Week 14 of the 2019 NFL season is here, and for many of you, the fantasy playoffs are either here or just around the corner.
As always, we’re here to help with your weekly decisions with our fantasy lineup advice. Each week, we give you the studs (players with plus matchups due to the defense they’re facing or their team situation), duds (players with tougher matchups or who are in muddled roster situations at the moment) and sleepers (a player you might consider starting who could be in for a big week).
Here are the names we’ve got for Week 14, and as we always say, good luck!!
Studs
QB Ryan Tannehill, Tennessee Titans
It’s not just the fact that the matchup with the Raiders is juicy. It’s that he’s been so good since he took over for Marcus Mariota — multiple touchdowns in each of his last six starts, 250-plus yards in three contests, and although it seems like a Derrick Henry game script, I’m confident here.
RBs Nick Chubb, Kareem Hunt, Cleveland Browns
They’ve both thrived even with Hunt back from suspension. Against the Bengals (the worst run defense in the league), they both should thrive and then some.
WR Alshon Jeffery, Philadelphia Eagles
What a way to come back from injury! He had 16 looks and nine catches for 137 yards and a touchdown last week. Now, he gets to face the extremely porous Giants secondary.
TE Jack Doyle, Indianapolis Colts
From sleeper last week to stud this week — he’s got the full workload that he was previously splitting with Eric Ebron and now he gets to feast on the extremely vulnerable Bucs defense that allows the second-most fantasy points to tight ends.
Duds
QB Drew Brees, New Orleans Saints
I didn’t love how he was a dud in a good spot against the Falcons last week, and the Niners are the best team against the pass in the NFL. There are better options out there.
RBs Ronald Jones, Peyton Barber, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
It’s partially because the Colts have the ninth-best defense against the run, but also because we don’t know which of the backs will get the ball this week. Are these guys you want to trust in the postseason? Didn’t think so.
WR Terry McLaurin, Washington Redskins
You would think he and Dwayne Haskins would have chemistry since they played together at Ohio State. But it sure doesn’t seem that way yet. Plus, the Packers present a tough defensive matchup.
TE Zach Ertz, Philadelphia Eagles
As always, I’m not saying you should bench a name like him. But you can see his volatility, especially with Dallas Goedert picking up more of a role. Some weeks he’s picking up huge yardage, others he’s catching just two or three passes. The Giants have allowed the fewest passes to opposing tight ends, but part of me wonders if that’s because opponents focus on throwing to their wideouts against the awful secondary. Anyway, this is a long way of saying it could be a dud kind of day for Ertz.
Sleepers
QB Jacoby Brissett, Indianapolis Colts
He hasn’t been that great with T.Y. Hilton on the shelf, so I’ll say he’s just a sleeper against a terrible Bucs secondary.
RB Derrius Guice, Washington Redskins
I would assume his huge game against the Panthers (10 carries, 129 yards, two touchdowns) will mean the Skins will give him more carries. Plus, the Packers aren’t great at containing opposing running backs.
WR James Washington, Pittsburgh Steelers
He seems to have chemistry with Duck Hodges and has scored in three of his last four. Plus, he faces the Cardinals this week, which helps.
TE Mike Gesicki, Miami Dolphins
The Jets are pretty good at defending vs. tight ends, but Gesicki has two touchdowns in his past couple of contests.
Fantasy football waiver wire claims and adds to make ahead of Week 14.
Need a fresh face for your fantasy football roster this week?
It’s never too late for a few extra points to add to your win column. Especially since it could be playoff time now.
Here are seven waiver wire claims to make in fantasy football ahead of Week 14:
QB Ryan Tannehill
Ryan Tannehill has quietly put up three-straight games which have included two touchdown passes in each. Of course, the yards haven’t always been there, limiting his fantasy football value. This week Tannehill’s Titans are on the road, but against the Raiders. They’ve allowed 27 passing touchdowns to date and rank as the No. 24 team defending the pass, allowing an average of 258.2 yards per game. They’re not great.
You’re waking up on Tuesday reading all that you can about the players that you should be picking up off the waiver wire as you prepare for Week 14 of fantasy football in 2019.
But it’s likely there aren’t as many things written about who you should be dropping to grab those players. That’s what this weekly column — keep ’em or dump ’em! — will hopefully answer for you: Some help in the debate over who you should keep or drop in order to improve your team.
For many of you reading this, it’s playoff time! Congratulations, and here are a few players you may be debating in order to make room for an extra D/ST or some backup running backs.
1. RB Jonathan Williams, Indianapolis Colts
Jordan Wilkins took over in the second half on Sunday and Marlon Mack might return soon. But if you’ve read this weekly post, you know I always advocate for keeping players who are even a small part of backfields.
VERDICT: Keep him
2. RB Ronald Jones, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
See above. The Bucs keep switching between him and Peyton Barber (who scored twice last week). You just don’t know which week is a Jones week and which one belongs to Barber. It’s the worst, but you have to keep him.
VERDICT: Keep him
3. WR Sammy Watkins, Kansas City Chiefs
Three targets and a goose egg last week, under 63 yards in four of his last five … and he faces tough secondaries the rest of the way. No thanks.
VERDICT: Drop him
4. RB Jay Ajayi, Philadelphia Eagles
The Eagles have some good matchups the rest of the season, but it feels like Miles Sanders is going to be the bellcow. That said, if you have room to stash him as a handcuff, you may be forced to hang on in case Sanders gets injured. Also keep an eye on whether Jordan Howard is ready to return or not.
VERDICT: Keep him
5. WR Larry Fitzgerald, Arizona Cardinals
This is in case he’s still rostered — he shouldn’t be. He’s scored double-digit fantasy points exactly zero times since Week 3 in standard formats.
VERDICT: Drop him
6. TE Tyler Higbee, Los Angeles Rams
Keep an eye on Gerald Everett health news, but I bet Higbee’s one-week explosion was due to him facing the Cardinals, who are a sieve against tight ends. If Everett is back in Week 14 …
VERDICT: Drop him
7. RB J.D. McKissic, Detroit Lions
The Lions backfield belongs to Bo Scarbrough, and although McKissic could be a handcuff if Scarbrough goes down, the Lions face the Vikings, Bucs and Broncos the rest of the fantasy season. Even if he gets more work, it’s a set of rough matchups.
In most league formats, Week 14 marks the last week of the regular fantasy football season. Your last chance to add and drop players who will or will not be with your team for the crucial playoff weeks. Perhaps you do not need to add anyone and you have been rolling with the same guys all year. In that case, consider yourself lucky.
Being active on the waiver wire is always one of the biggest keys to building a playoff contender, and that continues to hold true as the fantasy season hits the final stretch.
Here are six waiver wire pickups to target entering Week 14:
RB Raheem Mostert: 14.1% rostered (ESPN)
In what was once a crowded backfield in San Francisco with Matt Breida and Tevin Coleman having a majority of the carries, it was hard to judge which 49ers running back would be worth adding. Mostert has survived the injury bug that has started to attack this 49ers offense and has taken over as the lead back.
Against Baltimore in Week 13, Mostert totaled 19 carries for 146 yards and a touchdown in a downpour that lasted all game. Mostert brings a dynamic speed and toughness aspect to this young 49ers team.
The upcoming schedule isn’t great, but Mostert has flex appeal—especially if something happens to Coleman and/or Breida.
After failing to find the end zone the first six weeks of the season, Rudolph has now done so six times in the six games since.
For the sixth time in the last six games, Minnesota Vikings tight end and Notre Dame product Kyle Rudolph found the end zone, cutting the Seahawks lead on Monday Night Football to just four.
Like we’ve seen from Rudolph time and time again, it was a one-handed snag that wound up a score.
The fantasy football playoffs are upon us for the vast majority of leagues, and it’s no time to give up on working the waiver wire.
Free-agent recommendations refer to 12-team league formats, unless specifically stated. FAAB $ amounts are based on a $100 budget.
Bye weeks: none
Quarterbacks
1-Week Plug & Play
Ryan Fitzpatrick, Miami Dolphins at New York Jets
Should Fitzpatrick remain on your league’s wire, he makes for a fine one-week play against this divisional foe. New York has given up more than 26 fantasy points in three of the last six games: The guys incapable of topping 20 fantasy points were Dwayne Haskins, Derek Carr, Andy Dalton … not exactly an elite crop of talent. While FitzMagic is anything but elite, he’s capable of posting studly numbers at times. The last time these two met was Week 9, and he threw for 285 yards and a trio of scores (26.6 points). WR DeVante Parker is playing like a brand-new man, and the Dolphins are making the most of a suspect cast of weapons. That said, Fitz should be treated as a quality QB2 starter or a low-tier No. 1 play.
Availability: 60%
FAAB: $2-3
Daniel Jones, New York Giants at Philadelphia Eagles
The rookie has been held under 20 fantasy points in three of the last four contests but had thrown only one interception in the four games leading up a three-INT mistake fest vs. the Green Bay Packers in Week 13. It’s one of those “take the bad with the good” scenarios in fantasy … Philadelphia has granted quarterbacks multi-TD games on six occasions in 2019, including a three-score day to Ryan Fitzpatrick in Week 13. These teams haven’t met this season, and Jones is a risk-reward decision against a defensive unit that has permitted massive fantasy stats when it has been bad. Five different passers have at least 28 points vs. this group in ’19.
Availability: 52%
FAAB: $1-2
Grab & stash
Gardner Minshew, Jacksonville Jaguars
Last week, I wrote Minshew was worth a stash since Nick Foles has done nothing to instill confidence that he can be “the guy.” We saw it play out exactly as suspected in Wee 13. There is enough tape on Foles to know what he is and isn’t, so giving Minshew a chance to further prove he is the future makes the most sense. The Jaguars face one of the easiest remaining fantasy schedules with matchups vs. the Los Angeles Chargers, at Oakland and at Atlanta in the upcoming weeks. Add him for depth or as a QB2 in leagues that allow/require utilization of more than one starting passers now that head coach Doug Marrone has publicly committed to Minshew Mania.
Availability: 61%
FAAB: $0-1
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Running Backs
priority free agents
Patrick Laird, Miami Dolphins
Kalen Ballage (leg) left Week 13 action and did not return. Laird stepped up for the second time in three weeks and is a must-add in all fantasy formats, especially in PPR scoring. Ballage was nothing more than a lotto ticket each week for a TD, and Laird is more of a pass-catching extension of the hand-off. In those two contests, he has 11 total targets and 10 receptions for 94 yards. Facing Philly in Week 13, Laird ran a Ballage-like 10 times for five yards and a TD. Miami faces the New York Jets and New York Giants — both at the Meadowlands — in the next two outings, followed by a Week 16 home tilt with Cincinnati.
Availability: 84%
FAAB: $15-17
Raheem Mostert, San Francisco 49ers
Tevin Coleman took a back seat after struggling to generate much of anything, and Mostert had little trouble posting career-best numbers vs. the Baltimore Ravens. While he’s a premium add this week, Mostert isn’t necessarily a must-start until we have a clearer understanding of what to expect from Matt Breida’s ankle injury. Should Breida return, the backfield gets even more convoluted, and it’s not like the matchup is particularly friendly at New Orleans. For now, add him and wait to see what the week of practice reveals for Breida. Coleman easily could reclaim the primary workload, although the hot hand usually wins out in a multi-back situation in which the players tend to be interchangeable.
Availability: 58%
FAAB: $3-4
1-Week Plug & Play
Darwin Thompson, Kansas City Chiefs
The caveat here is two-fold: What is the diagnosis of Darrel Williams’ hamstring injury, and will the Chiefs get Damien Williams back on the field in Week 14? The point being, if either player returns, there’s no lineup-worthy value in Thompson. However, should both miss the contest, it’s pretty clear LeSean McCoy cannot do it alone. The New England Patriots host the Chiefs, and guarding checkdown passes is a major weakness for this defensive scheme.
Availability: 70%
FAAB: $4-5
Wide Receivers
priority free agents
1-Week Plug & Play
Nelson Agholor, Philadelphia Eagles vs. New York Giants
Look, it hasn’t been pretty for Agholor in the last two-plus months. Since Week 3, he hasn’t scored a touchdown, nor has the USC product tallied more than 42 yards of offense in any of those appearances. In the past two weeks, Carson Wentz has targeted him 15 times, resulting in an unmemorable seven catches for 81 yards in total. New York is the driving force behind this recommendation, and the injury to TE Zach Ertz also is a factor. The Giants have permitted 10 touchdowns to wideouts in the last five outings, and seven receivers in that time were good for at least 80 yards, while 11 managed double-digit PPR points.
Availability: 51%
FAAB: $2-3
Marcus Johnson, Indianapolis Colts at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
This one depends mostly on the status of wide receiver T.Y. Hilton (calf) after he aggravated his injury in Week 12 and missed Week 13. The trip to Tampa brings on the best possible matchup to kick off the fantasy playoffs. The Bucs have yielded 10 scores to the position in the last five games, and four receivers have posted at least 114 yards in that time. Johnson is likely a total unknown to most fantasy gamers, but he has been more involved of late and is a worthwhile fantasy consideration for gamers in dire need of a flex. In all likelihood, he’s too unknown for most gamers to be willing to take the chance, but the matchup and his role present an opportunity. In the Colts’ last two games without Hilton, Johnson has been targeted an average of five times. He has produced at least 9.5 PPR points in each of those contests, and the Week 11 meeting with Jacksonville saw Johnson score a touchdown.
Availability: 99%
FAAB: $1-2
Demaryius Thomas, New York Jets vs. Miami Dolphins
Miami has granted 10 scores to the position in the last six games, or eight in the past five. Four receivers have gone over the century mark for yardage, and seven of the wideouts landed at least five balls — the most likely way Thomas will make a dent. Miami has conceded at least 19.4 PPR points to seven receivers since Week 7. Thomas, as mentioned, is hardly a threat for a touchdown, but if he’s ever going to score one in 2019, this ought to be the week. The veteran has at least five targets in seven of his last nine appearances, and he has snagged four or more balls in five of them. The combination of matchups and utilization makes Thomas a reasonable waiver add for a Week 14 PPR flex.
Availability: 63%
FAAB: $1-2
Grab & stash
John Ross, Cincinnati Bengals
Two weeks ago, he resumed practicing and enters the final week before the Bengals have to either activate or keep him on IR. It wouldn’t hurt to stash him away ahead of the decision, especially with Andy Dalton back under center. The previous move to QB Ryan Finley was the driving force behind not including Ross in this space.
Availability: 78% FAAB: $1-2
Tight Ends
priority free agents
1-Week Plug & Play
Vance McDonald, Pittsburgh Steelers at Arizona Cardinals
In Week 13, with Devlin Hodges starting at quarterback, McDonald landed all three of his targets for a paltry 21 yards. He has caught no more than three passes in any game since Week 9. Exciting stuff, huh? This one is all about the matchup, and, oh boy, is it ever an exploitable matchup! The Cardinals are on a historically bad pace for giving up fantasy points to the position, and we’ve seen an average of a score per game come against Arizona in the hands of tight ends in the last five battles. The season-long outlook is so much brighter: Thirteen of 79 catches by the position found paydirt, coming at a rate of once every six snags. McDonald is a hopeful play for a score from a volatile position.
Availability: 50%
FAAB: $2-3
Jonnu Smith, Tennessee Titans at Oakland Raiders
Smith hasn’t much competition for touches at his position, yet he can’t seem to get the job done. The Titans have looked his way 13 times in the last four games, including a no-involvement Week 12. Smith should get back on track in Week 14 with such a good matchup for scoring. The Raiders have permitted only two scores to TEs in the last five games, but extending the view just two games adds three more trips to the end zone. The season-long peek reveals eight touchdowns against Oakland by tight ends. Smith caught nine of 10 looks for 142 yards and a score from Weeks 7-8, so it’s not like he has been a total scrub without Delanie Walker.
Availability: 61%
FAAB: $1-2
Kaden Smith, New York Giants
This one is solely predicated on the Giants being without TE Evan Engram (foot) and TE Rhett Ellison (concussion) in Week 14. Smith scored in their absence in Week 12 and managed a line of 6-70-0 on eight looks in Week 13. The rookie is an athletic 6-foot-5, 255 pounds, and he would benefit even more if wideout Golden Tate (concussion) also misses the upcoming week. Don’t invest FAAB yet, but Smith is worth a late-week add if the injury report favors another game of starter’s involvement for him.
Availability: 98%
FAAB: $0
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Kickers
1-Week Plug & Play
Matt Prater, Detroit Lions at Minnesota Vikings
Entering Week 13, Minnesota had given up 13 field goal attempts in the prior four outings. That’s the third-highest figure in the league and most among teams with only four games played. The veteran kicker as at least six fantasy points (non-distance scoring) in three of the last five weeks, and Prater has six three-point attempts in the past two games. The overall offensive efficacy issues makes Prater a viable PK1 without Matthew Stafford (back) on the field, presuming he indeed is out again.
Availability: 44%
FAAB: $0-1
Matt Gay, Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Indianapolis Colts
The rookie has averaged a pair of field goal tries a game in the last five contests, and he has nailed all but one. The total number of extra points attempted sits at 16 in that window, and each one of those tries went through the pipes. Indianapolis has granted kickers at least seven fantasy points in four of the past five matchups, and 10 of the 11 three-point attempts in that time have connected. The Colts could slow Tampa’s offense just enough to stall out a few drives, and this defense isn’t quite known for its penchant to create turnovers.
Availability: 56%
FAAB: $0-1
Defense/Specials Teams
1-Week Plug & Play
Tennessee Titans at Oakland Raiders
Tennessee has at least three sacks in four of the last five weeks, and the one week with only two sacks resulted in a defensive touchdown. Mike Vrabel’s bunch has generated two takeaways, on average, in that time frame. The Raiders has been one of the worst matchups most of the year for defenses, but protecting the ball hasn’t been a high priority in recent weeks. In the last three games, Oakland has lost three fumbles, thrown four interceptions (after just one in the previous six outings), and permitted a pair of defensive touchdowns. Quarterback Derek Carr has been sacked nine times in the last month.
Availability: 62%
FAAB: $1-2
Atlanta Falcons vs. Carolina Panthers
With zero sacks in the last two games, and no fumble recoveries since Week 5, Atlanta is a tough sell in any fantasy format. The defense has just eight interceptions on the year, although three-quarters of them have come in the past month. Carolina provided Atlanta its best fantasy day of 2019 in Week 11, giving up five sacks and throwing four picks. In addition, the Falcons managed a special teams return score in that contest. The Panthers have yielded 16 sacks in the past three games alone, committing seven turnovers in that window. The recommendation to play Atlanta is purely a bid to take advantage of the upside of the matchup.
For most you, the fantasy football playoffs have arrived. And if you are reading this article, you’re probably in the playoffs. Congratulations. (If you’re still fighting to win the consolation bracket for pride or for a keeper/dynasty league, best of luck and better luck next year.)
Your roster got you into the playoffs. It never hurts to trust those championship-caliber stars. But it’s always important to build out your bench and depth, even when you’re one of the best teams in your league. A few of these players could be helpful, depending on how many players are in your league.
Here are seven players to target on the waiver wire after Week 13.
7. Gardner Minshew, QB, Jaguars
ESPN: 10%. Yahoo! 8%.
It’s likely that Minshew is in and Nick Foles is out as Jacksonville’s starting quarterback. And in a half of play on Sunday, Minshew managed just over 10 points in standard leagues. He produces in fantasy, particularly because he runs well. The Chargers defense is tough next week, but Oakland is a solid matchup in Week 15.
6. Zach Pascal, WR, Colts
ESPN: 25%. Yahoo! 17%.
With T.Y. Hilton out in Week 13, Pascal shined against the Titans with seven receptions and 109 yards. He’s a solid possession receiver when he’s in the lineup, but goes missing in action when better receivers are healthy.
5. Jordan Wilkins, RB, Colts
ESPN: 6%. Yahoo! 3%.
I mentioned that he might take the job away from Jonathan Williams. And it seems Wilkins is, at least, the top back in a timeshare in Indianapolis. Wilkins had 13 touches (11 carries, 2 receptions) for 56 yards. Williams had nine touches (8 carries, 1 catch) for 24 yards. Wilkins outplayed Williams, and seems likely to take an increased share in the backfield. The major caveat: Marlon Mack is reportedly eying a Week 14 return.
4. Cole Beasley, WR, Bills
ESPN: 24%. Yahoo! 32%.
He has turned up in recent weeks, and is becoming a viable option in both standard and PPR. In the last two weeks, he has 12 receptions for 186 yards and two touchdowns. It seems the Bills offense is getting better as the season progresses and Beasley is quarterback Josh Allen’s safety valve.
3. Mike Gesicki, TE, Dolphins
ESPN: 10%. Yahoo! 19%.
As the Dolphins are making a late-season push into competency, Gesicki, a 2018 second-round pick, has six or more targets in the last five games. He has had a touchdown in each of the last two games. Perhaps things are beginning to click for the young tight end, who was a high-profile draft prospect.
2. Darwin Thompson, RB, Chiefs
ESPN: 5%. Yahoo! 5%.
When Darrel Williams suffered an injury in Week 13, the Chiefs began to feed Darwin Thompson (11 carries, 44 yards, 1 touchdown), who was the rookie many thought might be a breakout candidate at the start of the season. Instead, Damien Williams’ struggles and injuries led to emergences from LeSean McCoy and Darrel Williams. Perhaps Thompson has earned himself a bigger role as the season winds down.
1. Bo Scarbrough, RB, Lions
ESPN: 47%. Yahoo! 43%.
He is definitely the lead back in Detroit, and it’s wild to think he couldn’t get a job in the NFL. Scarbrough hasn’t been brilliant, but he’s an Alabama product who has been competent. His touch total has increased every week since he rejoined the Lions. He had 21 carries for 83 yards in Week 13. It may not be much in terms of points, but it’s the volume you want out of FLEX option.
Game-by-game NFL Week 13 breakdowns, with NFL betting odds, lines, predictions, picks and betting tips for each game.
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SportsbookWire’s NFL Betting Guide is at your service for Week 13; full of NFL odds, lines, spreads, game-by-game predictions, picks and best-bet selections to help you make the best NFL sports bets for the week.
Be sure to check out our top NFL Underdog Bets for Week 13, where our Ken Pomponio is 21-15 on underdog predictions with this weekly staple.
Are you looking for some action on these games? Visit BetMGM and place your bets now. Games are always more interesting when you have some skin in the game.
Now that you have the skinny on what to do with each game, visit BetMGM to place a bet on your favorite match ups now. For additional sports betting picks and tips, visit SportsbookWire.com now and for a complete set of today’s live odds, access them at USA TODAY Sports.
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NFL fantasy football PPR rankings for Week 13 of the NFL season.
The fantasy football title pursuit is scorching hot in Week 13, and we have the fantasy football player rankings and cheat sheets to keep your team ablaze.
Bye weeks are behind us, but there are crucial lineup decisions to be made for playoff positioning.
We consulted with our friends at TheHuddle.com, who have been helping fantasy players just like you win their leagues for over two decades. Check out TheHuddle.com‘s top players in point-per-reception (PPR) fantasy scoring for the upcoming weekend:
Quarterback Rankings – Week 13
Patrick Mahomes, KC vs. OAK – 30.0 projected fantasy points
Nick Foles, JAC vs. TB – 28.5
Russell Wilson, SEA vs. MIN – 28.0
Drew Brees, NO vs. ATL – 27.5
Lamar Jackson, BAL vs. SF – 27.0
Josh Allen, BUF vs. DAL – 26.5
Jameis Winston, TB vs. JAC – 26.0
Kyler Murray, ARI vs. LAR – 24.5
Jared Goff, LAR vs. ARI – 24.0
Dak Prescott, DAL vs. BUF – 22.5
Kirk Cousins, MIN vs. SEA – 22.0
Matt Ryan, ATL vs. NO – 21.5
Carson Wentz, PHI vs. MIA – 21.5
Aaron Rodgers, GB vs. NYG – 21.0
Andy Dalton, CIN vs. NYJ – 21.0
Baker Mayfield, CLE vs. PIT – 20.0
Mitchell Trubisky, CHI vs. DET – 19.5
Running Backs Rankings – Week 13
Christian McCaffrey, CAR vs. WAS – 31.0 projected fantasy points
Dalvin Cook, MIN vs. SEA – 26.0
Saquon Barkley, NYG vs. GB – 23.0
Ezekiel Elliott, DAL vs. BUF – 22.0
Miles Sanders, PHI vs. MIA – 22.0
Josh Jacobs, OAK vs. KC – 21.0
Devonta Freeman, ATL vs. NO – 20.0
Chris Carson, SEA vs. MIN – 20.0
Le’Veon Bell, NYJ vs. CIN – 19.0
Todd Gurley, LAR vs. ARI – 19.0
Melvin Gordon, LAC vs. DEN – 19.0
Kenyan Drake, ARI vs. LAR – 19.0
Alvin Kamara, NO vs. CAR – 19.0
Derrick Henry, TEN vs. IND – 18.0
Kareem Hunt, CLE vs. PIT – 18.0
Jamaal Williams, GB vs. NYG – 18.0
Mark Ingram, BAL vs. SF – 17.0
Jonathan Williams, IND vs. TEN – 17.0
Leonard Fournette, JAC vs. TB – 17.0
Ronald Jones, TB vs. JAC – 17.0
Tarik Cohen, CHI vs. DET – 16.0
Aaron Jones, GB vs. NYG – 16.0
Tevin Coleman, SF vs. BAL – 15.0
Sony Michel, NE vs. HOU – 14.0
Nick Chubb, CLE vs. PIT – 14.0
Benny Snell, PIT vs. CLE – 14.0
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Wide Receivers Rankings – Week 13
Michael Thomas, NO vs. ATL – 33.0 projected fantasy points
DJ Chark, JAC vs. TB – 32.0
Cooper Kupp, LAR vs. ARI – 24.0
Chris Godwin, TB vs. JAC – 24.0
Julian Edelman, NE vs. HOU – 23.0
Davante Adams, GB vs. NYG – 23.0
DJ Moore, CAR vs. WAS – 23.0
Tyreek Hill, KC vs. OAK – 22.0
Amari Cooper, DAL vs. BUF – 21.0
Dede Westbrook, JAC vs. TB – 20.0
Adam Thielen, MIN vs. SEA – 20.0
Tyler Lockett, SEA vs. MIN – 19.0
Tyler Boyd, CIN vs. NYJ – 19.0
Cole Beasley, BUF vs. DAL – 18.0
Allen Robinson, CHI vs. DET – 18.0
Auden Tate, CIN vs. NYJ – 18.0
Randall Cobb, DAL vs. BUF – 17.0
Robby Anderson, NYJ vs. CIN – 17.0
Calvin Ridley, ATL vs. NO – 17.0
Odell Beckham Jr., CLE vs. PIT – 16.0
Corey Davis, TEN vs. IND – 16.0
James Washington, PIT vs. CLE – 15.0
Jamison Crowder, NYJ vs. CIN – 14.0
DeVante Parker, MIA vs. PHI – 14.0
Mecole Hardman, KC vs. OAK – 14.0
Julio Jones, ATL vs. NO – 12.0
Robert Woods, LAR vs. ARI – 12.0
Darius Slayton, NYG vs. GB – 12.0
A.J. Brown, TEN vs. IND – 12.0
Mohamed Sanu – NE vs. HOU – 11.0
Tight Ends Rankings – Week 13
Travis Kelce, KC vs. OAK – 23.0 projected fantasy points
Jared Cook, NO vs. ATL – 18.0
Zach Ertz, PHI vs. MIA – 18.0
George Kittle, SF vs. BAL – 18.0
Darren Waller, OAK vs. KC – 17.0
Hunter Henry, LAC vs. DEN – 15.0
Kyle Rudolph, MIN vs. SEA – 14.0
Jack Doyle, IND vs. TEN – 14.0
Jacob Hollister, SEA vs. MIN – 14.0
Dallas Goedert, PHI vs. MIA – 13.0
Ryan Griffin, NYJ vs. CIN – 12.0
Tyler Higbee, LAR vs. ARI – 12.0
Kaden Smith, NYG vs. GB – 12.0
Noah Fant, DEN vs. LAC – 12.0
Greg Olsen, CAR vs. WAS – 10.0
Place Kickers Rankings – Week 13
Mason Crosby, GB vs. NYG – 12.0 projected fantasy points
Jason Myers, SEA vs. MIN – 12.0
Wil Lutz, NO vs. ATL – 12.0
Ryan Succop TEN vs. IND – 11.0
Sam Ficken, NYJ vs. CIN – 11.0
Brandon McManus, DEN vs. LAC – 10.0
Ka’imi Fairbairn, HOU vs. NE – 10.0
Harrison Butker, KC vs. OAK – 10.0
Justin Tucker, BAL vs. SF – 9.0
Greg Zuerlein, LAR vs. ARI – 9.0
Matt Gay, TB vs. JAC – 9.0
Adam Vinatieri, IND vs. TEN – 8.0
Stephen Hauschka, BUF vs. DAL – 8.0
Randy Bullock, CIN vs. NYJ – 8.0
[lawrence-newsletter]
Defensive Team Rankings – Week 13
Panthers, CAR vs. WAS – 15.0 projected fantasy points
Packers, GB vs. NYG – 10.0
Eagles, PHI vs. MIA – 10.0
Chargers, LAC vs. DEN – 9.0
Chiefs, KC vs. OAK – 9.0
49ers, SF vs. BAL – 8.0
Rams, LAR vs. ARI – 9.0
Lions, DET vs. CHI – 8.0
Ravens, BAL vs. SF – 7.0
Redskins, WAS vs. CAR – 7.0
Cardinals, ARI vs. LAR – 7.0
Titans, TEN vs. IND – 7.0
Browns, CLE vs. PIT – 7.0
Patriots, NE vs. HOU – 7.0
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