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    You are at:Home»Sports»Fantasy playbook: NFL Week 3 scores, projections, matchups
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    Fantasy playbook: NFL Week 3 scores, projections, matchups

    onlyplanz_80y6mtBy onlyplanz_80y6mtSeptember 21, 20250018 Mins Read
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    Fantasy playbook: NFL Week 3 scores, projections, matchups
    Should fantasy managers bench WR Jerry Jeudy in Week 3? (0:56)

    Mike Clay explains why fantasy managers should bench WR Jerry Jeudy in the Browns' Week 3 matchup against the Packers. (0:56)

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    • Mike ClaySep 19, 2025, 06:56 AM ET

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        Mike Clay is a senior writer for fantasy football and the NFL at ESPN. Mike is a member of the FSWA Hall of Fame. His projections power the ESPN Fantasy Football game, and he also appears on “Fantasy Football Now” and the Fantasy Focus Football podcast.

    Welcome to The Playbook for Week 3, which kicked off Thursday with the Dolphins at the Bills.

    This column features score projections, over/unders, win probabilities, and, of course, easily digestible fantasy advice for seasonlong leagues and DFS. This guide should help you with all sorts of decision-making, including sit/start decisions, last-minute waiver adds and lineup choices.

    Additionally, we have folded the Shadow Reports, previously a separate column, into the game-by-game breakdowns here. Using our play-by-play data, we’re able to identify defensive schemes and where each wide receiver and cornerback lines up on each play. By tracking these WR/CB matchups, including potential shadow situations, we can offer the best projections, rankings, sit/start advice and waiver wire suggestions each week.

    All of this advice is centered on 12-team PPR leagues with relatively standard scoring and lineup settings (1 QB, 2 RB, 3 WR, 1 flex, 1 K, 1 D/ST), although I’ll often mention “shallow” or “deep” leagues for some starters. The charts show all players who have been projected for at least 6.0 fantasy points this week, as well as all D/STs. “Matchup” is automatically determined using a proprietary metric that factors in raw and volume-adjusted fantasy points allowed to each position by the opposing defense this season.

    (Editor’s note: Projections and rankings will align almost perfectly, but sometimes when a projection is close, a player might be ranked slightly higher or lower because of other factors, including upside or risk. This column is subject to updates during the weekend, although at the very minimum, rankings will be updated on the site and projections will always be updated inside the game leading up to kickoff.)

    ATL-CAR | GB-CLE | HOU-JAX | CIN-MIN | PIT-NE | LAR-PHI | NYJ-TB
    IND-TEN | LV-WAS | DEN-LAC | NO-SEA | DAL-CHI | ARI-SF | KC-NYG | DET-BAL

    Projected score: Packers 24, Browns 15

    RANK

    PLAYER

    PROJ

    MATCHUP

    QB1616.0

    Good

    QB3210.6

    Shaky

    RB916.9

    Poor

    RB369.0

    Poor

    WR3812.0

    Average

    WR5010.4

    Good

    WR549.7

    Average

    WR578.8

    Good

    WR638.4

    Good

    TE511.1

    Poor

    TE139.4

    Good

    TE198.2

    Good

    DST18.1

    Great

    DST224.5

    Shaky

    Lineup locks: Josh Jacobs, Tucker Kraft

    Fantasy scoop: Quinshon Judkins made his pro debut in Week 2 and played more than expected. The second-round rookie soaked up 10 carries and three targets on 19 snaps. Game script allowed Jerome Ford to lead the Cleveland backfield in snaps (35) for the second week in a row, but he was limited to six carries to go along with his six targets. Dylan Sampson crashed back to earth after a strong Week 1, totaling four carries and three targets on 17 snaps. Judkins played well (71 yards), and his role only figures to increase, although Ford appears to be a real threat for passing down work, with Sampson also likely to chip in here or there. Judkins might work his way into the RB2 mix at some point soon, but he’s safest as a fringe flex this week against a Packers defense that has held opposing backs to 2.4 yards per carry (second lowest) so far this season.

    Over/under: 38.7 (Lowest)
    Win probability: Packers 81% (2nd highest)

    Projected score: Colts 24, Titans 19

    RANK

    PLAYER

    PROJ

    MATCHUP

    QB1118.2

    Shaky

    QB2914.1

    Shaky

    RB418.7

    Average

    RB2014.7

    Average

    WR2313.0

    Average

    WR4810.5

    Great

    WR539.8

    Average

    WR608.7

    Great

    TE411.6

    Good

    TE169.4

    Average

    DST76.9

    Great

    DST195.3

    Poor

    Lineup locks: Jonathan Taylor, Tony Pollard, Calvin Ridley, Tyler Warren

    Shadow Report: Michael Pittman Jr. is a candidate to draw shadow coverage from L’Jarius Sneed. Sneed shadowed Courtland Sutton when he was on the field in Week 1, then full-time shadowed Davante Adams on his perimeter routes in Week 2. Both Sutton (granted, Sneed was limited in that game) and Adams put together strong stat lines, but a healthy Sneed is one of the game’s top cover corners, so this matchup is not to be completely disregarded. Pittman doesn’t draw shadows as often as some No. 1 receivers, although Pat Surtain II did travel with him at times in Week 2, which helps explain his 4-40-0 receiving line. Pittman is already a fringe flex option, so he’s safest left on your bench in Week 3.

    Over/under: 42.6 (12th highest)
    Win probability: Colts 69% (6th highest)

    Projected Score: Vikings 21, Bengals 20

    Lineup locks: Chase Brown, Jordan Mason, Justin Jefferson, Ja’Marr Chase, T.J. Hockenson

    Fantasy scoop: Joe Burrow is out for three-plus months, which means Jake Browning will take over as Bengals quarterback. Browning played a majority of the snaps in seven games in place of Burrow in 2023. Browning averaged 19.1 fantasy PPG those weeks, which was fourth best among QBs during the span. The Bengals were very pass-heavy with Burrow under center in 2023 (12% pass rate over expected) and, while still pass-first, they were more balanced with Browning (+4%). He totaled 14 TDs and 7 INTs in those seven games and adds just enough with his legs to place him in the QB2 mix going forward. Chase was limited to a 29-383-1 receiving line in six games with Browning (12.2 FF PPG) in 2023, but that was prior to his big 2024 breakout and he was very productive with Browning under center last week (14-165-1). Tee Higgins produced 15-328-3 in five games (13.2 PPG) with Browning in 2023 and is now more of a WR3/flex. Browning is obviously a downgrade from Burrow, but he averaged 267 passing yards per game in 2023 and threw at least one TD pass in all seven of those games. Brown and Chase remain lineup locks.

    Fantasy scoop: Minnesota will be without J.J. McCarthy and Aaron Jones this week. McCarthy’s absence shouldn’t affect the passing game much, as, at this point his young career, he might not be much better than replacement Carson Wentz (McCarthy totaled 301 yards, two TDs and three INTs during Weeks 1-2). Jefferson and Hockenson can remain in lineups. Jones’ injury means Mason should be in lineups. The 26-year-old has minimal competition for snaps (Zavier Scott is next up on the depth chart), is a terrific rusher (career 5.2 YPC ranks third and 2.5 YAC ranks first among RBs with 200-plus carries since he entered the league) and was actually used a bit as a receiver last week (career-high 14% target share). Mason will be very busy against a Bengals defense that has allowed the second-most fantasy points and a league-high three TDs to opposing RBs.

    Over/under: 41.3 (13th highest)
    Win probability: Vikings 54% (14th highest)

    Projected score: Steelers 22, Patriots 22

    RANK

    PLAYER

    PROJ

    MATCHUP

    QB1218.0

    Good

    QB2415.3

    Good

    RB1316.1

    Average

    RB2911.9

    Good

    RB3310.6

    Average

    RB398.8

    Good

    WR1814.5

    Good

    WR4910.5

    Good

    WR588.7

    Good

    WR648.4

    Good

    TE119.6

    Shaky

    TE159.1

    Average

    TE237.3

    Shaky

    DST145.7

    Good

    DST175.6

    Good

    Lineup locks: Jaylen Warren, DK Metcalf

    Fantasy scoop: It was expected that second-round rookie TreVeyon Henderson was going to take lead back duties from Rhamondre Stevenson in New England this season. That hasn’t happened … at least not yet. After out-snapping Henderson 45-23 in Week 1, Stevenson held a 36-16 edge last week. In addition to dominating the snaps, Stevenson holds an 18-8 edge in carries, 9-8 edge in targets and 33-26 edge in routes. Henderson has played well when called on (4.6 YPC, and he caught all eight of his targets for 54 yards) and his role only figures to grow, but at least for now, he should be relegated to the fantasy bench. Stevenson (169 yards on 25 touches this season) is seeing just enough work to place him in the flex discussion against a Steelers defense that allowed 16-plus fantasy points to both Breece Hall and Kenneth Walker III.

    Over/under: 44.2 (11th highest)
    Win probability: Steelers 51% (Lowest)

    Projected score: Eagles 27, Rams 23

    Lineup locks: Jalen Hurts, Saquon Barkley, Kyren Williams, Puka Nacua, Davante Adams, A.J. Brown

    Fantasy scoop: Eagles wide receivers are off to a very slow start, but don’t panic just yet. As noted last week, Brown and DeVonta Smith were slowed by Dallas’ extremely zone-heavy scheme in the opener. The team made an effort to get them going in Week 2, and while Brown was held to an ugly 27 yards, he was peppered with nine targets (41% share). Smith was slightly better, totaling 53 yards on six targets. Pass volume has been down (45 total pass attempts) and all five of the offensive TDs have come on the ground (compared to 58% in 2024). Both receivers remain featured pieces of a good Eagles offense. Brown is still a lineup lock and Smith is best viewed as a fringe WR3.

    Shadow Report: Adams can expect to see shadow coverage from Quinyon Mitchell. Philly’s top corner traveled with George Pickens in Week 1 and, though it wasn’t the entire game, he shadowed Hollywood Brown on six of his first seven perimeter routes last week. Why Adams and not Nacua? Similar to CeeDee Lamb, Nacua spends a lot of time in the slot, whereas Pickens and Adams primarily align out wide. Mitchell, one of the game’s top young corners, will see a ton of Adams, whereas Nacua will work often against Cooper DeJean in the slot. The Rams’ top two receivers will still be extremely busy (they both have a 33% target share this season), so even in what might be a harder matchup than usual, they remain top fantasy options.

    Over/under: 49.3 (4th highest)
    Win probability: Eagles 63% (8th highest)

    Projected score: Buccaneers 27, Jets 19

    RANK

    PLAYER

    PROJ

    MATCHUP

    QB718.6

    Average

    QB2515.7

    Average

    RB717.9

    Good

    RB1715.9

    Average

    RB407.2

    Good

    WR1415.5

    Poor

    WR1714.6

    Average

    WR3112.7

    Average

    WR628.4

    Average

    TE227.2

    Good

    DST37.1

    Average

    DST264.3

    Average

    Lineup locks: Baker Mayfield, Bucky Irving, Breece Hall, Mike Evans, Garrett Wilson, Emeka Egbuka

    Shadow Report: Evans is a candidate for shadow coverage courtesy of Sauce Gardner. Gardner did not shadow against Buffalo’s wide receiver rotation last week, but did the last time he faced a clear No. 1 perimeter target: DK Metcalf in Week 1. Gardner was on Metcalf on all 29 of his perimeter routes, holding Pittsburgh’s top receiver to 12.3 fantasy points. Shadowed in both Week 1 (A.J. Terrell Jr.) and Week 2 (Derek Stingley Jr.), Evans is off to a slow start, totaling a 10-107-0 receiving line on 19 targets. Gardner presents a tough matchup, though Evans’ 29% target share is enough to keep him squarely in the WR2 mix.

    Over/under: 46.1 (7th highest)
    Win probability: Buccaneers 76% (3rd highest)

    Projected score: Commanders 27, Raiders 19

    RANK

    PLAYER

    PROJ

    MATCHUP

    QB1617.0

    Average

    QB2215.2

    Average

    RB1415.4

    Shaky

    RB2811.2

    Poor

    WR1614.7

    Shaky

    WR2312.9

    Good

    WR3012.6

    Good

    WR627.8

    Shaky

    TE214.9

    Great

    TE109.6

    Poor

    DST86.8

    Good

    DST165.6

    Average

    Lineup locks: Ashton Jeanty, Jakobi Meyers, Terry McLaurin, Deebo Samuel, Brock Bowers

    Fantasy scoop: Austin Ekeler is out for the season, which opens the door for Jacory Croskey-Merritt, Jeremy McNichols and Chris Rodriguez to handle the Washington backfield. Croskey-Merritt (34 snaps, 14 carries, 15 routes, 2 targets this season) is the top bet to lead the unit in snaps and carries moving forward. However, McNichols (26 snaps, four carries, 10 routes, zero targets) is likely to take on a sizable chunk of Ekeler’s passing down role, and Rodriguez (inactive in Weeks 1-2) is a capable short-yardage/goal line option. The Raiders have locked down RBs pretty well (fifth-fewest fantasy points allowed), so while Croskey-Merritt is the top fantasy option of the unit, he’s best left on benches in Week 3.

    Shadow Report: The Raiders have surrendered the fourth-most fantasy points to wide receivers, which is hardly a surprise considering their shaky cornerbacks room. That’s good news for McLaurin, Samuel and rookie Jaylin Lane, who will face off with Eric Stokes, Kyu Blu Kelly and Darnay Holmes this week. Upgrade the Washington WR room.

    Over/under: 46.4 (6th highest)
    Win probability: Commanders 75% (4th highest)

    Projected score: Falcons 24, Panthers 21

    RANK

    PLAYER

    PROJ

    MATCHUP

    QB1816.2

    Shaky

    QB2714.6

    Poor

    RB121.0

    Average

    RB1914.7

    Poor

    WR915.6

    Poor

    WR2113.3

    Shaky

    WR4510.6

    Poor

    WR687.6

    Shaky

    WR697.4

    Shaky

    TE129.5

    Great

    DST67.0

    Great

    DST303.2

    Shaky

    Lineup locks: Bijan Robinson, Chuba Hubbard, Drake London, Tetairoa McMillan

    Fantasy scoop: Is Year 5 the charm for Kyle Pitts? The fantasy results haven’t been spectacular (7-59-0 and 4-37-0 receiving lines), but the 24-year-old has a career-high 21% target share through two games. He’s been on the field for 78% of Atlanta’s snaps and has run a route on 82% of the team’s pass plays, both of which are also career-high marks. Pitts’ usage is enough to put him in the fringe TE1 mix, especially against a Carolina defense that has allowed a league-high 188 yards to tight ends through two games.

    Shadow Report: McMillan is a good bet to draw shadow coverage from Terrell this week, assuming of course that he is able to play. Terrell, who left Sunday’s game with a hamstring injury, shadowed Mike Evans in Week 1 and has a history of traveling with most clear No. 1 perimeter receivers. That’s the case for McMillan, who has aligned out wide on 84% of his routes and leads Carolina with 19 targets (22% share). Terrell did a nice job on Evans in Week 1, but especially considering his injury, there’s minimal reason for concern here. McMillan is a fringe WR2.

    Over/under: 44.6 (10th highest)
    Win probability: Falcons 62% (9th highest)

    Projected score: Jaguars 22, Texans 20

    RANK

    PLAYER

    PROJ

    MATCHUP

    QB1516.2

    Average

    QB2115.8

    Good

    RB2412.7

    Good

    RB2711.9

    Shaky

    WR716.9

    Great

    WR1315.3

    Average

    WR4211.5

    Average

    WR569.2

    Great

    WR598.7

    Average

    TE188.2

    Average

    TE207.7

    Poor

    DST126.1

    Good

    DST185.2

    Shaky

    Lineup locks: Brian Thomas Jr., Nico Collins

    Fantasy scoop: Nick Chubb has settled in as Houston’s clear lead back, and that was further confirmed by Dameon Pierce being a healthy scratch on Monday night. Chubb handled 12 carries and a pair of targets on 24 snaps, which allowed him to gain 72 yards and one TD. Chubb was, however, limited to 52% of the snaps (he played 49% in Week 1), deferring the other 48% to Woody Marks and Dare Ogunbowale. Chubb is running the ball fairly well, but he remains in a timeshare and without much of a role as a receiver. He’s a flex option against the Jaguars. Marks (three carries and one target in Week 2) should see an expanded role as the season progresses, especially as a receiver, so he’s not the worst end-of-bench stash.

    Shadow Report: Thomas is a good bet to see Derek Stingley Jr. shadow coverage this week. Houston’s top corner traveled with Davante Adams in Week 1 and Mike Evans in Week 2, aligning against them on a combined 44 of their 49 perimeter routes. Adams managed 7.2 fantasy points and Evans was limited to 10.6. Thomas and Stingley faced off in Week 13 last season, and though Thomas had a decent fantasy day (87 scrimmage yards and one TD on five touches), he caught just two of seven targets when covered by Stingley. Thomas posted a 5-76-1 receiving line in the Week 4 meeting, though he wasn’t shadowed in that game. Thomas is off to a very slow start to 2025 (69 yards and a rushing TD on six touches), but his target share remains strong (27%). Even in a tough matchup, he should be in lineups as a fringe WR1.

    Over/under: 41.1 (14th highest)
    Win probability: Jaguars 57% (13th highest)

    Projected score: Chargers 23, Broncos 22

    Lineup locks: Ladd McConkey, Courtland Sutton, Keenan Allen

    Fantasy scoop: Troy Franklin was quiet as a situational player throughout his rookie season and even in Week 1, but perhaps we saw the start of a breakout season on Sunday. The 2024 fourth-round pick played 85% of the snaps, was targeted nine times (30% share) and totaled 100 yards and one TD on nine touches. Franklin’s big game and Denver’s wide-open No. 2 WR slot are enough to make Franklin worthy of a waiver add, though it’s worth noting that he played only 58% of the snaps in Week 1. A return to irrelevance is possible, especially with Sutton, Marvin Mims, Pat Bryant and, perhaps someday, Evan Engram in the mix, but it’s also possible the second-year receiver goes down as one of the surprise breakouts of 2025. He’s a deep league flex against the Chargers.

    Shadow Report: I wouldn’t call it a lock, but Quentin Johnston could draw Pat Surtain II shadow coverage this week. Surtain tends to shadow clear No. 1 perimeter targets, as he did full time against Calvin Ridley in Week 1 and part time against Michael Pittman Jr. in Week 2. Johnston might not be Los Angeles’ top target, but with McConkey and Allen in the slot so often, Johnston (81% perimeter), who has three TDs in two games, might get the Surtain treatment. We’ve seen that in the past, with Surtain shadowing Mike Williams over Allen (2022) and Joshua Palmer over McConkey (2024). Granted, Allen, Williams and Palmer were sidelined, but Surtain did shadow Johnston full time in Week 17 back in 2023, and Johnston totaled 29 yards on five targets in the game. Johnston’s strong play and Los Angeles’ pass-heavy offense are enough to keep him in the WR3 discussion, but the bust risk is higher than usual this week.

    Over/under: 45 (9th highest)
    Win probability: Chargers 57% (12th highest)

    Projected score: Seahawks 23, Saints 17

    RANK

    PLAYER

    PROJ

    MATCHUP

    QB3014.0

    Good

    QB3113.2

    Poor

    RB1815.3

    Good

    RB2512.5

    Good

    RB3011.3

    Good

    WR1115.5

    Average

    WR3412.6

    Poor

    WR4610.5

    Average

    WR5110.1

    Poor

    TE810.6

    Great

    DST47.0

    Average

    DST165.8

    Good

    Lineup locks: Alvin Kamara, Jaxon Smith-Njigba

    Fantasy scoop: Week 2 gave us little additional clarity on the Seattle backfield. Zach Charbonnet remained the “1A” back and now holds an edge over Ken Walker III in snaps (64 to 43), carries (27 to 23) and routes (22 to 16), with Walker leading in targets (four to zero). Charbonnet’s lead back role hasn’t led to production, as he has totaled 57 yards and one TD on 27 carries (2.1 YPC) and has yet to see a target. Walker struggled in Week 1 but exploded for 118 yards and one TD on 14 touches in Week 2. The production very well could lead to a larger role moving forward, but keep in mind that his share of the snaps, routes and targets were all lower in Week 2 than they were in Week 1. For now, this remains a situation best avoided, but Walker’s strong showing is enough to make him the preferred RB2/flex of the two.

    Shadow Report: With two weeks in the books, the Seahawks have allowed the fewest fantasy points to receivers, including the second fewest to the perimeter. Chris Olave, Rashid Shaheed and the rest of the New Orleans wide receiver room should be downgraded against Riq Woolen, Devon Witherspoon (if he returns from injury) and Josh Jobe.

    Over/under: 39.3 (15th highest)
    Win probability: Seahawks 70% (5th highest)

    Projected score: Cowboys 26, Bears 26

    RANK

    PLAYER

    PROJ

    MATCHUP

    QB619.1

    Great

    QB918.4

    Great

    RB1216.2

    Average

    RB1616.1

    Great

    WR120.0

    Great

    WR1215.3

    Great

    WR2713.0

    Great

    WR2512.9

    Great

    WR658.1

    Great

    TE611.4

    Good

    DST274.1

    Average

    DST283.6

    Poor

    Lineup locks: Caleb Williams, D’Andre Swift, Javonte Williams, CeeDee Lamb, Rome Odunze, George Pickens, DJ Moore, Jake Ferguson

    Fantasy scoop: Both quarterbacks in this game should be considered strong starting options, if not full-on lineup locks. Both defenses are off to horrific starts, with Dallas allowing 30.3 fantasy points to Russell Wilson and 24.3 points to Jalen Hurts, and Chicago surrendering 22.2 points to J.J. McCarthy and 34.0 points to Jared Goff. Williams sits 10th among QBs in fantasy points and fourth in rushing yards. The good matchup vaults him up the Week 3 rankings. Dak Prescott is fresh off a 361-yard effort against the Giants and is a back-end QB1 this week.

    Shadow Report: Upgrade Chicago’s receivers against a Dallas defense that has allowed the third-most fantasy points to wide receivers, as well as the most to the perimeter. Odunze and Moore will see plenty of Trevon Diggs and Kaiir Elam on the boundary, with Olamide Zaccheaus facing off with DaRon Bland or, if Bland remains out, Reddy Steward in the slot. With Bland out last week, Giants slot man Wan’Dale Robinson went for 142 yards and a score on 10 targets, so Zaccheaus will be a deep sleeper if Bland remains sidelined.

    Shadow Report: Chicago’s top corner, Jaylon Johnson, is out for the season and slot man Kyler Gordon missed both Weeks 1-2 with a hamstring injury. Chicago’s man-heavy defense has, in turn, allowed the sixth-most fantasy points to wide receivers. This week, Lamb and Pickens stand to benefit against Tyrique Stevenson, Nahshon Wright (Johnson’s replacement) and either Gordon or Nick McCloud. Upgrade the Dallas receivers.

    Over/under: 52 (2nd highest)
    Win probability: Cowboys 51% (15th highest)

    Projected score: 49ers 25, Cardinals 22

    RANK

    PLAYER

    PROJ

    MATCHUP

    QB1017.8

    Shaky

    QB2614.6

    Good

    RB220.8

    Average

    RB2213.4

    Average

    RB388.9

    Average

    WR3012.7

    Average

    WR3911.9

    Good

    WR4710.5

    Good

    WR727.1

    Average

    TE116.1

    Average

    DST106.3

    Average

    DST135.8

    Good

    Lineup locks: Christian McCaffrey, James Conner, Marvin Harrison Jr., Trey McBride

    Fantasy scoop: Harrison is coming off a rough Week 2 outing in which he was limited to 27 yards on five targets. This, of course, comes after he posted a 5-71-1 receiving line on six targets in Week 1. Harrison’s 21% target share isn’t going to cut it for a player expected to be an elite offensive player, but the good news is that he’s been on the field for 90% of Arizona’s pass plays and overall pass volume will increase. The Cardinals haven’t had to throw much, as they’ve led on 70% of their offensive snaps (third highest), but, once adjusted for game script, they have the league’s fourth-pass-heaviest offense. Harrison needs to be better to justify “lineup lock” status, but he is worthy of WR3 status against the 49ers.

    Over/under: 47 (5th highest)
    Win probability: 49ers 62% (10th highest)

    Projected score: Chiefs 25, Giants 21

    RANK

    PLAYER

    PROJ

    MATCHUP

    QB519.9

    Great

    QB1716.3

    Average

    RB3211.0

    Great

    RB3410.3

    Shaky

    RB359.9

    Shaky

    RB379.3

    Great

    WR219.8

    Average

    WR4012.5

    Great

    WR4111.6

    Average

    WR5210.1

    Great

    TE711.2

    Good

    DST96.7

    Shaky

    DST254.2

    Average

    Lineup locks: Patrick Mahomes, Malik Nabers, Travis Kelce

    Fantasy scoop: After Tyrone Tracy Jr. dominated the Giants’ backfield in Week 1, it was Cam Skattebo who took control last week. The rookie soaked up 11 carries and three targets on 33 snaps (18 routes), compared to five carries and five targets on 27 snaps (17 routes) for Tracy and one carry and one target on four snaps (one route) for Devin Singletary. A hot-hand approach seems to be the game plan for New York, which means neither back can be trusted this week against the Chiefs.

    Over/under: 45.2 (8th highest)
    Win probability: Chiefs 64% (7th highest)

    Projected score: Ravens 29, Lions 26

    RANK

    PLAYER

    PROJ

    MATCHUP

    QB223.6

    Average

    QB1316.4

    Great

    RB617.9

    Great

    RB1116.5

    Average

    RB2312.8

    Great

    RB417.0

    Average

    WR419.5

    Average

    WR1015.8

    Good

    WR2812.9

    Average

    WR559.5

    Good

    TE311.8

    Great

    TE217.5

    Shaky

    TE247.2

    Shaky

    DST293.5

    Poor

    DST312.7

    Poor

    Lineup locks: Lamar Jackson, Jahmyr Gibbs, Derrick Henry, Amon-Ra St. Brown, Zay Flowers, Jameson Williams, Sam LaPorta

    Fantasy scoop: Mark Andrews has fallen off the fantasy radar. Once a superstar, Andrews has managed just 7 yards on four targets through two games. And that’s despite having played 78% of the snaps and with Isaiah Likely out of the lineup. Andrews figures to hit for the occasional touchdown (he had 11 in 2024), but his dwindling target share has made him unusable in fantasy. He should be buried on your bench for the time being.

    Over/under: 54.6 (Highest)
    Win probability: Ravens 59% (11th highest)

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