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Week 1: Patience
9/7/06

Fantasy football players should treat the opening week of the season like a fine restaurant, not a fast-food restaurant.

A little patience can reap big rewards.

Experienced fantasy football players know not to panic if a few of their players struggle in Week One. It’s just one week, not an entire season.

Inexperienced fantasy football owners panic when their players don’t meet their preseason expectations in the opening weeks.

Owners who traded Indianapolis wide receiver Reggie Wayne when he stumbled during the first two weeks last season with 69 yards and no TDs against the tough defenses of Baltimore and Jacksonville regretted it after he finished the season strong.

Owners who dropped Dallas wide receiver Terry Glenn when he opened last season with a 42-yard, no-TD effort were kicking themselves after he busted out for 157 yards and a TD in Week Two.

The lesson? Don’t make any drastic moves after Week 1 or the first couple weeks.

Here’s a few players that could start the season cold because they face a tough schedule: Detroit wide receiver Roy Williams (Seattle in Week 1, Chicago in Week 2); Jacksonville quarterback Byron Leftwich (Dallas, Pittsburgh, Indianapolis); Minnesota running back Chester Taylor (Washington, Carolina, Chicago); New York Giants running back Tiki Barber (Indianapolis, Philadelphia, Seattle); and Tampa Bay wide receiver Joey Galloway (Baltimore, Atlanta, Carolina).

If you notice one of the star players listed above or another star player start slow on another owner’s team, offer a sub-par player who’s off to a hot start for that slumping star in a trade. Then, laugh all the way to your league title.

Hot Read
Frank Gore, San Francisco: The trade of running back Kevan Barlow to the New York Jets shot Gore up preseason running back rankings. Gore shined with Barlow out of the picture in the last three weeks last season, gaining 255 yards, including a 108-yard effort in Week 17 against Houston and a two-touchdown game against St. Louis in Week 16.

Broken Play(er)
Cedric Benson, Chicago: The second-year pro didn’t play in a preseason game for the second straight season, this time with a shoulder injury. Thomas Jones has been named the Bears’ starting running back and clearly is the favorite of teammates to be the Bears’ go-to back, so Benson’s touches could be limited early in the season.

Off The Bench
Laveranues Coles, N.Y. Jets: The wide receiver faces Tennessee, which gave up the most touchdown passes (33) last season. Coles should find some lanes to run in against the Titans’ young secondary.

Safe Bet
Ben Watson, New England: Wide receiver Deion Branch appears likely to not be in the Patriots’ lineup due to his holdout. With David Givens gone to Tennessee, Watson is quarterback Tom Brady’s most-familiar target. Look for the tight end to catch at least five passes with a possible touchdown.

Extra Point
Keep an eye on Arizona’s run/pass ratio during the first few weeks of the season. Last season, the Cardinals ranked first in passing plays and yards and last in rushing plays and yards. With Edgerrin James signing a free-agent deal from Indianapolis, Arizona is expected to run the ball much more than the 35 percent it did last season. If this ratio closes, examine if it affects the production of Larry Fitzgerald and Anquan Boldin.