Veteran TE Nick Vannett activated from Saints injured reserve

Veteran TE Nick Vannett activated from Saints injured reserve

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Thursday didn’t bring only bad news for the New Orleans Saints, who activated tight end Nick Vannett from the injured reserve list. Vannett suffered a knee injury in the Saints’ final preseason game and was reportedly expected to miss two to four weeks — instead, he’s been unavailable for two and a half months.

But what’s important is that he brings some badly-needed experience at a position where it’s badly needed. Vannett was talked up as the Saints’ replacement for Josh Hill, handling a variety of blocking assignments while his fleeter-footed teammates Adam Trautman and Juwan Johnson focused on running routes and catching passes.

How the plan changes now will be interesting given Trautman’s poor performance as a pass-catcher and surprising competence as a blocker. Johnson was benched last week to make room for another special teams player but third-wheel Garrett Griffin didn’t see an accompanying workload increase while playing just 11 snaps against Trautman’s 67.

Vannett should be able to cut into that and help Trautman fit into more favorable situations. He was one of the team’s few free agent acquisitions this offseason and the team could really use a nice return on that investment given how badly other moves have panned out, like first-round rookie Payton Turner going to injured reserve.

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Targets, Touches and TDs: Week 7

Examining touchdowns scored thus far in 2021 to find useful fantasy nuggets.

Touchdowns. Tuddies. Scores. Paydirt. Sixers. TDs.

Whatever you want to call them, they’re under the TTT fantasy microscope this week.

More specifically, we’re looking at who’s scoring them and who’s not, and what it has meant for fantasy so far — and going forward — as we approach midseason.

We’re doing a touchdown stat analysis of all of the major fantasy positions, including defense, and we start (as usual) with the …

Quarterbacks

Total TDs (passing + rushing)

Patrick Mahomes 19 (18 passing-1 rushing), Tom Brady 18 (17-1), Josh Allen 17 (15-2), Kyler Murray 17 (14-3), Dak Prescott 16 (16-0), Matthew Stafford 16 (16-0), Justin Herbert 15 (14-1), Joe Burrow 14 (14-0), Aaron Rodgers 14 (12-2), Kirk Cousins 13 (13-0), Jaylen Hurts 13 (8-5), Jameis Winston (13 (12-1)

Fantasy takeaways

  • Mahomes, the current positional leader in average fantasy points per game with 31.8 (Huddle Performance scoring), is on pace for 54 total TDs and 51 passing scores, which would eclipse his career highs from 2018 when he paced QBs with 494.1 fantasy points (30.9 per contest). KC’s less-than-formidable defense, which is surrendering 29.3 points per game, is prodding Mahomes to keep the pedal to metal late into games.
  • The Ravens’ Lamar Jackson (fifth with an average of 28.6 fantasy points) and the Panthers’ Sam Darnold (10th with 24.6) are the only current top-10 fantasy QBs who don’t rank among the top 12 in total TDs. Jackson (11 total TDs), though, leads all QBs with 392 rushing yards and is averaging a career-best 281 aerial yards per game, while Darnold (12 total TDs) is tied with Hurts for the positional lead with five rushing scores.
  • Prescott (seventh with 26.9 fantasy points per outing) and Stafford (eighth with 26.4) are the only top-10 fantasy QBs without a rushing score. Prescott has run for 70 yards on 22 carries, while Stafford has 26 yards on 18 rushes. Both QBs, not coincidentally, are coming back from injury-marred 2020 seasons.

TD pass percentage leaders

Winston 10.3 percent, Stafford 8.0, Burrow 8.0, Russell Wilson 8.0, Mahomes 7.4, Prescott 7.4, Murray 7.2, Allen 6.5, Rodgers 6.5, Brady 6.4

Fantasy takeaways …

  • Playing on the run-heaviest team in the league (54.74 percent of total plays), the Saints’ Winston ranks 31st in the league with 116 passing attempts but is tied for ninth with 12 TD tosses. Winston, who has had games of five and four TD passes so far, is averaging only 178.4 passing yards per contest and ranks 17th among QBs who have played three or more games with 21.4 fantasy points per outing.
  • Stafford on Sunday enjoyed his third game this season with three or more passing scores and has had a banner start to his first season in Sean McVay’s Rams offense. In his 12 seasons with the Lions, Stafford had a TD pass percentage of 4.6, with his full-season high-water mark coming in 2011 when he had a 6.2 rate, throwing for a career-high 41 TDs. That’s the only season in which he’s had more than 32 scoring passes.
  • Burrow has thrown multiple TD passes in all six of his games this season after doing so in only four of his 10 games as a rookie a year ago when he ranked 28th in the league with 3.2 TD toss percentage.

Running backs

Total TDs (rushing + receiving)

Derrick Henry 10 (10-0), Austin Ekeler 7 (4 rushing-3 receiving), Ezekiel Elliott 6 (5-1), Aaron Jones 6 (4-2), James Conner 5 (5-0), Darrell Henderson 5 (4-1), Kareem Hunt 5 (5-0), Cordarrelle Patterson 5 (1-4), James Robinson 5 (5-0), Jonathan Taylor 5 (4-1)

Fantasy takeaways …

  • Ekeler, fantasy’s second-ranked back with 21.5 points (point-per-reception scoring) per game, has already set a career season high with his four rushing TDs. Ekeler is on pace to score 20 TDs, which would smash his 2019 career high of 11 — a total that included a running back-best eight receiving TDs.
  • Henry, who has finished either first or second among RBs with 17 and 18 touchdowns, respectively, the past two seasons, is on pace for a whopping 28 scores in 2021. He is averaging a league-most 29.6 total touches per game — a full seven touches more than any other player.
  • Patterson already has as many TDs (5) in five games this season as he totaled in his previous three seasons combined and is tied with the Packers’ Jones for the RB lead with four receiving scores. Patterson’s season career high for TDs was set back in his rookie season of 2013 with the Vikings when he had nine total (four receiving, three rushing and two on kickoff returns).

Most total touches with 1 or fewer TDs

Mark Ingram 90 touches (1 TD), Chuba Hubbard 85 (1), Alexander Mattison 83 (1), Chase Edmonds 79 (0), Javonte Williams 79 (1), Tony Pollard 76 (1), Miles Sanders 75 (0), Devin Singletary 73 (1), Christian McCaffrey 68 (1), A.J. Dillon 58 (1), Sony Michel 58 (1)

Fantasy takeaways …

  • It’s not surprising to see Edmonds high on this list as Conner is now the team’s goal-line back with all five of his rushing scores coming from inside the opposition’s 5-yard line on seven total carries. Edmonds has had one carry inside the enemy 5-yard line but still is the only running back ranked among the top 34 in total PPR points (17th with 73.9) who has yet to score a TD.
  • It’s interesting to see both of the Panthers’ top backs listed here with McCaffrey and the rookie Hubbard combining for two TDs on 153 touches to date. Nineteen of those 153 combined touches and both of those TDs for the Carolina backs have come in the red zone. The aforementioned Darnold, meanwhile, has logged six red-zone rushes and has scored on five of them.
  • Sanders has yet to find his way into the end zone after scoring six TDs in each of first two NFL seasons. Sanders has a minus-one yard on nine red-zone rushes this season, including minus-five on four inside-the-5-yard-line carries. The second-year QB Hurts, meanwhile, has stolen the Philly close-in thunder with 47 yards and five TDs on 14 red-zone rushes. Sanders is 46th among RBs with an average of 6.5 fantasy points.

Wide receivers

Total TDs (receiving + rushing)

Cooper Kupp 7 (7 receiving, 0 rushing), Mike Williams 6 (6-0), DeAndre Hopkins 6 (6-0), Marquise Brown 5 (5-0), Ja’Marr Chase 5 (5-0), Tyreek Hill 5 (5-0), D.K. Metcalf 5 (5-0), Adam Thielen 5 (5-0), Antonio Brown 4 (4-0), Amari Cooper 4 (4-0), Mike Evans 4 (4-0), CeeDee Lamb 4 (4-0), Deebo Samuel 4 (3-1), Emmanuel Sanders 4 (4-0)

Fantasy takeaways …

  • Kupp, whose two-TD game Sunday against the Giants was his third of the season, also leads the league in targets (68), red-zone targets (12), and is tied with Davante Adams and Hill with a league-most 46 receptions. His seven TD grabs this season already is the second-highest total of his five-season career, trailing only the 10 he had on 134 targets in 2019 when he finished fourth among wideouts with 270.5 PPR points.
  • Thielen finished third a season ago with 14 touchdown catches thanks to his mega-efficient red-zone production, reeling in 16-of-19 targets for 115 yards and 13 scores inside the opposition’s 20-yard line. He’s at it again this season, catching all six of his red-zone targets for 37 yards and four TDs.
  • In his last 11 games, including three last postseason, the Bucs’ Brown has caught 57 of 82 targets for 765 yards and 10 TDs — an average of 17.6 PPR points per outing. He’s averaging 19.1 through five games played in ’21.

Most targets with 1 or fewer TDs

Keenan Allen 58 targets (1 TD), Brandin Cooks 57 (1), Jakobi Meyers 52 (0), Michael Pittman Jr. 46 (1), DeVonta Smith 44 (1), Calvin Ridley 42 (1), Chase Claypool 42 (1), Laviska Shenault 41 (0), Darnell Mooney 39 (1), Tyler Boyd 38 (1)

Fantasy takeaways …

  • Allen has notched six or more TD grabs in each of his previous four seasons, but the Chargers’ target leader ranks fifth on the team with his one scoring reception so far. Fellow wideout Mike Williams’ ascendance (six TD catches on 33 receptions and 56 targets) has hurt Allen as he currently ranks 26th with an average of 14.5 fantasy points per game.
  • Since the start of last season, Diggs leads the league in targets (224) and receptions (164) and ranks second in receiving yards (1,998) but is tied for 16th with 10 TD grabs in 22 regular-season games. Among wide receivers, Diggs still ranks third, though, in total PPR points (423.9).
  • Meyers has 174 targets since the start of the 2019 season — 83 more than any other Patriots wide receiver or tight end — but famously is still waiting on his first NFL TD. During that span, including the postseason, only the Panthers (40) and Jets (39) have thrown fewer TD passes than the Patriots’ 44 in 39 games.

Tight ends

Total TDs (receiving + rushing)

Dawson Knox 5 (5 receiving-0 rushing), Rob Gronkowski 4 (4-0), Travis Kelce 4 (4-0), Mo Alie-Cox 3 (3-0), Mark Andrews 3 (3-0), Noah Fant 3 (3-0), Hunter Henry 3 (3-0), Juwan Johnson 3 (3-0), Dalton Schultz 3 (3-0),  C.J. Uzomah 3 (3-0)

Fantasy takeaways …

  • Knox (finger) has been a surprise at fantasy’s shallowest position as he’s already doubled his career TD total six games into the season. Essentially he’s been the 2021 Robert Tonyan, ranking 17th at the position with 24 targets and 12th with 21 receptions but leading the way with five scoring receptions.
  • A high ratio of TDs to targets also is inflating the fantasy stocks of the Bengals’ Uzomah, the Colts’ Alie-Cox and the Saints’ Johnson … all have three TDs on 18 or fewer targets so far.
  • Gronk has missed the past three games with a rib injury but still is tied for second among 2021 tight ends with his four scoring grabs on 21 targets and 16 receptions. In his last 11 games, Gronkowski has eight TDs on 50 targets and 32 catches — meaning one of every four catches is counting for six points.

Most total targets with 1 or fewer TDs

Mike Gesicki 43 targets (1 TD), Kyle Pitts 36 (1), Tyler Conklin 30 (1), George Kittle 28 (0), Dan Arnold 26 (0), Jonnu Smith 25 (1), Cole Kmet 24 (0), Evan Engram 21 (1), Pat Freiermuth 20 (1), Robert Tonyan 20 (1)

Fantasy takeaways …

  • On the other side of the touchdown ledger, the Dolphins’ Gesicki ranks fifth in 2021 tight end targets (43) and sixth in receptions (30) but has only one scoring grab to show for it. From 2019-20, he had 11 TDs on 174 total targets.
  • Niners star Kittle began his career with 12 TD catches in his first three seasons, but with a string of injuries limiting him to 12 games since the start of last season, he’s only added two more touchdowns since on 91 targets and 67 receptions.
  • As expected, regression has hit the Packers’ Tonyan and Patriots’ Smith hard this season with one TD apiece so far. In 2020, they finished ranked tied for first (11) and third (9), respectively, a year ago in tight end TDs, both with 52 touches or fewer.

Defensive/special teams

Non-offensive TDs (defensive TDs + special teams TDs )

Cowboys 3 (3-0), Buccaneers 2 (2-0), Jaguars 2 (0-2), 13 teams with 1 apiece

Fantasy takeaway …

  • The top annual fantasy team defenses/special team units typically feature multiple return-score TDs, and this season is no exception. The top eight 2021 D/STs, according to Huddle Performance scoring, all have at least one non-offensive touchdown, led by the league-leading Cowboys (57 total fantasy points) with their trio of interception-return TDs.

Giants drop Saints in OT: Instant analysis

Analyzing the New York Giants’ thrilling overtime victory over the New Orleans Saints on Sunday afternoon in Week 4.

The 0-3 New York Giants entered this week’s game against the New Orleans Saints desperate for a win. They were up against a formidable defense in the Saints’ 6th-ranked unit and the large, raucous New Orleans crowd, who were witnessing their team live for the first time this season.

Both defenses ruled the early going until the Giants drove 67 yards on 10 plays on their third possession to the Saints’ 16. They sputtered again the red zone and lined up for what appeared to be an easy three points, but kicker Graham Gano hooked the kicked left.

New Orleans came back with a drive of their own, going 35 yards on eight plays to the Giants’ 40. The defense held again on third down. Ex-Giant Aldrick Rosas’ 58-yard attempt sailed wide right to keep the game scoreless with just under nine minutes remaining in the second quarter.

The Giants took possession on their own 48. On first down, quarterback Daniel Jones fired a perfect pass down the middle of the field to wide receiver John Ross, who was making his Giants’ debut. Ross reeled it in and dove into the end zone with with two Saints defenders all over him. The ball came loose but Ross recovered it in the end zone. The replay upheld the TD catch and the Giants had a surprising 7-0 lead.

New Orleans drove into Giants territory for the fourth time in four possessions late in the second quarter. They drove 90 yards on 13 plays and tied the game at seven on a Jameis Winston-to-Juwan Johnson 15-yard TD connection on a third and six. It was the fourth straight game the Giants’ defense allowed a touchdown in the final two minutes of the first half.

New Orleans received the ball to open the second half and drove 75 yards on three plays to take a 14-7 lead when backup quarterback/everyman Taysom Hill rumbled through a slew of lax Giants defenders for an eight-yard score. The Giants’ defense was a sieve on the drive. James Bradberry was beaten by Marquez Callaway for a 58-yard reception down the middle.

But the Giants’ offense behind Jones was not about to fold up the tent. Jones continued to utilize his new weapons. Completions to rookie Kadarius Toney and expensive free agents Kenny Golladay and Kyle Rudolph got Big Blue down to the Saints’ three yard-line. However, the red zone offense fell apart again with some dubious play calling (a sweep to Evan Engram on second down loss two yards) and shoddy execution. They had to settle for 23-yard field goal from Gano.

The Giants lucked out on the Saints’ next drive when a 46-yard TD strike from Winston to Kenny Stills was nullified by a holding penalty by tight end Adam Trautman. Hill received Winston on the next play and his pass intended for Deonte Harris was intercepted by Bradberry on the Giants’ 12.

The third quarter ended with New Orleans leading, 14-10. In the beginning of the fourth quarter, the Saints drove 63 yards in 11 plays to take a 21-10 lead on Hill’s second touchdown run of the afternoon.

The Giants weren’t done by a long stretch. After they forced a Saints’ punt that C.J. Board returned 15 yards to his own 46. Jones hit running back Saquon Barkley down the left sideline for q 54-yard touchdown on first down. Jones ran in the two-point conversion to narrow the lead to 21-18.

On the Saints’ next possession, the Giants’ defense forced another punt and took possession on their own 11 with 3:01 remaining. The drive stalled on the New Orleans 30 after an 11-play drive. Graham Gano tied the game at 21 with a 48-yard field goal with 31 seconds remaining.

In overtime, the Giants won the toss and elected to receive. They didn’t give the Saints a shot a the ball, driving 80 yards on nine plays, winning the game on Barkley’s six-yard TD run with 4:54 left in overtime.

The Giants are now 1-3 and could possibly have been 3-1 or 2-2 on the year, losing their last two games in the final seconds.

Notes

  • As expected, wide receivers Sterling Shepard and Darius Slayton were inactive with hamstring strains.
  • Reggie Ragland started at inside linebacker next to Tae Crowder in place of the injured Blake Martinez, who is out for the remainder of the season with a torn ACL. Crowder wore the headset and called the defensive signals again.
  • Jabrill Peppers left the game in the fourth quarter with a hamstring injury.
  • Graham Gano had made 37 consecutive field goals when he hooked a 35-yarder early in the second quarter. That was the fourth-longest streak in NFL history. He didn’t allow the miss to shake him as he made his other kicks.

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Watch: Juwan Johnson catches 15-yard touchdown pass from Jameis Winston

Watch: Juwan Johnson catches 15-yard touchdown pass from Jameis Winston

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With the clock running out quickly and a 7-point deficit in his face, New Orleans Saints quarterback Jameis Winston had to make a play on third down. And that’s exactly what he did — Winston went to tight end Juwan Johnson for a crucial touchdown connection, tying the score with the New York Giants before halftime.

It was a great throw, placed between two Giants defenders where only Johnson could reach it. And Johnson got there with an impressive route, breaking off the stem at just the right moment to squeeze into the throwing lane. And just like that the Saints got on the board.

Johnson’s third touchdown catch of the year leads the team, while it was Winston’s eighth scoring throw. The big wide receiver-convert has become one of Winston’s favorite targets early this season.

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Targets, Touches and TDs: Week 2

Which surprise Week 1 standouts are the real deal in fantasy football?

NFL 2021 is upon us with the first 16 of a record 272 games in the books to kick off the league’s longest-ever regular season.

We witnessed the typical mix of expected (Patrick Mahomes rallying the Kansas City Chiefs from a double-digit deficit to a win), unexpected (the Arizona Cardinals and Philadelphia Eagles completely dominating the Tennessee Titans and Atlanta Falcons, respectively, as road underdogs), and the downright strange (reigning MVP Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers laying a 3-point egg in a 35-point neutral-site beatdown at the hands of Jameis Winston and the temporarily displaced New Orleans Saints).

Fantasy football-wise, there were the usual Week 1 standouts who came out of nowhere to blow up on benches or who are now taunting and tempting fanasy general managers from the waiver wire.

But which of these opening-week standouts are flash-in the-pan fool’s gold (recall Mitchell Trubisky, Malcolm Brown and Darius Slayton from Week 1 a season ago), and which are the real deal (Robby Anderson and Logan Thomas, lightly regarded in 2020 drafts, also had big opening weeks a year ago)?

Here’s the best-guess fantasy forecast for 10 of the surprise standouts (going by relative preseason ADPs) of the opening weekend and whether we’re buying in or simply bypassing …

Saints QB Jameis Winston

Fantasy position rank (Huddle PPR scoring): 6th with 31.1 fantasy points

Buying or bypassing? Buying.

Sure, we all know that throwing a touchdown pass on every fourth attempt as Winston did Sunday (5 TDs, 20 attempts) is far from sustainable, but Sean Payton’s offensive system is.

It’s a system that established Drew Brees as a locked-in top 10 fantasy option for nearly 15 seasons, and Winston — with his superior deep-passing ability compared to the twilight-era Brees and better mobility (he rushed for 37 yards Sunday) — has the skills to thrive in this offense.

That’s as long as Winston can avoid the crippling interception clusters that ended his starting run in Tampa. Any sort of relapse will be sure to have Payton reconsidering and inserting his longtime favorite Taysom Hill for more snaps.

There also is a question about the talent level of the Saints’ current collection of pass-catchers outside of super-stud RB Alvin Kamara. But if wideouts Deonte Harris, Marquez Callaway, Kenny Stills and Tre’Quan Smith and tight ends Juwan Johnson and Adam Trautman can outperform expectations and hold things together until No. 1 wideout Michael Thomas (hopefully) is ready to return from injury in a month or so, Winston has definite QB1 staying power.

Detroit Lions QB Jared Goff

Fantasy position rank: 8th with 30.3 fantasy points

Buying or bypassing? Bypassing — at least in standard-size, one-quarterback leagues.

No quarterback had more garbage-time production in Week 1 than Goff, who attempted 57 passes (trailing only Dak Prescott’s 58 on Thursday) as the Lions were trailing by multiple touchdowns from the second quarter on Sunday against the visiting San Francisco 49ers.

Detroit’s new starter did complete two-thirds of those attempts for 338 yards a trio of TDs and even a pair of two-point conversions, but Goff averaged only 5.9 yards per attempt with 20 of his 56 targets going to running backs. So it was volume-driven production to be sure.

And, hey, we know with the Lions’ overall talent level that Goff is sure to have plenty of opportunity to rack up garbage-time stats, but it’s certainly not something you want to rely on from your starting QB in 10- to 14-team leagues — especially given the Lions’ arguably league-worst wide receiver corps.

Houston Texans QB Tyrod Taylor

Fantasy position rank: 12th with 26.6 fantasy points

Buying or bypassing? Buying in two-QB leagues or as a fall-back option if you waited on QB and are already nervous about your starter in your single-quarterback league.

Unlike Goff, Taylor produced the majority of his QB1 stats (21-of-33 for 291 yards, 2 TDs and 4-40 rushing) with his team leading by multiple scores Sunday against the visiting Jacksonville Jaguars.

Taylor isn’t spectacular, but he’s a steady veteran hand who’s good at avoiding turnovers. He also offers upside with his legs as his 40 yards rushing Sunday on 10 attempts ranked fourth among QBs for the opening weekend.

Lions RB Jamaal Williams

Fantasy position rank: Tied for 2nd with 25.0 PPR points

Buying or bypassing? Buying — as running back depth or as a flex position starting option in 12-team-or-larger leagues.

As we discussed above with Goff’s garbage-time numbers, Williams isn’t going to see nine targets (and eight receptions) per week.

But he is going to be involved in the Lions’ offense as the team’s coaches promised as much on several occasions during the offseason. On Sunday against the Niners, Williams had 17 touches to lead back D’Andre Swift’s 19 and finished with 0.6 more PPR points thanks to his superior yards-per-carry average (6.0-3.5) while logging only two fewer rushing attempts (11-9).

And given Swift’s health question marks even as a second-year back, Williams is at the ready to assume the every-down RB duties in the Motor City.

Denver Broncos RB Melvin Gordon

Fantasy position rank: 7th with 20.8 fantasy points.

Buying or bypassing? Buying.

A number of fantasy pundits and GMs were ready to cast Gordon aside this offseason when the Broncos moved up in the second round to draft RB Javonte Williams in late April.

And while the team loves the hard-running Williams — he had three more rushing attempts (14-11) than his veteran teammate in Sunday’s win over the New York Giants — we saw the old MGIII rise to the occasion in the Meadowlands, displaying more explosiveness (a game-sealing 70-yard TD burst in the fourth quarter) and getting more work in the passing game (catching all three of his targets for 17 yards while Williams had one catch on one target for a minus-4 yards).

The rookie is certainly going to stay involved and could easily command roughly 50 percent of the Denver RB touches, but the talented Gordon was simply written off too soon and figures to have solid RB2/flex appeal for the foreseeable future.

San Francisco 49ers RB Elijah Mitchell

Fantasy position rank: 13th with 16.4 fantasy points

Buying or bypassing? Buying — mainly due to the RB-friendly system he plays in — but resist the temptation to overpay.

With third-round rookie RB Trey Sermon a surprise, healthy scratch and veteran starting back Raheem Mostert going down early in Sunday’s game with a knee — and yet another — injury that is expected to sideline him for the first half of the season, Mitchell was suddenly handed the valuable keys as the lead back in a Kyle Shanahan attack.

The rookie sixth-round pick took the gig and ran with it, accounting for 19 of the team’s 22 RB carries and rushing for 104 yards, including a 38-yard scoring burst in the second quarter.

As impressive as the debut was, Shanahan’s running back master plan in any given week remains as unpredictable as ever, and it wouldn’t be surprising to see Sermon — who was clearly sent a message with his Week 1 inactive designation — getting the bulk of the work in Week 2 or JaMychal Hasty, who received a pair of touches Sunday — suddenly elevated into the lead role to see what he can do.

That said, the most likely Niners backfield scenario is that Mitchell has earned another turn as the team’s lead back and that makes the rookie a must pick-up in almost all leagues.

Arizona Cardinals WR Christian Kirk

Fantasy position rank: 10th with 24.0 fantasy points

Buying or bypassing? Buying — but only as a deeper-league bench stash.

Three other Arizona wideouts (DeAndre Hopkins, A.J. Green and rookie Rondale Moore) received as many targets (five) as Kirk did in Sunday’s surprise thrashing of the host Tennessee Titans, but none were more efficient than Kirk, who reeled in all five for 70 yards and a pair of touchdowns.

The Cards are in need of a consistently productive pass-catcher to emerge opposite the stud WR1 Hopkins, but Kirk has so far shown only WR2 flashes in his boom-or-bust three seasons. In 2020, for example, he had a midseason run of three straight 20-point-plus games, but he topped 10 PPR points in only three of his 11 other contests on the season.

Los Angeles Chargers WR Mike Williams

Fantasy position rank: 14th with 22.2 fantasy points

Buying or bypassing? Intriguing as always but just renting for now.

Speaking of boom-or-bust wide receivers, the Bolts’ Williams is even more mercurial. In 2020, he had four games with at least 17.1 PPR points, but he also had seven contests with 5.8 or fewer.

Perhaps it’s just a simple matter of volume.

On Sunday against host Washington, Williams did attract double-digit targets (12) — only one fewer than WR1 Keenan Allen — for only the fourth time in 57 career games and turned those into a career-high eight catches for 82 yards and a TD in the Chargers’ 20-16 win.

The Bolts most certainly have room for another productive pass-catcher to emerge with talented second-year QB Justin Herbert slinging the rock, so perhaps the fifth season will be the charm for Williams, who has never finished a season ranked among the top-30 PPR wideouts.

Buccaneers TE Rob Gronkowski

Fantasy position rank: 1st with 29.0 fantasy points

Buying or bypassing? It’s Gronk — and the position is tight end — so we’re definitely in.

Tom Brady threw 50 passes in the Bucs’ 31-29 season-opening win over the Dallas Cowboys on Thursday night, and only WR Chris Godwin (14) was targeted more times than Robert James Gronkowski’s eight. No Tampa pass-catcher was more efficient, though, as the veteran tight end caught all eight for 90 yards and two TDs.

That’s certainly not going to be the case every week — volume or efficiency wise — given the width and depth of the Bucs’ pass-catching corps. But at tight end — where TDs arguably have more relative value than any of the other three main fantasy positions — the 6-foot-6, 270-pound Gronk is a standout among all-time standouts with 102 career regular season and playoff TD grabs.

So with the fantasy position as shallow as ever — and even with Gronkowski having turned 32 in May — those who missed out on the elite TE1s should all be making a waiver claim if he’s available.

Saints TE Juwan Johnson

Fantasy position rank: 5th with 17.1 fantasy points

Buying or bypassing? Speculatively buying, unless you have one of the elite TE1s.

As aforementioned, the Bucs only threw 20 passes Sunday — and Johnson, the second-year undrafted free agent, was only targeted three times — but he caught all three for 21 yards and, most importantly, two TDs.

Surely that will earn the 6-foot-4, 230-pound Johnson more snaps and looks in a passing offense in need of productive pass-catchers with the WR1 Thomas out. And, sorry for repetition, but those also are in short supply at the shallow fantasy tight end position.

Don’t overspend, but pick up Johnson now if you have a spare bench spot and see what develops.

Stars, Studs, and Duds from Saints’ Week 1 win vs. Packers

New Orleans Saints vs. Packers: Stars, Studs, and Duds from Week 1 win

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Who stood out the most for the New Orleans Saints in their Week 1 upset of the Green Bay Packers — for good and bad? Well, to start with, there were many more positives than negatives. So much so that I’m adding a category to the usual “Studs and Duds” list to highlight the game’s best performers.

So let’s dig in. Here are your Week 1 Saints Stars, Studs, and Duds:

Watch: Former Penn State receiver elevated for a big touchdown against the Packers

WATCH: Former Penn State receiver Juwan Johnson elevated for a big touchdown for the Saints against the Packers

During any game, you’re going to see plays that are going to be talked about during the week and maybe make Sportscenter Top 10. On Sunday the New Orleans Saints took on the Green Bay Packers and a former Nittany Lion made one of those plays.

During the second quarter, with the New Orleans Saints leading 10-0 faced a 4th & Goal. Quarterback Jameis Winston connected with former Penn State wide receiver Juwan Johnson for the touchdown after Johnson went up an elevator to come down with the catch.

This is not the first time we have seen Johnson make those types of catches. He did that a couple of times at Penn State with his most famous one was against Ohio State in 2018.

Johnson, who transferred from Penn State to Oregon after the 2018 season, and the Saints have been on cruise control in their opener against the Packers into the second half. Maybe teams from Wisconsin should just avoid season openers entirely?


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Juwan Johnson goes up, comes down with Jameis Winston pass for Saints’ score

Juwan Johnson went way, way up to come down with a Jameis Winston touchdown pass

The New Orleans Saints appear to be at home in Jacksonville.

Displaced by Hurricane Ida, the Saints are having their way big time with the Green Bay Packers.

Sean Payton showed supreme confidence in Jameis Winston with time running out in the second quarter and a 10-0 lead.

Payton went for it on fourth down and Winston was under extreme heat when he released a pass to the back of the end zone.

Watch as Juwan Johnson displays incredible hops as he takes to the air and grabs the pass that gave New Orleans a 17-0 lead after the PAT

Winston has a pair of touchdown passes as he goes up against Aaron Rodgers.

Players on the roster bubble ahead of Saints preseason games

A strong preseason could win roster spots for New Orleans Saints players on the bubble like TE Juwan Johnson and CB Brian Poole:

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What does it mean to be on the roster bubble? Does it mean players inside that zone are probably going to be cut? Not necessarily. There are plenty of New Orleans Saints players who are so close to winning a roster spot — they just need to make enough plays in the preseason to seal the deal.

On the other hand, there absolutely are some players who have put themselves in a tight spot and need to win back some confidence with the coaching staff. Impressing during the next month will go a long way towards building their case for a job. So let’s get to it:

 

WATCH: Jameis Winston training with Adam Trautman, Juwan Johnson

New Orleans Saints QB Jameis Winston was joined by TE Adam Trautman and WR Juwan Johnson for a throwing session in San Diego this week.

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Props to Jameis Winston for embracing the grind. He’s putting in the work to earn the Saints’ starting quarterback job by meeting up with a couple of teammates for a workout in San Diego; his longtime photographer shared video of their throwing session at a neighborhood park, with Winston tossing darts to second-year pros Adam Trautman and Juwan Johnson.

Trautman’s presence is notable because he’s currently on top of their tight ends depth chart. And barring a bold move, Trautman should stay there — his competition on the roster includes free agent pickup Nick Vannett and two practice squad players, Garrett Griffin and Ethan Wolf. He’ll have every opportunity to make plays in the offense with Winston at quarterback. So it’s good to see the pair already working to build some trust.

And we shouldn’t overlook Johnson’s involvement. The big receiver out of Oregon was active for seven games last year, racking up 182 snaps with the Saints offense. What’s interesting is that he might be a candidate to move around the formation and line up at tight end himself; some of his splits in the video have him starting his routes awful close to where the offensive line would be. He has the size to make the conversion at 6-foot-4 and 231 pounds.

This isn’t the first time Winston has met with his Saints teammates to log some extra reps. He was joined by wide receiver Marquez Callaway and running back Tony Jones Jr. in mid-March before signing his one-year extension with New Orleans, which probably helped all of them. Winston needs to get to know his receiving corps better. Young, undrafted players like Johnson, Callaway, and Jones can help their case for a roster spot by developing a rapport with their quarterback. We’ll see if it pays off when training camp rolls around.

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