D’Andre Swift nominated for FedEx Ground Player of the Week

Swift is the Lions first nominee for the award since at least 2018

For the first time in the season, a Detroit Lions player is nominated for one of the weekly honors sponsored by FedEx. Lions running back D’Andre Swift is one of three finalists for the Week 10 FedEx Ground Player of the Week.

Swift ran for 130 yards on 33 carries, both career highs, in the Lions’ 16-16 tie with the Pittsburgh Steelers. It was just the second time Swift has topped the 100-yard mark in a game in his two seasons in Detroit. He is the first Lions nominee for the weekly award since at least 2018.

Swift is up against Rhamondre Stevenson of the New England Patriots and Jonathan Taylor of the Indianapolis Colts.

You can vote for Swift here. Winners are announced later in the week.

Lions vs. Steelers: Best and worst PFF grades from Week 10

Here are this week’s PFF best and worst performances for the Detroit Lions week 10 matchup against the Pittsburgh Steelers

It wasn’t exactly the performance the Detroit Lions were hoping for coming out their bye. Still, after one of the most unappealing, uncompetitive games you will ever watch, the Lions mustered out a 16-16 tie against the Pittsburgh Steelers.

If there was ever a game where neither team deserved to claim victory, it was most certainly this one where each team was doing everything in their power to lose this week. The Lions offense became predictable real quick, and once the Steelers were able to solve that issue, it was all over for them. On the flip side of the defense, they did put in a solid effort, but when you are facing Mason Rudolph on the other side, it can be difficult to judge how well the players are performing.

The performances speak for themselves, and with the latest PFF grades from this matchup, it almost lines up with how you would anticipate from this week.

Lions vs Steelers: Studs and Duds for Week 10

After an abysmal showing from the Detroit Lions and the Pittsburgh Steelers ending in a 16-16 tie, here are this week’s studs and duds.

Between the weather and the execution from the teams, it was about as messy and clumsy example of football you’ll ever see in this Week 10 matchup between the Detroit Lions and the Pittsburgh Steelers. The game ended everyone’s misery with a 16-16 tie.

Each team had a plethora of opportunities to seal the victory, but each time it was squandered with inept play or boneheaded mistakes that made it a tough watch. For that matter, the Lions play calling seemed to be taken straight out of a high playbook, where it was downright frustrating to muster any energy into the game. This was one of those games where neither team deserved to walk away with a victory.

There were a few moments that gave the Lions some life against the Steelers, but then there were others you could tell were going to be the death to any hopes of a win. That turned out to be the case in this week’s studs and duds.

 

Detroit Lions vs. Pittsburgh Steelers game recap: Everything we know

Now that it’s over, here’s everything we know in the immediate aftermath of the tie between the Lions and Steelers

It can no longer be said of the 2021 Detroit Lions that they have lost every game. No, they still haven’t won a game, but coach Dan Campbell and the Lions managed to avoid a loss in a 16-16 tie with the Pittsburgh Steelers in Week 10.

The neutral outcome ended a bitterly underwhelming display of offensive football from the two teams. The dreary, rainy weather and atrocious condition of the overused Heinz Field turf did not help, but bad quarterback play and ponderous play-calling from both teams were far more culpable.

Now that it’s over, here’s everything we know in the immediate aftermath of the tie.

Lions vs. Steelers: 3 key matchups that will decide the Week 10 game

Here are three of the critical matchups that will determine if the Lions crack the win column or continue as the NFL’s only winless team

Dan Campbell and the Detroit Lions return from the bye week with the mission to go out and secure the first win of the season. It will not be easy. The schedule takes Campbell’s Lions to Pittsburgh in Week 10 to face the 5-3 Steelers, winners of four games in a row.

It’s a daunting task, no doubt. But the Lions do have the ability to pull off the unexpected. Detroit has played better football against better competition all season, and the rested Lions catch Pittsburgh coming off a hard-fought, physical game against the Chicago Bears on Monday Night Football.

Here are three of the critical matchups that will determine if the Lions crack the win column or continue as the NFL’s only winless team.

Lions Wire fantasy football weekly: 2021 Week 10 preview

Our Derek Okrie breaks down the top fantasy matchups in Week 10 for the Lions-Steelers game as well as the rest of the NFL slate

In all of our fantasy leagues, there is always that one team that is good every year. They have a solid core of players or their draft is always top-notch, and week after week they put up wins. They’re always in contention for the top record in the league, and consistently make deep playoff runs often ending in championships.

With that being said, there is nothing better than when one of the bottom-feeder teams in your league raises up out of nowhere to beat that top contender. In fantasy football and in the NFL it is “any given Sunday”.

Lions at Steelers fantasy focus

That pretty much describes the Detroit Lions against the Pittsburgh Steelers this week. The Steelers are always good, the model of consistency, and their teams are always built with a solid foundation. The Lions often resemble that team that loves their team after the fantasy draft in your league, but unfortunately is at the bottom of the standings when it’s all said and done.

Jared Goff will have to have his best game at quarterback for the Lions to win. D’Andre Swift, T.J. Hockenson, and Amon-Ra St. Brown will have to carry the load from a fantasy football perspective. Plus Dan Campbell will have to find a way to outcoach the legend that is Steelers Head Coach Mike Tomlin.

It would be so great if the Lions do their best impression of a fantasy football upset this week. All their players play great and the favored team just has no luck from all their top stars. When the game starts no one will give the Lions a chance, but in the end maybe they are the one standing tall over the storied franchise in Pittsburg.

Start

  • Lamar Jackson at Dolphins
  • Johnathan Taylor vs Jaguars
  • Marquise Brown at Dolphins
  • George Kittle vs Rams

Sit

  • Ryan Tannehill vs Saints
  • Tony Pollard vs Falcons
  • Courtland Sutton at Eagles
  • Jared Cook vs Vikings

Top 3 projected players by position

Quarterbacks

  • Lamar Jackson at Dolphins
  • Josh Allen at Jets
  • Tom Brady at Washington

Running Backs

  • Najee Harris vs Lions
  • Dalvin Cook at Chargers
  • Jonathan Taylor vs Jaguars

Wide Receivers

  • Cooper Kupp at 49ers
  • Davante Adams vs Seahawks
  • Chris Godwin at Washington

Tight Ends

  • Travis Kelce at Raiders
  • Darren Waller vs Chiefs
  • Kyle Pitts at Cowboys

Team Defenses

  • Bills at Jets
  • Cardinals vs Panthers
  • Buccaneers at Washington

Kickers

  • Nick Folk vs Browns
  • Chris Boswell vs Lions
  • Daniel Carlson vs Chiefs

Waiver wire options

  • Taylor Heinicke (QB Washington)
  • Mike White (QB Jets)
  • Jordan Howard (RB Eagles)
  • Ty Johnson (RB Jets)
  • Donovan Peoples-Jones (WR Browns)
  • Tim Patrick (WR Broncos)
  • Tyler Conklin (TE Vikings)
  • Dan Arnold (TE Jaguars)

Intriguing games and players in Week 10

(Week 10 Bye Weeks: Chicago Bears, Cincinnati Bengals, New York Giants Giants, Houston Texans

Baltimore at Miami, Thursday 8:20 PM, EST

  • BAL: Lamar Jackson (QB), Mark Andrews (TE)
  • MIA: Miles Gaskin (RB), Jaylen Waddle (WR)

Cleveland at New England, Sunday 1:00 PM, EST

  • CLE: Jarvis Landry (WR), Baker Mayfield (QB)
  • NE: Mac Jones (QB), Jakobi Meyers (WR)

Detroit at Pittsburgh, Sunday 1:00 PM, EST

  • DET: Jared Goff (QB), D’Andre Swift (RB)
  • PIT: Dionte Johnson (WR), Najee Harris (RB)

Tampa Bay at Washington, Sunday 1:00 PM, EST

  • TB: Tom Brady (QB), Antonio Brown (WR)
  • WFT: Terry McLaurin (WR), Antonio Gibson (RB)

Carolina at Arizona, Sunday 4:05 PM, EST

  • CAR: Christian McCaffery (RB), D.J. Moore (WR)
  • AZ: Zach Ertz (TE), Deandre Hopkins (WR)

Seattle at Green Bay, Sunday 4:25 PM, EST

  • SEA: Russell Wilson (QB), Tyler Lockett (WR)
  • GB: Aaron Rodgers (QB), Aaron Jones (RB)

Kansas City at Las Vegas, Sunday 8:20 PM, EST

  • KC: Patrick Mahomes (QB), Tyreek Hill (WR)
  • LVR: Derek Carr (QB), Kenyan Drake (RB)

LA Rams at San Francisco, Monday 8:15 PM, EST

  • LAR: Matthew Stafford (QB), Darrell Henderson (RB)
  • SF: Deebo Samuel (WR), George Kittle (TE)

Bottom Line

Whether you are the top team in your league or that team that is often struggling to put up wins each week in fantasy football, any team can win and any team can be defeated each week.

There is nothing better than seeing the top team, the team that always wins, the team that has won multiple championships take an unexpected loss from a team no one thought had a chance to be victorious.

Maybe that will happen in your fantasy league this week and maybe it will happen when the Lions visit the Steelers in their matchup on the gridiron too.

Lions injury update: RB Jamaal Williams sits out, LT Taylor Decker a full participant

Decker was a full participant in his first practice since being activated from IR

There was some good news and some bad news in the first Detroit Lions practice injury report for Week 10.

If you’re the type of person who wants the bad news first, skip down another paragraph and then come back up.

The good news is that left tackle Taylor Decker was a full participant in his first practice since being activated off injured reserve. Decker has been out for the entire season after suffering a nasty injury to his left index finger that required six pins to repair surgically. The Lions activated Decker over the bye week and he appears good to go for the Week 10 matchup in Pittsburgh.

The bad news comes at running back. Starter Jamaal Williams was the only Lions player to miss the entire practice. Williams is dealing with a thigh injury and also missed the Eagles game in Week 8 before the bye.

More on the good news front: For the first time all season, running back D’Andre Swift did not appear at all on the team’s injury report. He has been nursing a groin injury since minicamp, though he has not missed any game action.

Three players were limited participants:

OLB Austin Bryant (shoulder)

DE Jashon Cornell (illness)

K Austin Seibert (hip)

Rookie CB AJ Parker was also on the list but as a full participant, like Decker. Parker missed Week 8 after suffering a neck injury in the Week 7 loss to the Rams in Los Angeles.

Lions Wire fantasy football weekly: 2021 Week 9 preview

Our Derek Okrie breaks down this week’s fantasy options and wraps the Lions first 8 games from a fantasy standpoint

It is no fun when your weekly fantasy matchup is over basically before it even starts. You know those weeks where before you know it your opponent gets multiple early deep touchdowns, your star quarterback gets an injury in the first moments of the game, guys that were projected for huge points totals put up goose eggs, and it just continues to get worse as the day goes on.

You looked forward to the week and you were ready to fight for the win, but before you can blink the scoreboard isn’t anywhere close to what you thought it would be when your fantasy matchup started on Sunday. It happens, but it sure is no fun when it happens. Fantasy football is a week-to-week league though just like the NFL, so you have to put it behind you and get set for the next opponent on your schedule.

Lions Bye Week fantasy focus

The Detroit Lions got embarrassed at home last week by the Philadelphia Eagles, and they don’t get a chance for redemption this week as they are off on their scheduled bye week.

Let’s recap where the Lions stand from a fantasy football perspective.

Starting at the running back position as that is often still the most important position in fantasy, D’Andre Swift and Jamaal Williams have both been solid. They have been decent. They have been good, but not great. Another season with no 100-yard rushing efforts again, and the big-time plays just haven’t consistently been there.

  • Swift: 289 yards rushing, 415 receiving yards, and 5 total touchdowns
  • Williams: 312 yards rushing, 99 receiving yards, and 2 total touchdowns

Moving to the wide receivers, it has not been good at all. Kalif Raymond has had a few big moments, but nothing substantial when it comes to fantasy football. Amon Ra St. Brown is a rookie and he has played like one. Seeing limited use throughout the year along with drops and turnovers on his record too. Quintez Cephus is out with a serious injury. They rank very low and haven’t seen quality production all year from the position group.

  • Raymond: 334 receiving yards and 2 touchdowns
  • St. Brown: 250 receiving yards and 0 touchdowns

T.J. Hockenson obviously leads the tight end group in catches, yards, and touchdowns. There have been too many games where he has been taken out of the game plan by other team though, and the explosive plays just haven’t been there.

  • Hockenson: 448 yards and 2 touchdowns

One of the main reasons for the lack of production for the wide receivers and tight ends has been the play of Jared Goff. He was thought to maybe be a sneaky steaming week-to-week quarterback for fantasy purposes, but he has been marginal at best. He has been a stand-up locker room player, but his play on the field has honestly been hard to watch.

  • Goff: 1,995 passing yards, 8 touchdowns, 6 interceptions, and 30.3 QBR

Start

  • Patrick Mahomes vs Packers
  • Johnathan Taylor vs Jets
  • Stefon Diggs at Jaguars
  • Mike Gesicki vs Texans

Sit

  • Ryan Tannehill at Rams
  • James Robinson vs Bills
  • DeVonta Smith at Bills
  • Austin Hooper at Bengals

Top 3 projected players by position

Quarterbacks

  • Josh Allen at Jaguars
  • Lamar Jackson vs Vikings
  • Patrick Mahomes vs Packers

Running Backs

  • Najee Harris vs Bears
  • Dalvin Cook at Ravens
  • Jonathan Taylor vs Jets

Wide Receivers

  • Cooper Kupp vs Titans
  • Davante Adams at Chiefs
  • Tyreek Hill vs Packers

Tight Ends

  • Travis Kelce vs Packers
  • Darren Waller at Giants
  • Mark Andrews vs Vikings

Team Defenses

  • Steelers vs Bears
  • Bills at Jaguars
  • Cowboys vs Broncos

Kickers

  • Greg Joseph at Ravens
  • Greg Zuerlein vs Broncos
  • Nick Folk at Panthers

Waiver wire options

  • Taysom Hill (QB Saints)
  • Mike White (QB Jets)
  • Adrian Peterson (RB Titans)
  • Carlos Hyde (RB Jaguars)
  • Marvin Jones Jr (WR Jaguars)
  • Mecole Hardman (WR Chiefs)
  • Pat Freiermuth (TE Steelers)
  • Dan Arnold (TE Jaguars)

Intriguing games and players in Week 9

(Week 9 Bye Weeks: Detroit Lions, Seattle Seahawks, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Washington Football Team

NY Jets at Indianapolis, Thursday 8:20 PM, EST

  • NYJ: Corey Davis (WR), Michael Carter (RB)
  • IND: Michael Pittman Jr (WR), Carson Wentz (QB)

Minnesota at Baltimore, Sunday 1:00 PM, EST

  • MIN: Dalvin Cook (RB), Justin Jefferson (WR)
  • BAL: Lamar Jackson (QB), Rashad Bateman (WR)

Cleveland at Cincinnati, Sunday 1:00 PM, EST

  • CLE: Baker Mayfield (QB), Nick Chubb (RB)
  • CIN: Joe Burrow (QB), Tee Higgins (WR)

Denver at Dallas, Sunday 1:00 PM, EST

  • DEN: Javonte Williams (RB), Tim Patrick (WR)
  • DAL: CeeDee Lamb (WR), Tony Pollard (RB)

LA Chargers at Philadelphia, Sunday 4:05 PM, EST

  • LAC: Austin Ekeler (RB), Mike Williams (WR)
  • PHI: Dallas Goedert (TE), Jalen Hurts (QB)

Green Bay at Kansas City, Sunday 4:25 PM, EST

  • GB: A.J. Dillon (RB), Allen Lazard (WR)
  • KC: Mecole Hardman (WR), Travis Kelce (TE)

Tennessee at LA Rams, Sunday 8:20 PM, EST

  • TEN: A.J. Brown (WR), Darryton Evans (RB)
  • LAR: Matthew Stafford (QB), Robert Woods (WR)

Chicago at Pittsburgh, Monday 8:15 PM, EST

  • CHI: Khalil Herbert (RB), Cole Kmet (TE)
  • PIT: Najee Harris (RB), Pat Freiermuth (TE)

Bottom Line

During a long season, we can all have that tough fantasy week where we lose by a ton of points. The Lions can have an awful game as they did against the Eagles, but the key is it can’t continue to occur.

If you lost big last week in fantasy, then work the waiver wire or take a star player out of your lineup that isn’t performing for others that are pointing up points. Dan Campbell will have to do the same thing with his football team if they want to get over the hump and put some wins together.

One week at a time. Last week’s result shouldn’t impact this week’s challenge. Make the adjustments, evaluate the changes that need to be made, and come back better than ever.

Targets, Touches and TDs: Week 9

Examining surprises and disappointments through eight weeks.

Believe it or not — and ready or not — we’ve already crossed into the second half of the fantasy regular season.

It’s been an eventful journey so far to be certain, and there have been the usual surprises, disappointments, and revealing statistics compiled through eight weeks of action to date. So let’s take a moment to take stock in how fantasy 2021 has played out by highlighting three surprise players, three disappointing players and a second-half player to watch for each of the four main fantasy positions.

To be considered for the surprising and disappointing lists, players must have played in a minimum of four games, so that automatically weeds out many of the one- or two-week wonders and the unfortunate players who have already been bitten hard by the injury bug.

And, as a general rule, we’re training most of our focus on the top-25-ranked players (average fantasy points per game) and the top 25 players selected, on average, at the four positions in re-draft leagues.

Fantasy point totals, as usual, are all point-per-reception scoring.

That established, here goes, starting with …

QUARTERBACK

Surprises

  • Tom Brady — Sure, we heard about how Brady was more in tune with the offense after full offseason, etc., but few, if any, expected him to be leading the position with an average of 30.3 fantasy points per outing through eight games. It’s been a highly effective mix of volume and efficiency for Brady, who leads the league in attempts (343), completions (231), yards (2,650) and touchdown passes (25), total QB TDs (26) with a 108.6 passer rating (fifth) and a 69.5 QBR (second). And all at age 44, still with no signs of decline.
  • Matthew Stafford — The L.A. marriage with Rams coach Sean McVay has been even better than expected as Stafford has thrown for at least 365 yards or multiple TDs in seven of eight games and trails only Brady in passing yards (2,477) and TD tosses (22). He’s averaging a career-best 9.1 yards per attempt and has formed an elite, league-leading bond with wide receiver Cooper Kupp, who has caught 63-of-90 targets for 924 yards and 10 TDs to easily rank as fantasy’s No. 1 wideout.
  • Derek Carr — This Silver & Black veteran was the 21st quarterback to come off the board, on average, in drafts this summer, but he currently ranks 11th with an average of 23.5 fantasy points per game. Carr trails only Brady with an average of 324.1 passing yards per game while averaging a career-best 8.5 yards per attempt. If he can pick up his passing TD pace (12 in seven games so far), he’ll challenge for a mid-level QB1 finish.

Disappointments

  • Aaron Rodgers –– Rodgers and the Pack are doing just fine — tied for the league’s best record at 7-1 — but there has been some definite (and expected) fantasy regression as Rodgers’ numbers are down across the board from his MVP season of 2020. Most notably his TD-passes-per-game average (2.1 from 3.0) and yards-per-attempt average (6.6 from his league-leading 9.1) have fallen off. As a result, he’s more of a QB2 (14th with 22.4 fantasy points per game) and not the QB1 he was drafted to be (ADP of 5th at the position) this summer.
  • Ryan Tannehill –– The Titans’ starter is another ADP QB1 who ranks in QB2 territory (15th among QBs who have played at least four games with 21.8 fantasy points per outing) as he’s thrown one or fewer TD passes in six of his eight games. Tannehill’s volume certainly should increase with the brutal Derrick Henry injury news that dropped Monday, but at the same time his efficiency very well could take a dip with opposing defenses’ no longer having to worry about the league’s best running back.
  • Justin Fields –– There were certainly high fantasy hopes for the Bears’ prized rookie, who was drafted 19th among quarterbacks this summer, but he’s only averaged 14.2 fantasy points in his six starts — and that includes Sunday’s season-best 29.1-point outing against the 49ers. Fields is only averaging 153.5 passing yards per start with a 3:6 TD pass-to-interception ratio during that span, but an encouraging sign came Sunday with his season-high 10 rushes for 103 yards and a TD, helping power his first 20-fantasy-point-plus day.

Second half QB to watch: Joe Burrow

The second-year Cincy QB is currently 10th at the position with an average of 24.4 fantasy points and he’s thrown for two more TD passes in all eight of his games. However, that average has jumped to 28.4 over the last three weeks with a trio of scoring tosses in every outing. His young cast of weapons is on the upswing as well, so don’t be surprised if Burrow winds up finishing as an upper-echelon QB1 when all is said and done this season.

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RUNNING BACK

Surprises

  • Cordarrelle Patterson — Undrafted in the summer, this well-traveled, ninth-year veteran shockingly ranks seventh among running backs with an average of 19.2 fantasy points per game. He’s played only 46 percent of the Falcons’ offensive snaps and ranks 26th in the league with 96 total touches — an average of 13.7 per game — but they’ve most certainly been high-efficiency touches as he ranks third at the position with an average of 6.3 yards per touch, is second among RBs with 333 receiving yards (on 32 catches) and is tied for seventh overall with seven total TDs. If anything, peg Patterson for a few more touches going forward with WR Calvin Ridley’s announcement Sunday that he’s taking an indefinite mental-health break.
  • D’Andre Swift — So with the likes of Dalvin Cook, Aaron Jones and David Montgomery also residing in the division, who had this second-year player for the winless Lions as the highest-ranking NFC North running back (eighth with 18.4 fantasy points per game) eight weeks into the season? Yet, here we are with Swift, who has been a PPR stud, leading all backs with 57 targets, 47 receptions and 415 receiving yards to account for 68.2 percent of his 147.4 total fantasy points.
  • Elijah Mitchell — As detailed a couple weeks ago in our fantasy rookie review, this 49ers sixth-round draft pick and owner of a preseason ADP of 81 among RBs has been a revelation, ranking 21st at the position so far with an average of 13.7 fantasy points per outing. Kyle Shanahan’s Niners have been known for their RB playing time volatility, but in the five games (out of the team’s seven) that Mitchell has been healthy, he’s handled 70.8 percent of the team’s running back touches.

Disappointments

  • Saquon Barkley — After missing most of 2020 with a knee injury, Barkley did start the season with games of 3.7 and 8.9 fantasy points but was just rounding into form with back-to-back 21-plus-point fantasy games in Weeks 3 and 4 before injury struck again early in Week 5. It was initially classified a low-grade ankle sprain, but Barkley hasn’t practiced or played in the three weeks since, and with the team slated for Week 10 bye, it wouldn’t be surprising to see the wait for Barkley’s return extended to Week 11.
  • Antonio Gibson — This Washington back was the 12th running back off the board on average in fantasy drafts this preseason as a big leap was anticipated in Year 2. But it hasn’t come to fruition so far as Gibson ranks 28th at the position with an average of 12.4 fantasy points. He’s been dealing with a shin stress fracture for a month now, but despite still practicing and starting as if all is OK, his recent numbers are saying otherwise. Gibson has now had three straight games with 8.4 fantasy points or fewer, including Sunday’s loss in Denver when he hit season lows in touches (11) and offensive snap share (33 percent) while sharing the backfield duties with J.D. McKissic and rookie Jaret Patterson.
  • Miles Sanders — With an ADP of RB18, Sanders wasn’t drafted as high as Gibson, but he ranks far lower at 43rd with an average of 8.7 fantasy points per outing. He had only one game of at least 10.2 points before injuring his ankle early in Week 7 and landing on injured reserve. One of the primary issues has been simple a decline in usage (11.7 touches per game) after averaging 14.3 and 16, respectively, over the previous two seasons.

Second half RB to watch: Christian McCaffrey

McCaffrey could come off IR and end a five-game absence as early as this coming Sunday in Week 9, but will we see the same old Run CMC step right back in to his usual monster workload? In his only two full games before injuring a hamstring in Week 3, McCaffrey totaled 59 touches and averaged 26.2 fantasy points. The Panthers have gone 1-4 since after that 3-0 start with rookie Chuba Hubbard averaging 20.4 touches and 13.3 fantasy points per outing during that five-game span. Seeing the missed games piling up, it’s very likely that McCaffrey will see a reduced workload with Hubbard spelling him more frequently going forward. But that could prove to be a boon down the stretch for McCaffrey’s fantasy teams if it helps keep him on the field and off the IR list.

WIDE RECEIVER

Surprises

  • Cooper Kupp — As aforementioned, he’s fantasy’s No. 1 wideout with 214.9 total points (26.9 per game), which is 27.8 more fantasy points than any other non-quarterback in the league and has posted at least 23.8 points in six of eight games. And through those eight contests, Kupp has already surpassed his season-long fantasy points totals in three of his previous four years. He is pacing the league in targets (90), receiving yards (924) and receiving scores (10) while ranking second with 63 receptions. Not bad at all for a player drafted to be a low-end WR2.
  • Deebo Samuel — Right behind Kupp and second-place Tyreek Hill (25.7 fantasy points per game) is this 49ers third-year wideout who’s averaging 22.6 fantasy points and has already established a new career season high with 819 receiving yards in only seven games. Samuel has an impressive 34 percent team target share and has accounted for a whopping 46 percent of San Francisco’s receiving yards so far. Just two months ago, Samuel was the 36th wideout being selected in fantasy drafts, on average.
  • Ja’Marr Chase — Running only behind the Stafford-Kupp connection is the Burrow-Chase duo, which has accounted for 38 completions for 786 yards (a league-leading 20.7 yards per catch) and seven TDs. If you were able to snag him in the middle rounds as the 23rd wide receiver off the board in late August, give weekly thanks to Chase’s preseason drop issues, which knocked the LSU rookie down a few rounds.

Disappointments

  • Allen Robinson — This Bears veteran had an ADP of 12 among wide receivers but somehow currently finds himself as WR75 with an average of 7.4 fantasy points per contest. He only has 44 targets, 26 receptions, 271 yards and one TD through eight games, which puts him on track for 55 catches and 576 yards — 17-game numbers that would barely exceed his 10-game rookie totals (48 for 548) from 2014 with the Jaguars. Truly a disappointment among disappointments.
  • Brandon Aiyuk — While his teammate Samuel has soared, this second-year Niners wide receiver has floundered in the team doghouse with all of 23 targets and 13 receptions for 141 yards and one TD through seven games. That ranks him 106th with a 4.9 point-per-game average — brutal numbers for the wideout with a positional ADP of 24, just one spot behind Chase.
  • Stefon Diggs — Diggs, of course, enjoyed a career year a season ago, leading the league in targets (166), receptions (127) and receiving yards (1,535) while totaling 328.6 fantasy points — third at the position. And that precisely was his WR ADP this summer. However, he currently can be found 19th among wideouts with an average of 15.8 fantasy points per contest. Even with the extra game this season, Diggs is on pace for 158 targets, 102 catches and, most significantly, 1,222 yards — all short of his 16-game totals from 2020 — as QB Josh Allen’s target tree looks to have sprouted a few more branches this season.

Second-half WR to watch: A.J. Brown

The Titans’ Brown got off to a brutally slow, injury-addled start, totaling all of 23.3 fantasy points over Tennessee’s first five games. But over the last three contests, Brown has compiled 74.9 points, looking much more like the top-15 fantasy wideout he was a season ago and the wide receiver drafted ninth overall, on average, at the position last summer. With Henry expected to miss the rest of the season, and fellow wideout Julio Jones battling nagging hamstring injuries on the downside of his brilliant career, Brown is now the unquestioned No. 1 playmaker and offensive option in the Music City.

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TIGHT END

Surprises

  • Dawson Knox — One reason why Diggs is seeing fewer targets this season is the emergence of pass-catchers such as Knox, who in six games has reeled in 21-of-27 targets for 286 yards and a tight end-leading five TDs — numbers, which are approaching or exceeding his full-season totals from his previous two years. Knox should be back soon from the hand injury he suffered in Week 6 and currently owns the fifth-highest fantasy scoring average (13.3 points) at the position after owning the 28th highest tight end ADP this summer.
  • Dalton Schultz — The Cowboys’ Schultz ranks a couple of rungs lower (seventh) than Knox with a 12.6-fantasy-point average. Schultz largely went undrafted as the TE35 this offseason — nine spots lower than Dallas TE teammate Blake Jarwin — and has capitalized on the defensive focus paid to the Cowboys’ ground game and talented wide receivers with 33 receptions for 370 yards and three TDs on 44 targets.
  • C.J. Uzomah — In his previous six seasons, the Bengals’ Uzomah had a combined eight scoring receptions, but so far this season, he’s matching Knox with a position-high five TD grabs. And he’s done so on only 23 targets and 21 receptions. Uzomah, though, is also averaging 13.8 yards per catch — fifth among tight ends — so there’s more to his game than just a high TD rate.

Disappointments

  • George Kittle — The Niners’ tight end missed half of the season a year ago due to injury, and here he is again having played in only four of San Francisco’s seven games due to a calf issue that currently has him on injured reserve. In the four contests in which he has played, the production has been mediocre with 19 catches for 227 yards and no TDs on 28 targets — certainly so far not worth the TE3 ADP pricetag most paid in drafts.
  • Jonnu Smith — Smith appeared on more than a few tight end sleeper lists this summer with his move over the Patriots, but he’s averaging only 5.8 fantasy points so far through eight games and that ranks way down at 30th at the position. Fellow New England offseason TE addition Hunter Henry has been significantly better with four TD catches to Smith’s one while averaging 9.8 fantasy points per outing.
  • Tyler Higbee — With Stafford’s arrival and the departure of fellow tight end Gerald Everett, many had sleeper tight end draft designs on Higbee, who wound up with a positional ADP of 12. But aside from two double-digit fantasy-point outings in the first three weeks, it hasn’t exactly gone according to plan with Higbee currently ranking 18th at the position with an average of 8.7 fantasy points per outing.

Second-half TE to watch: Pat Freiermuth

The Steelers’ rookie ranks only 22nd among tight ends with a 7.7 fantasy-point average, but his two best outings (12.8 and 14.4 points) have come in the Steelers’ two most recent games as they’ve looked for ways to replace injured-and-out-for-the-season wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster. Freiermuth has been targeted seven times in each of those games, catching 11 of those 14 for 102 yards and TD. That kind of volume and productivity is top-five worthy at a position of continued fantasy scarcity, so the rookie is definitely worth swooping up off the waiver wire if the rest of your league has been slow to notice.

Embarrassing performance leads Dud-filled list for the Lions vs Eagles

The Detroit Lions were destroyed against the Philadelphia Eagle with no redeeming qualities leaving with a list full of duds this week

Instead of treats, it was all tricks to the loyal fans this Halloween in the shameful excuse of a performance from the Detroit Lions.

In a week where most thought the Lions could get their first win of the season, they were embarrassed to a 44-6 beatdown by the Philadelphia Eagles. In every facet of the imagination, the Lions got outplayed and outcoached to their worst performance this season, and they picked a wrong time to do it.

Coming off a loss to the Los Angles Rams where they were not far behind in upsetting the potential Super Bowl-bound team, and how much heat for a poor start was surrounding the Eagles, this was as a good time as any to head to their bye week fresh off their first victory. Now in their week off, they get to get a long hard look in the mirror in figuring out how to get this winless monkey off their back and bounce back after this cringe-worthy performance.

Typically, I could find some worthy performances from the Lions losses, but there is no player worth earning a slot in the stud category this week, leaving me with a bunch of duds to sort out.

Jared Goff continues to show why the Rams were so happy to ship him off to Detroit. Between the zeroing in on targets and 12 step dropbacks, he is wound to the Lions offense that continues to bleed out. The Lions tried to simply this offense for him, and yes, he doesn’t have that many weapons, but good quarterbacks make the players around him better, and right now, he is epically failing. Also, when you throw it away on a fourth down, you deserve to get criticized.

On the flip side, the offensive line came him no favors. You could have put turnstiles out there, and they would’ve provided better performances. The pass protection gave up five sacks. Some of it was on Goff, but the line was getting demolished. Today was a day to open up the run game, and the lineman was getting blown and pushed back, leaving RB D’Andre Swift with one of his worst games this season, especially after accounting for his fumble-six (to ex-Lion Darius Slay).

The front seven had zero answers to the Eagles rushing attack giving up 236 yards on 5.1 yards per attempt while giving up four touchdowns on top of it. It felt like the Eagles rusher was getting at least five yards before he was even touched. The Eagles only threw the ball a total of 16 times. Detroit could not muster any pressure, and if they did, containment would break and end up giving up a massive gain on the ground to QB Jalen Hurts.

The question heading into this week was who would play slot if AJ Parker was a no-go this week, and regrettably, we got that answer, and it was one that made everyone cry. Will Harris has been probably the worst safety in the league, and whoever decided it was a good idea to put him there should rethink those choices. In one particular play, he came clean off a corner blitz, and he hesitated and lost every bit of momentum, allowing Jalen Hurts to rush for the first down. So if Parker is unable to go after the bye week, please, for all that is good in this world, do not put Harris in his place.

I could probably go all day on how bad of an all-around performance this week on every level, from the coaching to the players. They were ill-prepared this week, and it showed with a vanilla offense that reminds you of a preseason game and a porous defense. Thankfully, the Lions have the week off this coming week.