It
was a fun week to build lineups with four games projected at 50-plus
points on the main slate giving us plenty of roster construction
options. Ultimately, paying down at receiver and tight end and jamming
in as many high-volume, high-priced running backs was the play.
Some of us donkeys chose another strategy.
Here’s a look at my cash game Lineup for Fanduel in Week
5.
Quarterback
My favorite game environment on the slate was the Steelers-Falcons
matchup with the Raiders-Chargers a very close second. So, Ben
Roethlisberger ($8400), Matt
Ryan ($8300), Philip
Rivers ($8200) were strong considerations as was Blake
Bortles ($7000) against the Chiefs. We know Bortles tends
to do his best fantasy work with Leonard
Fournette on the sideline and the shootout potential was a
realistic outcome given the matchup. We also know Bortles can
be a turnover machine and look unorthodox when delivering the
ball, both of which were on full display Sunday. In the end, my
two top plays were Big-Ben and Bortles and given the $1400 savings
and my roster construction, Bortles was the only play.
Running Back
I’ve been using three RBs in cash games since Week 1 and
that wasn’t about to stop in Week 5 with Todd Gurley ($9100),
Melvin Gordon ($8700), Christian McCaffrey ($8100), James Conner
($7800) and T.J. Yeldon ($6500) all in good spots with Conner
and Yeldon getting a value boost this week with their expected
roles and positive matchup. The Falcons have been decimated by
pass-catching running backs this season making Conner intriguing
despite his poor performances the last two weeks and Yeldon was
getting the starting nod with Fournette (hamstring) on the sideline.
My contrarian cash play of Marshawn Lynch ($6500), who was just
5 percent owned in cash games, seemed to have a similar touch
projection as Yeldon and was a slightly better bet to find the
endzone given his usage around the goaline. I was also a leary
of having two Jaguars in my lineup. The $400 price savings on
Gordon over Gurley came in handy and my use of Lynch allowed to
me grab the high-priced receiver I wanted.
Wide Receiver
That receiver was JuJu Smith-Shuster. With double-digit targets
in each of the last three games (19-11-11) and costing $1000 less
than Antonio Brown ($9000) it was an easy call. It also allowed
me to get a piece of the game with the highest over/under (57)
on the slate.
Rounding out my receivers were a couple of mid-priced plays.
Tyler Boyd ($6300) has been a consistent force in my cash game
lineups the last two weeks. He’s taken over as the No.2
receiving option in the Bengals offense and didn’t project
to see Dolphins cornerback Xavien Howard in coverage. With John Ross (groin) being on the shelf, Boyd was an easy option in cash
games.
My last receiver spot came down to Kenny Golladay ($6300), Mike Williams ($6300), John Brown ($6200) in the mid-range and Marquez Valdes-Scantling (4800) at the bottom of the barrel. Golladay
seemed like the safer play of the bunch although I did have a
hard time choosing between him and Brown who’s clearly become
the big-play option for the Ravens. Brown’s deep ball targets
are enticing but his catch 50% rate leaves me queasy making Golladay
the easy call. The hindsight and possible process mistake here
is not taking the $1400 savings on MVS and using that cash on
an upgrade to Lynch at running back.
Tight End
The tight end position seemed straight forward this week. You’re
either paying up for Zack Ertz ($7500), Travis Kelce ($7700) or
paying down to Vance McDonald ($4600) who’s the clear passing
option at the position for Big-Ben. Other pivots off McDonald
included David Njoku ($5200), Austin Hooper ($5000) or C.J. Uzomah
($4700). Hooper and Uzomah haven’t seen the volume of McDonald
and didn’t possess the ceiling either, making McDonald (80
percent owned in $50 double-ups) the logical choice.
Flex
I messed around with some McCaffrey, Gordon and Yeldon lineups
but ultimately I wanted Gurley and was easily able to fit him
in given my roster construction. The Rams running back now has
9 touchdowns in five games including three on Sunday. The plethora
of good running back options led to him being only 60% owned,
but worth every penny.
Defense
The most popular play of the week was the Titans ($3900) who
seemed mispriced against the hapless Bills. Even on the road,
Tennessee projected to take advantage of Josh Allen who’s
only thrown for more than 200 yards once this season - Week 2
vs. the Chargers. The Jets (vs. DEN) and the Browns (vs. BAL)
were other strong considerations. Both were playing at home against
quarterbacks proven to be turnover prone. The Titans were my top
play, but I needed the $600 savings the Browns offered me, to
make this roster fit.
Results
The key decision this week was whether or not to go with cheapie
Marquez
Valdes-Scantling at wide receiver or stick with a more stable
commodity at the position. I chose the latter and it cost me.
Swapping Lynch and Golladay for MVS (30 percent owned) and Conner
would’ve netted me 25 points on this lineup and a clean sweep
in double-ups and 50/50s. Not making the 2V2 swap move cost me
my first losing week on Fanduel this season. I also could’ve easily
played Yeldon over Lynch for the same price and found a profitable
weekend. Mistakes were made.