The best fantasy football gamble of Week 2

Can you smellellell what this Charger is Cookin’?

Every week, at least one player becomes my fascination of whether he’s worthy of a fantasy football start or bench. The decision can be a mental wrestling match, but for the purpose of brevity, only one player can be chosen as the fantasy football gamble of the week.

The best fantasy football gamble for Week 2

Tracking my predictions: 0-1-0
Win: Player produces ≥ 75% of projected fantasy points
Loss: Player produces >75% of projected fantasy points
Tie: Player is ejected or leaves with an injury

Week 1 summary: Barf.

The case for San Francisco 49ers running back Trey Sermon was laid out rather convincingly, if I do say so myself … until it all crumbled down upon me in a Kyle Shanahan-induced, Jenga-like heap of gameday inactives. Sermon being a healthy scratch was one of the most shocking gameday personnel decision I’ve see in the NFL in some years.

Not at all bitter. Nope. Nuh uh. Not one bit.

I stand by the decision with steely commitment. My logic was sound … how was anyone to know Shanny would play games with not only Sermon but WR Brandon Aiyuk.

My reasoning proved true after RB Raheem Mostert (knee) exited early (c’mon, everyone should have seen that coming!) and paved the way for backup rookie Elijah Mitchell to run roughshod over the lowly Detroit defense. All told, a pair of San Francisco backups totaled 24.2 PPR points. My Sermon projection was 22.5. It’s not a win, nor even a push.

I’ll take the “L” and move on to Week 2, but first, I will apologize if my advice led to Sermon being stuck into someone’s lineup given how close we were to kickoff before anyone had a clue he’d be inactive. Being wrong isn’t what bothers me the most … costing someone else a win gnaws at me.

TE Jared Cook, Los Angeles Chargers vs. Dallas Cowboys

Last week, Tampa Bay Buccaneers tight end Rob Gronkowski was good for 90 yards and a pair of scores on his five grabs, illustrating Tom Brady isn’t the only one with indecent pictures of Father Time.

Cook is no Gronk, and the way the latter stuck it to the ‘Boys is not even the basis for the well-traveled veteran being the focus of this article. I’m not going to pretend like it doesn’t help my argument, but the real driving factor here is what Dallas is doing at linebacker in passing situations. Leighton Vander Esch and Jaylon Smith — superior players against the run — come off the field in favor of Micah Parsons and Keanu Neal.

There is no question the Neal-Parsons combo provides more athleticism in coverage, but this duo is about as inexperienced as it gets in the NFL playing coverage linebacker. Neal, a former safety under current Dallas defensive coordinator Dan Quinn in Atlanta, transitioned to the position just this offseason. And Parsons, for as ridiculously talented as he is, remains a rookie with one whole NFL game under his belt, regardless of position.

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These two guys are dynamic and rangy, covering territory far faster than their run-stuffing counterparts, but the NFL is such a mentally quick game that even a pro moving from a similar position — in the box safety — is bound to have hiccups at first, let alone for a rookie.

This game is on the road once again for the Cowboys, and defensive end DeMarcus Lawrence (foot) won’t be available to apply pressure on Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert. The second-year Oregon product is unflappable and showed a nearly seamless transition between a collegiate offense to the pros in 2020 and now to yet another new system in ’21.

The Bolts have two strong receivers, especially with Keenan Allen, for Dallas to be preoccupied with stopping. Mike Williams is coming off his most catches ever in a game last week. The Chargers really don’t have a bona fide WR3 at the moment, and running back Austin Ekeler wasn’t even targeted in the passing game, much to the dismay of his PPR owners.

That leaves Cook. The veteran came over from New Orleans in the offseason, following Joe Lombardi, LA’s new offensive coordinator. The system concepts are more than familiar for the 34-year-old tight end. Maybe Cook isn’t quite as athletic as he once was in his prime, but there is wisdom that comes with experience, and he understands nuance better than at any point in his career. He also has seen a serious scoring uptick in the past few seasons. One of my favorite value buys this draft season, here’s what I wrote about him entering the year:

He scored 25 total touchdowns in 117 appearances prior to his two-year stint with the Saints, a 29-game stretch in which he registered 16 TD grabs.

While Cook didn’t find the end zone in Week 1, he landed five of his eight targets for 56 yards. Williams isn’t going to see 12 looks every game, and some of those extra plays will go Cook’s direction. Unless Ekeler gets a major boost in receiving work this weekend, Cook is a strong bet to outperform last week’s 10.6 PPR points.

… That is, so long as he isn’t a surprise healthy scratch prior to kickoff!

My projection: 6 receptions, 64 yards, 1 TD (18.4 PPR points)

Fantasy football outlook, projection for Chargers TE Jared Cook

Entering Year 13, Jared Cook is in a great position to have another productive season.

With fantasy football drafts soon to be in full swing, I am going to do a series for each Chargers skill player and how they will fare this upcoming season and the production I project them to put up.

Today, we start with tight end Jared Cook, who replaces Hunter Henry.

Cook signed with Los Angeles this offseason after playing the best football of his career over the past three seasons with the Raiders and Saints.

In 2018, under Frank Smith, the Chargers’ offensive line coach, who was his position coach with the Raiders then, Cook had a career year, catching 68 passes for 896 yards and six TDs en route to his first Pro Bowl.

Cook spent the last two seasons with the Saints alongside offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi, who served the quarterbacks coach then. He had 80 catches for 1,209 yards and 16 touchdowns.

Cook’s 14.2 yards per reception over the past three seasons are more than any other tight end in the NFL with at least 100 receptions over that span, per Pro Football Focus.

This season, Cook will be joined by Donald Parham and Tre’ McKitty. Parham is an ascending option who could see an uptick in targets. McKitty will primarily serve as an in-line blocker, with potential to receive targets down the road.

As for Cook, he will provide a big frame in the middle of the field and in the red zone for Justin Herbert. 22 of Cook’s 41 career touchdowns were inside 20 yards and in 12 seasons, he has 100 career receptions of 20 yards or more.

With Lombardi transferring some of the New Orleans concepts over to L.A., the familiarity should only maximize his potential connection with Herbert.

During the final season that Lombardi called plays for the Lions, QB Matthew Stafford targeted the tight end on nearly 25% of his passes. In addition, Saints’ Drew Brees relied heavily on his tight ends.

At the moment, ESPN has him ranked 23rd out of 35 tight ends heading into the summer. But Cook, who has been playing the best football of his career since turning 30, is a strong TE2, with potential to finish top-12 at his position.

My projection: 68 Tgts | 47 Rec | 642 Yds | 6 Rec Tds