush yds, 5 rec yds
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Consistency isn’t exactly the word 
                that fantasy owners of Sam Bradford would use to describe the 
                Rams quarterback’s play this season, but that doesn’t 
                mean it hasn’t been effective at times. With receiver Danny 
                Amendola out, Bradford had perhaps his best fantasy day this season 
                when he threw for 315 yards, ran for 34 more and even scored a 
                rushing touchdown. While he failed to throw a touchdown, he also 
                avoided turning the ball over, which gave him a nice fantasy day 
                overall. The sudden rushing stats should be looked at more as 
                a mirage than a trend, however, as Bradford had not rushed for 
                more than 15 yards in any game this season.
 At the moment it appears that Brandon Gibson is the top target 
                in the St. Louis passing game so it will be interesting to see 
                if the Packers decide to lean coverage in his direction. Gibson 
                caught 7 passes for 91 yards in Week 6 and has had multiple catches 
                in every game so far this season. He hasn’t scored a touchdown 
                since Week 2, but given the up-and-down play of the Packers secondary 
                that allowed multiple passing touchdowns to Alex Smith, Russell 
                Wilson, Drew Brees and Andrew Luck already this season, Gibson 
                and Bradford could get back in the endzone this week. Another 
                player to play close attention to this week is receiver Chris 
                Givens who has become the Rams’ deep threat in recent weeks, 
                catching a pass of 50+ yards in each of the past three weeks. 
               Running Game Thoughts: When the Rams drafted running back Isaiah 
                Pead in the second round of the 2012 NFL Draft, most experts believed 
                that he would be the heir to one of the league’s best running 
                backs, Steven Jackson. While it does seem that Jackson is losing 
                some steam and could be being slowly phased out of the St. Louis 
                offense, the surprise has been that another one of St. Louis’ 
                2012 draft picks has emerged. Daryl Richardson carried the ball 
                11 times in Week 6, his second-highest total this season, and 
                most importantly only one less carry than what a healthy Steven 
                Jackson received. While the transition is still happening and 
                we don’t know for sure whether Richardson will see an increased 
                workload going forward, fantasy owners of Steven Jackson now have 
                a real reason to consider benching one of their high-round picks. 
               Whoever is getting the carries in Green Bay this week could have 
                trouble running against the Packers defense which just got done 
                holding Arian Foster and the Texans’ running game to just 
                3.3 yards per carry in Week 6. Sure, Foster did score twice, but 
                given that neither Jackson nor Richardson has scored a rushing 
                touchdown this season, it’s hard to believe that either 
                man will suddenly sneak into the endzone against the Packers. 
                If St. Louis’ defense struggles to stop Rodgers and the 
                Green Bay passing game, it could lead to fewer carries for the 
                Rams running backs, which only serves to lower their fantasy projections 
                this week.  Projections:Sam Bradford: 210 pass yds, 2 TD, 1 INT
 Brandon Gibson: 80 rec yds, 1 TD
 Chris Givens: 60 rec yds, 1 TD
 Lance Kendricks: 25 rec yds
 Steven Jackson: 55 rush yds, 15 rec yds
 Daryl Richardson: 40 rush yds
 Prediction: Packers 27, Rams 23
 Jaguars @ Raiders 
                - (Caron)
 
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Quarterback Blaine Gabbert hasn’t 
                even reached the 200-yard mark or thrown for more than one touchdown 
                pass since Week 1, making the Jaguars passing game - as many expected 
                - the worst in the league by a fairly wide margin. Rookie wide 
                receiver Justin Blackmon hasn’t had nearly the kind of return 
                on investment that one would expect. It is believed that his role 
                in the offense will continue to expand as the year goes on, especially 
                considering there really isn’t another reliable pass-catcher 
                on the active roster if Laurent Robinson is unable to suit up 
                due to his concussion. On the bright side, Gabbert and the Jaguars have had two weeks 
                to prepare for one of the league’s worst pass defenses. 
                The Raiders have been absolutely punished by opposing quarterbacks 
                this season, having allowed at least 200 yards in every game this 
                season. While some will point to their performance last week against 
                the Falcons as a more recent example of their success, as they 
                allowed only one touchdown while intercepting three passes from 
                Matt Ryan, the more skeptical eye will look at their previous 
                four games where they allowed nine passing touchdowns while intercepting 
                nothing. If you’re in a tough enough situation that you’re 
                contemplating Blaine Gabbert as a wise fantasy start, the waiver 
                wire is probably pretty thin. But if you’re looking for 
                some positive reinforcement, do consider that the Raiders defense 
                has been embarrassingly bad this season and it may very well begin 
                again this week.  Running Game Thoughts: 2011’s leading rusher Maurice Jones-Drew 
                averaged almost exactly 100 yards per game during his impressive 
                campaign last year, yet has failed to live up to that standard 
                in 2012 as he is averaging just 71 yards per game on the ground. 
                With Blaine Gabbert’s irritatingly slow progression as a 
                passer combined with the general lack of any vertical threat, 
                defenses have been free to key in on MJD and his stats have taken 
                a hit. Jones-Drew has only reached the 20-carry mark once this 
                season and his role in the passing game has diminished to an almost 
                non-existent level in most games. Thankfully for Jones-Drew owners, 
                rumors that Rashad Jennings would be taking significant snaps 
                this season were greatly exaggerated so whatever runs the Jaguars 
                have called have been going to Jones-Drew. If he’s going to get back on track, this is the week when 
                MJD needs to explode. The Raiders run defense has been notoriously 
                bad for years now and things haven’t been much better in 
                2012. While they’ve had a couple good performances including 
                shutting down the Falcons running game last week, Oakland has 
                had two games where they’ve been absolutely destroyed on 
                the ground against the Dolphins and Broncos. Not coincidentally, 
                those are the only teams that have run the ball more than 20 times 
                against this defense. If the Jaguars commit to the run, Jones-Drew 
                should have a nice day. Otherwise it could be another disappointing 
                performance for a player whom many spent a first round pick on 
                in their fantasy drafts. Projections:Blaine Gabbert: 160 pass yds, 1 TD
 Justin Blackmon: 50 rec yds, 1 TD
 Cecil Shorts: 40 rec yds
 Marcedes Lewis: 35 rec yds
 Maurice Jones-Drew: 100 rush yds, 1 TD, 10 rec yds
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: With the Raiders continuing to struggle 
                to run the ball, quarterback Carson Palmer has been asked to throw 
                quite a bit this season. He’s averaging 39 pass attempts 
                per game and while much of that can be attributed to the fact 
                that the Raiders have fallen behind in many games, the truth is 
                that they are leaning more on their passing game because it has 
                simply been more effective. Palmer has limited his interceptions 
                this season to just three, compared to six touchdowns, and has 
                only had one game out of five where he has failed to throw a touchdown 
                pass. With Denarius Moore continuing to perform at a high level 
                and Darrius Heyward-Bey back from his neck injury, the Raiders 
                passing game is looking increasingly viable.
 At first glance, the Jaguars’ middle-of-the-pack pass defense 
                doesn’t look too bad. A closer examination into why they’re 
                ranked where they are is in order though, because it’s hard 
                to blame an opposing team for not passing the ball much when they’re 
                up multiple scores. Jacksonville has been blown out in three games 
                this season and that has certainly contributed to the muted stats 
                that opposing teams have put up against them in the passing game. 
                Still, the Jaguars have allowed multiple touchdown passes to opposing 
                quarterbacks in three straight games and have to be considered 
                a pretty good matchup for Carson Palmer and the Raiders.  Running Game Thoughts: After taking him with a second or even 
                first round pick in fantasy drafts this season, Darren McFadden 
                owners are expecting more than what they’ve gotten thus 
                far. The concern for McFadden has always been injuries - not production. 
                But in 2012, the production hasn’t really been there either. 
                With only two touchdowns so far and only two games with more than 
                35 yards rushing, McFadden has been a big disappointment. Even 
                during last week’s near-win over the Falcons, “Run 
                DMC” ran for just 2.6 yards per carry. Not only that, but 
                after catching 13 passes in Week 1, McFadden has caught only eight 
                passes in the following four games combined. Frustrated fantasy owners might be tempted to sit him, but after 
                weeks of going up against fairly tough run defenses, Darren McFadden 
                finally has a chance to break out this week against one of the 
                league’s worst run defenses. The Jaguars have already allowed 
                a league-worst eight touchdowns to opposing running backs and 
                have only held one team (Indianapolis) to under 100 yards on the 
                ground so far in 2012. McFadden has the talent to terrorize a 
                defense like this and if Jacksonville falls behind early as they 
                have in other games, he could get a chance to do just that. The 
                Jaguars are allowing an average of 182 total yards per game to 
                opposing running backs, so look for McFadden to continue that 
                trend.  Projections:Carson Palmer: 260 pass yds, 2 TD, 1 INT
 Denarius Moore: 80 rec yds, 1 TD
 Derek Hagan: 40 rec yds
 Darrius Heyward-Bey: 30 rec yds
 Brandon Myers: 40 rec yds
 Darren McFadden: 115 rush yds, 1 TD, 35 rec yds, 1 TD
 Mike Goodson: 25 rush yds, 10 rec yds
 Prediction: Raiders 27, Jaguars 14  |