You know the feeling. It’s why you’re here. That glorious, maddening, weekly riddle that consumes us right until kickoff: WHO DO I START? The impact? Maybe the difference is between mess-talking victory and soul-sucking defeat. And we all want that “edge,” don’t we? That little nugget that pats us on our tushies and tells us everything will be ok. A gentle nudge, if you will. I want you to know that I’m here each week to pat your tushies (figuratively). To give you my two cents on who needs to be touching grass and who needs to be riding pine. And why.
This is your nudge. *pats tushie* Now, let’s get this ‘W’.
WEEK 11 RECEIPTS
I went 11-5 for the week, which is damn respectable. I should get double credit for the White sit reco, because it also contained a Sean Tucker start push, and if you listened, you probably won your week from it.
On the season, I’ve banked 108-84 (.563). If I were a major league baseball player, that’s a HOF average. Perspective, friends.
QUARTERBACKS
Start: Drake Maye (NE @ CIN): Maye is sitting on 2,836 passing yards with a 20 to 5 TD to INT line and a top-tier QBR, now walking into a Bengals defense that ranks bottom six in fantasy points allowed to quarterbacks in a game with a 49.5 total and New England favored by more than a touchdown. If you overthink a set it and forget it QB1 against a 3 and 7 defense that is dead last in points and yards allowed, you deserve to watch those points happen on your bench.
Start: Matthew Stafford (LAR vs. TB): Stafford leads the league with 27 touchdown passes against only two interceptions, and now gets a Buccaneers defense that sits in the softer half of the league versus fantasy quarterbacks in a home game with a 49.5 total. In an offense that creates multiple Cedar Point water slides every week and as a touchdown favorite, he is a slam start with four touchdown upside if Tampa has to chase and leaves the back end exposed.
Sit: Shedeur Sanders (CLE @ LV): Sanders just posted a 4 of 16 line for 47 yards with a pick, a QBR barely above zero, and did not lead a single scoring drive, now potentially heading into a road start in a game with a gross 36.5 total where his head coach still calls him the backup if Dillon Gabriel clears concussion protocol. A third-string rookie with four college coordinators is not the guy you trust in a low-scoring rock fight between two 2-8 teams, especially when even a soft Raiders pass defense can win simply by making him execute basic pro reads.
Sit: J.J. McCarthy (MIN @ GB): McCarthy has 842 passing yards with a 6 to 8 TD to INT line and a QBR in the mid-20s, coming off a meltdown game where he sprayed balls all over the field, and now he draws a Packers defense that ranks top seven toughest against fantasy quarterbacks. Throw in a 41.5 total at Lambeau and a division opponent that squeezes the middle of the field, and there is zero reason to stream a struggling rookie who has to be perfect just to land you a middling week.
RUNNING BACKS
Start: TreVeyon Henderson (NE @ CIN): Henderson has turned 100 carries into 492 yards at 4.9 per tote with five scores and now gets the Bengals run defense that is literally the best matchup on the board, allowing over 28 fantasy points per game to running backs and ranking dead last at the position. In a game where New England is favored and the total sits at 49.5, you bet on volume, red zone work, and a tired defense that has already checked out, then you hit submit and walk away – even with Stevenson set to return.
Start: Derrick Henry (BAL vs. NYJ): Henry is still a volume monster with 166 carries for 807 yards and seven touchdowns, and he now gets a Jets defense that sits in the bottom third against fantasy running backs while walking into Baltimore as a double-digit road dog. A 44.5 total with the Ravens favored by 13 screams second-half closer, which means thirty carries and a soul-crushing afternoon where Henry turns a good fantasy week into a week-winning one by halftime. No Quinnen Williams = fantasy goodness against.
Sit: Chase Brown (CIN vs. NE): Brown has respectable volume with 126 carries for 519 yards, but he has only two scores and now has to run into a New England front that ranks second-best in fantasy points allowed to running backs at just over 11.0 per contest. In a game where the Bengals are significant home underdogs and could be in negative script early, you are praying for a fluky touchdown while the Patriots defense is busy erasing your floor.
Sit: Ashton Jeanty (LV vs. CLE): Jeanty is slogging along at 3.7 yards per carry, and now he runs into a Browns defense that sits in the top four toughest against fantasy running backs, while the Raiders offense just managed twenty-seven total rushing yards on Monday night. With a 36.5 total and two broken offenses, touchdown equity is a joke, and you are basically starting him just to watch him run into the back of his guard for three quarters.
WIDE RECEIVERS
Start: AJ Brown (PHI @ DAL): Brown may be grumbling about his usage with only 38 grabs for 457 yards and three scores, but he is still a target hog when the switch flips and now faces a Cowboys defense that ranks dead last against fantasy wide receivers, allowing nearly 29.0 points per game to the position. In a rivalry game with a 48.5 total and Dallas’ corners getting cooked all year, this has classic squeaky wheel game written all over it. Ride the volume spike we’ve all been begging the Eagles to unleash.
Start: Stefon Diggs (NE @ CIN): Diggs sits top ten in receptions and top twenty in yards with 59 for 659 and three touchdowns, and in a game where Ja’Marr Chase is suspended and the Bengals defense ranks bottom half versus receivers, he has a very real chance to lead this entire matchup in targets. With a 49.5 total and Cincinnati’s secondary giving up over twenty fantasy points per game to wideouts, you stack him with Maye, smile, and let that Patriots passing volume embarrass whoever fades him.
Sit: Alec Pierce (IND @ KC): Pierce has a fun 20.9 yards per catch and 585 yards on only 28 receptions, which screams low percentage deep threat, and now he has to live on go balls against a Chiefs secondary that is the second stingiest in fantasy points allowed to wide receivers. In a 49.5 total where Kansas City can dictate coverage and force the Colts to spread the ball around just to survive, his floor is a goose egg, and his ceiling is one play you shouldn’t feel confident chasing.
Sit: Drake London (ATL @ NO): London has been a stud with 60 catches for 810 yards and six touchdowns, but he is dealing with a PCL sprain and already tagged doubtful, walking into a low 39.5 total game against a Saints defense that sits in the middle of the pack versus fantasy wideouts. Betting on a hobbled boundary receiver in a slow-paced division game with a significant downgrade at QB is how you lose the week.
TIGHT ENDS
Start: Hunter Henry (NE @ CIN): Henry has 34 catches for 422 yards and four touchdowns, and now gets the absolute dream matchup, with Cincinnati ranking dead last against tight ends and giving up over 15.0 fantasy points per game to the position. In a high total tied to a hot quarterback who already looks for him in the red zone, you lock in a top-eight week and do not look back.
Start: Mark Andrews (BAL vs. NYJ): Andrews has “only” 32 catches for 276 yards but five touchdowns, and Todd Monken just reminded everyone he is still a matchup nightmare by dialing up a 35-yard fake tush push touchdown for him last week, so you know the red zone schemed touches are still there. Against a Jets defense that is average to slightly soft versus tight ends in a game where Baltimore is a heavy favorite with a decent expected total, Andrews is either the chain mover or the kill shot, and both roles play just fine in your lineup.
Sit: T.J. Hockenson (MIN @ GB): Hockenson’s line of 34 catches for 280 yards and two scores is pure hope territory, and now he is tethered to an inaccurate quarterback against a Packers defense that quietly ranks top ten toughest versus tight ends. In a 41.5 total road game where Green Bay forces tight ends to work through traffic over the middle, you are banking on volume from an offense that has not earned that level of trust.
Sit: Jake Ferguson (DAL vs. PHI): Ferguson has been a touchdown machine with 60 grabs, 400 yards, and seven scores, but this is the week you get honest about the matchup because the Eagles are top-two stingy against tight ends and funnel production outside and to backs instead. In a 48.5 total where Dak has CeeDee Lamb, George Pickens, and multiple backs to feed, Ferguson becomes the luxury option who can pop, but is far more likely to be the guy whose three-for-thirty stat line sinks you while you chase historical boxscores.
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