Lions-Packers game will have Clete Blakeman as the referee

Blakeman’s last Packers-Lions game was mired in major controversy

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As if the Lions needed even more adversity for the Week 2 trip to Green Bay, the planets aligned even more favorably for the Packers.

The officiating crew assignments for Week 2 are now out, and none other than Clete Blakeman will be the referee for Detroit’s visit to Lambeau Field. Yeah, that Clete Blakeman…

Flashback to Week 6 of 2019, Ford Field. The Lions lose to the Packers 23-22 after three inexplicably awful calls from Blakeman and his crew go against them. I wrote this about Blakeman and the game after rewatching this summer as part of the 2019 season review,

I’ve been covering the NFL professionally since 2004 and watching football since the mid-1970s. I have never seen a single instance of the officials deciding the outcome of a game at any level of football more than this one. The Lions absolutely got hosed by Clete Blakeman and his clueless, biased crew. Blakeman effectively admitting he didn’t know what was going on in his postgame press conference–which he abruptly stopped–only reinforces my position.

Blakeman flagged Lions DE Trey Flowers twice for illegal hands to the face that were not in fact hands to the face infractions. Tracy Walker was also called for a personal foul on a terrible throw by Aaron Rodgers that he was trying to intercept.

The NFL, under pressure from several former officials, later agreed this should not have been a penalty against Walker.

This will be the first time Blakeman has handled a Lions game since. His crew did work the Packers playoff win over Seattle in January, another game with some major officiating controversy, though his bumbling went against the Packers in that one. Blakeman was also the referee during the Browns-Steelers matchup that ended in a massive brawl last year.

Graphic courtesy NFL Officiating

Report: Lions CB Desmond Trufant avoids ‘significant hamstring injury’, could play in Week 2

NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero is reporting that Detroit Lions corner Desmond Trufant avoided a “significant hamstring injury” and could play in Week 2.

NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero is reporting that Detroit Lions corner Desmond Trufant avoided a “significant hamstring injury” and could play in Week 2 against the Green Bay Packers.

This is a glimpse of good news for the Lions after they were forced to place fellow starting corner Justin Coleman on injured reserve earlier in the day with a significant hamstring injury.

If Trufant is able to play, he would join last week’s starter Amani Oruwariye and potentially third overall pick Jeff Okudah — who is also dealing with his own hamstring injury — in the starting lineup.  If either Trufant or Okudah was to miss the game, Darryl Roberts — who filled in very well last week — is capable of playing on the outside and in the slot, and has 26 career NFL starts to lean on.

We will find out more information tomorrow on Wednesday’s injury report, but don’t be surprised if the Lions play it safe with their injured corners and try and get them as healthy as possible before the weekend.

The Lions can use all the available corner help the team can muster as they’ll be in Green Bay and Aaron Rodgers is coming off a 364-passing-yards and four-touchdown performance against the Minnesota Vikings last week.

Gators stand pat in CBS Sports’ post-Week 2 rankings

Florida remained ranked No. 5, the third-highest ranked program in the SEC behind Alabama and Georgia, neither of whom have played.

With Week 2 of the college football season in the books, CBS Sports has released its latest rankings of the 76 teams competing this fall.

The biggest risers on the poll were Army, Louisiana-Lafayette and BYU, who all moved into the top 30. Among the biggest fallers was Florida State, who was upset at home by Georgia Tech, who went 3-9 in 2019, 16-13 in coach Mike Norvell’s debut. The Seminoles fell 18 spots from No. 22 to No. 40.

Florida, who is still just under two weeks from its season opener at Ole Miss, remained ranked No. 5, the third-highest ranked program in the SEC behind No. 2 Alabama and No. 4 Georgia, neither of whom have played yet, either.

The top 10 saw several changes, notably Texas moving from No. 11 to No. 8 after a 59-3 win over UTEP. Notre Dame moved up a spot to No. 6 after a lackluster 27-13 win over Duke in its first-ever conference game, while No. 7 LSU, No. 9 Auburn and No. 10 Texas A&M each dropped a spot despite not playing.

Here’s the full CBS Sports top 25 after the second week of action.

RANK TEAM RECORD PREVIOUS
1 Clemson 1-0 1
2 Alabama 0-0 2
3 Oklahoma 1-0 3
4 Georgia 0-0 4
5 Florida 0-0 5
6 Notre Dame 1-0 7
7 LSU 0-0 6
8 Texas 1-0 11
9 Auburn 0-0 8
10 Texas A&M 0-0 9
11 Oklahoma State 0-0 10
12 North Carolina 1-0 12
13 Memphis 1-0 14
14 UCF 0-0 15
15 Tennessee 0-0 16
16 Cincinnati 0-0 13
17 Miami 1-0 20
18 Louisville 1-0 19
19 Kentucky 0-0 21
20 Baylor 0-0 23
21 BYU 1-0 40
22 Appalachian State 1-0 25
23 Louisiana 1-0 43
24 Pittsburgh 1-0 24
25 Virginia Tech 0-0 18

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Vegas Watch: Lions open Week 2 as 5 1/2 point underdogs at Packers

Examining various betting lines at the beginning of Week 2 of the 2020 season as the Detroit Lions travel to Green Bay to face the Packers.

According to BetMGM, the Detroit Lions (0-1) open Week 2 of the 2020 season as 5.5-point underdogs as they prepare to travel to Green Bay to face the Packers (1-0).

The Lions are coming off yet another disappointing loss, this time to the Chicago Bears, while the Packers took down the Vikings 43-34 behind a big game from quarterback Aaron Rodgers and wide receiver Davante Adams — connecting on 14 receptions for 156-yards, and two touchdowns.

Both teams have starters injured for this matchup, with the Packers losing right guard Lane Taylor for the season, while three of the top four Lions corners are dealing with hamstring injuries.

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BetMGM has a lot of various bet lines to wager on in this game, but here’s a look the basic concepts most would be interested in, including the Moneyline, points spread, over/under, and total Lions points scored

Moneyline

Lions +205
Packers -250

Spread

Lions +5.5 -110
Packers -5.5 -110

Over/Under

Total points scored Over Under
47.5 -110 -110

Lions points scored

Lions points scored Over Under
19.5 -162 +125
20.5 -121 -106
21.5 100 -125
22.5 +105 -134

[Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.]

CBS Sports’ Week 2 power rankings has the Florida Gators at No. 7

CBS Sports released its latest college football power rankings on Monday with Week 2 of the 2020 season now in the rearview mirror.

CBS Sports released its latest college football power rankings on Monday with Week 2 of the 2020 season now in the rearview mirror. While there are plenty of familiar names at the top of the list, there are a few interesting placements of note.

The Florida Gators are ranked No. 7 according to these rankings, while in CBS Sports’ primary college football poll, UF sits in fifth place — which is a bit of an odd inconsistency. Additionally, Notre Dame leapfrogs into the fourth and Oklahoma surprisingly slides into second place, mostly by virtue of winning their season-opening games. Unsurprisingly, Clemson retains the top position after claiming a victory in their opening match.

Overall, the Southeastern Conference holds five of the 10 spots at the top of the rankings, with Alabama at No. 3, Georgia at No. 5, LSU at No. 8 and Auburn at No. 10 to round them out. Also included in the top-25 are Texas A&M (No. 12), Kentucky (No. 18) and Tennessee (No. 22).

Here is a brief blurb on what they had to say about the Gators.

It’s the Gators that are supposed to be on fire this season, not their stadium. Let’s hope the Saturday blaze at The Swamp isn’t a bad omen.

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NFL Power Rankings Week 2: Lions in bottom third after heartbreaking loss to Bears

Examining where the Detroit Lions stand in the latest national power rankings.

After a heartbreaking Week 1 loss to the Chicago Bears, the Detroit Lions saw a drop in most, but not all, national NFL power rankings.

Let’s take a look at where the Lions stand in the national eye.

USA Today: 23 (Previous 20)

“RB Adrian Peterson tends to make a good first impression, averaging 88.8 rushing yards when debuting for the five NFL teams he’s played for.” — Nate Davis

Touchdown Wire: 26 (Previous: 23)

“When Matt Prater hit a 44-yard field goal late in the third quarter, the Lions had a 23-6 lead over the Bears. Then, Detroit’s defense allowed three fourth-quarter passing touchdowns to Mitchell Trubisky, who looked about as accurate as a busted sprinkler in the first half. The real killer in Matthew Stafford’s attempt to come back from a 27-23 deficit was an easy dropped pass by rookie running back D’Andre Swift with 11 seconds left in the game. Heartbreak, thy name is Detroit.Doug Farrar

NFL: 28 (Previous: 30)

“Just a horrendous setback for the Lions, who melted down in the fourth quarter and allowed a Bears team led by Mitchell Trubisky to steal a win in the opener at Ford Field. According to Next Gen Stats, Detroit’s win probability was at 98.3 percent late in the fourth quarter, but the Lions — man, the Lions — they’re just one of those teams that always finds a way. Allowing Trubisky to throw three touchdown passes in the fourth quarter was bad; D’Andre Swift’s egregious drop as he backpedaled into the end zone in the final seconds was supernatural in its ghoulishness. These are the rare types of stomach-punch losses that can submarine an entire season.” — Dan Hanzus

ESPN: 25 (Previous: 28)

Best rookie debut: RG Jonah Jackson. This is largely due to usage. First-rounder Jeff Okudah didn’t play. Second-rounder D’Andre Swift dropped a game-winning touchdown pass. Fifth-rounder Quintez Cephus caught only three of 10 targets. Third-rounder Julian Okwara and sixth-rounder John Penisini didn’t record a stat. But Jackson played the entire game for the Lions, who ran the ball well — gaining 138 rushing yards. Matthew Stafford was sacked only once (although Jackson might have been the culprit on allowing the sack) and largely had time to throw. It’s something to build on for Jackson for sure.” — Michael Rothstein

CBS Sports: 26 (Previous 24)

“Much like last season, they blew a good lead in the opener. The defense made Mitch Trubisky look good. That’s not a good look.” — Pete Prisco

Sports Illustrated: 24 (Previous: 22)

“D’Andre Swift, man. That can’t be how anyone pictures their first NFL game going. But for some of his teammates who’ve been around the block, and those poor fans, it must have felt sadly familiar and predictable to lose in that fashion. Some people are bullish on a Matthew Stafford–led turnaround under Matt Patricia, but they aren’t good enough to give away games.” — Mitch Goldich

Sporting News: 30 (Previous: 27)

“The Leos are usually the ones making the fourth-quarter save with Stafford, but instead their defense continued to melt down, which now has Matt Patricia at 9-23 and not looking like he will last another season.” — Vinnie Iyer

Tim Brando updates his top 10 after college football’s Week 2

Brando updated his top 10 after the conclusion of Week 2, and though it no longer includes ISU, it still will no doubt be controversial.

Heading into Week 2 of the college football season, Fox Sports commentator Tim Brando released a projected final top 10 that raised some eyebrows.

Among other unpopular predictions, it included Iowa State at No. 6. That take didn’t age particularly well, as the Cyclones were upset by Louisiana-Lafayette at home in a 31-14 beatdown.

Brando updated his top 10 after the conclusion of Week 2, and though it no longer includes ISU, it still will no doubt be controversial.

The Ragin’ Cajuns made their way to No. 10 after springing one of the biggest wins in program history.

The top five remained unchanged, as only Clemson and Oklahoma competed this week. The Tigers beat Wake Forest 37-13, while the Sooners blanked Missouri State 48-0.

Meanwhile, Florida moved up a spot to No. 6, trailing only No. 2 Alabama, No. 4 LSU and No. 5 Georgia among SEC teams.

No. 7 Auburn and No. 8 Texas each moved up a spot, while Notre Dame held firm at No. 9 despite a lackluster outing in a 27-13 win over Duke.

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Free-agent Forecast: Week 2

Which players are the hottest waiver wire adds after Week 1?

Free-agent recommendations refer to 12-team league formats, unless specifically stated. FAAB $ amounts are based on a $100 budget.

Fantasy football waiver wire targets

Quarterbacks

Priority Free Agent

Gardner Minshew, Jacksonville Jaguars

It wasn’t impressive from a volume perspective, but Minshew’s Week 1 surgical dissection of the Indianapolis Colts deserves attention. The second-year mustachioed ‘slinger completed 19 of his 20 throws for only 173 yards but three touchdown strikes. Running back James Robinson offered just enough life to keep the Colts honest, and Minshew’s cast of receiving targets are more than capable of getting the job done. In Week 2, a trip to Tennessee probably won’t go over so well, but then he has Miami, Cincinnati, Houston and Detroit leading into the bye week. If Minshew struggles in any of those Week 3-6 outings, we’ve seen enough to know he can be cast aside.

Availability: 35%
FAAB:
$2-3

1-week Plug & Play/Grab & Stash

Mitchell Trubisky, Chicago Bears vs. New York Giants

Should the Giants stifle Ben Roethlisberger, consider this recommendation null and void. Trubisky was far from perfect vs. the Detroit Lions, and it is fair to say Detroit helped him throw three touchdowns, but a favorable matchup means Trubisky shouldn’t be outright ignored. The Giants brought in James Bradberry from Carolina at cornerback last year, and while adding Logan Ryan will help, he still joined the team late in the offseason. The Bears have a pair of quality wideouts, and we saw flashes of Jimmy Graham rising from the fantasy dead in Week 1. Expect Trubisky — whose job is absolutely on the line from week to week — play like he has nothing to lose. Should he play well, entertain keeping him around … the upcoming schedule is a delight.

Availability: 58%
FAAB:
$1-2

Running Backs

Priority Free Agent

Malcolm Brown, Los Angeles Rams

The veteran back gives a well-rounded element to an offense orchestrated on the play-action guessing game. Not only is Brown a talented runner when the end zone is in sniffing distance, he’s a steady receiving outlet for Jared Goff. Rookie Cam Akers was given 14 carries and a receiving target in his NFL debut, and he was just okay, but Brown’s 18-79-2 line on the ground, plus 3-31-0 in the aerial game, gives fantasy gamers hopes of a dangerous one-two punch each week. That also brings some guesswork into play, and there will be weeks, especially as 2020 rolls along, in which the Rams are not married to Brown as the lead back. When Akers is finally up to speed, he could extract a larger share of touches from the offense. Until then, Brown is a weekly fantasy start when the matchup is even at least decent.

Availability: 44%
FAAB:
$35-40

Nyheim Hines, Indianapolis Colts

In most competitive leagues, Hines was a late-round pick. The loss of Marlon Mack (Achilles) for the remainder of the year solidifies a weekly role for Hines in concert with the primary workload for rookie Jonathan Taylor. The second-rounder was targeted six times in his NFL debut to Hines’ eight. Look for that role to typically favor Hines in a more dramatic ratio. While rushing success won’t necessarily be his thing on a weekly basis, Hines is a PPR No. 2 or flex back the rest of the way.

Availability: 35%
FAAB:
$20-25

Joshua Kelley, Los Angeles Chargers

Austin Ekeler had seven more carries than the rookie’s 12, but Kelley was slightly more efficient (60 yards on the ground) and offers something around the goal line that the veteran doesn’t consistently bring to the table. Running back Justin Jackson (quad) suffered yet another injury (entered with a hamstring issue) and may have lost any opportunity to entrench himself as the No. 2 back, which is a weekly flex option in this offensive design.

Availability: 52%
FAAB:
$20-25

grab & stash

Peyton Barber, Washington Football Team

While it surely wasn’t pretty, Barber was effective enough in Week 1. Any back getting 17 carries belongs on a fantasy roster, and the two touchdowns show Washington’s likelihood to keep him in this role. Antonio Gibson (9-36-0, 2-8-0) should get more work overall as the season goes forward. After all, he is still a rookie who had to learn essentially a new position during a pandemic. Barber will present a weekly gamble for a touchdown, but when he doesn’t find paydirt, expect to be disappointed.

Availability: 70%
FAAB:
$3-5

Frank Gore/Josh Adams, New York Jets

Meh. Don’t be excited to land either of these guys, especially Gore, but they have an opportunity to see enough action to matter with Le’Veon Bell battling a hamstring injury. It’s unclear how long Bell will miss, so don’t invest a great deal in either player. Early reports say a few weeks. Consider them interchangeable, and Adams may even have a little more value given his youth. The Jets aren’t a quality rushing offense, and defenses can key in on the backfield almost every play. Adams was on this roster last year and knows the system well enough. He had contributed 120 carries, 511 yards (4.3 YPC) and three scores to the Philadelphia Eagles in 2018 as a rookie, although the 6-foot-2, 225-pounder is not much of a receiving option. This one is all about a warm body having an opportunity.

Availability: 29%
FAAB:
$3-5 for each

Jerick McKinnon, San Francisco 49ers

Six touches (eight utilizations), 44 yards and a score … not too bad for his first game back since Dec. 31, 2017. McKinnon should see more work as he becomes stronger, and it’s likely to come at the expense of Tevin Coleman. Don’t read too much into Coleman’s five total touches in this one, because he has a sickle-cell trait that probably wouldn’t have responded well to a heartier workload in the poor air conditions as California battles unprecedented wildfires. McKinnon has more appeal in PPR and going to be tough to play, but he belongs on rosters for now.

Availability: 52%
FAAB:
$4-5

Myles Gaskin, Miami Dolphins

It was the second-year back who led the way in touches for the Miami running back stable. Granted, Gaskin had only 13 utilizations, but he mustered a decent enough 66 yards of offense, including four catches. In seven appearances last year, the Washington rookie had run 36 times for 133 yards and a touchdown, chipping in 51 yards on seven grabs. He’s a compact 5-foot-9, 205 pounds, and it probably will be a headache deciding whether he’s worthy of a play most weeks. Nevertheless, given the volatility of running backs, he belongs in the conversation of a roster spot. Be prepared to move on quickly if we see a wild swing in the utilization figures over the next week or two, so keep your investment at a minimum.

Availability: 92%
FAAB:
$2-4

Watch list

J.D. McKissic, Washington Football Team

Keep an eye on him as the offense finds its way. He was targeted five times in the opener, but catching just one of them for a whole yard won’t draw much attention. Monitor McKissic’s involvement in the coming weeks if a PPR flex consideration is a need.

Availability: 64%

Wide Receivers

Priority Free Agent

Parris Campbell, Indianapolis Colts

T.Y Hilton looked rusty, and Michael Pittman Jr. looked like a rookie. Campbell, however, was every bit of what pundits billed him to be when he came out of Ohio State in 2019’s draft. Finally healthy, the burner even displayed some traits of a possession weapon, landing six of his nine targets for 71 yards. The Colts lost running back Marlon Mack to injury over the weekend, and if the duo of Jonathan Taylor and Nyheim Hines struggle some weeks, look for more passing than Frank Reich wants from Philip Rivers. Ahead, Minnesota and the New York Jets are coming to town — both have flimsy secondaries. Campbell faces only a handful of challenging matchups the rest of the way.

Availability: 41%
FAAB:
$4-5

grab & stash

Keelan Cole, Jacksonville Jaguars

Sure, his touchdown grab was a wide-open pitch-and-catch, but third-year receiver landing all five of his targets to lead the team in looks and yardage (only 47, but still) also deserve a mention. After facing a Tennessee secondary that is banged up and lost Logan Ryan in free agency, Miami, Cincinnati, Houston and Detroit are the Weeks 3-6 opponents before the bye. Cole probably doesn’t warrant a lineup spot vs. the Titans, but gamers with room should add him in case we’re seeing the start of a repeat of his rookie season (42-748-3).

Availability: 89%
FAAB:
$1-2

Russell Gage, Atlanta Falcons

Don’t ignore his nine targets, even if from a scenario when Atlanta effectively punted on the running game in effort to play catch-up football. Atlanta is poised to find itself in a similar situation with regularly. The defense isn’t overflowing with talent, and playing a base “big nickel” will make them highly susceptible play-action fakes. At any rate, Gage stands to benefit from the added scrutiny placed on Julio Jones and the departure of tight end Austin Hooper. Sure, Hayden Hurst figures to come into his own sooner than later, but we’re still looking at a chemistry/continuity situation. Gage played with Matt Ryan entering 2020, and Hurst is still feeling his way through the connection. Gage is a matchup option for PPR leagues that start at least three wideouts.

Availability: 66%
FAAB:
$1-2

1-Week Plug & Play

Marquez Valdes-Scantling, Green Bay Packers vs. Detroit Lions

The Lions entered Week 1 without cornerback Jeffrey Okudah, the 2020 No. 3 overall pick. The defense added safety Duron Harmon in the secondary — helpful, but not Aaron Rodgers-proof. Cornerbacks Desmond Trufant and Justin Coleman both left with hamstring injuries in Week 1. Playing MVS in Week 2 requires a little fortitude, but it’s not without merit, specifically after he found the end zone vs. a similarly deficient Minnesota secondary. For gamers looking to swing for the fantasy fences, Valdes-Scantling is in an awesome boom-or-bust situation this upcoming week.

Availability: 59%
FAAB:
$0-1

1-Week Plug & Play/grab & stash

Scott Miller, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

The smurfy wideout plays predominantly from the slot and had Tom Brady’s eye in Week 1 — shocker, right? Miller has respectable hands but also a limited track record. He’s in an offense loaded with individual talent, and Mike Evans being limited in the opener helped result in the six targets that headed Miller’s direction. The Bucs have a home date with the Carolina Panthers in Week 2, followed by a trip to the beaten-up Denver Broncos in Week 3. Give Miller that much runway on your roster before making a long-term determination.

Availability: 74%
FAAB:
$2-3

Danny Amendola, Detroit Lions at Green Bay Packers

As long as Kenny Golladay (hamstring) is injured, Amendola is a lineup-worthy option. The Packers had little answer for Minnesota’s second-half passing game, and this defense’s weakness is stopping the run up the middle. The way Adrian Peterson galloped in Week 1 should improve Amendola’s chances of seeing a few play-action passes come his way. The long-range outlook isn’t ideal, though, but the journeyman could have PPR utility going into Detroit’s Week 5 bye.

Availability: 70%
FAAB:
$1-2

Kendrick Bourne, San Francisco 49ers at New York Jets

The Niners will be without Deebo Samuel (foot) at least through Week 3. The entire passing game for San Fran wasn’t clicking in Week 1’s loss to Arizona, but Bourne tied for the lead in targets (five) among 49ers receivers. He could make for a dirt-cheap lotto ticket vs. the New York Jets’ feeble secondary this week, and another potential matchup for deployment comes against the Giants a week later.

Availability: 69%
FAAB:
$1-2

Tight Ends

Priority Free Agent

Dallas Goedert, Philadelphia Eagles

He won’t be available in most competitive leagues, but it still warrants a look on your wire. Goedert should be a regular in an offense that consistently implements two-tight end route concepts. The wide receivers are less than 100 percent right now, and two of the top four are rookies, so there’s utility here regardless of him being a technical backup.

Availability: 29%
FAAB:
$6-8

1-week plug & play/Grab & Stash

Jimmy Graham, Chicago Bears vs. New York Giants

As mentioned in the Trubisky section above, Graham had a pulse in Week 1. He should have scored twice but was ruled down just shy of the goal line. That said, his role will be mostly limited to jump-ball situations and work in the red zone. The Giants improved, in theory, when it comes to covering the position, so consider Graham no better than a TD flier play in Week 2. Should he enjoy another quality game, look at him as a potential weekly consideration.

Availability: 64%
FAAB:
$0-1

Watch list

Dalton Schultz, Dallas Cowboys

Blake Jarwin was on the verge of having a relevant fantasy season before being lost for the year to a torn anterior cruciate ligament. His replacement, the second-year Stanford product, brings similar skills to the field and could flash with the right matchup. Schultz should be on your watch list for the time being, because it looks like WR CeeDee Lamb and RB Ezekiel Elliott will have roles large enough to be detrimental to giving Schulz the benefit of the doubt.

Availability: 99%

Kickers

Priority Free Agent

Michael Badgley, Los Angeles Chargers

Badgley has the chops to succeed in fantasy lineups, and the offense will struggle just enough to make him a consistently viable play. The Chargers afforded him four field goal tries in Week 1, and he came through on three of them. He has utility with any matchup that doesn’t look like a total cakewalk.

Availability: 78%
FAAB:
$0-1

Joey Slye, Carolina Panthers

Slye was a fantasy asset at times in 2019 and returned to the conversation after Week 1’s three-FG display. He did miss an extra point, but so is life. The Carolina offense showed plenty of spunk and moved the ball effectively enough to suggest Slye will once again be in the lineup conversation more often than not.

Availability: 84%
FAAB:
$0-1

Tyler Bass, Buffalo Bills

The rookie debut was on point for Bass, whose leg strength is in the upper tier of the NFL. And that’s even more important when considering where he plays half of his games. The Bills are good enough to move the ball consistently but not immune to struggling in the opponent’s territory with regularity. Wildly inaccurate throws by Josh Allen tend to do those sorts of things, but I digress. There will be hiccups from a rookie kicker, so take the bad with the good and accept he is in a strong situation for success.

Availability: 94%
FAAB:
$0-1

Defense/Specials Teams

1-Week Plug & Play/Grab & Stash

Los Angeles Rams at Philadelphia Eagles

Gone are the days of plugging LA’s defense into your lineup and expecting a strong output. The matchup is crucial, and facing Philly’s decimated offensive line should bump the Rams up the short list of Week 2 waiver plays. Aaron Donald is poised to destroy Carson Wentz in this one.

Availability: 54%
FAAB:
$1

1-Week Plug & Play

Arizona Cardinals vs. Washington Football Team

Yes, Washington upset Philadelphia in Week 1, but how much do you really trust Dwayne Haskins? Arizona has crazy speed and will be closer to coming into its own with every passing week. Haskins having to travel across the country to face a defense that racked up three sacks last week against a far better offensive line should make gamers excited for a bargain streaming option in the Red Birds.

Availability: 94%
FAAB:
$0-1

Take a look at ESPN’s post-Week 2 AP Poll reaction for the Florida Gators

The Gators come in at No. 5 in ESPN’s post-Week 2 poll, the third-highest ranked SEC team behind No. 2 Alabama and No. 4 Georgia.

Week 2 of the 2020 college football season is in the books, and a new AP Poll has been released, and ESPN’s college football team gave their reactions for each team listed in the top 25.

This week’s poll is the first AP Poll to only feature teams playing football this fall, as the previous poll included teams from the Big 10 and Pac-12, which have postponed their fall seasons.

The Gators come in at No. 5 on this week’s poll, the third-highest ranked SEC team behind No. 2 Alabama and No. 4 Georgia. Here’s what ESPN’s Andrea Adelson said about Florida.

The Gators lost their top four receivers from a year ago, and though there are known players with the opportunity to step up such as Trevon Grimes and Kadarius Toney, watch for some new faces to potentially emerge. So far through camp, true freshman Xzavier Henderson (the brother of former Gators cornerback CJ Henderson) and Jaquavion Fraziars have earned praise. Then there is Penn State transfer Justin Shorter, now eligible to play this season. — Adelson

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Chiefs C Austin Reiter dealing with sore knee ahead of Week 2 practices

A new addition to the injury report for Kansas City and an update on an existing injury from Andy Reid.

The Kansas City Chiefs won’t be practicing until Wednesday, but head coach Andy Reid came in on Monday to speak with the media briefly. During Reid’s press conference he provided an injury update. He spoke on a new addition to the injury report first.

“Really the only injuries we have, well, we have a couple,” Reid began. “You know a couple of them and they’re making progress. Austin Reiter has a little bit of a sore knee, he’s working through that. You know we’ll just see how that goes for tomorrow.”

Reiter’s injury is new, but it doesn’t sound too serious compared to some of the other injuries that the Chiefs are dealing with. If Reiter couldn’t play in Week 2, replacing him would be veteran Daniel Kilgore, according to the Chiefs’ Week 1 depth chart. Kilgore was a late addition in training camp and hasn’t had much practice with the team. If he had to play it could limit some things the Chiefs are able to do on offense, thankfully they’ll likely have some repetitions to get him coached up and practicing with Patrick Mahome this week.

Reid also had an update on CB Charvarius Ward, who left Thursday’s game with a hand injury. NFL Network later reported that Ward would have surgery on his hand, but would have a chance to play. Andy Reid wouldn’t commit to Ward missing any time or playing in Week 2.

“We’ll see how it goes,” Reid said. “He had some work done on it and we’ll just see where he’s at by game time. We’ll see — we’ve just got to see how it feels.”

This one could go either way, it all just depends on how the injury heals and how Ward feels heading into the game. I wouldn’t expect him to practice much this week and if he does it’ll be in a limited capacity, with the chance of a full practice later in the week.

Reid didn’t provide any updates on Khalen Saunders who suffered a dislocated elbow and Alex Okafor who tweaked his hamstring in Thursday’s win over the Texans. You can monitor the injury status of Reiter, Ward, Saunders and Okafor right here on Chiefs Wire with our daily injury reports beginning Wednesday this week.

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