|  Chiefs @ Chargers 
                - (Caron) 
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: To say that 
                this is a lost season for the Chiefs is an understatement. Kansas 
                City has been a complete disaster on both sides of the ball but 
                it has been the quarterback position that has received the most 
                scrutiny. After an unsuccessful start to the season that saw Matt 
                Cassel throw at least one interception in every game he started, 
                the Chiefs handed the ball over to backup Brady Quinn who didn’t 
                perform much better in the limited time he spent behind center. 
                An injury to Quinn now puts Cassel back in the starting role, 
                which doesn’t mean much to fantasy owners on the surface, 
                but it does mean a ranking boost for wide receiver Dwayne Bowe 
                who has made a season out of garbage time points with Cassel at 
                quarterback. Bowe caught seven passes for 108 yards and a score 
                in the Chiefs Week 4 matchup against the Chargers. Coming off their best performance of the season, the San Diego 
                Chargers secondary must be licking their chops to have the opportunity 
                to go up against such a struggling passing game. The San Diego 
                defense held Brandon Weeden and the Browns passing game to just 
                129 yards and zero touchdowns. Of course, that also came in a 
                game that was run-heavy due to weather. The Chargers did have 
                their best game of the year, in terms of intercepting passes, 
                in Week 4 when they picked off Matt Cassel three times. They’ll 
                look to increase that number on Thursday night.  Running Game Thoughts: Fantasy football as a whole can be extremely 
                frustrating but when you’re the owner of a star running 
                back who, while healthy, ran the ball just five times, sometimes 
                you just have to throw your hands up in the air and admit that 
                there’s nothing you can do about it. That’s what happened 
                last week to fantasy owners who started Jamaal Charles against 
                a mediocre Oakland run defense. Charles contributed a total of 
                just 10 total yards including the yardage he accumulated on three 
                pass catches. With only 17 total carries over his past two games, 
                Charles may not be the every week must-start that we believed 
                he was from Weeks 3-5 this season when he seemed to be well on 
                his way to repeating his monster 2010 season.  San Diego has been decent at shutting down opposing rushers this 
                season, with only three teams having rushed for more than 100 
                yards against their defense. Of course, we’d be remiss if 
                we didn’t point out that one of those 100 yard games came 
                against Charles and the Chiefs in Week 4. Charles’ 111 yards 
                and two total touchdowns would have normally given him a bigger 
                fantasy day, but two fumbles (his only two on the season) led 
                to the numbers being washed out a bit. With the season now in 
                the tank, there is a legitimate concern that Charles might get 
                less carries through the end of the year than he would if the 
                team was in contention, but it’s not time to panic yet. 
                If he gets fewer than 10 touches this week, it could be time to 
                cut ties.  Projections:Matt Cassel: 170 pass yds, 1 TD, 1 INT
 Dwayne Bowe: 50 rec yds, 1 TD
 Dexter McCluster: 30 rec yds
 Jonathan Baldwin: 25 rec yds
 Tony Moeaki: 25 rec yds
 Jamaal Charles: 90 rush yds, 1 TD, 20 rec yds
 Peyton Hillis: 10 rush yds, 15 rec yds
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Fantasy owners who decided to play Philip 
                Rivers in Week 8 probably weren’t happy to see that the 
                Chargers QB threw for just 154 yards in a loss to the Cleveland 
                Browns while throwing up a goose egg in the touchdown column. 
                What the boxscore won’t tell you, is that the game was played 
                in monsoon-like conditions which led to a 7-6 final score. It 
                can be hard to do as a fantasy owner, but Philip Rivers needs 
                to be given a pass on this one. What we won’t give him a 
                pass on, is that he’s still turning the ball over at an 
                alarming rate, having already thrown nine interceptions in just 
                seven games. If he doesn’t stop throwing the ball to the 
                other team, it won’t matter how many yards he throws for 
                because his fantasy value is going to be in the toilet.
 This week Rivers has a chance to bounce back against a Kansas 
                City defense that has been abused by nearly every QB they’ve 
                played this season. The Chiefs have allowed multiple passing touchdowns 
                in every game except one, including two touchdowns to Philip Rivers 
                in Week 4. Kansas City ranks 27th in points allowed to opposing 
                quarterbacks and as of right now there appears to be no real reason 
                that the trend of multiple touchdown passes allowed won’t 
                continue. Now it’s just up to Rivers to avoid throwing the 
                rock to the Kansas City secondary.  Running Game Thoughts: Ryan Mathews was rather disappointing 
                for fantasy owners in a game that saw him touch the ball 26 times. 
                The Chargers running back did crack the 100 total yard mark, but 
                his inability to get into the end zone has continued to hurt his 
                fantasy value as he has now scored just one touchdown since Week 
                15 of last year. Some might say that he is on the verge of a breakout 
                performance, but it just hasn’t happened this year. Jackie 
                Battle is now a complete afterthought but Ronnie Brown seems to 
                have come out of nowhere and is producing excellent numbers as 
                a receiver out of the backfield which also hurts Mathews’ 
                value. He’s slipping into mid-tier RB2 status without the 
                touchdowns to back up his yardage.  On the bright side, Mathews has historically performed well against 
                the Chiefs. In his past three games against, Mathews has averaged 
                114 total yards per game and scored two touchdowns. If he can 
                get into the end zone and have over 100 yards, he will make fantasy 
                owners happy at least for one week. Kansas City has allowed over 
                100 total yards on the ground to opposing running backs in every 
                game this season, so it’s very possible Mathews could have 
                the breakout game his owners are waiting for.  Projections:Philip Rivers: 210 pass yds, 2 TD, 2 INT
 Malcom Floyd: 60 rec yds, 1 TD
 Robert Meachem: 30 rec yds, 1 TD
 Antonio Gates: 40 rec yds
 Ryan Mathews: 80 rush yds, 1 TD, 25 rec yds
 Ronnie Brown: 10 rush yds, 30 rec yds
 Prediction: Chargers 27, Chiefs 
                17 ^ Top 
 Bears @ Titans 
                - (Smith)
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: Chicago has 
                the league’s 30th-ranked passing game, and because Jay Cutler 
                is only 25th in passing yards and has a terrible ratio of nine 
                touchdowns and eight interceptions, he’s 26th among quarterbacks 
                in fantasy scoring. His poor showing hasn’t hampered Brandon 
                Marshall’s productivity though, as he’s fifth among 
                wideouts in fantasy scoring and fourth in receiving yards. Marshall 
                has amassed at least 70 yards in all but one game this season, 
                and has 98 or more yards in three of his last four contests. He 
                should have another exceptional outing against the Titans this 
                week. 
 Just one team has given up more touchdowns through the air than 
                Tennessee, only three teams have allowed more passing yards per 
                game than them, and no team has allowed a higher completion percentage 
                by opposing quarterbacks. So as you might expect, they’ve 
                allowed the third-most fantasy points per game to quarterbacks, 
                with six different gunslingers passing for multiple touchdowns 
                and five throwing for at least 250 yards against them. The Titans 
                have also allowed more FPPG, receptions, receiving yards and touchdowns 
                to tight ends than any other squad in the NFL
 
 Running Game Thoughts: Due to an 
                injury and bye week, Matt Forte is only 20th in fantasy scoring 
                among running backs. But in the four games in which he’s 
                had at least 15 carries, Forte has run for 70 or more yards in 
                all of them. He only has two touchdowns this season, but that’s 
                not a by-product of Michael Bush as you might think – Bush 
                hasn’t scored since Week 3, and has just 13 carries in his 
                last three games. So Forte is clearly the team’s top runner, 
                and has an excellent chance to do damage this week against a bad 
                Tennessee run defense.
 
 The Titans can’t stop the run a whole lot better than they 
                can the pass, and have allowed the third-most FPPG in the league 
                to running backs. They’re 28th in rush defense, 23rd (tied) 
                in rushing scores given up and 26th in yards per carry allowed. 
                Though just two backs have reached 100 rushing yards against Tennessee, 
                seven have run for at least 70 yards, and only one team has given 
                up more receiving yards to running backs.
 
 Projections:
 Jay 
                Cutler: 245 pass yds, 1 TD, 1 INT
 Brandon 
                Marshall: 110 rec yds, 1 TD
 Earl 
                Bennett: 60 rec yds
 Devin 
                Hester: 20 rec yds
 Kellen 
                Davis: 15 rec yds
 Matt 
                Forte: 105 rush yds, 2 TD / 30 rec yds
 Michael 
                Bush: 20 rush yds, 1 TD
 
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: Matt Hasselbeck 
                will continue to lead the show for Tennessee with Jake Locker 
                injured. He’s been a decent fill-in, but certainly not worthy 
                of a starting job for fantasy owners. His receivers haven’t 
                been great either. Nate Washington is the team’s top fantasy 
                scorer among wideouts, and he’s just 28th (tied). They have 
                a number of weapons, including Kenny Britt, Kendall Wright and 
                Jared Cook, which makes in more difficult for any to excel and 
                become much more than fantasy backups. That’s especially 
                true this week against a stout Bears pass defense. 
 Though the Bears are 18th in the league against the pass, they 
                are 10th in completion percentage allowed, third (tied) in sacks, 
                are tied for fewest passing scores given up and are also tied 
                for the lead in interceptions. That’s a recipe for fantasy 
                disaster when it comes to opposing quarterbacks, and the Bears 
                have held them to the fewest FPPG in the NFL.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: Chris Johnson 
                is 16th among running backs in fantasy scoring, which is a long 
                ways up from where he was at the beginning of the season. He got 
                off to a horrific start, but in his last three games has run for 
                91, 195 and 99 yards, respectively. Johnson has moved to 10th 
                in rushing yards for the season, and is once again a player fantasy 
                owners can start with confidence, though we can understand if 
                owners have trepidation this week considering Johnson will go 
                up against Chicago’s top-ranked rush defense.
 
 No team has allowed fewer yards per game on the ground than Chicago 
                this season, who are also eighth in YPC allowed and have given 
                up just a single rushing score, which is the second-lowest total 
                in the NFL (Houston). They’ve only allowed one runner to 
                gain more than 65 rushing yards, with none gaining more than 81, 
                and no team has given up fewer FPPG to backs than the Bears.
 
 Projections:
 Matt 
                Hasselbeck: 205 pass yds, 1 TD, 1 INT
 Nate 
                Washington: 70 rec yds
 Kendall 
                Wright: 55 rec yds, 1 TD
 Kenny 
                Britt: 35 rec yds
 Jared 
                Cook: 20 rec yds
 Chris 
                Johnson: 55 rush yds, 1 TD / 15 rec yds
 
 Prediction: Bears 30, Titans 20 
                ^ Top
 
  Dolphins @ Colts 
                - (Smith)
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: The Dolphins 
                are just 23rd in the league in passing offense, and though many 
                people have been impressed with rookie quarterback Ryan Tannehill, 
                he’s been an inconsistent fantasy performer, as many rookie 
                quarterbacks are. The Texas A&M product is 30th among quarterbacks 
                in fantasy scoring, and though he’s officially questionable 
                to return this week after suffering an injury in New York last 
                week, many expect him to play. His top target is wideout Brian 
                Hartline, who briefly held the NFL lead in receiving yards after 
                a 253-yard game during Week 4, but he’s had just eight receptions 
                for 100 yards in the three games since then, and is 26th (tied) 
                in fantasy scoring among wideouts. 
 Indianapolis doesn’t allow a lot of yards through the air, 
                ranking seventh in pass defense, but they’re 22nd (tied) 
                in passing touchdowns allowed, 25th in opponents completion percentage 
                allowed and have the fewest interceptions in all of football. 
                This has allowed opposing quarterbacks to accumulate the 11th-most 
                FPPG against them, and wide receivers to compile the seventh-most 
                FPPG. Where the Colts have had success is against tight ends, 
                with no team in the league allowing fewer FPPG to players at that 
                position.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: Reggie Bush 
                is 17th among running backs in fantasy scoring and 16th in rushing 
                yards, but he’s also a disappointing 16th in receiving yards 
                among backs with just 146. We’d like to see him pick up 
                more fantasy points that way, because his rushing success has 
                been limited since his Week 2 performance against the Raiders, 
                when he had 171 yards and two scores. Since then, Bush has one 
                touchdown and hasn’t gained more than 67 rushing yards, 
                though he certainly has an opportunity to break that mark this 
                week against Indianapolis.
 
 For the most part, the Colts have lacked success against the run 
                this year, and are allowing the seventh-most FPPG to opposing 
                running backs. They are 27th in the league in rush defense, 23rd 
                (tied) in rushing scores allowed and 29th in YPC given up. They 
                held Cleveland running backs to just 42 yards in Week 7, but have 
                also allowed some huge games, most noticeably Maurice Jones-Drew’s 
                177 yards in Week 3 and Shonn Green’s 161 yards and three 
                scores in Week 6.
 
 Projections:
 Ryan 
                Tannehill: 205 pass yds, 1 TD, 1 INT / 25 rush yds
 Brian 
                Hartline: 75 rec yds
 Davone 
                Bess: 60 rec yds, 1 TD
 Marlon Moore: 25 rec yds
 Anthony 
                Fasano: 15 rec yds
 Reggie 
                Bush: 80 rush yds, 1 TD / 20 rec yds
 Daniel 
                Thomas: 25 rush yds
 
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: Andrew Luck 
                is 11th among quarterbacks in fantasy scoring even though he has 
                as many touchdowns (eight) as he does interceptions. He’s 
                has success in terms of yards, however, with at least 280 passing 
                yards in five of his seven games, and has also picked up fantasy 
                points on the ground, where his three rushing scores are tied 
                for second-most among quarterbacks. Luck has also revived Reggie 
                Wayne, who is seventh (tied) among wideouts in fantasy points 
                and first in the NFL in receiving yards, and should be in store 
                for plenty of yards against Miami. 
 Only five teams have given up more yards per game through the 
                air than the Dolphins, but they have kept them out of the end 
                zone and are sixth in passing scores allowed. They’re also 
                sixth in sacks and have allowed the fifth-lowest completion percentage 
                in the league, so it’s a mystery as to why teams rack up 
                the yards against them. Carson Palmer, Sam Bradford and Kevin 
                Kolb have each had their highest passing totals of the season 
                against Miami, and Mark Sanchez has thrown for at least 280 yards 
                against them twice (though we can forgive them for allowing a 
                bunch of yards to Sanchez considering they got out to such a big 
                lead early and forced the Jets to throw).
 
 Running Game Thoughts: Donald Brown 
                isn’t at the top of anybody’s list of fantasy running 
                backs, but he’s been a decent flex play when healthy, and 
                has gotten better as the season has gone on. He has just one touchdown 
                on the year, and only three receptions, but has run for 84 and 
                80 yards in his last two games. Unfortunately, we don’t 
                have particularly high hopes for him this week as he squares off 
                against a Dolphins team that has been good against the run this 
                season.
 
 Miami may have difficulty stopping the passing game, but the opposite 
                is true for their run defense. Only two teams have allowed fewer 
                yards per game on the ground than they have, only one has given 
                up fewer YPC, and they’re sixth (tied) in rushing scores 
                given up. No back has gained at least 80 yards when facing the 
                Dolphins, and just five teams have given up fewer FPPG to running 
                backs.
 
 Projections:
 Andrew 
                Luck: 260 pass yds, 2 TD, 1 INT
 Reggie 
                Wayne: 90 rec yds, 1 TD
 Donnie 
                Avery: 55 rec yds
 Dwayne 
                Allen: 40 rec yds, 1 TD
 T.Y. 
                Hilton: 30 rec yds
 Donald 
                Brown: 45 rush yds, 1 TD
 Vick 
                Ballard: 15 rush yds / 10 rec yds
 
 Prediction: Colts 24, Dolphins 20 
                ^ Top
 
  Lions @ Jaguars 
                - (Smith)
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: It doesn’t 
                necessarily feel like it to many observers, but the Lions have 
                the league’s number-two passing offense. Matthew Stafford 
                is eighth at his position in fantasy scoring, and sixth in passing 
                yards, but last week was his first game with more than one touchdown 
                throw. We didn’t think that was possible, not with Calvin 
                Johnson at wideout. But despite being seventh in receiving yards 
                among wideouts, Megatron is a startling 18th (tied) in fantasy 
                points at his position because he’s caught just a single 
                touchdown throw. Similarly, tight end Brandon Pettigrew is tied 
                for seventh among tight ends in receiving yards and fourth in 
                receptions but his lone touchdown means he’s tied for 15th 
                in fantasy points among tight ends. 
 The Jaguars are 23rd in the NFL against the pass, and though they 
                are tied for seventh in passing touchdowns given up, they’re 
                also 25th (tied) in interceptions, and no team has sacked the 
                quarterback fewer times than they have. Yet those numbers haven’t 
                translated to a great deal of fantasy success for opposing players, 
                because Jacksonville is 15th in FPPG allowed to quarterbacks, 
                13th in points allowed to wideouts and 31st in in points given 
                up to tight ends.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: Mikel Leshoure 
                has taken over as Detroit’s top running back, with mixed 
                results. He ran for 100 yards and a touchdown in his first game 
                this season, but in his subsequent four contests has gained 26, 
                70, 63 and 46 yards without a score. Yet he makes for a great 
                play this week – in the very least as a flex – against 
                a Jaguars team that gives up bundles of fantasy points to running 
                backs.
 
 Jacksonville has had their troubles against the run this season, 
                with just three teams allowing more FPPG to running backs. They 
                are 25th in rush defense, 23rd (tied) in rushing scores given 
                up and 21st in YPC allowed. Every team the Jaguars have played 
                has had a running back gain at least 50 rushing yards and five 
                different backs have picked up 70 or more yards against them.
 
 Projections:
 Matthew 
                Stafford: 335 pass yds, 3 TD, 1 INT
 Calvin 
                Johnson: 115 rec yds, 1 TD
 Titus 
                Young: 70 rec yds
 Brandon 
                Pettigrew: 65 rec yds, 1 TD
 Ryan 
                Broyles: 35 rec yds, 1 TD
 Tony 
                Scheffler: 15 rec yds
 Mikel 
                Leshoure: 105 rush yds, 1 TD / 10 rec yds
 Joique 
                Bell: 20 rush yds / 15 rec yds
 
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: Jacksonville 
                has the league’s worst passing offense in terms of yards 
                per game, averaging just 164. That’s despite Blaine Gabbert’s 
                (29th in fantasy scoring among quarterbacks) 303-yard performance 
                last week against Green Bay, because it was just the third time 
                this season he had more than 155 yards through the air. In his 
                defense, he lacks weaponry on the outside, and all fantasy owners 
                need to know is that their highest-scoring wideout is Cecil Shorts, 
                who is 37th (tied). 
 Detroit is a solid ninth in the league in pass defense, 14th (tied) 
                in passing scores given up, and 15th (tied) in sacks, but just 
                27th (tied) in interceptions. The lack of takeaways hasn’t 
                hurt them though, because only two quarterbacks have thrown for 
                at least 240 yards against the Lions and just three wideouts have 
                managed at least 80 yards when playing them.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: Maurice Jones-Drew 
                will not play this week due to his foot injury, which clears the 
                way for Rashad Jennings to once again be the feature back. He’s 
                a solid pass-catcher out of the backfield, but has run the ball 
                38 times for just 103 yards (2.7 YPC) in his last two games. Detroit 
                isn’t a beast in terms of run defense, but they have kept 
                runners out of the end zone, and Jennings is not a good play this 
                week.
 
 The Lions are 18th in the NFL in rush defense, and 22nd in YPC 
                allowed, but have found a way to keep running backs out of the 
                end zone and are tied for third in rushing scores given up. That 
                means fantasy points have been at a premium for opposing backs, 
                and only six teams have given up fewer FPPG to players at the 
                position despite the fact Detroit has played a number of premier 
                runners.
 
 Projections:
 Blaine 
                Gabbert: 185 pass yds, 1 TD, 2 INT
 Justin 
                Blackmon: 60 rec yds
 Cecil 
                Shorts: 55 rec yds
 Marcedes 
                Lewis: 20 rec yds
 Kevin Elliott: 15 rec yds
 Rashad 
                Jennings: 50 rush yds / 25 rec yds
 
 Prediction: Lions 28, Jaguars 13 
                ^ Top
 
  Bills @ Texans 
                - (Smith)
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: The Bills 
                are just 29th in the NFL in passing offense, which might lead 
                one to conclude that their individual players have not put up 
                many fantasy-friendly game. Those conclusions would be right, 
                as Ryan Fitzpatrick is 18th among quarterbacks in fantasy scoring 
                and Steve Johnson is 26th (tied) among wideouts. Johnson does 
                have four touchdowns in seven games, but hasn’t gained more 
                than 82 yards in any contest, which is hurting his fantasy stock. 
                And even though Fitzpatrick has thrown three or more touchdowns 
                in four of his seven contests this year, he also has nine interceptions 
                and just two games with 210 or more passing yards. Frankly, we 
                don’t see much of an improvement in store this week against 
                the Texans. 
 Only four teams have allowed fewer yards per game through the 
                air than Houston, and though they’re 22nd (tied) in passing 
                scores given up with 13, almost half of those were by Aaron Rodgers 
                in Week 6. Even with Rodgers torching them, the Texans have allowed 
                the eighth-fewest FPPG to quarterbacks, and are 18th in FPPG given 
                up to receivers – they’ve allowed 100 yards or less 
                to wideouts four times in their seven games this year.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: Just three 
                teams have run for more yards per game this season than the Bills. 
                C.J. Spiller is 10th among running backs in fantasy scoring, but 
                has seen his production wane with the return of Fred Jackson the 
                past month. The two backs share the load, which cuts into the 
                fantasy production of both, with Jackson getting more carries 
                than Spiller in three of their last four games, but Spiller gaining 
                more rushing yards in three of those four contests. Neither of 
                them figure to have exceptional contests this week, not against 
                a Houston squad which has been excellent against running backs 
                this year.
 
 Just three teams have allowed fewer yards on the ground per game 
                than the Texans, who are also ninth in YPC allowed, but remain 
                the only team that has yet to allow a rushing score this season. 
                They’ve given up the fourth-fewest FPPG in the league to 
                running backs, and Chris Johnson’s 141 yards against them 
                in Week 4 represents the only time a running back has gained at 
                least 70 yards when facing Houston.
 
 Projections:
 Ryan 
                Fitzpatrick: 190 pass yds, 1 TD, 2 INT
 Steve 
                Johnson: 80 rec yds
 Scott 
                Chandler: 40 rec yds, 1 TD
 Donald 
                Jones: 25 rec yds
 C.J. 
                Spiller: 40 rush yds, 1 TD / 20 rec yds
 Fred 
                Jackson: 30 rush yds / 15 rec yds
 
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: It’s 
                no secret that Houston relies on their running game to move their 
                offense, but we thought that Matt Schaub would be more effective 
                for fantasy owners. He is just 23rd (tied) among quarterbacks 
                in fantasy scoring, with 10 or fewer points in three of his seven 
                games this year. Andre Johnson, despite relative health, is only 
                37th among wideouts in fantasy scoring, and though he has four 
                games with at least 70 receiving yards, has just a pair of touchdowns 
                this season, and none since Week 3. The player that fantasy owners 
                should be excited about in Houston’s passing game is Owen 
                Daniels. The tight end is fourth at his position in fantasy points 
                and has scored four times in his last five games and faces a middling 
                Buffalo pass defense this week. 
 The Bills have had their problems containing the pass this year, 
                ranking 22nd in the league in pass defense, 25th (tied) in touchdowns 
                allowed through the air, 15th in opponents completion percentage 
                and 15th (tied) in sacks. Those numbers translate to plenty of 
                fantasy points for the opposition, with Buffalo giving up the 
                second-most FPPG in the league to quarterbacks and fourth-most 
                FPPG to wide receivers. And with the exception of Tom Brady the 
                Bills haven’t faced elite quarterbacks, having allowed Mark 
                Sanchez to throw for 266 yards and three scores, Matt Cassel to 
                compile 301 yards and two touchdowns, and Alex Smith to collect 
                303 yards and three touchdowns.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: Arian Foster 
                leads all backs in fantasy scoring this season, and has four more 
                rushing touchdowns than any other running back. He’s amassed 
                no fewer than 14 fantasy points in any game this year, with a 
                trio of 20+ point games. Foster has a dream match-up against the 
                Bills, and has every opportunity to lead all players in scoring 
                this week.
 
 Buffalo has had the single-worst rush defense in all of football, 
                ranking dead last in all significant categories: rushing yards 
                per game given up, rushing scores allowed and YPC allowed. No 
                team has given up more FPPG to running backs than the Bills, with 
                nine backs gaining at least 55 yards, six picking up at least 
                80 yards and four accumulating 100 or more yards.
 
 Projections:
 Matt 
                Schaub: 210 pass yds, 2 TD
 Andre 
                Johnson: 70 rec yds, 1 TD
 Owen 
                Daniels: 65 rec yds, 1 TD
 Kevin 
                Walter: 45 rec yds
 Arian 
                Foster: 125 rush yds, 2 TD / 20 rec yds
 Justin 
                Forsett: 30 rush yds
 
 Prediction: Texans 31, Bills 17 
                ^ Top
 
 Cowboys @ Falcons 
                - (Smith)
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: Dallas is 
                third in the league in pass offense, but you wouldn’t know 
                it by Tony Romo’s fantasy status. He is 23rd (tied) in fantasy 
                scoring, and has tossed three more interceptions than any quarterback 
                in the league. He’s also had just a single game with multiple 
                touchdowns since throwing three during Week 1. His wideouts are 
                plenty talented, and Miles Austin is 15th (tied) in fantasy scoring 
                among wideouts and has failed to reach double-digits in scoring 
                only once this year. Dez Bryant is 30th (tied) in fantasy scoring 
                at his position, but has come on of late, with 95 or more yards 
                in three of his last four games. Jason Witten has also stepped 
                up recently, and even though he is just eighth among tight ends 
                in fantasy scoring, he leads everyone at the position in receptions 
                and targets, and is second in receiving yards. 
 Atlanta has allowed the 10th-fewest FPPG in the league to quarterbacks 
                and only two teams have given up fewer FPPG to wide receivers. 
                They are 10th in the NFL in pass defense, fourth (tied) in passing 
                scores given up, 12th (tied) in sacks and third (tied) in interceptions. 
                Just a single quarterback has thrown for at least 260 yards against 
                the Falcons and only one wideout has amassed over 85 receiving 
                yards, though they have allowed 50 or more yards to tight ends 
                three times in their last four contests.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: DeMarco Murray 
                is 27th among running backs in fantasy scoring, but has missed 
                his last two games and is questionable this week due to his foot 
                injury. The same can be said of Felix Jones, who has had his struggles 
                filling in for Murray but who is also dealing with knee and shoulder 
                issues. That’s a shame, because Atlanta has not been able 
                to shut down many running backs this year.
 
 The Falcons have been more apt to give up yards on the ground 
                than through the air this season, ranking 26th in the league in 
                rush defense, tied for 23rd in rushing scores allowed and next-to-last 
                in YPC allowed. Fantasy success for opposing backs has followed, 
                with Atlanta giving up the 10th-most FPPG in the league to running 
                backs.
 
 Projections:
 Tony 
                Romo: 270 pass yds, 1 TD, 2 INT
 Jason 
                Witten: 90 rec yds, 1 TD
 Dez 
                Bryant: 75 rec yds
 Miles 
                Austin: 65 rec yds
 DeMarco 
                Murray: 40 rush yds, 1 TD / 20 rec yds
 Felix 
                Jones: 25 rush yds / 10 rec yds
 
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: Matt Ryan 
                is sixth among quarterbacks in fantasy scoring, and has had just 
                one hiccup, which was Week 6 when he threw three interceptions 
                and only one touchdown. Otherwise, he’s been brilliant, 
                and can, in part, thank his pass-catchers for that. Roddy White 
                is 10th (tied) and Julio Jones is 13th among wideouts in fantasy 
                scoring, and those two, along with Tony Gonzalez (third among 
                tight ends in fantasy scoring), make for an outstanding triumvirate 
                of weapons that has benefited their fantasy owners all season, 
                even this week against a good Dallas pass defense. 
 The Cowboys have the league’s number three pass defense, 
                and are tied with their opponent this week, Atlanta, for fourth 
                in touchdown throws allowed despite being 21st (tied) in sacks 
                and 27th (tied) in interceptions. But the lack of touchdowns allowed 
                has meant fantasy success has been fleeting for their opposition. 
                Dallas is allowing the fourth-fewest FPPG to quarterbacks, the 
                seventh-fewest FPPG to wideouts and the 10th-fewest FPPG to tight 
                ends.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: Michael Turner 
                isn’t what he used to be (who is?) but he’s been plenty 
                good enough to be a RB2 or flex play all season. He’s 18th 
                among running backs in fantasy scoring, and though he’s 
                struggled the last two weeks, does have three rushing scores in 
                seven games, and has an opportunity to be a decent if unspectacular 
                contributor to his fantasy owners this week against the Cowboys.
 
 Dallas has been a middle-of-the-road team against the run this 
                season, ranking 13th in rushing yards allowed per game, 19th (tied) 
                in rushing scores given up and 12th in YPC allowed. Just three 
                running backs have gained 75 or more yards against the Cowboys, 
                and they’ve done an exceptional job of limiting backs in 
                the passing game – only one team in the league has allowed 
                fewer receiving yards to running backs.
 
 Projections:
 Matt 
                Ryan: 290 pass yds, 2 TD
 Julio 
                Jones: 95 rec yds, 1 TD
 Roddy 
                White: 80 rec yds, 1 TD
 Tony 
                Gonzalez: 60 rec yds
 Harry 
                Douglas: 25 rec yds
 Michael 
                Turner: 65 rush yds, 1 TD
 Jacquizz 
                Rodgers: 20 rush yds / 20 rec yds
 
 Prediction: Falcons 24, Cowboys 
                20 ^ Top
 
  Eagles @ Saints 
                - (Smith)
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: The Philadelphia 
                passing game may be 15th in the league, but it hasn’t done 
                a whole lot for fantasy owners. Michael Vick has had just two 
                games with more than 15 fantasy points this year, and is 15th 
                at his position in fantasy scoring despite running for 241 yards. 
                He’s been a disappointment, but so have his wideouts. DeSean 
                Jackson has only one touchdown and one 100-yard game this season 
                and is 35th in fantasy scoring among receivers. Meanwhile, Jeremy 
                Maclin has been great at times, but is 41st (tied) in fantasy 
                scoring and only twice has broken 40 yards. If either was going 
                to break out, this week against New Orleans would be a perfect 
                time. 
 The Saints have been truly bad against the pass this season, ranking 
                30th in the league in pass defense, 27th (tied) in passing scores 
                allowed, 28th in opponents completion percentage, 21st (tied) 
                in sacks and 27th (tied) in interceptions. They’re a dream 
                match-up for fantasy owners of opposing quarterbacks and receivers, 
                because no team in the league has allowed more FPPG to players 
                at those positions than New Orleans. Yet because wideouts are 
                so busy against them, tight ends have been left out of the fun, 
                with only six teams giving fewer FPPG to players at that position 
                than New Orleans.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: We spoke 
                of the Eagles’ passing game being a disappointment, but 
                LeSean McCoy qualifies as well. He is only 12th in fantasy scoring 
                among running backs and hasn’t run for more than 53 yards 
                in his last three games. McCoy is a great back who has no business 
                trailing the likes of Shonn Greene in rushing yards, even if Greene 
                has played one more game than McCoy. But we fully expect him to 
                give fantasy owners an outstanding performance this week against 
                the Saints, because they just stink against the run – there’s 
                really no other word for it.
 
 New Orleans is as bad against the run as they are the pass, ranking 
                31st in rush defense, 28th (tied) in rushing scores allowed and 
                30th in YPC. Only Buffalo has given up more FPPG to running backs 
                than the Saints, who have played seven games and allowed seven 
                different running backs to gain at least 80 rushing yards.
 
 Projections:
 Michael 
                Vick: 275 pass yds, 1 TD, 1 INT / 40 rush yds
 DeSean 
                Jackson: 90 rec yds
 Jeremy 
                Maclin: 85 rec yds, 1 TD
 Brent 
                Celek: 35 rec yds
 Jason 
                Avant: 30 rec yds
 LeSean 
                McCoy: 115 rush yds, 2 TD / 25 rec yds
 
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: The Saints 
                once again lead the league in passing, with Drew Brees ranking 
                fourth in fantasy points at his position. He’s thrown for 
                at least 325 yards in five of his seven games this season, and 
                has 20 touchdown passes, a quarter of which have gone to Marques 
                Colston, who is sixth among wideouts in fantasy scoring. Jimmy 
                Graham is also sixth at his position in fantasy scoring, but he 
                had a bye week and also missed a game with an injury, so we are 
                certain that by year’s end, he’ll be back among the 
                leaders at the tight end position. 
 Despite being one of only two teams in the league without at least 
                10 sacks, the Eagles have fared okay against the pass this year. 
                They are 14th in the NFL in pass defense, 14th (tied) in passing 
                scores given up and have held opposing quarterbacks to the second-lowest 
                completion percentage in the league. Philly has fared well against 
                both quarterbacks and tight ends, but have had some trouble with 
                opposing wideouts. Though they’re 15th in FPPG allowed to 
                players at that position, the Eagles have given up 100 or more 
                yards to a receiver five times in their past five games.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: The Saints 
                don’t have much running game to speak of. No team has run 
                for fewer yards per game than they have, and their running backs 
                have little fantasy value outside of Darren Sproles, who is 21st 
                in fantasy scoring, but that’s due almost entirely to his 
                receiving prowess. And with the Eagles having a solid run defense, 
                we don’t think the New Orleans running backs are going to 
                suddenly become fantasy worthy this week.
 
 Philadelphia is 17th in the league against the run, and 14th in 
                YPC allowed, but have given up just a pair of rushing scores, 
                which is tied for third in the NFL. Ray Rice gained 99 yards against 
                them in Week 2, and he’s the only back to pick up at least 
                85 yards against the Eagles, who have given up the 10th-fewest 
                FPPG in the league to running backs.
 
 Projections:
 Drew 
                Brees: 330 pass yds, 3 TD, 1 INT
 Jimmy 
                Graham: 95 rec yds
 Marques 
                Colston: 80 rec yds
 Lance 
                Moore: 45 rec yds
 Devery 
                Henderson: 15 rec yds
 Pierre 
                Thomas: 35 rush yds / 20 rec yds
 Mark 
                Ingram: 30 rush yds
 Darren 
                Sproles: 15 rush yds / 65 rec yds
 
 Prediction: Saints 30, Eagles 27 
                ^ Top
 
  Broncos @ Bengals 
                - (Anderson)
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: The Broncos 
                passing game is going strong right now; not only do they rank 
                fourth in the league in passing yards per game (293), but they 
                are also fourth in completion percentage, first in yards per pass 
                attempt (8.2), and tied for third in passing touchdowns (17). 
                To say the least, Peyton Manning is looking like his old self 
                lately (109 passer rating, best in NFL) and his receiving corps 
                is doing their part, especially Demaryius Thomas, who is third 
                in the league in receiving yardage (679). Manning absolutely picked 
                apart the Saints’ porous defense last week, going 22 of 
                30 for 305 yards and three touchdowns with no picks. Truth be 
                told, he probably could have had 500 yards, but Denver called 
                off the dogs and ran the ball much of the fourth quarter. 
 This week, the Broncos’ opponent will not be as soft, but 
                the Bengals are not exactly an elite defense either. Currently, 
                they rank in the middle of most passing statistics, although they 
                are worse in completion percentage allowed (67%, fourth worst) 
                and better in sacking the quarterback (23, tied for third best). 
                Fantasy-wise, the Bengals are actually pretty stingy to opposing 
                WRs (sixth toughest), but a little more generous to opposing QBs 
                (17th easiest) and even more to opposing TEs (sixth easiest). 
                While he may not make a huge impact in this game, cornerback (and 
                first-round pick) Dre Kirkpatrick will make his debut in this 
                game and may eventually make the Bengals pass defense much better. 
                For this game, however, the Broncos’ two main receivers 
                (Decker and Thomas) should be safe starts, even though on paper 
                the matchup is less than ideal. Manning is on fire right now, 
                and while he certainly will not have his best game of the year 
                this week, he is simply too good and too hot to sit. Manning should 
                be a top 10 QB option this week, Decker a solid WR2, and Thomas 
                a low-end WR1. It is very tempting to start TE Tamme in this matchup 
                as well, but he has been too inconsistent for my liking; consider 
                him outside the top 10 this week.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: With some 
                pass-heavy teams around the league, you tend to see a real lack 
                of a run game (Green Bay, New Orleans) because of a lack of attempts 
                or a lack of talent at running back. This is not the case with 
                the Broncos thus far, as their run game totals are very respectable, 
                which is keeping their main running back, Willis McGahee, is very 
                much relevant to the fantasy world. McGahee ranks 10th in rushing 
                yards this season and leads the Broncos, who are putting up 112.6 
                rush yards per game (14th in the league). While these are not 
                earth-shattering numbers, it certainly makes the Broncos a more 
                balanced team, and it makes McGahee a fairly solid RB2 most weeks.
 
 This week McGahee may even be a little better than that, as the 
                Bengals defense ranks 22nd in rush yards allowed per game (124), 
                and have let up a very generous nine rushing touchdowns (tied 
                for second most in NFL). Fantasy-wise, the Bengals are giving 
                up the fourth most points to opposing RBs and are just a bye week 
                removed from allowing one of the worst rushing attacks in the 
                league (the Steelers) to rack up a touchdown and 148 yards on 
                the ground. While the Bengals do have home field advantage and 
                the bye week to heal and plan against the Broncos, their trend 
                of being a weak rushing defense will continue this week. I would 
                start McGahee with confidence as a high-end RB2, as the Broncos 
                should be able to run all game long and accumulate some nice stats. 
                While the Broncos No. 2 running back, Ronnie Hillman, is not a 
                recommended start here, he is worth mentioning quickly, after 
                having his breakout game last week in putting up 86 yards on just 
                14 carries. While this was largely a product of a big Denver lead, 
                he looked very explosive and comfortable, so Denver may use him 
                more and more going forward. McGahee is in little danger of losing 
                his job, but fantasy owners should keep a close eye on Hillman 
                for the stretch run and roster him if they have the room. He may 
                become much more relevant as the season goes on.
 
 Projections:
 Peyton 
                Manning: 270 pass yds, 2 TD, 1 INT
 Demaryius 
                Thomas: 80 rec yds, 1 TD
 Eric 
                Decker: 55 rec yds, 1 TD
 Jacob 
                Tamme: 35 rec yds
 Willis 
                McGahee: 90 rush yds, 1 TD, 15 rec yds
 Ronnie 
                Hillman: 30 rush yds, 15 rec yds
 
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: When you 
                have a receiver like A.J. Green (90.9 rec ypg, 7 TDs) you can 
                mask a lot of your passing game problems. In week 7, however, 
                Green saw only six targets (he was averaging 11 before that), 
                and the passing game suffered tremendously because of it, netting 
                only 105 yards against the Steelers. Overall, the Bengals passing 
                stats still look pretty good: they are top 12 in passing yards 
                per game (257), passing touchdowns (14), passing yards per attempt 
                (7.8), and completions percentage (64.3% ). The problem is that 
                these numbers are trending down, their schedule gets tougher, 
                and Andy Dalton has a history (albeit for only one year) of struggling 
                in the second half of the season. 
 The Broncos are a tough pass defense, ranking in the top half 
                of the league in yards allowed per game (213), completion percentage 
                allowed (59.8), and yards allowed per attempt (6.4). They are 
                also pretty stingy when it comes to fantasy points, as they are 
                the eighth toughest team for opposing fantasy WRs and are tougher 
                than half the league in allowing opposing fantasy QB scoring. 
                Regardless of these numbers, Green is pretty much matchup-proof 
                and should be started as a low-end WR1—and even though I 
                expect he’ll get a heavy dose of Champ Bailey. No other 
                Bengals WR is on the fantasy radar this week, as the inconsistency 
                of targets is maddening, with different WRs stepping up each week 
                and backing down the next. TE Jermaine Gresham is an interesting 
                player this week because, even though he has not been much better 
                than average so far, the Broncos do allow the third most fantasy 
                points to opposing TEs. If you have Gronk or another top TE on 
                a bye, you could do worse than taking a shot on Gresham this week. 
                As for Dalton, I would try to find a better option, as he is outside 
                the top 12 QB matchups this week. If you do have to start him, 
                at least you can trust that Green should be targeted more than 
                six times, and that should positively affect Dalton’s numbers. 
                As a side note, I would look to trade Dalton while you can, as 
                the schedule won’t get easier for him going forward.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: In Week 7, 
                BenJarvus Green-Ellis and the Bengals running game were somewhat 
                productive (80 total yards) but unspectacular (longest run of 
                14 yds, 3.8 ypc, no TDs). These should be considered typical Bengals 
                rushing numbers for the remainder of the year, as no player in 
                their backfield has dynamic playmaking ability, and the play calling 
                has heavily favored the pass so far. Currently, the Bengals rank 
                23rd in the NFL in rush yards per game (96.6) and are about average 
                in most other rushing statistics.
 
 Their opponent this week is average in total rushing yards allowed 
                (742) but is much stingier on a per-carry basis (3.7 ypc, 6th 
                best). This is not great news for Green-Ellis, who is averaging 
                a mere 3.4 yards per carry on the season. The Bengals would probably 
                be smart to let their backup, Cedric Peerman (7 car, 83 yds, 1 
                TD on season), carry the rock a few more times, but thus far he 
                has been used sparingly other than his kick return duties. If 
                you have Green-Ellis, he should be no more than an RB3 anyway, 
                so if that is where you have him slotted, I suppose he is a fairly 
                safe start this week. While he should maintain his usual output, 
                do not expect a breakout game this week against a defense that 
                is running pretty hot.
 
 Projections:
 Andy 
                Dalton: 220 pass yds, 1 TD, 1 INT
 A.J. 
                Green: 80 rec yds, 1 TD
 Jermaine 
                Gresham: 70 rec yds
 Andrew 
                Hawkins: 45 rec yds
 BenJarvus 
                Green-Ellis: 70 rush yds, 15 rec yds
 
 Prediction: Broncos 30, Bengals 
                20 ^ Top
 
 Ravens @ Browns 
                - (Anderson)
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: Joe Flacco 
                started the season blazing hot, making many believe he was ready 
                to take that next step up to “elite” status, but he 
                has really struggled in his last three games, completing just 
                over 50 percent of his passes and averaging under 200 yards and 
                one touchdown per game. For the season, the Ravens rank in the 
                middle of most passing categories, but if the last three weeks 
                are an indication of things to come, they will end up near the 
                bottom. Unfortunately for the Ravens receiving corps, Flacco’s 
                struggles have made most of them very risky fantasy starts most 
                weeks. Most obviously effected is tight end Dennis Pitta, who 
                easily looked like a top 10 TE the first four weeks of the season 
                but has not topped 33 yards in a game or recorded a touchdown 
                since. Speedster Torrey Smith has been boom-or-bust most weeks, 
                but much more bust over the last three games. Anquan Boldin has 
                probably been the most consistent receiver on the team thus far, 
                but his upside is very limited, as he has turned mostly into a 
                possession receiver. 
 This week the Browns present an interesting matchup because their 
                overall defensive stats should favor the Ravens passing attack. 
                They have allowed the sixth most fantasy points to opposing QBs 
                and the fifth most to WRs. A deeper look into the stats shows 
                a different story, however. Since cornerback Joe Haden has returned 
                from suspension, the Browns defense has been much improved, allowing 
                the 17th most fantasy points to opposing QBs and the 29th most 
                to WRs—a big difference from the total season stats. The 
                Browns are also coming off their best defensive performance yet, 
                as they held the Chargers to just six points and Phillip Rivers 
                to a season-low 154 yards and no touchdowns. While I do not expect 
                Flacco to be held to such low numbers, expectations should certainly 
                be tempered for a road game against an underrated and emerging 
                defense. Until Flacco puts up another great game or two, I would 
                bench him unless you are in a very large or two QB league. As 
                for the receiving group, Smith is the most exciting option, as 
                he could always catch a long one for a touchdown, but this week 
                I expect Haden to cover him a lot, so he is therefore no more 
                than an average WR3. Boldin and Pitta should also be considered 
                no more than a WR3 and TE2 until the passing game shows some real 
                sign of life.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: In their 
                last game, the Ravens had to totally abandon the run after being 
                down 29-3 at halftime against the Texans, and Ray Rice finished 
                with just 42 rushing yards. It’s not going out on a limb 
                to say, that scenario will not happen this week. Even after such 
                a mediocre game from Rice, he still ranks 11th in rush yards per 
                game (74.9), eighth among running backs in rush yards per attempt 
                (4.9), and tied for third with five rushing touchdowns.
 
 Facing Rice this week, the Browns rank 24th in the league in rush 
                yards allowed per game (131.6) and 23rd in rush yards allowed 
                per attempt (4.4). Even more importantly for Rice owners, Cleveland 
                is currently giving up the 12th most fantasy points to opposing 
                RBs. The thing to worry about for Rice is the amount (or lack) 
                of rushes he gets based on the Ravens’ play-calling and 
                weakened defense. While this may be a thing to worry about against 
                high-scoring teams down the road, this matchup should call for 
                a heavy dose of Rice rushing the ball for all four quarters. Coming 
                off a bye with fresh legs, in a divisional rivalry game, Rice 
                should feel good and have some extra motivation this week, and 
                he should take his frustrations out on the Browns defense. While 
                Rice is obviously startable every single game, this looks to be 
                one of his better matchups. Start him with confidence as a top 
                5 option at RB this week.
 
 Projections:
 Joe 
                Flacco: 215 pass yds, 1 TD, 1 INT
 Ray 
                Rice: 105 rush yds, 1 TD, 25 rec yds
 Torrey 
                Smith: 45 rec yds
 Anquan 
                Boldin: 55 rec yds
 Dennis 
                Pitta: 40 rec yds
 
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: First the 
                bad news for the Browns passing game: their completion percentage 
                is the fourth worst in the NFL (55.2), their yards per pass attempt 
                is also fourth worst (6.4), their passing touchdowns (9) tie them 
                for sixth worst, and their 10 interceptions tie them for third 
                worst. In addition, they are coming off a game where Brandon Weeden 
                went 11 for 27 for just 129 yards, and they have no major talent 
                on offense save for running back Trent Richardson. With all this 
                doom and gloom, you may think it hard to find a silver lining 
                here, but you would be wrong, as there are some bright spots among 
                the dark clouds. First off, while Weeden’s numbers do not 
                look very good, he is still throwing a lot (299 attempts, tied 
                for fifth) and is actually looking downfield for the big play 
                quite a bit (11.1 yards per completion), especially to wide receiver 
                Josh Gordon, who is averaging 22.3 yards per catch (first in the 
                NFL). 
 The other good news is that a matchup against the once-dreaded 
                Baltimore defense is actually quite favorable for the Browns, 
                especially with the Ravens’ No. 1 cornerback, Lardarius 
                Webb, out for the year. Baltimore is giving up 257 passing yards 
                per game, ninth worst in the league, and has played only one game 
                without Webb so far, so that number might actually get worse. 
                The only major passing stat that Baltimore does not rank in the 
                bottom half of the league in is passing touchdowns allowed (6), 
                in which they are actually tied for first. Since the Browns do 
                not get many passing touchdowns anyway, this stat can be ignored 
                (I’m only half joking here). For the season, the Ravens 
                actually are pretty stingy to opposing QBs fantasy-wise (mostly 
                because of the lack of touchdowns), but these numbers are a bit 
                skewed because of current injuries and a game against the Chiefs, 
                where KC basically did not even try to pass the ball. While starting 
                Weeden is still not a great choice, even in a decent matchup, 
                the volume of passes should be there, and I suppose you could 
                do worse most weeks. Still, he is once again not a top 10 option. 
                The only Browns receiver remotely interesting from a fantasy perspective 
                is Josh Gordon, who has a great per-catch average and four touchdowns, 
                including a couple of long ones. The problem with starting him 
                is that he has only 17 catches on the season, so he is very boom-or-bust. 
                I would certainly feel comfortable starting him as a WR3 in a 
                good matchup such as this one, but you are really gambling if 
                you are penciling him in for a sure-fire good game.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: The Browns 
                are certainly not a very good team right now, but give them credit 
                for at least one thing: they know who their best playmaker is 
                and they do what they can to get him the ball. After two weeks 
                of dealing with a painful rib injury, Trent Richardson looked 
                healthy and energized as the Browns gave him 24 carries and he 
                responded with 122 yards (5.1 ypc) and a touchdown. The rest of 
                the Browns running backs got four total carries for seven yards 
                combined, showing that when Richardson is healthy he is their 
                run game. Even more encouraging for Richardson owners is that 
                he performed this well against a tough matchup, the Chargers, 
                who were among the top 3 rush defenses (in yards allowed per game) 
                going into last week’s game.
 
 Speaking of matchups, this week versus the Ravens is a decent 
                one for Richardson and the Cleveland run game, as the Ravens defense 
                is banged up and not near as dominant against the run as in years 
                past. Not only is Baltimore among the bottom 5 teams in rush yards 
                allowed per game (142.9), they are also near the bottom in rushing 
                touchdowns allowed (9). Even more encouraging for Richardson owners 
                is that the Ravens' last three opponents’ have rushed for 
                200 yards (Chiefs), 227 yards and a touchdown (Cowboys), and 177 
                yards and two touchdowns (Texans). In their first meeting this 
                season against the Baltimore defense, Richardson ran for only 
                47 yards but did add a rushing touchdown and 57 yards receiving 
                (his highest total so far). While these numbers are pretty nice 
                already, this week’s matchup could be even better since 
                the Browns are now at home, their defense is playing better (allowing 
                them to stick with the run), and the Ravens defense is without 
                two key players (Ray Lewis and Lardarius Webb) who both played 
                when these teams met in Week 4. Because it is a division rivalry 
                game and the Ravens are coming off a bye, I expect Baltimore to 
                be a tougher matchup then they look on paper, but I would still 
                easily start Richardson as a high-end RB2 and expect numbers at 
                least a little better than he posted the last time he faced the 
                Ravens.
 
 Projections:
 Brandon 
                Weeden: 245 pass yds, 1 TD, 1 INT
 Josh 
                Gordon: 55 rec yds, 1 TD
 Greg 
                Little: 30 rec yds
 Trent 
                Richardson: 75 rush yds, 1 TD, 35 rec yds
 
 Prediction: Ravens: 20, Browns 17 
                ^ Top
 
 Cardinals @ Packers 
                - (Anderson)
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: Well, you 
                can’t say the Cardinals aren't at least trying to throw 
                the football, as they rank fourth in the league in pass attempts 
                (309). The bad news, however, is that they rank just 24th in the 
                NFL in pass yards per game (211), 31st in pass yards per attempt 
                (6.2), and have thrown just nine touchdowns, tied for 20th in 
                the league. The only two members of the passing game that are 
                at all fantasy relevant are of course wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald 
                (511 rec yards, 3 TD) and, surprisingly, wide receiver Andre Roberts 
                (454 rec yds, 5 TD). However, the inconsistencies at quarterback 
                make both receivers risky plays each week. This week the Cardinals 
                again roll out with John Skelton, but he is far from a fantasy 
                starter, especially playing in Green Bay against a hot Packers 
                defense. 
 For the season, the Packers have allowed the 16th most fantasy 
                points to opposing fantasy QBs and the 11th most to WRs. While 
                these numbers would seem to present an average matchup at best, 
                it’s actually much worse for the Cardinals passing game, 
                as the last three weeks the Packers defense has improved and are 
                actually down to seventh hardest matchup for opposing QBs and 
                the 12th toughest for WRs. Even if this were a much easier matchup 
                on paper, it would be very tough to recommend starting any Cardinals 
                player outside of Fitzgerald, but in a road game at Lambeau field 
                against an improving defense, even Fitzgerald is a risky play. 
                The saving grace for the Cardinals passing game, from a fantasy 
                perspective, is that they will need to throw all game long (think 
                50 or more passes) to keep up with the white-hot Packers offense. 
                Because of this sheer volume of pass attempts, and the likelihood 
                of a bunch of garbage time yards, I suppose Fitzgerald should 
                be considered a low-end WR2 this week. Skelton should be avoided 
                at all costs, however, since I expect several turnovers (Packers 
                lead the NFL in sacks) and few touchdowns. Andre Roberts would 
                be a desperation play this week as a low-end WR3, but there should 
                be better options out there somewhere.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: On paper 
                the Packers run defense is barely above average, as they are 12th 
                in the NFL in rush yards allowed per game (103.9) and 17th in 
                points given up to opposing fantasy RBs. Against an average run 
                game, the Packers might give up enough to make an opposing RB 
                fantasy relevant, but the Arizona run game is no average rush 
                offense. The Cardinals are second to last in rush yards per game 
                (79), dead last in rush yards per attempt (3.5), and have just 
                three rushing touchdowns. Two weeks ago, LaRod Stephens-Howling 
                breathed a some life into the Cardinals rushing attack, running 
                for 104 yards and a touchdown, but that memory quickly faded as 
                he followed up with an eight-carry, six-yard effort against the 
                Niners last week.
 
 Sure, the Niners run defense is better than the Packers, and sure, 
                the Cardinals were never in that game so they abandoned the run, 
                but are you confident that will not happen again, this time against 
                a Packers offense that has averaged over 30 points per game the 
                past three weeks? The bulk of the carries will probably go to 
                Stephens-Howling again, since William Powell was invisible (no 
                touches) last week; however, this is merely a formality, as Stephens-Howling 
                is at best a low-end RB3 this week. If you have to start Stephens-Howling 
                you have to hope that the Cardinals' above-average defense keeps 
                the game interesting enough to get him at least 15 touches, but 
                I truly believe that’s a big leap of faith.
 
 Projections:
 John 
                Skelton: 250 pass yds, 1 TD, 3 INT
 Larry 
                Fitzgerald: 70 rec yds
 Andre 
                Roberts: 45 rec yds
 Michael 
                Floyd: 40 rec yds
 LaRod 
                Stephens-Howling: 35 rush yds, 30 rec yds
 
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: The Packers 
                passing offense versus the Cardinals defense will probably be 
                the most important matchup within this game, as Aaron Rodgers 
                has been absolutely on fire the past three weeks (11 TDs, 866 
                pass yds) and the Cardinals pass defense ranks among the very 
                best in the NFL. To be more specific, the Cardinals are letting 
                up the second lowest fantasy points to opposing QBs thus far, 
                the fourth fewest passing yards per game (193), the fourth lowest 
                completion percentage (56.5%). Furthermore, they are tied for 
                the lead league in sacks (26). 
 The Packers passing offense, on the other hand, is currently first 
                in completion percentage (68.9%), first in passing touchdowns, 
                and fourth in QB fantasy points for the season. While the stats 
                suggest that this may be a stalemate of sorts, the Packers seem 
                like the much hotter team right now. And in a home game, I expect 
                Green Bay to win this battle, although not in a landslide. One 
                thing to note for the Packers receiving corps is that Jordy Nelson 
                is questionable again this week, after having missed last week 
                with a hamstring issue, and he will probably miss this game since 
                the bye week is next week and the Packers tend to take caution 
                with injuries. Regardless of whether he plays, look at both Randall 
                Cobb and James Jones as very solid but unspectacular WR2s in this 
                matchup, and view Jermichael Finley as a high-end TE2. Aaron Rodgers 
                is of course a must-start in all matchups, and while I think he 
                will put up very respectable numbers, do not expect him to carry 
                your fantasy team this week, as the Cardinals are a good defense 
                and the Pack may be running the clock out late in the game.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: As a team, 
                the Packers rush offense is very ordinary, as they rank 20th in 
                the league in rush yards per game (90.1), 27th in rush yards per 
                attempt (3.7), and have scored just two rushing touchdowns thus 
                far (tied for last). This, combined with the fact that Arizona’s 
                defense is the 12th hardest team for opposing fantasy RBs to score 
                against, makes starting any Green Bay RB a risky proposition. 
                Alex Green gets the nod as the starter again this week, although 
                it sounds like James Starks may finally mix in a little as well. 
                Green has been very unimpressive since taking over the starting 
                job three weeks ago from an injured Cedric Benson. He is averaging 
                just under 3 yards per carry and has yet to find the end zone. 
                For those of you who own Green, the bright side is that he is 
                averaging 21 carries per start, a number that even some elite 
                backs (Rice, McCoy, etc.) have not hit over the same three-week 
                period. While the matchup is again a tough one for Green and the 
                Packers run game, I expect a heavy dose of the run, especially 
                late in the game, which alone makes starting Green as a low-end 
                RB2 an interesting proposition. While the Cardinals run defense 
                has been very strong overall, they have actually given up the 
                eighth-most fantasy points to opposing RBs over the past three 
                weeks. So, there is some upside here, even if it's capped by Green’s 
                lack of talent. You could certainly do worse this week than starting 
                Green in this matchup.
 
 Projections:
 Aaron 
                Rodgers: 240 pass yds, 2 TDs, 1 INT, 15 rush yds
 Randall 
                Cobb: 70 rec yds, 1 TD
 Jordy 
                Nelson (if he plays): 40 rec yds
 James 
                Jones: 70 rec yds
 Jermichael 
                Finley: 50 rec yds, 1 TD
 Alex 
                Green: 55 rush yds, 1 TD, 20 rec yds
 
 Prediction: Packers 27, Cardinals 
                17 ^ Top
 
 Vikings @ Seahawks 
                - (Caron)
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: After starting 
                the season off with four straight games having not thrown an interception, 
                second-year Vikings starter Christian Ponder has since slipped 
                into a four-game slump where he’s tossed seven interceptions 
                and only six touchdowns. The struggles on offense have been evident, 
                as only wide receiver Percy Harvin and running back Adrian Peterson 
                have done much of anything on offense in recent weeks. Tight end 
                Kyle Rudolph has had back-to-back awful games, accumulating just 
                17 yards receiving across those contests, and is now no more than 
                a low-end starter after his hot start made him a potential top 
                five TE. At this point, only Percy Harvin, who has remained hot 
                even on down weeks for his team’s offense, is an every week 
                fantasy starter in this passing game. Things don’t get any easier in Week 9, either, as Ponder 
                and the Vikings go up against one of the league’s best secondaries, 
                the Seahawks and their “12th man” in Seattle. Seattle 
                struggled to shut down a surprisingly red hot Matthew Stafford 
                last week, but they had previously allowed only one quarterback—Tom 
                Brady—to throw for more than 260 yards or multiple touchdowns. 
                Seattle has intercepted at least one pass from opposing quarterbacks 
                in six of their first eight contests, and given Ponder’s 
                recent struggles, they could be in for more this week. If there 
                is one glimpse of silver lining for owners of players in the Vikings 
                passing game, it's that Seattle has struggled to shut down opposing 
                tight ends in recent weeks. In their past three games, they’ve 
                allowed 25 catches for 258 yards and two touchdowns to opposing 
                tight ends. This could mean a decent day for Kyle Rudolph if Ponder 
                decides to throw the ball his way.  Running Game Thoughts: He came into the year off of an ACL tear 
                that ended his 2011 season as one of the league’s biggest 
                question marks, but Vikings running back Adrian Peterson has certainly 
                re-established himself as a premier player at his position. Peterson, 
                who hasn’t yet had his bye, is currently the second-ranked 
                running back in fantasy football in standard scoring leagues and 
                is coming off back-to-back 120-plus yard days against two fairly 
                decent run defenses in Tampa Bay and Arizona. Peterson is an every-week 
                must-start no matter who he is facing, as he is the kind of back 
                who can break free and explode for huge fantasy production at 
                any time.  His task will be a bit tougher this week, though, as Peterson 
                goes up against a Seattle defense that currently ranks third best 
                in the league in stopping opposing running backs. The Seahawks 
                haven’t allowed an opposing back to score a touchdown against 
                them since Week 3 and have only allowed two total on the year. 
                The list of backs they’ve held out of the end zone includes 
                DeMarco Murray, Stevan Ridley, and Frank Gore. Of course, none 
                of them are as talented as Peterson, but this isn’t exactly 
                the world’s best matchup for Adrian. Still, he needs to 
                be in your lineup every week right now, as he might currently 
                be the hottest back in all of football.  Projections:Christian Ponder: 190 pass yds, 1 TD, 2 INT
 Percy Harvin: 70 rec yds, 10 rush yds
 Jerome Simpson: 30 rec yds
 Michael Jenkins: 25 rec yds
 Kyle Rudolph: 25 rush yds, 1 TD
 Adrian Peterson: 85 rush yds, 1 TD, 15 rec yds
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Even though it came in a losing effort in 
                Detroit, Seattle rookie quarterback Russell Wilson had one of 
                his best performances of the year when he threw for 236 yards 
                and a pair of scores. Wilson, who has cracked the 200-yard mark 
                only three times this season, remains a bye-week fill-in at best 
                and still hasn’t focused in on any single receiver as his 
                favorite. If we had to pick one, it would probably be Sidney Rice, 
                who has caught multiple passes in five straight games, though 
                his yardage total has maxed out at only 81 yards in those games.
 Rice is a flex option and will have the chance to play against 
                his former team this week as the Seahawks host the Vikings, who 
                have been one of the league’s worst pass defenses this season. 
                Although they have allowed only one 300-yard passer on the year, 
                the Vikings have given up double-digit fantasy points to every 
                quarterback they’ve faced, including the likes of Blaine 
                Gabbert, Alex Smith, Matt Hasselbeck, and John Skelton. As the 
                third rookie starter the Vikings defense has gone up against this 
                season, Wilson will look to follow in the footsteps of Robert 
                Griffin III and Andrew Luck, who both beat up the Vikings for 
                multiple touchdowns and significant fantasy production. Wilson 
                hasn’t been given the keys to his offense in the same ways 
                that Griffin and Luck have, but he’s not a completely terrible 
                option this week against a bad Minnesota secondary.  Running Game Thoughts: His running style may not be quite as 
                flashy as other running backs in the league, but Seahawks star 
                Marshawn Lynch has been one of the league’s most consistent 
                fantasy producers this season. Ranked as the sixth best back in 
                the league coming into the week, Lynch has rushed for 100 or more 
                yards in four games this season and has topped 85 yards on the 
                ground in every game but one. What limits Lynch’s fantasy 
                value is that he is among the league's least passed-to backs, 
                as he has caught just 11 passes despite being on the field for 
                almost every play.  Tough defenses haven’t been a problem for Lynch yet, and 
                he’ll get another one this week as he goes up against a 
                Vikings defense that has ranked near the top of the league at 
                stopping opposing backs all season. It is worth considering that 
                the Vikings have slipped up a bit in recent weeks, however, including 
                allowing six total touchdowns to running backs in three straight 
                games. This comes after allowing none in their first five games. 
                It doesn’t appear that much has changed personnel-wise or 
                scheme-wise for the Vikings, so the expectation should be somewhere 
                between those two extremes, but it’s very possible that 
                a back like Lynch gets into the end zone against them again this 
                week.  Projections:Russell Wilson: 160 pass yds, 1 TD, 1 INT
 Sidney Rice: 50 rec yds, 1 TD
 Golden Tate: 30 rec yds
 Zach Miller: 25 rec yds
 Marshawn Lynch: 105 rush yds, 1 TD
 Prediction: Seahawks 23, Vikings 
                17 ^ Top 
 Buccaneers @ 
                Raiders - (Caron)
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: It took him 
                awhile to get things going, but there might not be a hotter fantasy 
                quarterback in the NFC right now than the Buccaneers’ Josh 
                Freeman. Freeman threw just five touchdowns in his first four 
                games this season, along with four interceptions; but he has since 
                gone on a tear, with nine touchdowns and only one interception 
                in his past three games. Not only that, but he has averaged 337 
                yards during this recent run. His receivers, including Vincent 
                Jackson and Mike Williams, have benefited greatly from Freeman’s 
                success but have been a bit inconsistent—but that has been 
                the story of their careers as a whole thus far. Even though Freeman has been hot the past three weeks, it’s 
                easy to point to his schedule and suggest that this can’t 
                continue. Having gone against the Chiefs, Saints, and Vikings 
                in those contests, Freeman’s numbers are sure to fall a 
                bit, right? Well, probably. But maybe not yet. This week he’ll 
                get the Raiders and their 24th-ranked fantasy pass defense. Oakland 
                has allowed at least one touchdown pass in every game this season 
                and have gone five of their seven games without intercepting a 
                single pass. Freeman may not be the best name for fantasy, but 
                his numbers and recent success make him a great option this week 
                against a bad Oakland secondary.  Running Game Thoughts: Typically when a team is throwing the 
                ball very effectively, the running game also begins to open up 
                a bit. That’s what we saw last week when the Vikings began 
                to focus too much on the Bucs passing game, which allowed rookie 
                tailback Doug Martin to have the biggest game of his young career. 
                Martin rushed the ball for an impressive 135 yards and a touchdown 
                while adding 79 yards as a receiver—a 32-point day in standard-scoring 
                formats. Better yet, after conceding numerous goal-line carries 
                to LeGarrette Blount in previous weeks, it was Martin who line 
                up in the red zone and scored the short-yardage touchdown at the 
                end of the drive, perhaps putting to rest the worry that his fantasy 
                value will be limited by another goal-line vulture.  Martin ran over and through one of the league’s best run 
                defenses last week, so he should have no problem breaking loose 
                a few times against a mediocre Raiders front that has given up 
                numerous big games already. The Raiders have looked better in 
                recent weeks, and they did shut down Jamaal Charles last week; 
                still, that can easily be chalked up to bad coaching, given that 
                the Chiefs gave Charles only five carries on the day. Martin has 
                looked very good in recent weeks, and there’s no reason 
                to believe he won’t continue his solid fantasy production 
                as a low-end RB1 going forward, even if he is now without his 
                elite guard, Carl Nicks, for the remainder of the season.  Projections:Josh Freeman: 260 pass yds, 2 TD
 Vincent Jackson: 80 rec yds, 1 TD
 Mike Williams: 60 rec yds, 1 TD
 Dallas Clark: 45 rec yds
 Doug Martin: 90 rush yds, 1 TD, 20 rec yds
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: With wide receivers Darrius Heyward-Bey 
                and Denarius Moore both finally healthy, the Oakland passing attack 
                appears to finally be putting things together. Moore has scored 
                in four of his past five games and will look to continue that 
                streak against the Buccaneers. Also, Carson Palmer has had 14 
                or more fantasy points in six of his seven games this season and 
                has, somewhat surprisingly, been one of the league’s most 
                consistent quarterbacks. One of the biggest factors for Palmer's 
                sudden step up in play has been that he has limited his turnovers, 
                having not thrown more than one interception in any contest yet 
                this season.
 With the exception of two games where they were humiliated by 
                Drew Brees and Eli Manning and allowed a total of seven touchdown 
                passes, the Tampa Bay secondary has been excellent. They have 
                held other opposing quarterbacks to just two passing touchdowns 
                combined. And that includes allowing just one passing touchdown 
                between the likes of Tony Romo, Cam Newton, and Robert Griffin 
                III. They don’t get after the passer much, which could lead 
                to a decent day for Palmer, but given that he’s not on the 
                same elite level as Manning or Brees, Palmer’s upside is 
                limited to what he has done in other games this season. He’s 
                serviceable, but not great. Running Game Thoughts: “He lives!” yelled Darren 
                McFadden owners when the perceived-to-be-elite running back finally 
                got things going on the ground this past week against the Chiefs, 
                rushing for just his second 100-yard game of the season. It took 
                him 29 carries, but McFadden’s 114 yards rushing were a 
                breath of fresh air for those who took him as early as the first 
                round. He’s still not producing much in the passing game 
                after a big performance in Week 1, but McFadden could be in for 
                some nice overall fantasy days if he can continue to play like 
                he did last week and, perhaps more importantly, stay healthy. 
               “Run DMC” will be tested this week by the Buccaneers, 
                who are coming off a game when they were humiliated at times by 
                Vikings running back Adrian Peterson, who seemed to run right 
                through them. McFadden is an elite runner when he’s in space, 
                but he doesn’t have Peterson’s strength, so he’ll 
                need his offensive line to get him to the second level by opening 
                up holes against a Bucs defensive line that hasn’t played 
                particularly well all season. This isn’t the greatest matchup 
                for McFadden, but it’s not a particularly bad one either. 
                In fact, it should be a barometer for what we can expect from 
                the Raiders running game going forward. Is McFadden “back” 
                or is it time for fantasy owners to cut and run? We’ll likely 
                know a lot more after this game.  Projections:Carson Palmer: 240 pass yds, 2 TD, 1 INT
 Denarius Moore: 90 rec yds, 1 TD
 Darrius Heyward-Bey: 50 rec yds, 1 TD
 Brandon Myers: 50 rec yds
 Darren McFadden: 85 rush yds, 1 TD, 15 rec yds
 Prediction: Buccaneers 27, Raiders 
                24 ^ Top 
 Panthers at Redskins 
                - (Marcoccio)
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: Owners of 
                Cam Newton were certainly expecting more from the Panthers signal 
                caller in 2012. Newton currently sits 13th among fantasy Quarterbacks 
                and the Carolina’s passing game as a whole ranks in the 
                bottom third of the league. Adding salt to the wound, it appears 
                Newton may be without one of his top-three weapons as wideout 
                Brandon LaFell has missed practice this week with concussion symptoms. 
                If he’s sidelined, expect more targets for Steve Smith and 
                tight end Greg Olsen with Louis Murphy taking LaFell’s spot 
                as the number three option in the passing game. 
 The Redskins defense is a positive matchup for opposing quarterbacks 
                and receivers having allowed multiple passing TDs in six of their 
                eight games. Roethlisberger, Dalton, Bradford, and Brees have 
                all thrown for three touchdowns against Washington, a team on 
                pace to allow 5,000 passing yards in a single season… yikes! 
                Injuries have plagued the Redskins-D who will be without starters 
                Brian Orakpo, Adam Carriker and Brandon Meriweather. For those 
                who have soured on Newton due to his first-half performance, you 
                may get what you were expecting at draft time here in Week 9 against 
                the defenseless Redskins.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: Last week 
                brought a new look to the Carolina running game as head coach 
                Ron Rivera somewhat ditched the RBBC approach and gave Jonathan 
                Stewart 17 carries in a loss to Chicago. DeAngelo Williams did 
                receive 11 carries but with trade rumors circling his name all 
                week, it’s clear that the Panthers will proceed with Stewart 
                as their featured back moving forward. The two could only muster 
                2.7 yards per carry against a stout Bears defense but the 28 combined 
                carries means the coaching is willing to stick with the running 
                game which should provided dividends for Stewart down the road.
 
 The Panthers running game is statistically middle of the road 
                and will match wits with a middle of the road rushing defense 
                in Week 9. The Redskins have allowed only one 100-yd rusher this 
                season (Jonathan Dwyer last week) and only five rushing touchdowns 
                on the year. I’m cautiously optimistic that the Panthers 
                will stay close enough to continue running Stewart well into the 
                fourth quarter, which should make for a good, but not great day, 
                for the Panthers main threat at running back.
 
 Projections:
 Cam 
                Newton: 270 pass yds, 2 TD, 2 INT; 40 rush yds
 Jonathan 
                Stewart: 70 rush yds, 30 rec yds
 Mike 
                Tolbert: 20 rush yds, 10 rec yds
 Steve 
                Smith: 90 rec yds, 1 TD
 Brandon 
                LaFell: 30 rec yds
 Louis 
                Murphy: 30 rec yds
 Greg 
                Olsen: 60 rec yds
 
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: Robert Griffin 
                III was taken as a borderline QB1 in most fantasy drafts this 
                summer and if you were one of the lucky owners to nab the Washington 
                QB, congratulations, you’ve hit the fantasy jackpot. RGIII 
                ranks second only to Drew Brees among fantasy quarterbacks and 
                is locked in as an every week starter regardless matchup thanks 
                to his rushing ability. RGIII has already racked up 494 yards 
                and 6 TDs on the ground, averaging 7.1 yards per carry. His passing 
                numbers are mediocre at best as he travels through the season 
                with his top two receivers (Pierre Garcon & Fred Davis) on 
                the bench due to injury. 
 The Carolina-D has performed well the last two weeks, allowing 
                only one touchdown pass to both Jay Cutler and Tony Romo but still 
                represents a neutral matchup for RGIII and company. Those in a 
                pinch can consider Santana Moss and Leonard Hankerson who are 
                doing what they can to fill the void left Garcon and Davis, but 
                both represent marginal WR3 plays for desperate fantasy owners 
                only. Logan Paulsen is a TE2 with little upside until the Redskins 
                make their passing attack more of a focus in their week-to-week 
                game plan.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: The Redskins 
                are second in the league in total rushing just behind the 49ers 
                thanks in large part to the play of rookie Alfred Morris and of 
                course, the legs of quarterback RGIII. Despite being a non-factor 
                receiving the ball, Morris ranks fifth among RBs in fantasy points 
                (105.2) and has a staggering 89% of the Washington’s rushing 
                attempts that haven’t gone to the quarterback. He’s 
                topped 20 carries in three games this season and should eclipses 
                that mark again on Sunday.
 
 The Carolina-D has allowed 100-yd rushing games to Michael Turner, 
                Andre Brown and Pierre Thomas this season and 95 yards to Tampa 
                rookie Doug Martin. The Panthers are generous to opposing running 
                backs, giving up the tenth most fantasy points to RBs this season. 
                This is a borderline plus matchup for Morris and I wouldn’t 
                be shocked to see him top the century mark with an above average 
                chance to crack the endzone as well.
 
 Projections:
 Robert 
                Griffin III: 210 pass yds, 1 TD; 60 rush yds, 1 TD
 Santana 
                Moss: 60 rec yds, 1 TD
 Leonard 
                Hankerson: 60 rec yds
 Josh 
                Morgan: 30 rec yds
 Logan 
                Paulsen: 40 rec yds
 Alfred 
                Morris: 90 rush yds, 1 TD
 Evan 
                Royster: 10 rush yds / 10 rec yds
 
 Prediction: Redskins 27, Panthers 
                23 ^ Top
 
 Steelers at Giants 
                - (Marcoccio)
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: With Rashard 
                Mendenhall mending from a knee injury, it was a good bet that 
                the Steelers would begin the season with an offensive focus geared 
                toward the pass and through eight weeks of action the Steelers 
                rank 7th in passing yards and 21st in rushing. As a result, Ben 
                Roethlisberger is a top ten fantasy QB averaging 22.8 FPts/G with 
                Mike Wallace, Antonio Brown, and the resurging tight end Heath 
                Miller, all every week fantasy starters. Roethlisberger is crusing 
                along with 14 TDs to only 3 INTs and with only one negative matchup 
                (@DAL) on the schedule, he’s shaping up to be a strong fantasy 
                performer the second half of the season. 
 This week, he’ll face a Giants-D that has been easy on quarterbacks, 
                allowing the 7th most fantasy points to quarterbacks through eight 
                weeks. Tony Romo has torched the Giants in two games for over 
                700 yards and 4 TDs and with a similar arsenal at his disposal, 
                Roethlisberger should be able to carve up the a suspect Giants 
                secondary that’s given up 11 touchdowns on the season. On 
                a side note, The Steelers will leave for New York on Sunday morning 
                because of the lack of hotel rooms and power in the New York area 
                due to Hurricane Sandy. Generally teams are required to travel 
                the day before the game.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: The Steelers 
                have been battling injuries at the running back position from 
                Week 1 and this week’s forecast at RB is cloudy. Rashard 
                Mendenhall (Achilles) has been limited in practice this week and 
                its unclear at press time if he will even be active on Sunday. 
                Jonathan Dwyer has impressed the last two weeks with back-to-back 
                100-yd rushing games but has been limited in practice due to a 
                quad injury.
 
 Whoever handles the running duties for the Steelers this week 
                will face a Giants defense that’s been decent against the 
                run, playing a bend but don’t break defense, allowing only 
                three rushing touchdowns on the season. Their best effort came 
                against the 49ers, giving up only 62 rushing yards to Frank Gore 
                and Kendall Hunter. The Giants are also leading the league in 
                takeaways (24) and have a fierce defensive line capable of getting 
                after the quarterback. For now it appears that Dwyer and Isaac 
                Redman (ankle) may share carries this week against the Giants 
                making both unattractive fantasy options. Stay tuned this weekend 
                and check the Inactives on Sunday for clarity on the situation.
 
 Projections:
 Ben 
                Roethlisberger: 270 pass yds, 2 TD
 Mike 
                Wallace: 80 rec yds, 1 TD
 Antonio 
                Brown: 70 rec yds
 Emmanuel 
                Sanders: 30 rec yds
 Heath 
                Miller: 50 rec yds, 1 TD
 Jonathan 
                Dwyer: 60 rush yds, 1 TD / 10 rec yds
 Isaac 
                Redman: 30 rush yds / 10 rec yds
 
 
  Passing Game Thoughts: The Giants 
                currently rank second in passing yards (282 per game) and Eli 
                Manning is performing at a top ten fantasy clip with three games 
                over 300 yards passing. He’s been successful without the 
                full use of one of his favorite weapons as Hakeem Nicks has battled 
                injury for much of the first half of the season. Victor Cruz has 
                remained steady and is must start regardless of matchup due to 
                his big-play ability. Tight End Martellus Bennett has cooled off 
                after a hot start - zero TDs in the last five weeks - but with 
                nine catches in the last two games could be poised for a big fantasy 
                day… any day now. 
 The Steelers-D has been stingy against the pass to nobody’s 
                surprise but isn’t taking the ball away. This Steelers top 
                ranked pass defense is giving up 182.6 yards per game. No quarterback 
                has topped the 300-yd mark against them and they did a remarkable 
                job holding RGIII to his worst fantasy day of the season (concussion 
                game not included). Eli has faired better at home than on the 
                road but this will be a tough task and a tough call for fantasy 
                owners to keep him in lineups if similar value QBs are available.
 
 Running Game Thoughts: The Giants 
                are slightly above average on the ground this year with Ahmad 
                Bradshaw shouldering the majority of the load with 126 out of 
                195 carries from the running back position. He’s been a 
                solid RB2 averaging 13.1 FPts/G and ranking 14th among fantasy 
                RBs through eight weeks. However, his chronic foot problems have 
                reduced his practice time the last two weeks and although it appears 
                he will suit up, fantasy owners should be cautious of his durability 
                moving forward. Expect to see David Wilson and Andre Brown become 
                more involved in the running game during the second half of the 
                season.
 
 For now, Bradshaw will butt heads with a Steelers run defense 
                that’s given up very little to opposing running backs. Only 
                Darren McFadden has cracked 100 yards on the ground against this 
                unit and with only 4 rushing touchdowns allowed, it could be a 
                long day for Giants running game. The silver lining is that Bradshaw 
                has scored three touchdowns in his last four games so I’ll 
                give him the benefit of the doubt and project him to find paydirt 
                in a solid but not spectacular fantasy day for his owners.
 
 Projections:
 Eli 
                Manning: 260 pass yds, 2 TDs
 Victor 
                Cruz: 90 rec yds, 1 TD
 Hakeem 
                Nicks: 80 rec yds, 1 TD
 Domenik 
                Hixon: 30 rec yds
 Martellus 
                Bennett: 40 rec yds
 Ahmad 
                Bradshaw: 70 rush yds, 1 TD / 20 rec yds
 Andre 
                Brown: 20 rush yds
 
 Prediction: Giants 27, Steelers 
                26 ^ Top
 
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