Buffalo Bills sign RB Duke Johnson to one-year deal

#Bills sign RB Duke Johnson to one-year deal:

The Buffalo Bills have signed a running back.

For real this time.

According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, running back Duke Johnson was signed by the Bills via a one-year deal.

Johnson, 28,  joined the Miami Dolphins’ practice squad  midway through the 2021 season after spending just over a week on the Jacksonville Jaguars practice squad in September.

Eventually Johnson appeared in five games for the Dolphins. He rushed for 330 yards and three touchdowns on 4.6 yards per carry. Johnson added another 41 yards on four receptions in the receiving game.

That aspect of Johnson’s game has become his bread and butter. Considering that, it appears that Johnson is a swap replacement for JD McKissic.

Last week, the Bills reportedly had an agreement with McKissic to join the team. He then circled back to his former team, the Washington Commanders, and re-signed with them at the same price point.

Buffalo general manager Brandon Beane voiced that he was upset about the situation.

But Beane’s actions speak loud as well. With Johnson’s signing, it’s clear he wanted to add a better pass-catching option out of the backfield this offseason for quarterback Josh Allen.

Johnson was originally drafted by the Cleveland Browns in the third round of the 2015 NFL draft out of the University of Miami.

In his seven-year career, Johnson has average 4.3 yards per carry and notched 23 total touchdowns. As a receiver, Johnson has 235 catches for 2,170 yards.

Johnson’s most-successful season came in 2017 with the Browns where he record 73 total catches in a single season.

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Former Dolphins RB Duke Johnson signs with Bills

He was productive in his short time in Miami.

After signing former Miami Dolphins center Greg Mancz on Monday morning, the Buffalo Bills have signed another free agent from Miami.

According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, running back Duke Johnson is joining the Bills on a one-year deal.

Johnson, 28, joined Miami’s practice squad roughly midway through the 2021 season after spending just over a week on the Jacksonville Jaguars practice squad in September. When Johnson finally got the opportunity to step on the field, he was productive, rushing for 330 yards and three touchdowns on 4.6 yards per carry. He added another 41 yards on four receptions in the receiving game.

The Dolphins have already signed Chase Edmonds and Raheem Mostert this offseason, so once those moves were made, it was pretty unlikely that Johnson would return for a second season.

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Dolphins RB Duke Johnson appears to take a shot at Baker Mayfield, Browns on Twitter

He’s ruthless.

Miami Dolphins running back Duke Johnson is preparing to hit the free agent market on Wednesday at 4 p.m. ET at the start of the new league year, but that hasn’t stopped him from staying up on all of the news around the league.

On Tuesday, Cleveland Browns quarterback Baker Mayfield posted a message on Twitter thanking their fans with uncertainty in his future as rumors swirl about their quarterback situation.

Duke Johnson took that opportunity to take a solid jab at his former team and quarterback with a tweet of his own depicting a train that has gone off the rails.

Mayfield and Johnson have some past discretion, as the quarterback seemed to take some offense to the running back asking for a trade in 2018, Mayfield’s rookie season.

“You’re either on this train or you’re not, it’s moving,” the Mayfield said. “You can get out of the way or you can join us.”

Johnson may not be with the Dolphins for much longer, but this level of trolling has probably earned him some lifelong fans.

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Dolphins free agent profile: Bringing back Duke Johnson may be a smart move

He could be an inexpensive option that could be Miami’s lead back.

NFL free agency is just over a month away, meaning we are getting close to the start of the 2022 league year. New head coach Mike McDaniel has filled out the entirety of his staff, so general manager Chris Grier and the rest of the front office can piece together what they want the roster to look like.

Miami is set to have 28 free agents when the league year starts, including running back Duke Johnson.

Johnson had a strange year in 2021. Right before the start of the league year, he was waived by the Houston Texans and wasn’t picked up until the start of the regular season when he joined the Jacksonville Jaguars practice squad. However, he was waived a week later.

It wasn’t until October 26 that Johnson signed with Miami’s practice squad. He saw his first snaps in the Week 11 game against the Jets and took over the lead back role by Week 14.

On the year, Johnson recorded 330 yards and three touchdowns on 4.6 yards per carry as well as four receptions for 41 yards.

In past stops, the 28-year-old had been used primarily as a pass-catching back. His rookie season was actually the year he got his most rushing attempts (104), and in five games with Miami this season, he wasn’t that far off (71).

Now, Johnson is a free agent, and the Dolphins are looking for a back to lead the room, as Myles Gaskin and Gerrid Doaks are the only ones under contract for 2022.

In McDaniel’s system, so much is predicated on the running backs, so it’s safe to say this will be an important decision. That may mean that they sign a back in free agency and draft one at some point.

Johnson has a skill set that could fit that system. He’s patient and his vision is above average which will allow him to find the holes in the wide runs that they’ll be running. His pass-catching should also help Tua Tagovailoa be able to get rid of the ball quickly and out in space.

If he was able to produce after being in the system for just a few weeks, he could be even better with a full offseason in Miami.

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5 highest-graded Dolphins in their Week 15 matchup vs. the Jets

Two guys finished with an 89.5.

The Miami Dolphins earned their sixth victory in six games when they beat the New York Jets on Sunday at Hard Rock Stadium. This victory moved Brian Flores’ team to 7-7, as they will continue to try and push toward the playoffs.

Their strong defensive performance, which has been a trend throughout this winning streak, kept the Jets’ offense out of the end zone in the second half. New York’s only points during the final two quarters came off of a pick-six from Tua Tagovailoa.

While the offense wasn’t great, their run game was the best they’ve been all season, and it could be argued that the passing game only struggled because they didn’t have their best wide receiver.

A win is a win, and these were Pro Football Focus’ five-highest graded Dolphins in the victory.

Targets, Touches and TDs: Week 16

Making sense of Week 15 results and applying lessons to the rest of 2021.

So you weren’t facing Travis Kelce and survived your first-round playoff matchup.

Or, you could’ve started the likes of Tom Brady, Ja’Marr Chase, Joe Mixon and Dawson Knox — who totaled a combined 27 fantasy points — and lived to tell about it.

Perhaps you were simply above the mess that was Week 15 and were one of the fortunate few top seeds who had an opening-week bye.

And maybe you had ridden a now-injured Leonard Fournette, Chris Godwin or a slumping Dak Prescott or Saquon Barkley this far and now are in need of some bench or waiver-wire plug-in help for this week’s semifinals. Or, unfortunately with the untimely COVID-19 surge, there’s almost certain to be the need for additional roster and lineup alterations on the fly.

You’ve come to the right place.

This week’s TT&T looks at 10 of the surprise fantasy standouts from Week 15 and which of these upstart, Johnny-come-latelys you should — or shouldn’t — trust during the championship chase over the next couple weeks.

Here goes, kicking off with those Week 15 surprises that you should …

Get them into your lineups

Atlanta Falcons WR Russell Gage

Week 15: 11 targets-8 receptions-91 yards-TD for 23.1 total fantasy points (sixth among wide receivers through Monday in point-per-reception scoring).
Looking ahead:
Gage has been anything but a one-week wonder. Since Week 12, Gage ranks fourth among wide receivers with 29 receptions and 347 yards, is tied for sixth with 36 targets and trails only Cooper Kupp, Hunter Renfrow and Justin Jefferson with 75.7 total fantasy points during that span. In short — in case you hadn’t noticed during the Falcons’ largely anonymous 6-8 season so far — Gage has stepped in for the departed Julio Jones and the on-leave Calvin Ridley as Matt Ryan’s go-to wideout and is producing WR1 numbers on a consistent basis. The Falcons do face the Buffalo Bills (fantasy’s toughest matchup for opposing fantasy wide receivers) in Week 17, but they do get the two-win Detroit Lions at home this coming weekend.

New Orleans Saints defense

Week 15: Four sacks, one interception and fumble recovery in Sunday night’s shocking shutout win over the hosting Tampa Bay Buccaneers for 8.0 total fantasy points (tied for fifth among team D/STs in Huddle Performance scoring).
Looking ahead:
Barring a rash of return scores, we fully realize a fantasy defense most likely isn’t going to be the impetus for a fantasy league title, but the New Orleans D closes the regular season with the second-most favorable Week 16-18 slate (Miami Dolphins, Carolina Panthers, Falcons), with the first two of those three also at home, so definitely look to grab the defense that just blanked Brady and the league’s highest-scoring offense.

Detroit Lions WR Amon-Ra St. Brown

Week 15: 11 targets-8 receptions-90 yards-1 TD for 23.5 total fantasy points (fifth among wideouts through Monday)
Looking ahead:
After averaging 4.7 targets and 3.5 receptions over his first 11 games, this Lions rookie has had at least 11 targets and eight receptions in each of his last three contests. And since Week 13, St. Brown is second only to Jefferson (70.8) with 63.6 total PPR points, reeling in 26-of-35 targets for 249 yards and a pair of scores. Only Godwin and Jefferson have more targets (39), and only Godwin has more receptions (31) at the position during that span. With tight end T.J. Hockenson having missed the last two games and shelved for the season due to thumb surgery, St. Brown is the unquestioned No. 1 target in the Motor City and deserves a spot in fantasy lineups for any team manager uncertain about one’s starting wideouts.

Solid plug-in options

Buffalo Bills WR Gabriel Davis

Week 15: 7 targets-5 receptions-85 yards-2 TDs for 25.5 total fantasy points (third among WRs).
Looking ahead:
Davis got his second start of the season Sunday vs. the Carolina Panthers in place of the injured and inactive Emmanuel Sanders and played a season-high 90 percent of the offensive snaps. Among the Bills, only Cole Beasley (8) received more targets than Davis in the game, and the latter’s two touchdown receptions stretched his game streak with a TD to three. He has four total scoring grabs over that span. Sanders could be back any week, and in Week 16 the Bills do face the New England Patriots, the third-toughest fantasy matchup for opposing wide receivers. With the Pats likely to focus on taking away the Bills’ top pass-catching threat in WR Stefon Diggs, Davis should see some extra-favorable matchups again after already accounting for Buffalo’s lone TD in a 14-10 home loss to New England in cold and brutally blustery conditions in Week 13.

Miami Dolphins RB Duke Johnson

Week 15: 22 carries-107 yards-2 TDs; 1 target-1 reception-20 yards-1 TD (first among running backs through Monday with 25.70 fantasy points (PPR scoring)
Looking ahead:
Long viewed as a underutilized asset by some, Johnson garnered one of the rare bell-cow workloads of his seven-year tenure Sunday, posting career highs in rushes (22), rushing yards (107), total touches (23) and total yards (127). But keep in mind this was with regular starter Myles Gaskin just coming off the COVID-19 list, and it was against the New York Jets, the most forgivable fantasy defense for opposing running backs in the league. So even if Johnson suddenly is the new lead back in Miami, fate would have it that no less than the top two toughest fantasy RB defenses await the next two weeks in the Saints and Tennessee Titans.

Detroit Lions RB Craig Reynolds

Week 15: 26 rushes-112 yards; 1 target-1 reception-5 yards for a total of 12.7 fantasy points (14th among running backs)
Looking ahead:
With D’Andre Swift (shoulder) and Jamaal Williams (COVID-19 list) out the last two weeks, the unheralded Reynolds has not only emerged as the Lions’ lead back but has looked impressive in doing so, rushing for 195 yards on 37 carries and catching all three of his targets for 35 yards. Only league rushing leader Jonathan Taylor (170) has rushed for more yards than Reynolds in Week 15. The Lions’ immediate schedule is tasty as Detroit draws a pair of bottom-eight fantasy RB defenses (the Falcons and Seattle Seahawks) the next two weeks. So as long as Reynolds remains in the mix with Williams now activated and the slim chance Swift returns to a two-won team, he’s a plug-and-play RB2/flex option.

Buffalo Bills RB Devin Singletary

Week 15: 22 rushes-86 yards-1 TD; 1 reception-10 yards for 16.6 total fantasy points (sixth among running backs)
Looking ahead:
Amazingly, this marked Singletary’s high in rushing attempts and matched his best outing in terms of total touches in 42 career games. And it came in a contest where fellow RB Zack Moss was a healthy scratch and Matt Breida only logged only one rushing attempt, giving Singletary a 95.8 percent share of the backfield touches. Prior to this contest, no Bills running back had had more than 16 touches in a game, so perhaps this was an indication of the direction Buffalo wants to go as it entered a critical season-ending, four-game stretch with the AFC East title and the AFC’s No. 1 seed still within reach. The remaining itinerary is favorable as well with the Bills set to face the second-easiest Week 16-18 slate of opposing fantasy RB defenses. The key, though, will be the Bills sticking with Singletary as the lead back and getting him 15-plus opportunities.

Simply one-week wonders

New England Patriots TE Hunter Henry

Week 15: 8 targets-6 receptions-77 yards-2 TDs for 25.7 total fantasy points (third among tight ends)
Looking ahead:
This was Henry’s best fantasy outing in more than two seasons and marked only his fourth contest with 13-plus PPR points on the season and first since Week 10. The trouble is, Henry remains too reliant on TDs. He led all tight ends with nine receiving scores on the season through Monday’s games but ranked 19th in targets (58), 16th in receptions (41), and 16th in receiving yards (471). To further illustrate the point, New England rookie QB Mac Jones has thrown 18 TD passes on the season, and half of them have been caught by Henry. You may have struck fantasy gold with the Pats tight end in Week 15, but his other numbers indicate that you’re going to miss often more than you hit when streaming Henry.

Carolina Panthers QB Cam Newton

Week 15: 38 attempts-18 completions-156 yards-1 TD-1 interception; 15 rushes-71 yards-1 TD for a total of 24.9 fantasy points (fifth among QBs on the week).
Looking ahead:
This was Cam’s second-best fantasy day since re-signing with the Panthers prior to Week 10, and his 15 rushing attempts and 71 rushing yards marked season highs. Newton, though, is still only completing 54.9 percent of his passes and hasn’t reached 190 aerial yards in any of his five outings and four starts this season. Carolina’s remaining schedule isn’t formidable from a fantasy standpoint as the Bucs (Week 16 & 18) and Saints (Week 17) both rank among the bottom third in most fantasy points allowed to opposing QBs, but Newton is too over-reliant on his 32-year-old legs to be counted on anything more than an emergency QB1 starter or spot QB2 streamer.

Pittsburgh Steelers defense

Week 15: 4 sacks-3 fumble recoveries-1 interception for 12 total fantasy points (second among team D/STs on the week).
Looking ahead:
The Steelers D certainly has brand recognition, especially with Defensive Player of the Year front-runner T.J. Watt headlining the unit. But “Steel City D” is more name than game this season, permitting the fourth-most yards (367.5) and 11th-most points (23.9) per game while ranking in a tie for 19th among fantasy defenses with an average of 5.4 fantasy points per outing. So don’t be fooled by the Steelers’ big game Sunday. It was against the turnover-prone Titans, who trail only the Jets (26) with 25 giveaways on the season. Much tougher matchups await the next two weeks in the fantasy playoffs as Pittsburgh faces the Chiefs, who have turned things around of late after a turnover-laden start, and the Cleveland Browns, who currently rank as the fifth-worst matchup for fantasy D/STs. Look elsewhere for a defensive team streamer.

4 takeaways from the Dolphins’ Week 15 win over the Jets

This is what we learned from this game.

The Miami Dolphins defeated the New York Jets 31-24 on Sunday at Hard Rock Stadium to give them six straight wins.

With two major players, wide receiver Jaylen Waddle and Jevon Holland, out due to being on the reserve/COVID list, and the team getting into an early hole, the Dolphins were able to battle through the adversity and win against an inferior opponent.

Brian Flores’ group was lucky that the Jets have been dealing with their own injuries because this game could’ve gotten ugly for Miami rather quickly.

Here’s what we learned from the Dolphin’s seventh win of the 2021 campaign.

The Dolphins are signing Duke Johnson to their active roster

After a big day against the Jets, the running back is being signed from the practice squad.

After touching the ball 23 times for 127 total yards and two touchdowns against the Jets, Dolphins running back Duke Johnson got more good news Monday morning.

According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, Miami is signing the veteran back to their active roster after he spent nearly two months on the practice squad.

The Dolphins run game has been horrendous in 2021. This game brought them from the 31st-ranked rushing offense to the 28th. The 100-yard performance was the first of Johnson’s career, and the first for the Dolphins all season.

With Myles Gaskin, Phillip Lindsay, and Salvon Ahmed expected to be healthy for their next game against the Saints, the Dolphins should have a good group to split carries between, but Johnson may be the most deserving of the lead spot.

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Tunnel Vision of Week 15

Tunnel Vision – a look back at Sunday for fantasy free agents, injuries and notable performances.

SUNDAY SALUTES
Quarterbacks Pass – Rush TD
 Tyler Huntley 215 – 73 4
 Patrick Mahomes 410 – 32 3
 Cam Newton 156- 71 2
Justin Herbert 236 – 16 3
 Aaron Rodgers 268 – 11 3
Running Backs Yards TD
Duke Johnson 22-107 rush
1-20 catch
2
Jonathan Taylor 29-170 rush 1
Jeffery Wilson 21-110 rush
2-9 catch
1
Austin Ekeler 12-59 rush
4-23 catch
1
James Robinson  18-75 rush
3-13 catch
1
Wide Receivers Yards TD
Tyreek Hill 12-148 1
Brandin Cooks 7-102 2
Gabriel Davis 5-85 2
Christian Kirk 9-94 1
Amon-Ra St. Brown 8-90 1
Tight Ends Yards TD
Travis Kelce 10-191 2
Mark Andrews 10-136 2
Hunter Henry 6-77 2
Dalton Schultz 8-67 1
George Kittle 6-93 0
Placekickers XP FG
Ka’imi Fairbairn 3 3
Chris Boswell 1 4
Riley Patterson 3 3
Evan McPherson 0 3
Greg Zuerlein 2 3
Defense Sack – TO TD
Cowboys 1 – 4 0
Steelers 4 – 4 0
Jets 1 – 3 0
Colts 1 – 2 1
Texans 1 – 0 1

Bumps, Bruises and Bowouts

QB Teddy Bridgewater – Head
RB Joe Mixon – Ankle
RB Leonard Fournette – Hamstring
WR Chris Godwin – Knee
WR Mike Evans – Hamstring
WR Julio Jones – Hamstring
WR Tajae Sharpe – Foot
WR Sterling Shepard – Torn Achilles
WR Rondale Moore – Ankle
TE Pat Freiermuth – Concussion
PK Zane Gonzalez – Quad

Chasing Ambulances

QB Teddy Bridgewater (DEN) – Was carted from the field and sent to the hospital after suffering a  neck/head injury in the loss to the Bengals. While HC Vic Fangio said that Bridgewater “checked out good,” he remained in the hospital overnight to be observed. Drew Lock replaced him  and will again at the Raiders if Bridgewater doesn’t return.

RB Joe Mixon (CIN) – He entered the win over the Broncos already banged up and then left later when his left leg was rolled up, and  he injured his ankle. HC Zac Taylor did not give a post-game update. His status should be known on Monday and the Bengals need him for their matchup with the Ravens this week. He may have just reaggravated his previous sprain.

WR Julio Jones (TEN) – His first season with the Titans is a bust. Now he let the loss to the Steelers with a hamstring injury before recording a catch.  He just returned from injured reserve last week and hasn’t been a factor since Week 2 anyway.

WR Sterling Shepard (NYG) – Tore his Achilles and is gone for the season. Given the constant stream of injuries to the Giants’ wideouts and the level of quarterbacking, there is no other receiver worth grabbing.

RB Leonard Fournette (TB) – Injured his hamstring and left the matchup with the Saints. Ronald Jones becomes a must-own if Fournette misses any time since the Bucs final three games are against the Panthers (twice) and the Jets.

Buccaneers wideouts – Mike Evans (hamstring) and Chris Godwin (knee) left the matchup with the Saints. Initial speculation is that Godwin has a sprained MCL and will be back.  The severity of Evans’ hamstring strain will be determined.  Antonio Brown has served his most recent suspension and will rejoin the team this week. He’ll be immediately returned to the field if either Evans or Godwin misses any time with their injuries.

Free Agents, Flops and Other Notables

For the first time ever, there are still four games left to play.

TE Hunter Henry (NE) – Henry already scored seven touchdowns on the year but had been quiet in the last three games. Against the Colts in a game when the Pats couldn’t win by rushing and good defense, Henry delivered six receptions for 77 yards and two scores for a season-best.

WR Gabriel Davis (BUF) – The Bills’ wideout just pulled the hat trick. After scoring against the Pats and Buccaneers in the two previous games, he led the Bills with five catches for 85 yards and two scores. Emmanuel Sanders’ absence hasn’t hurt Davis but he was already scoring before Sanders was hurt in Week 14.

RB Devin Singletary (BUF) – The Bills backfield is always among one of the least productive but they’ve settled on Singletary as the primary rusher. He comes off a season-high 22 carries for 86 yards and a score on the Panthers and he added a ten-yard catch. Matt Breida was the only other running back and he ran just once.

RB Chase Edmonds (ARI) – First game back from injured reserve and the “other half” of the Cardinals’ backfield  ran six times for 53 yards against eight rushes for 39 yards by James Conner. That split the backfield that Conner has owned in recent weeks. Conner caught two passes for 31 yards while Edmonds failed to catch his only target. The game did not go as planned, so the ratios are not set in stone. But so far, Edmonds reduced Conner’s fantasy value without creating much of his own.

RB Craig Reynolds (DET) – The undrafted practice-squad call-up surprised in Week 14 when he ran for 83 yards on 11 carries in Denver. He followed that with 26 carries for 112 yards in the improbable win over the Cardinals.  D’Andre Swift takes over whenever he returns, but Reynolds deserves a spot on the bench, not the practice squad after two impressive performances.

WR Amon-Ra St. Brown (DET) – The Lions’ rookie gets better and better. After recording over 70 yards for the last two weeks, St. Brown turned in a season-high 90 yards and a score on eight catches.  Josh Reynolds (6-68, TD) also looks better back with Jared Goff and not many people can say that.

WR Brandin Cooks (HOU) –  The Texans’ only weapon served up a season-high seven catches for 102 yards and two touchdowns in the win over the Jaguars. He caught eight passes for 101 yards last week versus the Seahawks. This coincided with Davis Mills being re-installed as the starting quarterback. Deshaun Watson is gone next year, but do the Texans need  to address quarterback? Lots of needs, Mills seems to be improving.

RB James Robinson (JAC) – The Jaguars’ passing offense remains weak in the Post-Meyer era, but at least Robinson is back to business with 18 rushes for 75 yards and a touchdown in the loss to the Texans.  Robinson added three catches for 13 yards as well.

RB Michael Carter (NYJ) – Returned from injured reserve but a disappointing eight runs for 18 yards in the loss to the Dolphins. Tevin Coleman (8-50) ran better and even Austin Walter had two carries. Carter had just gotten the backfield to use him as a primary back but his return created just another three-man committee.

RB Duke Johnson (MIA) – His first action as a Dolphin was in Week 11 when he rushed for  18 yards on four runs. Myles Gaskin was on the COVID list but returned in time to play the Jets. He gained 54 yards on ten carries versus the worst defense against running backs in the NFL, maybe the entire world. But Johnson ran for 107 yards and two scores on 22 carries in a career-best performance. It was his first-ever 100-yard game. The most important word in all of this is “Jets”, but he’s added to one of the weakest backfields in the NFL. He’ll probably find it tougher this week at the Saints.

RB D’Onta Foreman (TEN) – This is basically Duke Johnson on another team. Foreman ran for 108 yards on 22 carries at the Steelers and added 27 yards on two receptions. Dontrell Hilliard (9-49) and Jeremy McNichols (6-26) also mixed in as well, but Foreman’s been fantasy relevant for the last three games.

RB Jeff Wilson (SF) – Elijah Mitchell missed his fourth game of the season – starting to wonder about the whole “durability” thing – but a healthy Jeff Wilson ran for 110 yards and a touchdown on 21 carries versus the Falcons while Deebo Samuel only ran six times for 29 yards (and a touchdown, of course).  The problem with the 49ers isn’t a lack of talent, it is trying to guess which one goes off when they are all healthy. Fortunately, it’s been rare that all offensive stars are healthy in any given week.

QB Tyler Huntley (BAL) – The Ravens replacement quarterback did himself proud with 215 passing yards and two scores on the Packers, plus ran for 73 yards and two more touchdowns on his 13 runs. He led the Ravens on a comeback that could have tied the game had they not opted for the two-point play in an attempt to win outright. But everyone knew the pass would go to Mark Andrews and it was incomplete. But Huntley took over in Week 14 when Lamar Jackson was injured. He connected with Andrews for 115 yards on 11 catches with a touchdown. And this week as the starter, Andrews ended with ten  receptions for 136 yards and two touchdowns.

Huddle player of the week

TE Travis Kelce (KC)  –  He cost a first-round pick in August Fantasy drafts. For fantasy owners in their playoffs, Kelce delivered everything that was hoped when he caught ten passes for 191 yards and two touchdowns in the win over the Chargers that produced 41 points in a reception-point league. He’ll be a first-rounder again next summer. And he’s a difference-maker in fantasy playoffs.

Salute!

Drama 101 – Somebody has to laugh, somebody has to cry

Comedy Yards TDs Tragedy Yards TDs
QB Tyler Huntley 288 4 QB Tom Brady 214 0
RB Duke Johnson 127 2 RB Najee Harris 26 0
RB Jeffrey Wilson 119 1 RB Joe Mixon 60 0
WR Gabriel Davis 85 2 WR Ja’Marr Chase 3 0
WR Amon-Ra St. Brown 90 1 WR Michael Pittman 7 0
WR M. Valdes-Scantling 98 1 WR Mike Evans 14 0
TE Hunter Henry 77 2 TE Dawson Knox 38 0
PK Chris Boswell  1  XP   4 FG PK Ryan Succop  whiff
Huddle Fantasy Points = 161 Huddle Fantasy Points =  22

Now get back to work…

Jets vs. Dolphins Week 15 recap: Everything we know

The Jets had all the momentum in the world. Then they came crashing back to earth against the Dolphins. Recap:

The Jets had all the momentum in the world. Then they came crashing back to earth.

A strong first quarter had Gang Green in solid shape for a Week 15 win, but the team fell apart on both sides of the ball and once again allowed their opponent to put up over 30 points. The Dolphins had no problem coming back on their home turf, winning 31-24 following a second-half collapse by New York.

What looked to be a promising day resulted in the Jets’ 11th loss of the season. The Dolphins, meanwhile, extended their winning streak to six and improved to .500.