The best fantasy football gamble of Week 2

Seeking redemption from a veteran receiver after completely whiff in Week 1.

Every week, at least one player becomes my fascination of whether he’s worthy of a fantasy football start as a streamer. The decision can be a mental wrestling match, but for the purpose of brevity, only one player can be chosen as the fantasy football gamble of the week. Be sure to check out one of our newest pieces, Streamers of the Week, from the talented Kevin Hickey.

The best fantasy football gamble for Week 2

Tracking my predictions: 0-1-0
Win: Player produces ≥ 75% of projected fantasy points
Loss: Player produces >75% of projected fantasy points
Tie: Player is ejected, leaves with an injury, or lands on COVID-19 list after publishing

2021 record: 8-9-1
2020 record: 5-10-1

Week’s selection of Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers (projected 27.15 points) was nothing short of disastrous. Yikes. At the time of the writing, it appeared as though wide receiver Allen Lazard (ankle) wouldn’t play, which I had accounted for, but there was no clarity on the status of offensive tackles David Bakhtiari and Elgton Jenkins — both of whom ended up being inactive. Rodgers was sluggish, Green Bay seemed unprepared for the second straight season opener, and Minnesota took full advantage of it.

Lesson learned … it’s now time to dust it off and head into Week 2 with a fresh start.

WR Allen Robinson, Los Angeles Rams vs. Atlanta Falcons

Robinson was among the top fantasy football receivers for several years prior to last season’s dismal showing, and it was easy to chalk it up to poor quarterback play in a stale offense. In fact, once Robinson inked with the Rams in the offseason, many gamers — myself included — fully embraced a rebound campaign from the 29-year-old. His redemption tour didn’t exactly get off to the best of starts with a two-target, one-catch, 12-yard showing vs. the Buffalo Bills in what became a total beatdown. Depending upon your perspective on life, Robinson playing 65 of the 67 offensive snaps is either encouraging or disturbing.

After the game, head coach Sean McVay said he needs to call plays specifically to get Robinson more involved. Wideout Ben Skowronek  finished with three times the target volume as A-Rob, and while the veteran took it in stride, citing his understanding of the bigger picture, a competitor who is used to being the WR1 will use that as fuel. The problem is, though, what’s motivation worth if the ball just doesn’t come his direction?

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For starters, this week’s matchup is vastly easier. Atlanta was punched in the mouth by the New Orleans Saints’ receiving corps in Week 1, giving up the fourth-most fantasy points in both primary scoring formats. Only six teams yielded more receptions, and four defenses permitted a greater volume of yardage. A touchdown allowed every eight grabs surrendered rated as the eighth-highest frequency. All of that ineptitude was a carryover from 2021’s sixth-easiest matchup to exploit for the receiver position.

LA will come out hungry and firing shots to help ease concerns about last week’s impotent performance. All of the attention paid toward slowing Cooper Kupp favors Robinson against isolated coverage, and as long as the ball is sent his way, there’s a pretty good chance he returns WR2 value.

If Robinson doesn’t show signs of life in this one, expect a long year from the former Nittany Lion.

My projection: 7 targets, 6 receptions, 90 yards, 1 TD (21.0 PPR points)

What Allen Robinson brings to the Rams’ offense

Touchdown Wire’s Laurie Fitzpatrick goes to the film to examine how Allen Robinson fits in the Rams’ offense

The Los Angeles Rams added to their stacked receiver corps in free agency by signing veteran Allen Robinson to a three-year, $46.5 contract with $30.7 million guaranteed. It’s a great signing for team and player, and Robinson — who has had ghastly quarterback luck going back to his time at Penn State — now has his best quarterback ever.

Coming into 2021, Robinson was coming off back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons with Mitch Trubisky, Chase Daniel, and Nick Foles as his quarterbacks. No offense to any of those fine gentlemen, but Stafford is several levels above in traits and production, and when you watch both Robinson and the Rams’ passing game as separate entities, it’s easy to see why this is a great fit.

The defending Super Bowl champs already have Cooper Kupp, Van Jefferson, the underrated Robert Woods, tight end Tyler Higbee, and a group of running backs who can grab the ball out of the backfield for easy gains. What they did not have — even with the addition of current free agent Odell Beckham Jr. in the second half of the season — was a receiver who brings Robinsons specific attributes to the roster.

Let’s go to the tape, and see why Allen Robinson can make Sean McVay’s offense even more explosive in 2022 and beyond.