Tunnel Vision – thanks and goodbye

Tunnel Vision – A fond farewell

This is my 481st Tunnel Vision. It is also the last. This one took 28 years to write.

I also write the weekly Predictions and Projections, where I will have broken down 7,501 games as of the Super Bowl. Projected over 100,000 player performances. Published 15 million words. Through three decades of illnesses, life’s tragedies, and even 28 radiation treatments during the nightmare COVID season of 2020, I never missed a deadline.

Not once.

I have a sign in my office that reads “No one ever asks if the paperboy is okay.” I answered the phone at the circulation desk at the Tyler Morning News when I was in high school. They really don’t ask. They will say unkind things if their paper wasn’t delivered. People just want what they paid for. That’s a guiding light.

But, if you can indulge me this one time, I’ll focus on the one thing you did not come here for – me. And how I got to this day and this final column. A quick look behind the site. A fond farewell after almost three decades.

But first – a football story.

I grew up in Tyler, Texas and when I was in fourth grade, I joined the Andy Woods Raiders flag football team. I loved football. It is the only sport I ever played or followed or cared about. Getting to play as a ten-year-old was a thrill.

But – I wasn’t a starter. We had a great set of athletic and disciplined kids. We had more than enough for a starting lineup so I was a backup. We went undefeated that first year, rolling scores like 60-0 in a world that had not yet discovered the mercy rule. I loved being with my friends but I spent most of my time on the sideline. I intentionally stood next to the head coach, hoping he’d look up from his clipboard and bark, “Dorey – get in there.” Didn’t happen.

I’d play at the end of the game when the other team also trotted out their backups. Lining up across from some under-sized kid sucking on an asthma inhaler wasn’t as much fun as I hoped. But only so many kids could play, and we were already a peewee juggernaut. I wanted more.

The next summer brought excitement. My goal was to become a starter. On that first practice a few weeks from the start of the season, we exercised and ran a big lap around the playground to burn off enough energy so that a group of boisterous boys might actually listen to the coaches for a few minutes.

The head coach went through some housekeeping about jerseys, water and whatever (I stopped listening). And then he pulled out a piece of paper. I hated that piece of paper. He wanted to practice our plays and he read the old starting lineup out loud. Now, as an adult, that made perfect sense. We demolished every opponent, so why wouldn’t he use that as a starting point? Nothing was set in stone, just written in pencil on a folded piece of paper from last year.

But I was an 11-year-old kid. In my mind, I could already see another season of standing next to the coach and dodging him when he ran down the sidelines as we scored another long touchdown. I reasoned it was not fair. That I did not have a chance. Living on the sideline of a fifth-grade flag football team wasn’t what I wanted. Just weekly proof that I did not measure up enough to play the only game that I cared about.

So, in my disappointment, I decided to quit. Screw it. That made sense. I wasn’t good enough, and even if I was, I would not get the chance. After dinner that night, my father motioned me into the den.

“I hear you want to quit football.”

I was ready. I had my arguments ready for whatever direction the talk took.

“Oh yeah, just not into it, I guess. No big deal.”

“But I thought you were looking forward to it.”

“Okay, look, I’m not going to start, and I’d only get a few plays, and it is not fair, and I don’t have any chances, and the coach keeps running into me…”

He stopped me.

“Hold on. Answer two questions.”

This was expected. I was ready.

“First – do you like football?”

Whoa, whoa, whoa. Unfair. He knew I loved football.

“Yes. But sometimes that is not enough.” I thought that was a great counter.

“Okay, can you look me in the eye and honestly tell me that you gave 100% every time you practiced and every time you played?”

Dammit.

“Okay, so no, I did not give 100% on every play. We were already so far ahead that no one cared anymore. There was no reason to …”

He waved off my defense.

“Son, you love football. And you have not given 100%. David, how could they know who you are? I’ll make you a deal. You go to practices for the next two weeks and give 100% all of the time. And at the end of two weeks, if you still want to quit, then okay.”

Again, being an 11-year-old knucklehead, all I heard was suffer through two more weeks with a team that won’t give you a chance and where it is not fair. I wasn’t motivated, I wasn’t disappointed, I was just mad.

And so, I held up my part. When I went to practice, I did not tell anyone. I just tried as hard as I could on everything. Ran hard. Paid attention. Did my best on all I was given to do. Just paying off my debt to quit. I remember the offense practicing and they called me to fill in for defensive tackle. When the ball was snapped, I kept disrupting the play. The coaches yelled at my friend who wasn’t blocking me, and I felt really bad for him. But I had to fulfill my part of the deal, and I would soon be gone, so it did not matter. After I shot through again, the coach said, “I am sick of this,” and made me switch places with my friend.

Naturally, I interpreted it to mean, “Let’s embarrass you.” So, I got mad. And I blocked while the coaches watched and whispered. It went on with that sort of thing for the next week until I had finally fulfilled my part of the deal with my dad. It was the final practice before our first game and at the end, coach had all the kids sit down. I saw him pull that piece of paper out of his pocket. I picked at the grass and decided who to tell that I quit and what to say.

Then I felt the pain of someone slugging my upper arm a little too hard, which is the only way boys that age know how to hit. “Hey stupid, get up – he called your name.”

A meaningless and inconsequential event in the world. A huge lesson for an 11-year-old boy. Never underestimate the power of a moment to a kid.

It taught me not to listen to those voices in my head about fairness, what others think, or comparing yourself.

It taught me that if you really want something, then give it 100%, balls out, get-out-of-my-way, commitment. Keep your head down and the lights on. Get tired. Get mad. Don’t stop.

I always wanted to thank Dad for that life lesson. Finally, one night 50 years later, we had a heartfelt talk and I recalled that moment, how it impacted my life and how grateful I was. How it guided me and drove me through so many goals and challenges that eventually led me to The Huddle. He nodded but all he could say was “good for you.” He passed away a few hours later.

When I was 26, I returned to college to finish my degree. That drive helped me get through five exhausting semesters of working full-time and attending school full-time while on the Dean’s List.

A few years later, I switched from being an Operations Manager at EDS to a technical role despite having no education or experience in programming. With a high failure rate, I agreed to be fired if I failed. I had a family and a mortgage as added motivation. I turned on the lights, kept my head down, and spent nights teaching myself enough coding to catch up. I loved the analytics, logic and problem-solving.

I still kept my eye out for whatever could be The Next Big Thing for me.

At my 1996 EDS fantasy football league draft, my friend and fantasy football nemesis Whitney Walters leaned over and asked, “Ever think about opening a fantasy football website?” I owe Whitney a lot.

 The Huddle

The Huddle was born in January 1997 at a Round Table Pizza in Rancho Cordova, California. Just two system engineers who loved fantasy football and saw an unserved opportunity on an emerging internet. There were no “best practices” to copy. There were no preconceived notions as to what a website was or could be. There was nothing. The first year, we wrote the site in raw HTML. Producing the site was more programming than journalism.

As someone who lived for football, analysis, writing, and technology, The Huddle was the collision of everything that I loved. It checked every box. I already knew hard work, so a second job was nothing unusual. You cannot imagine the thrill of doing something that had never been done. The joy of discovering “your thing.”

Those early days were straight-up intoxicating.

The internet was a techno-Wild West. With websites popping up like boom towns and disappearing just as quickly. There were no rules. I loved the saying,” What is the difference between a mega-corporation website and one that a teenager threw together in an afternoon? Answer – Nothing, really.” It was an incredible leveling of the playing field, a world where all that mattered was the quality of your content. Suddenly, it didn’t matter what you looked like, what school you went to, who you knew, or what you did in your free time. You were measured 100% on what you had to say.

Email was new and more personal then. I would write an article late at night, publish it, and when I woke, run to the computer to the dozen or more emails from people asking questions or just caring to comment how much they enjoyed it. I answered over 2,000 emails that first year.

We innovated many things in those early days. As the scorer of my work league, I had the stats and spreadsheets that I used to develop player strength of schedule based on fantasy matchups. It was my secret weapon. I’m sure others would have figured it out, but ours was the first ever published. Other measurements and techniques along the way helped differentiate us, at least until they became common on other sites.

Like some grumpy old man, I often think “you don’t know how easy you have it,” about fantasy football players and other web sites. When passing targets became a popular stat, I spent one season manually recording every pass to every player in every game and then adding them to our weekly stats.

I’ve seen the progression of fantasy football from simple work and family leagues to million-dollar contests involving thousands of participants. The introduction of reception points. The death of mock drafts and the birth of “best ball” leagues. From not knowing your weekly results until your league scorekeeper told you on Tuesday to instantly knowing everything all the time about everyone.

I saw the NFL try to kill fantasy football. They wanted nothing that remotely suggested gambling and sent out threatening letters to league software sites and contests to cease their operations based on “right to publicity” for the stats. They sent a legal minion to those early conventions to take names. The NFL has since embraced fantasy football and now happily dove head-first into gambling, considering the bulk of advertising, Vegas venue, and even official partners.

I remember when the NFL draft was just a listing in the back of the USA Today sports page. When The Huddle started, I had to cut out the box scores from the newspaper and tape them to pages in a binder as my reference guide.

But the way of the world is to always get bigger, faster, and more complex. Fantasy football is no different. Keep up or get left behind. It just is.

What began as two friends working in spare bedrooms on a website that cost $29.99 a month became so much more. Our ISP kicked us out for crashing their servers that first year. Ten years later, when we sold our ownership in the business, it had a write-up in the Wall Street Journal. It’s a great country.

Through it all, in my mind I was never here to feed information to the masses. When I wrote, I’d picture some parent up late at night holding a sick kid while surfing the internet. And if I could help them beat the loudmouth at work, learn a few things and maybe have a chuckle, then I did my job.

It is hard to walk away from Everything You Ever Wanted. But, for a variety of reasons, it is time.

Time to raise my head and turn off the light. I’m not sure who I’ll be without The Huddle. But I know who I was – someone who lived his own version of the American Dream. Who exceeded every goal I set for myself. Who spent the last 28 years passionately devoted to something we created from nothing. Like that 11-year-old boy, I still love football. And I can look at myself in the mirror and know that I gave it 100%. Life isn’t what you prove to others, it’s what you prove to yourself.

I owe a debt of gratitude to many people. Whitney first and foremost. But also everyone who worked with us on the site. John Tuvey. Cory and Ryan Bonini. Countless great writers. Carl, the imaginary technical support we blamed when anything broke. A wealth of friends I’ve known in the industry. Andrew Carey and Steve Gallo for always being there.

Most of all, I offer a heartfelt appreciation to you. Someone who gave me a moment in their day, who allowed me to pursue a rewarding life’s purpose in the ways that I measure success. I hope I helped.  Thank you so much. Thank you. Thank you.

It’s been a blast. The time of my life.

And just one last thing.

Thanks Dad.

 

DMD

 

Now get back to work…

Tunnel Vision – Injuries, free agents and Sunday stars

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

 

SUNDAY SALUTES
Quarterbacks Pass-Rush TD
Joe Burrow 412-25 4
 Baker Mayfield 359-2 5
 Drew Lock 309-5 5
Lamar Jackson 168-87 3
Patrick Mahomes 320-12 3
Running Backs Yards TD
Jonthan Taylor 32-125 2
Derrick Henry 27-147
2-18
1
Bucky Irving 20-113
4-77
0
Saquon Barkley 31-167
2-2
0
Bijan Robinson 17-90
3-8
2
Wide Receivers Yards TD
Tee Higgins 11-131 3
Malik Nabers 7-171 2
Marvin Mims 8-103 2
DeVonta Smith 6-120 2
Mike Evans 8-97 1
Tight Ends Yards TD
Trey McBride 12-123 1
Travis Kelce 8-84 1
Tyler Conklin 8-57 1
Mike Gesicki 10-86 0
Zach Ertz 6-72 2
Placekickers XP FG
Cameron Dicker 4 4
Daniel Carlson 1 4
Chase McLaughlin 6 2
Will Reichard 3 2
Jake Elliott 5 2
Defense Sack – TO TD
Ravens 5-1 0
Eagles 1-4 1
Seahawks 7-1 0
Giants 2-3 1
Bills 4-2 0

Bumps, Bruises and Bowouts

QB Kenny Pickett – Ribs
RB James Conner – Knee
RB Ameer Abdullah – Foot
RB Chase Brown – Ankle
RB Kendre Miller – Concussion
RB Aaron Jones – Quad

Chasing Ambulances

QB Kenny Pickett – He was already filling in for Jalen Hurts who did not pass the concussion protocols in time to play. Pickett took several shots to the side in the game and was already wearing a flak jacket from last week. He was held out of the win over the Cowboys and Tanner McKee ended the game with 54 yards and two scores on just three completions.

RB James Conner – Was already questionable with a knee injury entering the game and was pulled from the loss to the Rams after only four rushes for four yards. He rode an exercise bike on the sidelines to try to help, which is a sign it isn’t a serious injury, but he never returned to the field.

RB Ameer Abdullah – He already nursed a sore foot last week in practice but was active. Abdullah had a great game with 20 rushes for 115 yards before leaving. He also caught three passes for 32 yards. That was his career-best game, better than the 94 yards he gained back in Week 4 of 2017.

RB Chase Brown – With the game tied 17-17, Brown was injured when he slid down on the one-yard line instead of scoring a touchdown to help run out the clock. He was ruled out with a sprained ankle and a paid a price for being selfless and trying to help his team more than just scoring for himself.

RB Kendre Miller – He was replacing Alvin Kamara who was inactive, but the oft-injured Miller could not make it through the loss to the Raiders without being held out with a concussion. He will be reevaluated on Monday.

RB Aaron Jones – Was held out of the final quarter but HC Kevin O’Connell said that he was dealing with a quad contusion. O’Connell said that Jones was ready to go back if neccessary, so practices this week should help determine if he’ll suit up for the all-important game with the Lions.

Free Agents, Flops and Other Notables

Chiefs backfield – Despite having a lower average carry, Kareem Hunt (9-20, TD) was given more work than Isiah Pacheco (6-18) plus the 2-yard touchdown run. Worse yet, neither back recorded a catch in the win over the Steelers.

RB Joe Mixon – Facing a stout Baltimore run defense, Joe Mixon only gained 26 yards on nine carries and has lost nearly all of the fantasy value that he created earlier in the season. C.J. Stroud only passed for 185 yards versus one of the weaker secondaries in the league and they only scored two points from a safety to prevent a shutout at home.

RB J.K. Dobbins – The Chargers’ back returned after a month on injured reserve to run for 76 yards and a score on 19 rushes in the blowout win over the Patriots. He added one catch for seven yards but looked none the worse for his knee injury.

WR Marvin Mims – The Denver second-year wideout went from mostly special teams work to seeing much more playing time over the last six weeks. He scored four times over that time, and just had his breakout game when he led the Broncos with eight catches for 103 yards and two scores in the overtime loss to the Bengals.

QB Aaron Rodgers – Just when it seemed that maybe Rodgers would meet expectations after two games with 250+ yards and four total touchdowns, he returned to the early season version in the blowout loss to the Bills. Rodgers only passed for 112 yards and two touchdowns when he was yanked out in favor of Tyrod Taylor, who threw two touchdowns in the fourth quarter to prevent a 40-0 shutout.

WR Brian Thomas Jr. – Despite playing on a woeful Jaguars offense with Mac Jones as the quarterback, the rookie has thoroughly impressed for next year. He’s caught ten touchdowns and against the Titans, he ended with 91 yards and a score on seven catches. He broke 100-yards in the two previous games. No other Jacksonville receiver had more than three catches for 31 yards.

RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire –  The Saints picked him up after CEH was released by the Chiefs, and he actually led the offense with five rushes for 20 yards in the loss to the Raiders. Jamaal Williams (2-12) also helped though Kendre Miller (3-3) was knocked out of the game.

QB Drew Lock – While the struggling franchise never had more than two passing scores or 264 passing yards in a game, Lock went into the matchup with the Colts and threw for 309 yards and four touchdowns for a team-high this season. Malik Nabers (7-171, 2 TD) has been so good without a quarterback, that he’ll be scary in 2025 if they acquire a top-tier passer.

QB Joe Flacco – The Colts already confirmed that Anthony Richardson would return next season, but the old man Flacco just threw for 330 yards and two scores versus the Giants, that included topping the century mark with Alec Pierce (6-122, TD) and Michael Pittman (9-109, TD). Both receivers had only one other game with more production this year. But both were also thrown by Flacco.

RB Saquon Barkley – The Eagles “free agent signing of the century” just shredded the Cowboys for 167 yards on 31 carries and that has him become the ninth running back to eclipse 2,000 yards in a season (2,005). In Week 18, he can become the No. 1 single-season rusher of all time if he can run for 101 yards next week and eclipse Eric Dickerson’s 2,105 yards from 1984. What could be better? Oh, I know. How about reaching the record when the Eagles host the Giants next week?

TE Brock Bowers – Big day for the Raider rookie. Bowers just broke the 63-year-old record of Mike Ditka of 1,076 yards by a rookie tight end. Bowers not only stands at an NFL-history best 1,144 yards, but his 108 receptions tops all other rookies in history. Now to worry about 2025 because both Sam LaPorta and Kyle Pitts were unable to match their breakout rookie seasons.

Huddle player of the week

Credit: Joseph Maiorana-Imagn Images

WR Tee Higgins (CIN)  –  Week 17 means you need your players to show up and help you to win your fantasy championship. No one did more than Tee Higgins who caught 11 passes for 131 yards and scored three touchdowns for a cool 41.1 fantasy points.

Salute!

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

Comedy Yards TDs Tragedy Yards TDs
QB Drew Lock 309-5 5 QB C.J. Stroud 185-7 0
RB Ameer Abdullah 20-113
3-32
0 RB R. Stevenson 2-1 0
RB J.K. Dobbins 19-76
1-7
1 RB Isiah Pacheco 6-18 0
WR Marvin Mims 8-103 2 WR Cooper Kupp 1-29 0
WR Adam Thielen 5-110 2 WR Zay Flowers 2-31 0
WR Alec Pierce 6-122 1 WR J. Smith-Njigba 3-32 0
TE Tyler Conklin 8-57 1 TE D. Kincaid 2-24 0
PK Cameron Dicker 4 XP   4 FG PK Ka’imi Fairbairn  nada
Huddle Fantasy Points = 194 Huddle Fantasy Points = 30

Now get back to work…

Tunnel Vision – Injuries, free agents and Sunday stars

Week 16 in review

 

SUNDAY SALUTES
Quarterbacks Pass-Rush TD
Jayden Daniels 258-81 5
Bryce Young 158-68 3
 Geno Smith 315-8 3
Jared Goff 336-(-1) 3
Caled Williams 334-34 2
Running Backs Yards TD
Chuba Hubbard 25-152
4-13
2
De’Von Achane 17-121
6-70
1
James Cook 11-100
3-26
2
Saquon Barkley 29-150 2
James Conner 15-117
4-49
1
Wide Receivers Yards TD
Justin Jefferson 10-144 2
Keenan Allen 9-141 1
Brian Thomas Jr. 9-131 1
Jameson Williams 5-143 1
Deebo Samuel 8-95
5-25
1
Tight Ends Yards TD
Brock Bowers 11-99 0
Chig Okonkwo 9-81 0
George Kittle 8-106 0
Dalton Schultz 5-45 1
David Njoku 8-66 0
Placekickers XP FG
Jason Sanders 2 5
Jake Elliott 3 4
Chad Ryland 3 3
Jake Bates 4 2
Brandon Aubrey 2 4
Defense Sack – TO TD
Falcons 3-3 2
Bengals 5-3 0
Bills 1-3 1
Ravens 3-2 1
Eagles 1-5 0

Bumps, Bruises and Bowouts

QB Jalen Hurts – Concussion
RB James Conner – Knee
RB Kenneth Walker – Ankle
WR Drake London – Hamstring
WR Tank Dell – Knee
WR Sterling Shepard – Hamstring

Chasing Ambulances

QB Jalen Hurts – He enters the concussion protocol and missed nearly the entire loss to the Commanders. It was a fantasy owner disaster during their league playoffs. Kenny Pickett took over and threw 14-of-24 for 143 yards and one touchdown with an interception. The Eagles host the Cowboys this week and Hurts availability relies on how quickly he can pass the tests.

RB James Conner -Left the overtime loss to the Panthers with a right knee injury and did not return. He will undergo an MRI to determine the severity of the injury. The Cardinals are already without Trey Benson who never practiced last week due to ankle injury. Michael Carter was called up from the practice squad to replace Benson and finished the game.

WR Drake London – He injured his hamstring in the win over the Giants and did not return to the game. HC Raheem Morris said that the injury is minor and that he could have returned to the game but they already led the easy win.

WR Tank Dell – Suffered a gruesome injury when he caught a touchdown but his teammate inadvertantly hit his knee from the side. He dislocated his knee cap which appeared to stick out the side of his knee beneath his sock. There is a concern that the injury could be career-ending.

RB Kenneth Walker – Injured his ankle in the fourth quarter when he scored his touchdown and did not return. Zach Charbonnet replaced him as he has in three other games this year. Walker’s ankle will have an MRI on Monday to determine the severity.

Free Agents, Flops and Other Notables

RB Gus Edwards – He’s been of little fantasy value since joining the Chargers, so leaving him on your bench made sense for the past 11 games. But against the Broncos, he ran for 68 yards and two touchdowns on 14 rushes and even caught only his third pass of the year.  Last week? Just 23 yards on eight carries.

WR Marquise Brown – The Chiefs finally got their offseason acquisition onto the field after he had missed this season recovering from a shoulder injury. Brown caught five passes for 45 yards and his eight targets were second only to Xavier Worthy (11) in the win over the Texans. He may not have rolled up huge stats, but he looked fast and connected well with Patrick Mahomes for his first game as a Chief.

QB Michael Penix Jr. – The rookie debuted against the Giants which was as kind a matchup as the NFL offers. The Falcons won 34-7 and Penix threw 18-of-27 for 202 yards and one interception. It was a plus that his best two receivers were Darnell Mooney (5-82) and Drake London (5-59). This week in Washington won’t be that easy, but Penix looked very sharp for a debut.

QB Shedeur Sanders – The Giants are taking a quarterback in the NFL draft and Sanders is likely the top player. Unless his father Dieon gets involved, he’s headed to the Big Apple since the Giant’s tenth-straight loss now gives them an NFL-worst 2-13 record since the Raiders beat the Jaguars. On the plus, he’ll have Malik Nabers. On the negative, that is all he will have.

RB Jahmyr Gibbs – His first game without sidekick David Montgomery was a success with 23 carries for 109 yards and a score, plus four catches for 45 yards in the 34-17 win in Chicago. Craig Reynolds (4-18) was the only other back with a rush, and he was purely a change of pace. Gibbs isn’t ceding much to any other back.

RB Jerome Ford – In the wake of losing Nick Chubb again this year, Ford returned to being the starter and was effective, rushing for 92 yards on 11 carries with a touchdown that included a 66-yard gainer. D’Onta Foreman (2-1) and Pierre Strong (2-6) chipped in but Ford is the clear primary back taking the biggest chunk.

QB Dorian Thompson-Robinson – The newest starting quarterback in Cleveland isn’t nearly as fun or fantasy-profitable as Jameis Winston. He threw two interceptions and just 157 yards and no scores. He added 49 rushing yards but the Browns only scored six points. Worse yet, Jerry Jeudy (2-20) turned back into a pumpkin.

WR Brian Thomas Jr. – Like other rookie wideouts, he landed on a bad offense that has only worsened while losing players. But he turned in a season-best fantasy performance of 10 catches for 105 yards and two touchdowns in the loss to the Raiders. He is only 44 yards away from logging his first 1,000-yard season.

RB Patrick Taylor – The 49ers were down to their No. 4 running back with Isaac Guerendo out, but apparently that is one step down too many. The 49ers only ran Taylor eight times for 24 yards and his lone catch was for one yard. Had to figure that grabbing the newest 49er running back would eventually not pay off.

QB Bryce Young – The Panthers’ second-year quarterback was benched earlier in the season, but he thrown at least one score in every game since. He was the No. 2 fantasy quarterback this week when he threw for 158 yards and two scores, plus ran for a season-best 68 yards that included a 23-yard touchdown.  He’s making the case that the Panthers need to keep him and give him better weapons.

Huddle player of the week  

Syndication: The Indianapolis Star

RB Jonathan Taylor  –  The Colts powerback led all fantasy players with 29 carries for 218 yards and three touchdowns. He had no catches. But he did hold onto the ball when he crossed the goal line, unlike last week. His touchdowns included runs of 70 and 65 yards as he shredded the Titans defense. He only scored in one of his previous six games, but he showed up with a career-best performance right when fantasy owners needed him the most.

Salute!

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

Comedy Yards TDs Tragedy Yards TDs
QB Bryce Young 158-68 3 QB Jalen Hurts 11-41 0
RB Gus Edwards 14-68
1-3
2 RB Najee Harris 42 0
RB Jerome Ford 11-92
5-39
1 RB Joe Mixon 14-57
1-14
0
WR Olamide Zaccheaus 5-70 2 WR Amari Cooper 1-10 0
WR Kayshon Boutte 5-95 1 WR Cooper Kupp 3-24 0
WR Jameson  Crowder 2-15 2 WR Jerry Jeudy 2-20 0
TE Chig Okonkwo 9-81 0 TE Trey McBride 3-20 0
PK Jason Sanders 2 XP   5 FG PK Graham Gano  1  XP
Huddle Fantasy Points = 168 Huddle Fantasy Points = 30

Now get back to work…

Tunnel Vision – Injuries, free agents and Sunday stars

Week 15

 

SUNDAY SALUTES
Quarterbacks Pass-Rush TD
Josh Allen 362-68 4
Lamar Jackson 290-65 5
Jalen Hurts 290-45 3
Jared Goff 494-13 5
Aaron Rodgers 2889-45 3
Running Backs Yards TD
James Conner 16-110
5-28
3
Jahmyr Gibbs 8-31
5-83
2
Tyjae Spears 4-5
6-87
2
James Cook 14-105
1-28
2
Chase Brown 25-97
3-16
2
Wide Receivers Yards TD
Davante Adams 9-198 2
Amon-Ra St. Brown 14-193 1
Mike Evans 9-159 2
Brian Thomas Jr. 10-105 2
DeVonta Smith 11-109 1
Tight Ends Yards TD
Trey McBride 9-87 0
Josh Whyle 5-37 1
Sam LaPorta 7-111 0
Brenton Strange 11-73 1
Jonnu Smith 9-48 1
Placekickers XP FG
Chase McLaughlin 4 4
Cam Little 1 4
Tyler Bass 6 2
Chad Ryland 3 3
Brandon Aubrey 3 3
Defense Sack – TO TD
Chiefs 5-3 0
Bengals 1-6 1
Broncos 2-5 1
Cowboys 6-4 0
Texans 3-4 0

Bumps, Bruises and Bowouts

QB Patrick Mahomes – Ankle
QB Tommy DeVito – Concussion
QB Justin Fields – Abdomen
QB Geno Smith – Ankle
WR Jaylen Waddle – Knee
RB Braelon Allen  – Back
RB Trey Benson – Ankle
RB Nick Chubb – Fractured foot
RB Alvin Kamara – Groin
RB Jaleel McLaughlin – Quad
TE Zach Ertz – Concussion
WR Alec  Pierce – Concussion
WR A.J. Brown – Ankle

Chasing Ambulances

QB Patrick Mahomes – He was tackled with his legs trapped below him while being bent awkwardly backward. He was X-rayed and there were no breaks, but he will receive an MRI on Monday to determine the severity of his injury. His ankle was reported and there is speculation that it may also involve his knee. He was initially considered week-to-week. Carson Wentz will be the starter for any games that Mahomes misses.

WR Jaylen Waddle – The Miami receiver left in the second quarter when he was blocking and had a defender roll up on his legs. He already had a hamstring issue last week but the severity of the knee injury will be known on Monday after an MRI.

RB Nick Chubb – Suffered a fractured foot and will miss the rest of the season. Jerome  Ford will resume being the primary running back for the final three weeks of the season.

RB Alvin Kamara – He left in the fourth quarter of the loss to the Commanders and did not return. The injury was reported to be to the groin but there was speculation that it may be a hamstring injury. He will receive an MRI to determine the severity of the injury. Kendre Miller and Jamaal Williams will handle the backfield for any time Kamara misses, with Miller the likely primary back.

QB Geno Smith – He suffered an ankle injury when a defender dove at his lower legs and his feet were caught awkwardly beneath him. It was the late game on Sunday, so not much information was immediately known but it appeared to be very painful and  could extend into next week or beyond. Sam Howell took over and completed only 5-of14 for 24 yards and one interception. The Seahawks are still tied for the NFC West lead but without a healthy Smith, their post-season prospects take a major hit.

WR A.J. Brown – His ankle twisted when he was dragged down by a defender and while he did not leave the game, it was looked at on the sideline and he said in the post-game that he thought it would by okay.

Free Agents, Flops and Other Notables

WR Jalen Coker – The Carolina undrafted rookie led the team with four catches for 101 yards, including an 83-yard touchdown catch. Adam Thielen (5-51) was also effective versus the Cowboys but Coker is outplaying the drafted Xavier Legette (2-7).

WR Xavier Worthy – We’ll see how the passing in Kansas City shakes out if Patrick Mahomes misses time, but the rookie Worthy led the Chiefs with six catches for 46 yards. He fielded 11 targets, three more than Travis Kelce (4-27). He also ran in a 21-yard touchdown.

RB Jerome Ford – The Browns are back to Ford as the starting running back with Nick Chubb back on injured reserve. Ford ran for 84 yards on seven carries, including a 62-yard run for a third-quarter touchdown. He also caught two passes for 20 yards. Ford should handle the primary workload and D’Onta Foreman should be active on game days again.

TE Brenton Strange -The Jaguars placed Evan Engram on injured reserve last week, and Strange was promoted to the starting tight end. While he had been catching one pass weekly, he stepped up to 11 receptions for 73 yards against the Jets. That was not only his best game of the year, but it was better than any that Engram turned in.

RB Kendre Miller – In Week 14, Miller scored the Saints’ first rushing touchdown in eight games when he ran for 32 yards on ten carries. On Sunday, he ran for 46 yards on nine carries and ended the game covering for the injured Alvin Kamara. Miller hasn’t caught either of his targets since returning two weeks ago, but he was already splitting the rushing with Kamara. The Saints play in Green Bay this week and they’ll look to run as much as they can. Kamara signed an extension and will be back next year, but Miller is working on forming a tandem with Kamara next year.

RB Tyjae Spears – Tony Pollard was questionable for the Bengals game but was active and rushed 17 times for 45 yards and one score. But he had no passes for the first time this season. Tyjae Spears not only rushed in a score on his four carries for five yards, but he also scored on his six catches for 87 yards.  Spears had not totaled six catches over his five previous games, so it was a major change, coupled with removing Pollard from the pass equation.

WR Jalen McMillan—The Buccaneers’ fourth-round pick, McMillan already caught four passes for 59 yards and two scores in Week 14 versus the Raiders. On Sunday, he proved that wasn’t an aberration but a start to his career when he gained 75 yards on five catches with another touchdown. He’ll play in Dallas this week with a chance for the hat trick.

Beware the Eagles – The Steelers committed to stopping Saquon Barkley and had success. They limited him to only 65 yards on 19 carries, and he caught just two passes for nine yards for his second-worst game as an Eagle – just in time for fantasy playoffs, no less. But Jaylen Hurts, and their passing game had been criticized. So without the run owning the game, Hurts passed for 290 yards and two touchdowns against a Top-5 pass defense. And A.J. Brown (8-110, TD) and DeVonta Smith (11-109, TD) had their best performances of the year.

Huddle player of the week

Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

Davante Adams (NYJ)  –  His season hasn’t met expectations, but when the Jets faced the staggering Jaguars, it was vintage Aaron Rodgers to Davante Adams. He led all NFL players in fantasy points when he caught nine passes for 198 yards and two touchdowns. His 71-yard touchdown catch in the fourth quarter helped the Jets to remain ahead of the Jags. And just in time for fantasy playoffs!

Salute!

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

Comedy Yards TDs Tragedy Yards TDs
QB Aaron Rodgers 289-45 3 QB Kyler Murray 224-11 0
RB Jerome Ford 7-84
2-10
1 RB Tyrone Tracy 10-31
1-4
0
RB Justice Hill 2-7
5-61
1 RB Derrick Henry 14-67 0
WR Rashod Bateman 3-80 2 WR Cooper Kupp 0 0
WR Jalen Coker 4-110 1 WR Marvin Harrison 2-32 0
WR Jalen McMillan 5-75 1 WR Jaylen Waddle 0 0
TE Josh Whyle 5-37 1 TE Travis Kelce 4-27 0
PK Cam Little 1 XP  4 FG PK Riley Patterson  1  XP
Huddle Fantasy Points = 206 Huddle Fantasy Points = 35

Now get back to work…

Tunnel Vision – Injuries, free agents and Sunday stars

Week 13 review

 

SUNDAY SALUTES
Quarterbacks Pass-Rush TD
Jayden Daniels 206-34 4
Russell Wilson 414-3 3
Caleb Williams 256-39 3
Lamar Jackson 237-79 2
Josh Allen 148-18 3
Running Backs Yards TD
Bucky Irving 25-152
3-33
1
Bijan Robinson 26-102
6-33
1
Najee Harris 16-75
6-54
1
Joe Mixon 20-101
4-18
1
Josh Jacobs 19-43
4-74
1
Wide Receivers Yards TD
Terry McLaurin 8-73 2
Mike Evans 8-118 1
Keenan Allen 5-73 2
Parker Washington 6-103 1
Adam Thielen 8-99 1
Tight Ends Yards TD
Brock Bowers 10-140 1
Trey McBride 12-96 0
Jonnu Smith 10-113 0
Mark Andrews 6-67 1
Pat Freiermuth 6-68 1
Placekickers XP FG
Chad Ryland 1 5
Chase McLaughlin 2 4
Chris Boswell 5 3
Brandon McManus 3 3
Eddy Piniero 2 3
Defense Sack – TO TD
Steelers 4-3 1
Cowboys 6-2 1
Chargers 1-4 1
Jets 3-2 1
Seahawks 2-2 1

Bumps, Bruises and Bowouts

QB Trevor Lawrence – Concussion
RB Christian McCaffrey – Knee
WR Ladd McConkey – Knee
WR Noah Brown – Rib
WR Calvin Austin – Head
WR Rashod Bateman – Knee
TE Taysom Hill – Knee

Chasing Ambulances

QB Trevor LawrenceHe was in the process of sliding down when the Texans’ defender hit him in the head which caused his head to snap back into the turf. He appeared to be temporarily unconscious but managed to get up and sit in the cart. He was already questionable to play with a shoulder injury and now has a concussion. Mac Jones is likely the starter this week at the Titans.

WR Ladd McConkey – He was tackled with his legs awkwardly bent underneath him and limped off. He’s been dinged up this year with a balky hip and a sore shoulder but had aseason-best nine catches for 117 yards in the win over the Falcons. No early word was given about the severity, so expect to hear more after Monday.

TE Taysom Hill – A week after his career-best game, Hill (5-37) was the leading receiver for the Saints in their loss to the Rams. He went down with a knee injury that will be examined on Monday, but early speculation is that he likely tore ligaments or at least has a bone bruise. He’s probably gone for the rest of the season in either of those cases. An MRI will determine what the damage is.

RB Christian McCaffrey – He looked great for the first quarter in Buffalo, gaining 53 yards on seven carries, but he went down untouched in the San Francisco backfield after being tossed the ball. He’ll get an MRI on his knee but a non-contact knee injury is never good news.  More should be known on Monday. Jordan Mason took over once McCaffrey left and would be the primary back again if needed.

Free Agents, Flops and Other Notables

QB Drew Lock – While the Giants lost to the Cowboys last Thursday, Drew Lock took his first start and threw for 178 yards and one interception that was returned for a critical touchdown. Lock also ran for 57 yards and a score on just four scampers. He kept Malik Nabers (8-69) still worthy of a fantasy start.

RB Raheem Mostert – He had nearly disappeared from the game plan for most of the season, but Mostert showed up against the Packers with five rushes for 19 yards to lead the backfield. De’Von Achane only ran for 14 yards on seven rushes. Mostert added two catches for 15 yards. He still fell below fantasy startability, but at least he’s back in the box score.

TE Jonnu Smith – His career-best season continues with a team-leading ten catches for 113 yards in the loss to the Packers. That was four more catches than Tyreek Hill. Tagovailoa has been throwing shorter routes since he returned from his most recent concussion, and it has directly benefitted Smith.

RB Isiah Pacheco – His first game back since breaking his leg in Week 2, Pacheco ran well with seven rushes for 44 yards, though 34 yards came on one carry. But that compared to Kareem Hunt’s seven carries for only 15 yards. Pacheco added a five-yard catch as well. The Kansas City backfield likely remains a committee to help keep Pacheco healthy for the playoffs, but he’s justified a starting role in fantasy lineups after owners waited a long time. The problem is that Hunt is still involved, but becomes a very risky consideration.

QB Aidan O’Connell – The newest starting quarterback for the Raiders passed for 340 yards and two touchdowns in Kansas City last Friday and connected well with the only two Raiders who have fantasy value – Brock Bowers (10-140, TD) and Jakobi Meyers (6-97). He’ll play in Tampa Bay against a far weaker secondary this weekend.

RB Sincere McCormick – The Raiders’ undrafted rookie gained 33 yards on five carries in Week 12, and then led the backfield against the Chiefs with 12 rushes for 64 yards versus the No. 1 defense against running backs. He’ll face the No. 26 defense in Tampa Bay this week.

Chargers Backfield – J.K. Dobbins landed on injured reserve after a productive season that lasted longer than usual.  The new backfield was little used but still effective with Gus Edwards (6-32) and Kimani Vidal (4-20). Edwards had just one catch on the only pass thrown to a running back.  Edwards has been a plodder this year, but the rookie Vidal deserves to be on fantasy rosters. The Bolts host the Bills this week and their only defensive weakness is against running backs.

QB Russell Wilson – The Steelers-Ravens tilt turned into a shootout, and Russell Wilson continues to reinvent his career with 414 passing yards and three touchdowns in Cincinnati. He hit ten different receivers, and none gained more than 74 yards.

QB Mac Jones – Entered the loss to the Texans after Trevor Lawrence was concussed. He threw for 235 yards and two scores in little over two quarters to bring the Jaguars to within three points. He is likely to start again this week at Tennessee and potentially even longer, depending on how quickly Lawrence recovers.

RB Antonio Gibson – The Patriots rely on Rhamondre Stevenson as the primary running back, but Gibson is seeing an increase in touches lately. After six runs for 31 yards and a 14-yard catch in Week 12 in Miami, he logged seven rushes for 62 yards and a touchdown on Sunday versus the Colts.  Stevenson still ran the ball 18 times for 73 yards, but Gibson was allowed the score and played a bigger role than in the past.

RB Chris Rodriguez – Austin Ekeler landed on injured reserve and Washington used two players to replace him. Jeremy McNichols (6-32) and Chris Rodriguez (13-94, TD) both saw use in the 19-42 beatdown of the Titans. But Rodriguez showed up at the start of the fourth quarter, so his big day was entirely during the ample trash time in the game. McNichols saw most of his use in the first half.

RB Bucky Irving – The Buccaneers rookie took over the backfield a few weeks ago and just posted his first 100-yard game when he ran for 152 yards and a touchdown with three catches for 33 yards. Rachaad White ran for 76 yards on 11 carries, but Irving was used less near the end of the game as he had injured his hip but played through it.

QB Bryce YoungThe Panthers have shown grit and heart continuing to play well  despite their 3-9 record. They brought the Buccaneers into overtime before losing 26-23. Young played well, throwing for 298 yards and one score, and rushing for 17 yards and a touchdown. He’s looking much better.

RB Blake Corum – There have been plenty of questions from fans and the media about why the Rams rarely use their prized rookie running back Blake Corum who only ran once in Week 12 versus 16 carries by Kyren Williams. Playing at the Saints this week, Corum handled eight rushes for 42 yards versus 15 runs for 104 yards by Williams, who also scored once. That’s still short of being a fantasy option, but it is encouraging to see them ramp up his usage and gives more confidence if Williams was to be injured, which happened last year but not yet for 2024.

Huddle player of the week

Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images

Brock Bowers (LV)  –  The Raiders’ rookie has far exceeded all expoectations and wasted no time in being the No. 1 fantasy tight end – and he just gets better and widens the gap below him. Against the Chiefs, the Raiders lost but Bowers turned in 10 catches for 140 yards and a touchdown. He was drafted this summer as a backup and became the premier tight end.

Salute!

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

Comedy Yards TDs Tragedy Yards TDs
QB Jayden Daniels 206-34 4 QB Justin Herbert 147 0
RB Chris Rodriguez 13-94 1 RB Chuba Hubbard 12-43 0
RB Isaiah Davis 1-4
3-28
1 RB Ken Walker 16-49
2-(-3)
0
WR Keenan Allen 5-73 2 WR Tank Dell 1-23 0
WR Parker Washington 6-103 1 WR Cooper Kupp 3-17 0
WR Tre Tucker 1-58 1 WR CeeDee Lamb 2-39 0
TE Jonnu Smith 10-113 0 TE T.J. Hockenson 3-28 0
PK Chad Ryland 1 XP  5 FG PK Jason Sanders  1 FG
Huddle Fantasy Points = 160 Huddle Fantasy Points = 39

Now get back to work…

Tunnel Vision – Injuries, free agents and Sunday stars

Tunnel Vision – fantasy free agents, injuries and notable performances.

 

SUNDAY SALUTES
Quarterbacks Pass-Rush TD
Jaylen Daniels 275-74 3
Patrick Mahomes 269-60 3
Tua Tagovailoa 317-(-2) 4
Caleb Williams 340-33 2
Sam Darnold 330-(-1) 2
Running Backs Yards TD
Josh Jacobs 26-106 3
Bucky Irving 12-87
6-64
1
Jahmyr Gibbs 21-90
3-9
2
Tony Pollard 24-119
3-10
1
Saquon Barkley 26-255
4-47
2
Wide Receivers Yards TD
Jordan Addison 8-162 1
Courtland Sutton 8-97 2
Jaylen Waddle 8-144 1
D.J. Moore 7-106 1
Keenan Allen 9-86 1
Tight Ends Yards TD
Trey Mcbride 12-133 0
Jonnu Smith 9-87 1
Noah Gray 4-66 2
George Kittle 6-82 1
T.J. Hockenson 7-114 0
Placekickers XP FG
Will Lutz 2 5
Daniel Carlson 1 4
Eddy Pineiro 1 4
Nick Folk 3 3
Jake Elliott 4 3
Defense Sack – TO TD
Cowboys 4-3 2
Seahawks 5-1 1
Texans 8-3 1
Dolphins 4-2 0
Buccaneers 4-1 0

Bumps, Bruises and Bowouts

QB Gardner Minshew – Collar bone
RB Brian Robinson – Ankle
RB David Montgomery – Shoulder
RB Austin Ekeler – Head
TE Ja’Tavion Sanders – Neck
WR Josh Downs – Shoulder
WR Romeo Doubs – Concussion

Chasing Ambulances

RB Brian Robinson –  The Commander’s back appeared to have a serious ankle injury when he was tackled on his first carry but was able to walk off. He returned for four carries and one catch but was then ruled out of the game near the end of the second quarter. His status for this week will be determined later in the week.

RB Austin Ekeler—He returned the final kickoff and was flattened in the process. He appeared to be temporarily unconscious but was eventually able to walk off the field, though he looked groggy. The expectation is that he had a concussion, and he went to a local hospital for observation.

RB David Montgomery – He caught a screen pass and gained 14 yards when injured. He did not appear to be hit that hard and he did not show any signs of pain, but he pulled himself out of the game and did not return. His status for this week  versus the Bears will be determined later.

TE Ja’Tavion Sanders – The Panthers’ rookie tight end landed on his head and appeared to jam his neck as well. He went to the hospital but was discharged shortly after. The early expectation is that he’ll miss the game against the Buccaneers this week.

WR Josh Downs – The Colts’ slot receiver went down with a shoulder injury on a seven-yard catch in the fourth quarter and did not return. Downs is also the punt returner for the Colts, so he’ll have two roles to replace this week in New England if he cannot play.

QB Gardner Minshew – The Raiders quarterback was knocked from the loss to the Broncos late in the game and Desmond Ridder had to finish. Early speculation is that he has a broken collarbone and is lost for the season. That will likely mean that Ridder will get the start, but playing in Kansas City will not likely be productive.

WR Romeo Doubs – Suffered a concussion on an incompletion. That’s a bigger problem because the Packers play on Thursday, and there is not expected to be enough time for Doubs to get through the concussion protocol. Dontayvion Wicks or Bo Melton would help to replace him.

Free Agents, Flops and Other Notables

RB Jonathan Brooks – The Panthers’ second-round pick made his NFL debut a short 12 weeks into the season. The ex-Longhorn only ran twice and gained seven yards, while Chuba Hubbard still shouldered the primary workload with 16 carries for 58 yards and one score. It was just the first game for Brooks after recovering from his knee injury of last year, but it also suggests that we may never see Brooks with a full-time load this year, and it would not make sense to leave him open to injury much with Hubbard already effective as the running back.

TE Noah Gray – He’s spent his time in Kansas City being “not Travis” and it was a surprise when he collected four passes for 23 yards and two scores in the loss to the Bills in Week 11 while Kelce only managed one catch. Against the Panthers, Kelce was better with six catches for 62 yards but Gray repeated his previous week when he caught four more passes for 66 yards and two more touchdowns. He’s scored four times in two weeks, while Kelce only totals two scores on the year.  Patrick Mahomes finally has a full house for wide receivers and he’s thrown four of six touchdowns to Gray.

WR David Moore – The Panthers finally got Adam Thielen (3-57) back after missing the last nine weeks, but Bryce Young suddenly turned to Moore as the primary receiver, leading the team with ten targets and six catches for 81 yards and their lone passing touchdown. The Chiefs brought one of the better defenses to the game, but apparently not the sense that a trap game could almost happen. Moore only had 13 catches on the season and no previous scores, so he was just one of many “go-figure” players from Week 12.

TE T.J. Hockenson – He hasn’t been a huge factor since returning three weeks ago, but Hockenson blew up for seven catches for 114 yards in the win over the Bears.  He’s heating up just in time to help fantasy owners reach their playoffs, and he’ll be playing the Cardinals, Falcons, and Bears again all at home.

QB Caleb Williams – Granted, the Bears will lose the game in the final minute even if it takes overtime, but at least the rookie quarterback finally threw a touchdown after four scoreless games saw him thrown onto many fantasy league waiver wires. But he passed for 340 yards and two touchdowns versus the Vikings, and that included DJ Moore (7-106, TD) and Keenan Allen (9-86, TD) who had also gone a month without a score or any notable yardage. His next three games are all on the road while facing the Lions, 49ers, and Vikings again. The need to throw will be high in each.

QB Anthony Richardson – He was already benched once this year for poor passing, and in Week 12, he only completed 11-of-28 for 172 yards in the loss to the Lions. He added 61 yards on 10 yards, but Michael Pittman (6-96) was the only receiver with more than three catches or 39 yards.

WR Jaylen Waddle – The Miami wideout had just one score on the year and one 100-yard game back in Week 1. Against the Patriots, Waddle posted eight catches for 144 yards and a score to lead the Fins. Now if Tyreek Hill could only match that, since he’s not broken 100 yards since Week 1 as well.

QB Tommy DeVito – The Giants released Daniel Jones and went with DeVito instead of Drew Lock because he “gave us the best chance to win.” Apparently, it is still not a great chance because DeVito Part II only passed for 189 yards and no scores, while the passing stats fell off even worse than when Jones played. Worse yet, Tyrone Tracy Jr. was limited to only nine runs for 42 yards and caught four passes for 28 yards – all late in the game. And they not only lost 30-7, DeVito passed against one of the worst secondaries in the NFL.

RB Jaleel McLaughlinThe Denver backfield is always changing, and usually not for the best. Javonte Williams (8-(-2)) was a flop against the Raiders and gave way to McLaughlin (7-44) and Audric Estime (3-15) which is all to say there nothing reliable in the Denver backfield.  Much less an actual touchdown.

RB Dylan Laube – Crafty waiver wire hounds snapped up Laube last week with the news that Alexander Mattison and Zamir White were out, but crafty waiver wire hounds are not always right. Laube returned a kick for 59 yards in the first quarter and never touched the ball again. Sincere McCormick was promoted from the practice squad and led the Raiders with five carries for 33 yards.

QB Brandon Allen – His first start in three years could have gone better. Allen passed for 199 yards and one score, but most of that went to George Kittle (6-82, TD), while Deebo Samuel (1-21) and Jauan Jennings (5-40) were the top wideouts. Even Christian McCaffrey was held to 31 rushing yards and three catches for 37 yards. Brock Purdy suggested he may be back next week in Buffalo, and they’ll need him to have a chance there.

Jordan Addison (MIN)  –  Justin Jefferson (2-27) was quiet against the Bears on Sunday, but mostly because Addison turned in a career-best performance with eight catches for 162 yards and one touchdown. Addison’s previous high yardage for the year was only 72 yards, and he caught a 69-yard touchdown to kick off his big day.

Huddle player of the week

Credit: Alex Gallardo-Imagn Images

RB Saquon Barkley – You have to think he doesn’t miss New York much. Barkley Set a personal best when he ran for 255 yards on 26 carries with touchdowns from 70- and 72-yards. He also added four catches for 47 yards which all rolled up into 46.2 fantasy points in reception-point leagues. That’ll make a difference.

Salute!

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

Comedy Yards TDs Tragedy Yards TDs
QB Caleb Williams 340-33 2 QB Jared Goff 269 0
RB Ameer Abdullah 8-28
5-37
1 RB R. Stevenson 8-13 0
RB Jaylen Warren 11-45
3-19
1 RB Brian Robinson 5-13
1-11
0
WR Keenan Allen 9-86 1 WR Deebo Samuel 1-21 0
WR David Moore 6-81 1 WR Justin Jefferson 2-27 0
WR Calvin Austin 3-78 1 WR Jayden Reed 3-26 0
TE Noah Gray 4-66 2 TE Sam LaPorta 3-19 0
PK Will Lutz 2 XP   5 FG PK Graham Gano  1  XP
Huddle Fantasy Points = 163 Huddle Fantasy Points = 37

Now get back to work…

Tunnel Vision – Injuries, free agents and Sunday stars

Fantasy free agents, injuries and notable performances.

 

SUNDAY SALUTES
Quarterbacks Pass-Rush TD
Jared Goff 421-21 4
Anthony Richardson 272-32 3
Bo Nix 307-5 4
Matthew Stafford 295-4 4
 Joe Burrow 356-28 3
Running Backs Yards TD
Saquon Barkley 26-146
2-52
2
Breece Hall 16-78
7-43
2
David Montgomery 15-75
3-20
2
Josh Jacobs 18-76
4-58
1
De’Von Achane 17-73
4-32
1
Wide Receivers Yards TD
Amon-Ra St. Brown 11-161 2
Cooper Kupp 6-106 2
Jerry Jeudy 6-142 1
Tee Higgins 9-148 1
Ja’Marr Chase 7-75 2
Tight Ends Yards TD
Taysom Hill 7-138
8-50
3
Brock Bowers 13-126 1
Jonnu Smith 6-101 2
David Njoku 9-81 0
Zach Ertz 6-47 1
Placekickers XP FG
Chris Boswell 0 6
Jake Bates 7 1
Jason Sanders 4 2
Joey Slye 1 3
Matt Gay 1 3
Defense Sack – TO TD
Denver 4-1 0
Buffalo 2-2 0
Pittsburgh 2-3 0
Minnesota 5-1 0
LA Rams 3-2 0

Bumps, Bruises and Bowouts

How great is this short list?

RB Alexander Mattison – Ankle
RB Zamir White – Quad
RB Tyjae Spears – Head
WR Darnell Mooney – Hamstring

Chasing Ambulances

RB Alexander Mattison –  Left the loss to the Dolphins after five carries and his status will be determined on Monday. The Raiders turned to Zamir White, who was lost with a quad injury. This is the No. 30 fantasy backfield, but it is notable when they lost their top two backs in the same game.

Free Agents, Flops and Other Notables

WR Christian Watson – The oft-injured Watson turned in his annual big game, turning four catches into 150 yards in the win over the Bears. He caught passes for 17, 25, 48, and 60 yards. Before you grab your wallet and run to the waiver wire, that was roughly the same yardage he totaled from all games since Week 3. He managed that against a Bears secondary rated No. 3 versus wide receivers, so it was impressive. The question is whether it can be repeatable.

WR Brian Thomas Jr. – The Jaguars rookie led the team with five catches for 82 yards, though most of that came later in the humbling beatdown by the Lions. He was the only Jag with more than 30 yards in the game, and even with seven more games to play, the Jaguars looked like they were breaking camp and folding up the tents. Like Malik Nabers, we cannot know how good Thomas is while starting his career on a sinking ship.

HC Doug Pederson – Already expected to be on the chopping block, losing 52-6 should see him fired this week. The Jags will turn the team over to an interim coach and whoever that is, it cannot be any worse than what the Jags have become this season.

TE Brock Bowers – The Raiders may be yet another team in a slow-motion crash-and-burn, but the rookie tight end has been a saving grace, catching 13 passes for 126 yards and one touchdown versus the Dolphins.

RB Ameer Abdullah – While this backfield may not produce any fantasy-relevant numbers, injuries to Alexander Mattison (5-19) and Zamir White (5-9) were both injured in the loss to the Dolphins.  Abdullah only ran once, but he caught three passes for 16 yards and a touchdown later in the game.  Dylan Laube was a preseason sleeper who hasn’t been involved and was inactive last Sunday. But the Raiders may need to scrape their depth chart for running back help when the Broncos visit this week.

TE Jonnu Smith – The Dolphins have relied on tight ends as just blockers during the rein of HC Mike McDaniel, but Smith has been consistent with four or five catches per game. Facing the Raiders, he just turned in a career-best game with six catches for 101 yards and two touchdowns. The Miami offense has not thrown as well to their wideouts, but Smith has been the best tight end they’ve thrown to in years.

QB Jameis Winston – The Browns rushing offense appears to be on a permanent vacation this season, but Winston is posting surprising stats as their season swirls down the drain. He passed for 395 yards and two scores in their loss to the Saints and passed scores to Jerry Jeudy (6-142, TD) and Elijah Moore (6-66). Even David Njoku (9-81) turned in big stats. The  Browns’ NFL season may be realistically over, but their fantasy output has been stronger with Winston as the starter.

QB Anthony Richardson – That two-week “think about it” vacation seemed to work. The second-year player faced the Jets in New York and left with a win and the best performance of his career. Richardson completed 20-of-30 for 272 yards and one touchdown pass, plus rushed for 32 yards and two scores on ten runs. The top three receivers were all the starting wideouts. He played noticeably better.

QB Russell Wilson – There was plenty of anticipation about what he could do versus the Ravens’ worst secondary in the NFL. Ends up not much, but just enough. The Steelers took the 16-18 win but Wilson only passed for 205 yards and one interception. George Pickens (8-89) shined, but no other receivers did. The Steelers’ defense played one of their best games of the year, and that depressed the needed scoring. However, the Steelers will continue to rely on their backfield and defense to win most games.

WR Nick Westbrook-Ikhine – The Titan scored in five of the last six games but rarely has more than two receptions. He did it again against the Vikings with two catches for 117 yards, including a 98-yard touchdown catch.  Calvin Ridley (4-58) provides the No. 1 wideout role but has just three touchdowns on the season.

QB Bo Nix – The Denver rookie is everything we hoped (from Caleb Williams) and totaled 13 touchdowns in the last seven games. He boosted that progress with a healthy 307-yard, four-touchdown effort in the win over the Falcons. Nix passed to ten different receivers and none had more than 78 yards. His development has already exceeded expectations.

RB Audric Estime / Javonte Williams – In Week 10, Javonte Williams was scaled back to only one rush and two catches, while the rookie Audric Estime ran a season-high 14 times for 53 yards, including five carries in the final drive that should have won the game (blocked field goal). The expectation was that the more effective rookie would take over the primary role but that was premature. Williams started the game with three carries in the opening drive, while Estime showed up for the second series. But Estime only gained 16 yards on six runs while Williams gained 59 yards on nine runs with one score. He also caught four passes for 28 yards compared to three receptions for nine yards from Estime. The bad news is that both runners are involved in the committee and limit each other. There is no good news.

WR Jaxon Smith-Njigba – He was a disappointment as a rookie but certainly not a bust. He logged seven catches for 180 yards and two scores in Week 10, then led the Seahawks with ten receptions for 110 yards in the win over the 49ers. DK Metcalf (7-70) was back on Sunday, so Smith-Njigba’s recent success isn’t from a lack of options for Geno Smith.

WR Xavier Worthy – His four catches for 61 yards and a score paced the Chiefs in their loss to the Bills. Worthy also ran once for seven yards. The only real hole in the offense for the Chiefs is a lack of a top-flite wideout. DeAndre Hopkins (3-29) was ineffective versus the Bills defense, so any improvement from Worthy will make a difference.

RB Isiah Pacheco – He is expected to return for Week 12 after rehabbing his broken fibula and getting in practices last week. Kareem Hunt (14-60) may have just had his final game as the clear primary back, but it is highly unlikely he will stay on the sideline. The Chiefs play in Carolina and are coming off a loss, so there should be plenty of touches to share. For this week, anyway.

Huddle player of the week

Credit: Matthew Hinton-Imagn Images

Taysom Hill (NO)  –   With Chris Olave out, the psuedo-tight end Hill has been worth around 50 yards per game but only scored once since Week 4. That level of production likely left him on many fantasy benches for Week 11 when he thrashed the Browns who had been rated as the No. 5 defense against tight ends. Hill ran for 138 yards on just seven carries with three touchdowns, plus caught eight passes for 50 yards. That was a career-high in catches, touchdowns, and rushing yards. He heads onto his bye, so he gets to enjoy this landmark game for two weeks.

Salute!

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

Comedy Yards TDs Tragedy Yards TDs
QB Jameis Winston 395-8 2 QB Lamar Jackson 207-46 1
RB Cam Akers 10-25
2-11
1 RB Tony Pollard 9-15
2-14
0
RB Ameer Abdullah 1-1
3-16
1 RB Aaron Jones 15-39
1-4
0
WR N Westbrook-Ikhine 2-117 1 WR Terry McLaurin 1-10 0
WR Christian Watson 4-150 0 WR Jaylen Waddle 2-37 0
WR Elijah Moore 6-66 1 WR Garrett Wilson 4-18 0
TE Taysom Hill 7-138
8-50
3 TE Travis Kelce 2-8 0
PK Chris Boswell 6 FG PK Justin Tucker 1  XP 1 FG
Huddle Fantasy Points = 165 Huddle Fantasy Points = 46

Now get back to work…

Tunnel Vision – Injuries, free agents and Sunday stars

A look back at Sunday for fantasy free agents, injuries and notable performances.

 

SUNDAY SALUTES
Quarterbacks Pass-Rush TD
Joe Burrow 428-3 4
Jalen Hurts 202-56 4
Kyler Murray 266-21 3
Lamar Jackson 290-33 4
Brock Purdy 353-17 2
Running Backs Yards TD
Bijan Robinson 20-116
3-28
2
Chuba Hubbard 28-153
4-16
1
Chase Brown 13-42
9-52
1
James Conner 12-33
5-80
1
Rachaad White 10-31
6-39
1
Wide Receivers Yards TD
Ja’Marr Chase 11-264 3
M Valdes-Scantling 3-109 2
Calvin Ridley 5-84 2
George Pickens 5-91 1
Tylan Wallace 3-115 1
Tight Ends Yards TD
Travis Kelce 8-64 1
Mark Andrews 6-68 1
Tanner Hudson 6-42 1
T.J. Hockenson 8-72 0
George Kittle 3-57 1
Placekickers XP FG
Joey Slye 1 4
Tyler Bass 3 3
Jake Moody 2 3
Jake Elliott 4 2
Harrison Butker 1 3
Defense Sack – TO TD
Eagles 3-5 0
Patriots 9-0 0
Bills 4-4 1
Vikings 3-3 0
Texans 0-5 0

Bumps, Bruises and Bowouts

Delightfully light.

RB Miles Sanders – Leg
RB Tank Bigsby – Ankle
RB Aaron Jones – Chest
TE Dalton Kincaid – Knee
TE Sam LaPorta – Shoulder
GM Jerry Jones – Microphone allergy

Chasing Ambulances

RB Miles Sanders – Carted from the field with what is expected to be a serious injury to his leg. His absence won’t mean much to the Panthers who should be bringing Jonathan Brooks into the active lineup very soon, and Chuba Hubbard has been very strong.

RB Tank Bigsby – Had to be helped from the field after the second drive of the game with an ankle injury. He was already questionable with an ankle injury entering the game. He later re-entered the game for one carry in the second quarter but then was not used. The ankle is an ongoing problem for Bigsby, who may not be fully healthy until after their Week 12 bye.

RB Aaron Jones – Took a massive hit to his right ribs and was in much pain. He was carted to the locker room. He later returned to the game and carried four times near the end of the game.

TE Dalton Kincaid – Twisted his knee in the second quarter, then returned for one third-quarter incompletion and then ruled out of the game. Dawson Knox steps up if Kincaid cannot play against the Chiefs this week, but expectations would be low.

TE Sam LaPorta – Left the game after scoring once, but injured his shoulder and did not return. There wasn’t much said about him in the late game on Sunday, so more information should be known on Monday.

Free Agents, Flops and Other Notables

RB Cam Akers – Aaron Jones ran 17 times in the win over the Jaguars but was banged up for part of the game. Cam Akers handled 13 carries for 38 yards, while Ty Chandler ran just four times for 18 yards. The Vikings are comfortable leaning on Akers when they have to, and he is a must-add for the Jones owner. He could offer standalone fantasy value if Jones misses time.

RB Chuba Hubbard – Playing in Munich, Germany, the Panthers opted to make the rookie Jonathan Brooks inactive again this week and that left Hubbard with 28 carries for 153 yards and one touchdown, plus four catches for 16 yards and the primary weapon in their second-consecutive win. The Panthers enter their bye and then host the Chiefs in Week 12. By this point, why bother with Brooks? Then again, what changed in Hubbard’s fourth NFL season?

QB Joe Flacco – The Colts are riding the veteran the rest of the way and facing the Bills. Joe Flacco passed for 272 yards and two scores. He used his wideouts almost exclusively. That involved Alec Pierce (4-81, TD), Josh Downs (7-72), and Adonai Mitchell (6-71) who all offered moderate fantasy points. There are no stars here, but three fantasy options for receivers. Flacco also threw three interceptions, but only two were his fault.

TE T.J. Hockenson – Finally returned from his 2023 knee injury in Week 9 but only managed three catches for 27 yards. Facing the Jaguars weak secondary, Hockenson rekindled pre-injury form when he led the offense with eight catches for 72 yards. That didn’t take long.

RB Javonte Williams / Audric Estime – The Broncos backfield has struggled to produce this season, and Javonte Williams has been the primary back. Until now. Williams had been used for 12 to 17 carries weekly, and Audric Estime and Jaleel McLaughlin shared the scraps. Facing the Chiefs, Williams was only given one first-quarter carry for five yards. McLaughlin only ran twice. But Estime carried 14 times for 53 yards. The trio will continue to exist, but the playcalling has swung to favor Estime, and he is the back of the future.

WR Marquez Valdes-Scantling – With the Saints already down three starting wideouts and suffering through their seven-game losing streak, they acquired MVS after the Bills released him after they traded for Amari Cooper. He only caught one pass in his debut last week, but MVS caught three against the Falcons for Week 10. They included a 40-yard touchdown, a 67-yard gain, and a 2-yard touchdown for a total of 109 yards and two scores. All three catches were within an eight-minute span in the second quarter.

Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

RB Christian McCaffrey – After waiting just nine short weeks, McCaffrey owners got to click that START box for the first time and any points would be more than what McCaffrey offered in return for likely the first pick in a fantasy draft. He ran for 39 yards on 13 carries, while Jordan Mason owners only got one run for five yards. But McCaffrey offered six catches for 68 yards. His 19 touches were great to see in his first game back and he’ll face a weak Seattle run defense this week.

WR Jauan Jennings – Brandon Aiyuk is on injured reserve but Jennings returned after missing three games and took over the split end spot and led the 49ers with seven catches for 93 yards and was thrown 11 targets, four more than anyone else. Granted, it came against the weak Buccaneers secondary, but Jennings should figure in more for the stretch of the season as Aiyuk’s replacement. The rookie Ricky Pearsall (4-73, TD) also showed up in Week 10, making an impact from the slot.

WR Mike Williams – He was traded away by the Jets after they acquired Davante Adams and he was active on Sunday despite only having a few days with the Steelers. He only caught one pass – a beautiful 32-yard bomb thrown by Russell Wilson that provided the winning points with just two minutes left to play. That should accelerate his role in the game plan.

RB Gus Edwards – After landing on injured reserve in Week 5, Edwards was finally active for the Chargers again on Sunday. And he did exactly what no one wanted to see.  He gained 55 yards on ten catches while J.K. Dobbins gained 50 yards on 15 runs. Edwards also was given several goal-line carries though none were successful. Kimani Vidal was inactive and it’s back to the maddening committee approach.

RB Tyjae Spears – Also out injured since Week 6, Spears returned against the Colts and ran six times for 27 yards, while Julius Chestnut returned to zero touches. Tony Pollard (9-44) was banged up coming into the game, so Spears was likely a little busier than usual.

QB Cooper Rush – The Cowboys are 0-4 at home and the first week of Cooper Rush shattered any hopes for the Cowboys, their fantasy players, and their season-ticket drive next spring. He completed just 13-of-34 for 45 yards and was later benched so that Trey Lance could go 4-of-6 for 21 yards and one interception. The fantasy fallout spread to Jake Ferguson (4-24) and CeeDee Lamb (6-21).

WR John Metchie – The Texans bumped him up the depth chart after Stefon Diggs was lost in Week 8 and Nico Collins was already on IR. Metchie only caught three passes for 29 yards in Week 8, and then failed to catch either of his passes in Week 9. That landed him back on most waiver wires. But against the Lions, Metchie led the Texans with five catches for 74 yards and the only passing score by C.J. Stroud. That’ll get him picked up, again, from the waiver wire at least for this week in Dallas.

Huddle player of the week

Syndication: The Enquirer

Ja’Marr Chase (CIN)  –  This was not the week to face Chase in your fantasy league. Chase could practically build a career just facing the Ravens. In Week 5, he caught ten passes for 193 yards and two touchdowns. In Week 10, he racked up an astounding 264 yards and three touchdowns on 11 catches. That’s 55 points in a PPR league for those of you who did not go against him. In his eight games not playing the Ravens, Chase totaled 45 catches for 524 yards and five touchdowns.  In two games versus Baltimore, he had 21 receptions for 457 yards and five scores.

Salute!

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

Comedy Yards TDs Tragedy Yards TDs
QB Derek Carr 269-17 2 QB Jayden Daniels 202-5 0
RB Jaylen Warren 14-66
2-29
0 RB Saquon Barkley 14-66
1-12
0
RB Chase Brown 13-42
9-52
1 RB D’Andre Swift 16-59
1-6
0
WR M Valdes-Scantling 3-109 2 WR DeVonta Smith 2-14 0
WR Calvin Ridley 5-84 2 WR D.J. Moore 3-24 0
WR Tylan Wallace 3-115 1 WR CeeDee Lamb 6-21 0
TE Tanner Hudson 6-42 1 TE J Ferguson 4-24 0
PK Joey Slye 1 XP   4 FG PK Justin Tucker 3  XP
Huddle Fantasy Points = 153 Huddle Fantasy Points = 50

Now get back to work…

Tunnel Vision – Injuries, free agents and Sunday stars

Looking back at the injuries, stars and free agents from Week 9

 

SUNDAY SALUTES
Quarterbacks Pass-Rush TD
Joe Burrow 251-11 5
Jalen Hurts 230-67 3
 Geno Smith 363-16 3
Daniel Jones 174-54 3
Josh Allen 235-7 3
Running Backs Yards TD
Saquon Barkley 27-159
3-40
2
De’Von Achane 12-63
8-58
2
Alvin Kamara 29-155
6-60
0
Chase Brown 27-120
5-37
1
Derrick Henry 23-106
1-27
2
Wide Receivers Yards TD
J. Smith-Njigba 7-180 2
Garrett Wilson 9-90 2
Zay Flowers 5-127 2
Demarcus Robinson 6-94 2
Courtland Sutton 7-122 1
Tight Ends Yards TD
Mike Gesicki 5-100 2
Brock Bowers 5-45 1
Jake Ferguson 7-71 0
Theo Johnson 3-51 1
Trey McBride 3-35 1
Placekickers XP FG
Evan McPherson 5 2
Justin Tucker 5 2
Tyler Bass 1 3
Blake Grupe 1 3
Austin Siebert 3 2
Defense Sack – TO TD
Rams 7-3 1
Chargers 6-3 0
Cardinals 6-0 0
Jets 8-1 0
Jaguars 3-1 1

Bumps, Bruises and Bowouts

QB Dak Prescott – Hamstring
WR Chris Olave – Concussion
WR Drake London – Hip
WR Cedrick Wilson – Shoulder
WR Jaylen Waddle – Ankle
WR Puka Nacua – Ejected
WR A.J. Brown – Knee

Chasing Ambulances

QB  Dak Prescott – He appeared to have injured his throwing hand but then they ruled him out with a hamstring injury. He’ll have an MRI on his leg on Monday, but he said that he “felt something that he never felt before,” which sounds concerning.

WR Chris Olave – He was carted from the field on a backboard and sent to the hospital for evaluation. He was later released but will enter the NFL concussion protocol, and there was nothing that seemed “mild” about that hit. This could end up more than just one week.

WR Drake LondonCaught a touchdown in the win over the Cowboys but landed on his hip. He rode a stationary bike on the sideline but was ruled out. He’ll be evaluated on Monday, but initial speculation is that it is not a very serious injury.

WR Jaylen Waddle – Had a Bills defender blocked into him step on his ankle and seemed to be in much pain initially. He later returned to the game,  so he apparently was no worse for the injury.

WR A.J. Brown – Was initially evaluated for a concussion but was cleared, only to be later ruled out with a knee injury. It did not seem bad, and there is speculation that he was held out more as a precaution, but more will be known after Monday.

Free Agents, Flops and Other Notables

QB Cooper Rush/Trey Lance – The Cowboys may be without Dak Prescott, depending on further news about his hamstring. Cooper Rush entered the loss to the Falcons and finished the game with 115 yards and a score. The Cowboys face the Eagles, but at 3-5, the game has lost much of the luster. Barring more information, the fear is that the Cowboys could try both quarterbacks during the game.

WR Darnell Mooney – After Drake London left the win over the Cowboys, Mooney took over as the primary receiver and led the Falcons with five catches for 88 yards and a score. He fielded nine targets – six more than any other Atlanta wideout. Notable, too, was Kyle Pitts reverting back to only one catch for 11 yards. Mooney was already fantasy-relevant for next week but becomes a must-start if he is the top receiver against the Jaguars.

QB Derek Carr – Faced the weak Panthers’ defense in his first game back from injured reserve but only passed for 236 yards and one score. This was one of their softest matchups of the year, but it was a surprise that the top receivers were Alvin Kamara (6-60) and Taysom Hill (4-41).  Kamara also ran for 155 yards on 29 rushes to handle the bulk of all offense. But it was still disappointing to see that no wideouts stepped up after Chris Olave was lost.

TE Ja’Tavion Sanders – The Carolina rookie is still far too inconsistent to merit a fantasy start, but he’s had two games with five catches before this week and led the team with four catches for 87 yards in the win over the Saints. When he whiffs, it can be a one-catch dud but he is improving. With Diontae Johnson gone, the Panthers have to redistribute the passes, and for one week, Sanders did the most.

QB Desmond Ridder – The Raiders already traded Davante Adams away and they never had a highly-rated quarterback. Now Gardner Minshew has been benched mid-game again. Ridder entered the game near the end of the third quarter and completed 11-of-16 for 74 yards and one score. The Raiders go onto their bye for Week 9 and need to figure out how to be at least competitive in games.

TE Mike Gesicki – The Bengals tight end already caught seven passes for 73 yards in Week 8 when Tee Higgins was out. For Week 9, he again helped cover for the missing Higgins with a team-best five catches for 100 yards and two touchdowns as the top fantasy tight end for the weekend. With rumors of Higgins being on a trading block, Gesicki’s role may continue to be used more.

WR Quentin Johnston – The first-round pick of 2023 hasn’t met expectations and never managed more than 52 yards in any game this season. In Week 9, he led the Chargers with four catches for 118 yards and one score. It was his career-first 100-yard performance but Ladd McConkey had two more targets (5 vs. 7) and gained 64 yards on five catches. Justin Herbert passed for 282 yards and two scores on the road versus an above-average defense.  Johnston finally turned in stats worthy of that high draft pick.

WR Jaxon Smith-Njigba – Speaking of 2023 first-round wideouts, Smith-Njigba struggled through a disappointing rookie season and hasn’t done that much this year. But he just reached a career-high, by a large margin, when he ended the overtime loss to the Rams with seven catches for 180 yards and two scores. Tyler Lockett (3-63, TD) was next best and all others were meaningless. DK Metcalf was out and Smith-Njigba took advantage.

WR Puka Nacua – He was limited to only one catch for 11 yards in the win over the Seahawks because he ran a deep route that was intercepted. A defender continued to block Nacua beyond the end of the play, and well beyond the point that caused him to choose violence, and he punched the defender, which led to a disqualification. He was already questionable coming into the game with his knee bothering him again but he was still active. Hopefully, the visiting Dolphins won’t set him off again. In other news, Cooper Kupp caught 11 passes for 104 yards.

RB Cam Akers – He was traded to the Vikings, and against the Colts he carried for 46 yards on six rushes, ripping several chunk plays. Aaron Jones was the lead rusher with 21 carries for 64 yards, but the Vikings are ready if they need to replace him. Akers looked so good that he might take a few more touches from Jones than originally thought.

WR Demarcus Robinson – After trudging through the season with sub-10-point fantasy scores, the Rams receiver scored twice in Week 8 on his two catches for 35 yards. On Week 9 Sunday, he had a career-best fantasy performance when Puka Nacua was out and the Rams threw him nine targets to catch six for 94 yards and two touchdowns in the overtime win at the Seahawks. Robinson never scored more than four touchdowns in any of his seven previous seasons, and just logged four in the last two weeks.

Huddle player of the week

Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

Saquon Barkley (PHI)  – Imagine what could have been had Barkley been drafted by the Eagles instead of languishing in New York for six years running behind a terrible line on a team with no other weapons that concerned the defense. Barkley just ran for 159 yards and a score on 27 rushes in the win over the Jaguars, and added three receptions for 40 yards and a second touchdown.

Salute!

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

Comedy Yards TDs Tragedy Yards TDs
QB Daniel Jones 174-54 3 QB Kyler Murray 154-6 0
RB Emari Demarcado 4-59
2-21
1 RB Nick Chubb 15-39
1-(-4)
0
RB Ray Davis 4-20
2-70
1 RB Tank Bigsby 8-22 0
WR Demarcus Robinson 6-94 2 WR Puka Nacua 1-11 0
WR Quentin Johnston 4-118 1 WR Chris Olave 1-13 0
WR Courtland Sutton 7-122 1 WR A.J. Brown 2-36 0
TE Mike Gesicki 5-100 2 TE Sam LaPorta 2-28 0
PK Evan McPherson 5 XP   2 FG PK Jason Meyer  2 XP
Huddle Fantasy Points = 176 Huddle Fantasy Points = 30

Now get back to work…

Tunnel Vision – Injuries, free agents and Sunday stars

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

 

SUNDAY SALUTES
Quarterbacks Pass-Rush TD
Jalen Hurts 236-37 4
Bo Nix 284-4 4
Kirk Cousins 276-13 4
 Trevor Lawrence 308-10 3
Matthew Stafford 279-(-4) 4
Running Backs Yards TD
James Cook 17-111
3-22
2
De’Von Achane 10-97
6-50
1
Josh Jacobs 25-127
1-(-2)
2
Rhamondre Stevenson 20-48
3-17
2
Joe Mixon 25-102 1
Wide Receivers Yards TD
Ladd McConkey 6-111 2
Cedric Tillman 7-99 2
Calvin Ridley 10-143 0
Marvin Harrison Jr. 6-111 1
CeeDee Lamb 13-146 2
Tight Ends Yards TD
Cade Otton 9-81 2
Kyle Pitts 4-91 2
Travis Kelce 10-90 1
Trey McBride 9-124 0
George Kittle 6-128 1
Placekickers XP FG
Jake Elliott 4 3
Brandon McManus 3 3
Austin Siebert 0 4
Ka’imi Fairbairn 2 3
Dustin Hopkins 2 3
Defense Sack – TO TD
Lions 1-4 1
Broncos 2-2 0
Bills 1-2 0
Texans 5-2 0
Chiefs 5-1 0

Bumps, Bruises and Bowouts

QB Drake Maye – Concussion
QB Jordan Love – Groin
RB Rico Dowdle – Illness
RB Kendre Miller – Hamstring
RB Jordan Mason – Shoulder
WR Sterling Shepard – Hamstring
WR Stefon Diggs – Knee
WR Gabe Davis – Shoulder
WR Brian Thomas Jr. – Chest
WR Christian Kirk – Shoulder
WR Deebo Samuel – Ribs

Chasing Ambulances

QB Drake Maye – Left the win over the Jets during the second quarter and did not return. He was listed as a head injury but is expected to have suffered a concussion.  Jacoby Brissett wasn’t that productive but did not lose the ball. Maye could miss Week 9 at the Titans, and Brissett would again replace him.

QB Jordan Love – Injured his groin in the second quarter and did not return. Love had previously injured his knee this season and he seemed to have re-injured his left knee in the first quarter but continued to play. He came out with a groin injury after getting shoved on a pass attempt. Malik Willis replaced him, but the Packers lost. This injury could not be timed worse – the Packers play the Lions this week.

WR Sterling Shepard – Injured his hamstring after three catches in the loss to the Falcons. He later returned to the game after receiving treatment but the Buccaneers wideouts are still sorting out what they have to work with.

WR Stefon Diggs – The Texans were already without Nico Collins, and then Diggs pulled up lame with a non-contact injury to his knee during the second quarter. That is never good. An MRI will be performed to determine the exact injury and severity, but first glance suggested that he would miss time with the same knee that he’d injured twice before and missed time after those.

WR Brian Thomas Jr. – Injured his chest on his third-quarter touchdown catch and did not return to the game.  It did not initially appear to be severe, but he’ll be further examined to determine the extent of his injury.

WR Christian Kirk – The Jaguars lost both starting wideouts in the loss to the Packers. Christian Kirk had caught two passes for 59 yards and was injured on a deep incompletion in the fourth quarter. He landed hard on his left shoulder and was in a lot of pain. He immediately grabbed his collarbone and then went straight into the locker room. Kirk was rumored to be the subject of a potential trade to the Steelers, but that’s likely no longer a consideration.

RB Jordan Mason – The 49ers tailback was forced from the game with a shoulder injury in the first half and while he was never listed as out, he did not play again while the 49ers just turned to Isaac Guerendo instead. Mason injured his shoulder earlier this year but played through it. The 49ers head onto their bye week, and Christian McCaffrey might actually show up by then. His health is worth tracking since McCaffrey may not return to an immediate full load whenever he returns.

WR Deebo Samuel – He was unable to finish Week 7 because of his pneumonia but was active and turned in four catches for 71 yards in the win over the Cowboys. He left the game late with a rib injury. He heads onto his bye week, so his health will be assessed for Week 10 during their time off.

Free Agents, Flops and Other Notables

QB Jameis Winston – With Deshaun Watson lost for the year, Winston was handed the reins of the Browns and he had the good fortune of playing one of the worst secondaries in the NFL of the Ravens. Winston threw for 334 yards and three touchdowns, even though Watson’s high-game was just 196 yards and two touchdowns.  He’ll go against a Top-10 defense of the Chargers next week, but it will be another home game.

WR Cedric Tillman – The Browns traded Amari Cooper away, and Cedric Tillman stepped up as his replacement. Tillman caught eight passes for 81 yards last week versus the Bengals, and on Sunday, he led the Browns with seven catches for 99 yards and two touchdowns. Elijah Moore (8-85) also had his best game of the season, but again, they faced the No. 32 defense versus fantasy wideouts.

WR Calvin Ridley – The first week without DeAndre Hopkins saw the Titans face the No. 29 defense versus fantasy wideouts and that showed up with Ridley gathering 15 targets to catch 10 for 143 yards. That was more yardage than his last five games combined. His previous high on receptions was just four. The Titans play the Patriots this week, and while their defense is at least marginally better than the Lions, Ridley has instantly become the primary target on every pass play. No other receiver managed more than three catches or 39 yards.

WR John Metchie – Stefon Diggs was injured near the end of the third quarter and his backup Metchie entered the game and caught three of his four targets for 29 yards.  Diggs plays the important slot role, and his injury seems likely to make him miss time. If he does, Metchie will join Tank Dell and Xavier Hutchinson as the starting wideouts for their trip to play at the Jets this week. Hutchinson replaced Nico Collins but only caught one pass for 19 yards.

WR Parker Washington – The Jaguars had injuries to Brian Thomas Jr. (chest), Christian Kirk (shoulder), and Gabe Davis (shoulder) all left the loss to the Packers with injuries. That is all of the starting wideouts. Washington (3-46) replaces Kirk as the backup slot receiver. Depending on what happens with the three injured starters this week, Washington may end up as the primary wideout at the Eagles.

QB Tua Tagovailoa – He’s back but went against the No. 29 defense versus quarterbacks and only managed 234 passing yards and one score. He brought Tyreek Hill back to life (6-72), but no other receivers gained more than 45 yards. Probably rust.

TE Kyle Pitts – Maybe it was National Tight End Week, but Pitts turned in a career-best performance when he caught four passes for 91 yards and his first two-touchdown game.

Buccaneer wideouts – Mike Evans and Chris Godwin were gone, and yet Baker Mayfield still passed for 330 yards and three touchdowns in the close loss to the Falcons. There was no standout replacement for the two star receivers. Rakim Jarrett (3-58), Sterling Shepard (3-18), Jalen McMillan (4-35), Trey Palmer (2-29), and Ryan Miller (3-19) were all involved. And that was every active wideout that the Bucs had on their roster. And still, not one of them with any real fantasy value. Mayfield tried them all.

WR Ladd McConkey – He’ll be a hot property on the waiver wire after logging six passes for 111 yards and two touchdowns in the win over the Saints. Realize he only averaged 44 yards per game coming into this week, but he also just bought some confidence from Justin Herbert.

QB Bryce Young – Yes, the Panthers lost 28-14 to the Broncos, but Young threw for 224 yards and two scores. That may not sound like much, but his first four starts contained no passing scores and never more than 161 passing yards. That was also more than what Andy Dalton did in any game other than his first start.

WR Jakobi Meyers – He was questionable coming into the game but he caught a team-high six passes for 52 yards and a touchdown. In the post-Adams world, Meyers stepped up as the new primary wideout.

RB D’Andre Swift – He had scored in the last three games entering Week 8. Swift made it four straight and ran for a season-best 129 yards on 18 carries in the loss to the Commanders. For the last month, Swift has handled at least 21 touches in every game and is one of the busiest running backs in the league. Swift a workhorse? Go figure.

National Tight End Day – Not only did the day set the NFL record for tight end touchdowns (16) and tight end catches (177), but the “holiday” was invented by George Kittle, who was also the top tight end on the day with six catches for 128 yards and a score.

RB Isaac Guerendo – The rookie stepped in for the injured Jordan Mason and rolled up 85 yards on 14 carries (6.1 YPC) with a touchdown against the visiting Cowboys and even added three receptions for 17 yards. He looked great and picked up chunks of yardage. The 49ers go on their bye, and Christian McCaffrey may be back in Week 10. But Guerendo did himself a favor by creating confidence whenever they need to turn to him again.

Huddle player of the week

Credit: Neville E. Guard-Imagn Images

WR CeeDee Lamb –  The Cowboys dropped below .500 with their loss to the 49ers, but at least Lamb finished with 17 targets for 13 receptions, 146 yards and both Dallas touchdowns. His scores came  in the final eight minutes of the contest and nearly made a game of it. He got paid this year, he disappointed to start the season but he should have been thrown every pass on Sunday night.

Salute!

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

Comedy Yards TDs Tragedy Yards TDs
QB Bo Nix 284-4 4 QB Jordan Love 196 0
RB Bucky Irving 9-44
7-40
0 RB Ken Walker 9-12
4-33
0
RB Jaleel McLaughlin 8-47
1-9
1 RB Nick Chubb 16-52 0
WR Ladd McConkey 6-111 2 WR Michael Pittman 1-16 0
WR Cedric Tillman 7-99 2 WR D.J. Moore 2-27 0
WR Calvin Ridley 10-143 0 WR Drake London 4-34 0
TE Adam Trautman 4-85 1 TE Cole Kmet 1-16 0
PK Jake Elliott 4  XP   3 FG PK Cairo Santos  1  XP
Huddle Fantasy Points = 182 Huddle Fantasy Points = 39

Now get back to work…