Commanders lead Falcons 17-10 at halftime

Two touchdown passes from Sam Howell have the Commanders up at halftime.

The Washington Commanders lead the Atlanta Falcons 17-10 at halftime, thanks to two first-half touchdown passes from quarterback Sam Howell.

On Washington’s opening drive, Howell connected with wide receiver Terry McLaurin on multiple occasions, at least twice on third down, to keep the drive alive. However, once the Commanders were in Atlanta territory, Howell took a sack, putting them behind schedule. The Commanders would eventually settle for a field goal.

The Falcons had an impressive drive of their own, as quarterback Desmond Ridder found tight end Kyle Pitts for a touchdown to give Atlanta a 7-3 lead.

After each team punted, wide receiver Jamison Crowder returned a punt 61 yards to the Atlanta 11-yard line, setting up Washington’s first touchdown, as Howell found running back Antonio Gibson from one yard out.

On their next possession, the Falcons went for it on fourth down, and the Commanders held them. Howell responded with another scoring drive, finding wide receiver Curtis Samuel for the touchdown to give Washington a 17-7 lead.

The Falcons would answer with a field goal to make it 17-10.

Howell completed 12 of 18 passes for 109 yards with two touchdowns. He did take three sacks, including two on Washington’s final drive.

McLaurin caught five passes for 63 yards in the first half. Atlanta will receive the second-half kickoff.

Six points with David Dorey

Friday’s quick look at six fantasy items to know

Heading into Week 6, many of us are feeling the pinch from injuries and when that precious No. 1 pick in your draft (Justin Jefferson) lands on injured reserve, you realize that your best played now was the 24th pick in your draft. Aaron Jones and Austin Ekeler have been painful to see on my roster for the last month.

After five games, were getting comfortable with how good and bad the players are. And from here on out, depth chart movement and new opportunities will almost entirely be related to injured players being out.

Let’s take a look at what the impact injuries have had over the first five weeks, and a few other notables to think about heading into the weekend.

  1. Running Back Injuries – Feels like there are more running backs getting hurt this season, so I took the Top-20 from the average draft from the last three years and marked the week in black if they didn’t play.
    Draft 2021 1 2 3 4 5 2022 1 2 3 4 5 2023 1 2 3 4 5
    1 C McCaffrey Jonathan Taylor C McCaffrey
    2 Dalvin Cook C McCaffrey Austin Ekeler
    3 Alvin Kamara Austin Ekeler Saquon Barkley
    4 Derrick Henry Najee Harris Bijan Robinson
    5 Ezekiel Elliott Dalvin Cook Nick Chubb
    6 Aaron Jones Derrick Henry Tony Pollard
    7 Saquon Barkley D’Andre Swift Derrick Henry
    8 Nick Chubb Joe Mixon Jonathan Taylor
    9 Jonathan Taylor Alvin Kamara Josh Jacobs
    10 Austin Ekeler Saquon Barkley R Stevenson
    11 Najee Harris Javonte Williams Najee Harris
    12 Antonio Gibson Nick Chubb Travis Etienne
    13 Joe Mixon Leonard Fournette Breece Hall
    14 Edwards-Helaire Aaron Jones Joe Mixon
    15 J.K. Dobbins Ezekiel Elliott Jahmyr Gibbs
    16 D Montgomery James Conner Aaron Jones
    17 D’Andre Swift Travis Etienne Kenneth Walker
    18 Chris Carson Cam Akers Dameon Pierce
    19 Miles Sanders J.K. Dobbins Miles Sanders
    20 Josh Jacobs D Montgomery J.K. Dobbins
    Missed = 12 1 2 2 2 5 Missed = 10 2 2 0 3 3 Missed = 24 2 4 6 5 7

    So yes, there have been more injuries through the first five weeks. Twice as many as either of the last two years. Hey, it’s getting hard out there – this doesn’t even touch playing injured. Just the zero point games.

  2. Wide Receiver Injuries – This is info to consider when making position choices during your draft. Are running backs or wide receivers more reliable to play?
    Draft 2021 1 2 3 4 5 2022 1 2 3 4 5 2023 1 2 3 4 5
    1 Davante Adams Justin Jefferson Justin Jefferson
    2 Tyreek Hill Cooper Kupp Ja’Marr Chase
    3 Stefon Diggs Ja’Marr Chase Tyreek Hill
    4 DeAndre Hopkins Stefon Diggs Cooper Kupp
    5 Calvin Ridley Davante Adams Stefon Diggs
    6 DK Metcalf Deebo Samuel CeeDee Lamb
    7 Justin Jefferson CeeDee Lamb A.J. Brown
    8 A.J. Brown Tyreek Hill Davante Adams
    9 Keenan Allen Mike Evans Amon-Ra St. Brown
    10 Terry McLaurin A.J. Brown Garrett Wilson
    11 CeeDee Lamb Michael Pittman Jr. Jaylen Waddle
    12 Allen Robinson Keenan Allen DeVonta Smith
    13 Julio Jones Tee Higgins Chris Olave
    14 Mike Evans DJ Moore Tee Higgins
    15 Robert Woods Courtland Sutton DK Metcalf
    16 Amari Cooper Mike Williams Deebo Samuel
    17 Michael Thomas Diontae Johnson Calvin Ridley
    18 Chris Godwin Terry McLaurin Amari Cooper
    19 Cooper Kupp Amon-Ra St. Brown Keenan Allen
    20 Adam Thielen Jaylen Waddle DeAndre Hopkins
    Missed = 10 1 1 1 4 3 Missed = 8 0 2 2 2 2 Missed = 10 2 1 2 1 5

    Not only were the wideouts far less likely to miss games, but there was usually only one of the Top-20 draft picks that missed more than one. This year, Kupp was out for four games and Higgins had two. Notable too is that Justin Jefferson just landed on injured reserve.

  3. WR Chase Claypool – Sure, I was comfortable thinking that Claypool was just another “physical freak” who had one monster game in his career and then flamed out. That may well be still true, but Claypool leaves a passing attack that has improved from the disaster of 2022, but he just never made a difference and potentially rubbed coaches and players the wrong way (Part 2). But ending up in Miami is an opportunity his past probably doesn’t deserve. There are interesting aspects to joining Miami, who has suggested that the 6-4, 238-pound wideout might play tight end (which they have never used much under Mike McDaniel). Rumors abound that Jaylen Waddle could be traded – likely not true – but that would move everyone else up a notch on the depth chart. Just do not admit that you are tracking him or have him hidden in the dark recesses of your fantasy bench.
  4. RB D’Onta Foreman – The Bears backfield is not only a mess to decipher, but in the end, they all watch Justin Fields run past on the way to the endzone. But Khalil Herbert has a high-ankle sprain and will miss multiple weeks. Roschon Johnson has a concussion but has impressed. Foreman has been inactive for several games but may be the only healthy back. He ran for 914 yards in Carolina last year with five 100-yard games. What interests the most is that  he’ll play the Vikings and maybe the Raiders as a waiver wire scrape. But watch what he does, not because he is taking over the crowded Bears’ backfield but also because we are heading into a three-week stretch where teams will make trades to fill holes or get more value getting rid of a player than keeping him. Running backs are getting hurt, and teams will be looking for help.
  5. WR KJ Osborn – Justin Jefferson landed on injured reserve with a hamstring injury that happened without contact. And while they said they expect him back this season, it wasn’t one of those “on the field in five weeks” declarations. How do you replace the best wideout in the world? Probably not that well. But Osborn slides over to take Jefferson’s split-end spot.  Jordan Addison remains as the flanker and Brandon Powell is in the slot. Given that T.J. Hockenson maybe be the primary receiver now, the No. 3 wideout isn’t likely to matter. Osborn knows the offense and has chemistry with Kirk Cousins. The fear now is the rumor that they might trade Cousins away if they decide the season is already over and want to build for 2024.  It’s worth tracking to see how the offense changes, though overall, it will not be for the better.
  6. Atlanta Offense – It is hard to track what HC Arthur Smith is doing in Atlanta, but the highly drafted offensive pieces are in place for what should be an offensive juggernaut. They even have a solid offensive line. But they have disappointed all last year, and again through Week 4. Then, they played the Texans who shut down the running game and made Desmond Ridder pass for 329 yards and a score. And for once, both Kyle Pitts and Drake London were both productive. They face the weak Commanders’ secondary this week, and it is a chance for back-to-back high-point offensive performances. There’s still a chance for the offense to reach their potential, but it has to show again this week.

 

About last night

Credit: William Purnell-USA TODAY Sports

Denver 9, Kansas City 19

The Chiefs won, and even beat the 10.5 point line. But this game was yet another low-scoring Thursday night affair, that contained precious few notable fantasy performances and WOW Taylor Swift!  served no purpose other than give the Chiefs ten days off before they face the Chargers.

Javonte Williams was able to play and led the backfield with ten carries for 52 yards. That left the rookie Jaleel McLaughlin with only  seven runs for 30 yards though he caught two passes for 12 yards. The struggles of Russell Wilson were on full display with 13-of-22 completions gaining just 95 yards and one score with two interceptions, Wilson had a QB-rating of just 46.6. The Denver defense played better than usual, though that could also be that the Chiefs just played worse from the Thursday night effect.

Isiah Pacheco (16-62) handled all but two carries for the backfield, and added six catches for 36 yards.  Patrick Mahomes threw for 306 yards and one score but could have turned in three scores for the want of a few more yards and one interception. Travis Kelce dominated the first half and ended with 124 yards on nine catches. The Broncos opted to actually cover him in the second half and held him to only two receptions for 15 yards.

Rashee Rice  was the next best receiver with four catches for 72 yards, but Mahomes threw to five other wideouts on the night. The 5-1 Chiefs keep their best record status in the AFC while the 1-5 Broncos are thinking about having a garage sale next week.

Winners and Losers: Week 5 roundup of Florida Gators in the NFL

Take a look at how former Florida Gators played in the NFL, including an overdue performance from Atlanta Falcons tight end Kyle Pitts.

There are 29 active NFL players who attended the University of Florida and 24 of them have a starting job this season.

Week 5 saw a lot of success and letdowns from Gators across the league, including Atlanta Falcons tight end Kyle Pitts and speedy Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Kadarius Toney.

Quarterback Anthony Richardson has been having trouble staying on the field with the Indianapolis Colts, getting injured for the third time in four starts. Meanwhile, down in Tampa Bay, quarterback Kyle Trask is learning and sitting behind Baker Mayfield.

There were plenty of individual winners and losers in the NFL last week, but let’s take a look at the best and worst performances of Florida Gators in the NFL.

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
 Justin Fields 282-57 4
 Josh Allen 359-14 3
 Jalen Hurts 303-72 2
 Jared Goff 236-2 4
 Sam Howell 388-19 2
Running Backs Yards TD
Travis Etienne 26-136
4-48
2
Zack Moss 23-165
2-30
2
Breece Hall 22-177
3-17
1
Devon Achane 11-151
1-14
1
David Montgomery 19-109
2-20
1
Wide Receivers Yards TD
Ja’Marr Chase 15-192 3
D.J. Moore 8-230 3
Tyreek Hill 8-181 1
Adam Thielen 11-107 1
George Pickens 6-130
1-16
1
Tight Ends Yards TD
Dallas Goedert 8-117 1
Travis Kelce 10-67 1
Logan Thomas 9-77 1
Sam LaPorta 3-47 2
George Kittle 3-67 3
Placekickers XP FG
Greg Zuerlein 2 5
Cairo Santos 4 4
Ka’imi Fairbairn 1 4
Jake Elliott 2 3
Matt Gay 2 3
Defense Sack – TO TD
Saints 2-3 1
Jets 4-3 1
Steelers 4-3 0
Bengals 3-3 1
Giants 1-3 1

Bumps, Bruises and Bowouts

HC Bill Belichick – mumble mumble
QB Anthony Richardson – Shoulder
QB Mac Jones – Benched
QB Daniel Jones – Neck
RB Khalil Herbert – Ankle
RB Roschon Johnson – Concussion
RB James Conner – Knee
WR Justin Jefferson –  Hamstring
WR JuJu Smith-Schuster – Concussion
WR Wan’Dale Robinson – Concussion
WR Demario Douglas – Concussion
WR Tank Dell – Concussion
TE Mo Alie-Cox – Concussion

Chasing Ambulances

A light week is always great to see. But it also

RB  Khalil Herbert / Roschon Johnson – A high-ankle sprain will keep the Bears’ starting running back on the sideline for at least a  few weeks and Johnson could miss time with a concussion. That will give D’Onta Foreman a chance to be active and would be the starter  against the Vikings if Johnson cannot clear the concussion protocols.

QB Anthony Richardson – He just got over a concussion, and now was knocked out of the game with what was later described as an AC joint sprain in his shoulder. The frequency of his injuries are concerning, but at least the Colts have a capable backup in Gardner Minshew.

QB Daniel Jones – Left the game with a neck injury and will receive an MRI on Monday. Tyrod Taylor replaced him and offered the same mediocre passing. The Giants’ receivers are very risky fantasy options and  even more so if Jones is out.

RB James Conner – Twisted his knee after six rushing attempts and did not return. HC Jonathan Gannon said Conner would be examined better on Monday for a prognosis but wouldn’t elaborate more than to say that Conner was “feeling okay.” The rookie Emari DeMarcado took over after Conner left.

WR Justin Jefferson – The Vikings star wideout suffered a non-contact hamstring injury. HC Kevin O’Connell said that it was too early to put a timeline on when Jefferson would return. That doesn’t sound promising but more will be known later in the week. Jordan Addison and K.J. Osborn will have to step if Jefferson misses any time.

Free Agents, Flops and Other Notables

RB D’Onta Foreman (CHI) – The Bears have lost Khalil Herbert for multiple weeks with an ankle injury, Roschon Johnson has a concussion, and Travis Homer suffered a hamstring injury last week. Foreman has been inactive in recent weeks, but he looks like the last man standing until Johnson or Herbert are cleared. The next two games are home stands against the Vikings and Raiders which should be potentially rewarding.

TE Dalton Schultz (HOU) – While he started slowly in the Texans offense, the ex-Cowboy tight end scored in Week 4 with three catches for 42 yards versus the Steelers. He repeated the score on Sunday, while logging a team-high seven catches for 65 yards in the London game. C.J. Stroud started the season connecting with his wideouts, but he’s finally starting to rely on the tight end that he had chemistry with in the summer.

RB Emari DeMarcado (ARI) – He stepped in after James Conner was injured and ran for 45 yards and a touchdown on ten carries in the loss to the Bengals. He also caught a 12-yard pass. At the least he’s a needed handcuff for the Conner owner. Keaontay Ingram was the backup but is out with a neck injury. The Cardinals play at the Rams and at the Seahawks next, which is far from ideal. But DeMarcado could end up as their only choice for starter.

QB Desmond Ridder (ATL) – After his starting job was being questioned, Ridder threw for 329 yards and a score in the London meeting with the Texans.  Notable was his top two receivers of Kyle Pitts (7-87) and Drake London (6-78) which should have been true every week but never was. It may not mean that Pitts and London are bounced back into being a strong fantasy start, but it means don’t drop them as have happened in some fantasy leagues.

Carolina backfield – They did face a Top-5 defense against running backs in the Lions, but it was troubling to see them split the work up with Chuba Hubbard (9-35) edging out Miles Sanders (7-32). But Hubbard only totaled three carries prior to the fourth quarter when they gave up.

WR Jameson Williams (DET) – His debut was two receptions for two yards. So maybe not an immediate savior. Amon-Ra St. Brown was a scratch for the game and Jared Goff just focused on Josh Reynolds (4-78, TD) and Sam LaPorta (3-47, 2 TD).

RB Jonathan Taylor (IND) – He’s happy from signing a three-year, $42 million contract. His 2023 debut was only six runs for 18 yards while Zack Moss is making $1.2 million and is a free agent in the spring. And Moss just ran for 165 yards and two touchdowns on 23 carries. The last time Taylor gained that many yards was in 2021. How do you tactfully bench Moss? That was his second 100-yard game in three weeks.

RB De’Von Achane (MIA) – The Dolphins rookie back just gained 151 yards on 11 carries with one score versus the Giants. He was inactive in Week 1, and little used in Week 2. And he is now the No. 3 fantasy running back mostly thanks to two games. No. 2 is still Raheem Mostert by only four fantasy points. The Dolphins backfield is No. 1 in fantasy points for running backs and it is not even close.

RB Alvin Kamara (NO) – He caught 13 passes last week in his debut and in New England ran for 80 yards on 22 carries with a touchdown, and three catches for 17 yards. Kamara’s come through both weeks of play and faces the Texans and Jaguars next. He’s been the only consistent part of the New Orleans offense.

Patriots’ offense – They’ve been spectacularly bad the last two weeks and they are making the benching of Mac Jones a formal part of the weekly game plan. Next is a road trip to Las Vegas and then hosting the Bills. The Pats seem very likely to make some changes, but what remains to be seen as Bill Belichick was hard to understand in the post-game presser. Bailey Zappe has been no better. The unspoken question is this – what if it is just the coaching?

What’s going to happen? – Now we know. Cooper Kupp returned to his old workhorse volume of catches with eight receptions for 118 yards in the loss to the Eagles. But rookie superstar Puka Nacua did not take a backseat with seven catches for 71 yards and a touchdown. Literally, every other receiver disappeared, but the offense is accommodating both wideouts, even if to the detriment to all others.

RB Breece Hall (NYJ) – They said that he would no longer be limited and the second-year back ran for 177 yards and a score on 22 carries, including a 72-yard touchdown romp through the defense.

RB Jaleel McLaughlin (DEN) – Javonte Williams was a scratch this week and the backfield was shared by the rookie McLaughlin (9-68 rush, 3-21, TD receive) and Samaje Perine (6-22 rush, 4-73 receive). The Broncos were playing the Jets, so the passing offense was shortened. But the undrafted rookie offered more any other back has shown for Denver, so we’ll see if it turns into a three-headed monster once Williams returns.

Vikings backfield –  Alexander Mattison rushed for over 90 yards for two weeks in a row, but the Vikes still acquired Cam Akers for little more than a bag of Doritos. And they used him. His debut in Week 4 had him with just five rushes for 40 yards while Mattison handled 17 runs for 95 yards at the Panthers. On Sunday, Mattison was throttled back to only eight carries for 26 yards while Akers still had his five runs and gained 15 yards. Both backs caught two passes. Playing in Chicago this week doesn’t look nearly as promising for the Mattison owners.

QB Dak Prescott (DAL) – The Cowboys dumped OC Kellen Moore as the scapegoat for Prescott’s interception problem last year. HC Mike McCarthy calls the plays and the Cowboys faced all 1-3 teams to start the year. At San Francisco, Prescott threw for 153 yards, one score and three interceptions. After four weeks, the Chargers were ranked No. 3 in quarterback fantasy points. The Cowboys are No. 27. So maybe it wasn’t Moore? This does not bode well for the rest of the season.

Huddle player of the week

Credit: Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports

Ja’Marr Chase  –  The Bengals’ star wideout had not scored this year, and managed just one 100-yard effort on the year. Against the Cardinals, Chase had a career-best game, catching a team-record 15 passes for 192 yards and three touchdowns. That’ll help his average. And that will definitely win a fantasy game.

Salute!

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

Comedy Yards TDs Tragedy Yards TDs
QB Desmond Ridder 329-10 2 QB Anthony Richardson 98-5 0
RB Zack Moss 23-165
2-30
2 RB Rhamondre Stevenson 8-24 0
RB Kendre Miller 12-37
4-53
0 RB Miles Sanders 7-32 0
WR D.J. Moore 8-230 3 WR DeVonta Smith 1-6 0
WR George Pickens 6-146 1 WR Justin Jefferson 3-38 0
WR Curtis Samuel 6-65 1 WR Garrett Wilson 3-54 0
TE Dalton Schultz 7-65 1 TE Hunter Henry 0-0 0
PK Greg Zuerlein   2 XP   5 FG PK Tyler Bass  2 XP
Huddle Fantasy Points = 234 Huddle Fantasy Points = 26

Now get back to work…

Falcons snap Texans’ win streak 21-19

The Atlanta Falcons edged the Houston Texans 21-19, taking the AFC South team off its two-game winning streak.

Younghoe Koo hit a 37-yard field goal as time expired, and the Atlanta Falcons ended the two-game winning streak of the Houston Texans 21-19 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium Sunday in Week 5.

Quarterback Desmond Ridder led Atlanta on a 10-play, 56-yard drive to setup the Falcons for the winning field goal. The second-year signal caller went 28-of-37 for 329 yards and a touchdown while also rushing four times for 10 yards and a touchdown.

The Texans defense allowed 447 yards total offense, but managed to recover two of the Falcons’ three fumbles. Ridder did not take a sack and finished the game with a 111.2 passer rating.

WATCH: Texans S Grayland Arnold forces Falcons TE Jonnu Smith fumble

Houston Texans safety Grayland Arnold forced a key fumble in Week 5 against the Atlanta Falcons.

Grayland Arnold has found a way to contribute for the Houston Texans.

The former Baylor product stepped up and forced the defense’s second fumble of the afternoon when he hit Atlanta Falcons tight end Jonnu Smith after a 10-yard gain with 4:50 to go in the third quarter at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Despite getting down to the Houston 13-yard line, Arnold’s forced fumble gave the Texans an opportunity to flip the field as safety Jalen Pitre recovered for a 22-yard return to Houston’s 30-yard line.

Arnold entered Sunday’s game with 16 combined tackles and a tackle for loss through 16 games for the Texans.

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Fantasy football start ’em, sit’ em: Week 5

Check out these starts and sits for fantasy football in Week 5.

In the blink of an eye, we’re already in Week 5 of the season. As we get into the heart of the fantasy football campaign, this is when managers truly find ways to separate themselves.

As if making start/sit decisions wasn’t difficult enough, this is the first week introducing byes into the mix. Teams on a bye in Week 5 include the Los Angeles Chargers, Cleveland Browns, Seattle Seahawks and Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Doing start/sit articles can be a little challenging. The players featured on the list below should not be taken as “must starts” or “must sits.” Instead, these are more suggestions on what we believe managers should do with fringe players heading into the weekend. The choice is ultimately up to the manager.

Just because a player is listed as a “start” doesn’t mean he should be put in the lineup over the secure, bona fide studs. Vice versa for the “sits.” If there’s no better option on the waiver wire or the bench, a manager shouldn’t automatically sit the player. That’s why these can be tricky waters to navigate.

Feel free to ask any specific start/sit questions via X, formerly Twitter, (@KevinHickey11) or check out our player projections for Week 5:

Jimmie Ward on Falcons offense: ‘I don’t think they’re trying to pass’

“They got wide receivers if they use ’em,” – Texans DB Jimmie Ward on Atlanta’s offense. “I don’t think they’re trying to pass the ball.”

Texans safety Jimmie Ward didn’t seem overly concerned about stopping the Falcons’ passing attack when asked about facing Atlanta’s offense on Thursday, and it’s hard to blame him. 

Anyone who’s watched film of the Falcons this season can see they have a one-dimensional offense with a limited passing game. Quarterback Desmond Ridder hasn’t been able to get the ball to his playmakers with enough consistency.

The pass-blocking has been poor as well, but Ward thinks the Falcons are simply choosing not to utilize their weapons.

“They got wide receivers if they use ’em,” said Ward. “I don’t think they’re trying to pass the ball. They’re trying to out-physical teams and run the ball. So, we’re going to have a tough task — stopping them from running the ball.”

Watch Ward’s interview below, as shared by FOX-5 Atlanta’s Miles Garrett:

The Falcons are slight favorites going into Week 5, but this won’t be an easy game by any stretch of the imagination. Even though the Texans are rebuilding, rookie QB C.J. Stroud is playing at a Pro Bowl level this season. 

We’ll see if Atlanta puts together a more balanced performance on Sunday, or if it ends up being the Bijan Robinson solo show once again. 

Falcons starting lineups

Falcons Week 5 depth chart

Hollins on Ridder exchange

NFL Week 5 Power Rankings

Examining Ridder’s 8 starts

Six points with David Dorey

Friday’s quick look at six fantasy items to know

The NFL season is taking form and were left with only two undefeated teams and two one winless team. Player rankings are still dominated by players who had one monster game to skew their fantasy points. Right now, the only Top-10 running backs from last year that are still Top-10 are Tony Pollard and Christian McCaffrey. But the top wideouts from last year are almost all top in the rankings again. Puka Nacua is a slight surprise, and maybe we underestimated the Texans and Nico Collins. But so far – those early wideout picks have almost all been golden, and running backs are mostly frustrating.

Unless we are talking about rookies.

Let’s take a look at some positions and situations as we head into Week 5.

  1. Rookie running back report – Here’s where the first five rounds of rookie running backs have ended up through the first four weeks.
    Pick Tm Running Backs Yards Catch TDs FF Pts RANK
    1.08 ATL Bijan Robinson 452 19 1 70.2 6
    1.12 DET Jahmyr Gibbs 249 14 0 38.9 27
    2.21 SEA Zach Charbonnet 126 4 0 16.6 57
    3.08 NO Kendre Miller 42 2 0 6.2 79
    3.18 TEN Tyjae Spears 150 10 0 25 46
    3.21 MIA Devon Achane 362 8 6 80.2 4
    3.25 JAC Tank Bigsby 33 2 0 15.3 60
    4.13 CHI Roschon Johnson 180 11 1 35 30
    5.08 NYJ Israel Abanikanda 0 0 0 0 na
    5.28 CIN Chase Brown -1 1 0 0.9 114
    5.37 NYG Eric Gray 0 0 0 0 na
    5.41 IND Evan Hull 7 1 0 1.7 110

    Jahmyr Gibbs still rates as a fantasy starter but hasn’t been a difference-maker. Devon Achane’s stats were vastly impacted by his four-TD performance, but he’s a fantasy starter until he isn’t. The most likely assumption is that Achane drops and Gibbs rises as the season progresses. But we were all correct – Bijan Robinson is the one to draft and in the first round.

  2. Rookie wide receiver report –  Rookie receivers very rarely meet fantasy expectations. That has held true with one gigantic outlier. Tank Dell and Michael Wilson can thank one big performance to scoot them into the end of the WR3 range. Zay Flowers is also barely there. All the others have not rated a fantasy start except for NFL-record setter Puka Nacua. He was the 20th wideout drafted. All other teams missed him five times before he was taken.
    Pick Tm Wide Receivers Yards Catch TDs FF Pts RANK
    1.20 SEA Jaxon Smith-Njigba 62 12 0 18.2 89
    1.21 LAC Quentin Johnston 44 6 0 10.4 113
    1.22 BAL Zay Flowers 244 24 0 49.5 35
    1.23 MIN Jordan Addison 185 13 2 43.5 44
    2.08 CAR Jonathan Mingo 64 8 0 14.4 100
    2.19 GB Jayden Reed 203 12 2 44.1 42
    2.24 KC Rashee Rice 140 13 1 32.7 59
    2.32 DEN Marvin Mims 242 9 1 40.5 45
    3.06 HOU Nathaniel Dell 267 16 2 56 25
    3.10 NYG Jalin Hyatt 99 4 0 13.9 102
    3.11 CLE Cedric Tillman 5 1 0 1.5 154
    3.16 IND Josh Downs 158 17 0 32.8 57
    3.31 ARI Michael Wilson 239 21 2 59.8 34
    3.37 LVR Tre Tucker 34 1 0 1 137
    4.23 LAC Derius Davis 85 4 0 6.4 108
    4.29 CIN Charlie Jones 6 1 0 1.6 150
    4.31 CHI Tyler Scott 20 3 1 2.3 123
    5.15 BUF Justin Shorter 0 0 0 0 na
    5.24 GB Dontayvion Wicks 0 0 0 0 na
    5.42 LAR Puka Nacua 501 39 1 95.5 5

    Some of the above will likely creep into fantasy starter range later in the season. But drafting a rookie wideout almost never pays off. Nacua wasn’t drafted in most leagues – why would he? You have to love the surprises.

  3. Jameson Williams (DET) – He served his time and the NFL cut his suspension short, so tie those yellow ribbons all over Ford Field. The Lions play the Carolina “for a good time, call” Panthers, so most everything should work anyway. To start, he’ll timeshare with Marvin Jones which is to say he’ll handle all the actual receptions between the two. He’s one to watch but had just one catch last year as he returned from a torn ACL. He’s good enough that the Lions drafted him with their 1.12 pick last year, knowing that he’d have a down rookie year from his knee. They did not see the suspension coming, but it is over and the ex-Alabama star finally hits the field healthy. He turned in a 79-1572-15 stat line as a Crimson Tide junior who ran a 4.38 and even posted 7-184-2 on the Georgia defense in 2021. Amon-Ra St. Brown is safely the No. 1 wideout but there’s room for Williams to start to climb the depth chart.
  4. Chiefs receivers – Will there be a primary wideout this year? Tyreek Hill left last year, and JuJu Smith-Schuster stepped up with 78-933-3 as the No. 27 fantasy wideout. This year? The top wideout is the rookie Rashee Rice (No. 59) and Skyy Moore (No. 69).    Patrick Mahomes uses around a dozen receivers every week and none have more than five catches in a game. Usually, they catch two or three. Kadarius Toney is officially empty on any upside. Playing at the Vikings who rank No. 32 versus wideouts should give a look at how the passing should ideally be distributed. Rice is the one to watch, but if he cannot clearly step forward ahead of the rest in this venue, than the Chiefs will not offer a safe wideout fantasy starter this season.
  5. Kyle Pitts / Drake London (ATL) – Both players are highly talented. Pitts (2020 – 1.04) was the highest-drafted tight end in NFL history. London (2021 – 1.08). Pitts set records as a rookie, as expected. Last year, Marcus Mariota prevented the passing game from succeeding. Now that Desmond Ridder is starting his career, the passing game has nosedived and both Pitts and London are landing on waiver wires in frustration and anger.  The duo are in the Bottom-3 among all NFL receivers in catchable target rate. It is not their fault. The Falcons rank No. 32 in fantasy wideouts. Pitts isn’t even the most productive tight end on his team. But if the passing continues to be so bad, the Falcons will be forced to switch to Taylor Heinicke. This week against the Texans should see some signs of improvement. If not, the calls to remove Ridder will grow. Don’t throw away either receiver if you have any roster room. Talent always finds a way. Eventually.
  6. Israel Abanikanda (NYJ) – The Jets intend to kick off the training wheels for Breece Hall and eliminate his limitations.  That’s great for Hall and his fantasy owners because he looks very much to be in top shape, averaging 6.6 yards per carry.  Behind him has been Dalvin Cook, but the veteran back has not been of any help. After four games, he is averaging just 2.5 yards per carry. There is speculation that Cook could get traded or released, as he is not adding anything to the backfield despite signing a 1-year, $7M contract. The fifth-round pick Abanikanda impressed earlier this summer, but then had a thigh injury. He’s not seen any work this season, but the Jets have to be concerned about Cook if they were forced to rely on him.  It is a situation worth tracking.

About last night

Credit: Brad Mills-USA TODAY Sports

Chicago 40, Washington 20

Free at last…

The Bears broke that fourteen-game losing streak, this time by building a huge lead and then NOT letting the opponent post a huge comeback. Bet they thought about last week, just without anyone speaking a word. The Commanders are now officially “it.” And in their own stadium, no less.

Once again, Justin Fields was a fantasy gem. He ran for 57 yards on a team-high 11 rushes, and passed for 282 yards and four touchdowns. DJ Moore had a career-best game with eight receptions for 230 yards and three touchdowns. Cole Kmet offered five catches for 42 yards and a score, but all other receivers combined for only two catches for two yards. This illustrates why covering DJ Moore would be a game-changer. Khalil Herbert rushed for 76 yards on ten carries but left with an ankle injury. Roschon Johnson gained 19 yards on three rushes and left with a concussion. Have to think the only Bears cheering then were close family members of D’Onta Foreman. Who may have been at home with them.

The Bears defense finally showed up and never left. The No. 31 defense against running backs only allowed Brian Robinson to gain 10 yards on six runs. That will help the average. Sam Howell passed 51 times to complete 37 passes for 388 yards and two scores between Logan Thomas (9-77, TD) and Curtis Samuel (6-65, TD). Antonio Gibson never rushed the ball but caught four passes for 64 yards.  Eight different receivers caught at least two passes but they were not nearly enough for a Bears team that found destiny after almost a calendar year.

Arthur Smith says Kyle Pitts is nearly back to full health

Falcons head coach Arthur Smith said TE Kyle Pitts is getting close to being fully healthy

Falcons tight end Kyle Pitts had his 2022 season cut short due to a torn MCL he suffered in Week 11. After a long recovery, Pitts returned in time for Atlanta’s Week 1 win over the Carolina Panthers.

The former No. 4 overall pick has played in all four games this season, but his production — 11 catches for 121 receiving yards — suggests something still isn’t quite right.

During head coach Arthur Smith’s Monday press conference, he said Pitts was “getting close” to being 100 percent in his recovery, per ESPN’s Michael Rothstein.

Even if Pitts’ injury is still hindering his play on the field, the tight end hasn’t come close to matching the success he had during his rookie season when Matt Ryan was still the quarterback.

Fans blamed Marcus Mariota for Pitts’ dropoff in production last year, and now Desmond Ridder is getting the blame in 2023. What’s really irking fans is the fact that Jonnu Smith continues to be a factor while Pitts seems like an afterthought most weeks.

Smith led the team with six catches for 95 yards during Sunday’s loss to the Jaguars. Comparatively, Pitts finished with two catches for 21 receiving yards in Week 4.

The Falcons offense will look to bounce back at home against the Houston Texans in Week 5.

Fans react to Week 4 loss to Jags

10 takeaways from Week 4

Studs and Duds: Week 4

Hollins on exchange with Ridder

Twitter turns on Ridder after 2 INT

Ridley scores TD vs. Falcons

12 Falcons free-agent options