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Damien Williams, Samaje Perine highlight Week 5 waivers

Damien Williams

Damien Williams

Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

Welcome to the Week 5 edition of Waiver Wired for the 2021 season. With a handful of injuries already cratering our best-laid plans, we’ll sift through every position to find immediate production while also prepping for the beginning of byes in Week 6.

As a refresher, The Drop List consists of players who are rostered in at least 50 percent of Yahoo leagues and are no longer must-have assets, recommended additions are available in over 50 percent of Yahoo leagues, the Watch List contains in-depth notes on fringe waiver adds, and Deep Cuts includes player notes on those rostered in five percent or fewer of Yahoo leagues.

The Drop List

QB: Baker Mayfield

RB: David Montgomery, Myles Gaskin, Kenyan Drake, A.J. Dillon, Ronald Jones

WR: Mecole Hardman, D.J. Chark

TE: Robert Tonyan

Eyeing a reported “4-5" week absence, Montgomery is fully expected to sit through Chicago’s Week 10 bye and (perhaps) return in time for Week 11 against Baltimore. You know your league settings better than I do, which makes this a case-by-case argument, but it seems like a worthless endeavor to roster an injured player through Week 11 with the fantasy playoffs beginning around that time. If you have the space on deeper benches, by all means. In shallower leagues, though, I would drop Montgomery outright for Damien Williams (see below)...Gaskin, fully healthy at kick-off, most recently recorded two-year lows in snaps (23%), carries (2), and targets (0) in any game he’s been active for in that time. With the Dolphins averaging a league-low 4.0 yards per play, there’s no need to shed a positive light on any of Miami’s backfield...Even with Peyton Barber picking up a foot injury on his first touch, Kenyan Drake registered a season-low in touches (1) and snaps (20, 35%) with zero targets to speak of against LA...Eight of Dillon’s 15 carries on Sunday came in the fourth quarter with a comfortable 27-10 lead over the Steelers. I personally would not drop Dillon, a league-winning contingency option, in deeper leagues, but his role exclusively as a backup with zero standalone value didn’t change unless the schedule makers allow Green Bay to play the Steelers every week...Hardman has run just seven more routes the Demarcus Robinson (113-106) on the year, having yet to finish inside the top-34 at his position. Arguably every option listed below is a better short- and long-term stash. I would drop Hardman for Josh Gordon wherever applicable since the approach to both is simply throwing a Hail Mary at Kansas City’s No. 3 receiver...There’s no need to keep Tonyan rostered with so many top-10 options (seeing significantly more targets) on waiver wires. I would rank Dalton Schultz and Dawson Knox, for example, well over Tonyan for the rest of the season.

Overall Top 5

1. Kenneth Gainwell
2. Damien Williams
3. Samaje Perine
4. Alex Collins
5. Dalton Schultz

High-Stakes Top 5

1. Damien Williams
2. Samaje Perine
3. Alex Collins
4. Randall Cobb
5. Ricky Seals-Jones

For those looking to roster the best available player(s) regardless of position, the rankings above take into account every factor from the positional lists minus players’ actual positions for both recreational and high-stakes (FFPC, NFFC, etc.) formats, the latter which have far fewer viable players available with every passing week. These are listed in the precise order I would prioritize waiver claims in those leagues ahead of Week 5. Adjust accordingly for what you need on your roster — touches, high-upside bench stashes, targets, one-week spot-starters, etc.

Contingency Top 10

1. Alexander Mattison
2. A.J. Dillon
3. Sony Michel
4. Ty’Son Williams
5. Chuba Hubbard
6. Jermar Jefferson
7. Darrel Williams
8. I Samaje Perine
9. Justin Jackson
10. Wayne Gallman

For those looking to stash the best available backup(s) with minimum standalone value, the rankings above were designed to help prioritize direct backups in the event a player in front of them were absent. These are listed in the precise order I would stash them ahead of Week 5. Presumed targets, touches, environment, remaining schedule, etc. are included in the process.

Quarterbacks

1. Sam Darnold
2. Daniel Jones
3. Trey Lance
4. Taylor Heinicke

Running Backs

1. Kenneth Gainwell
2. Damien Williams
3. Samaje Perine
4. Alex Collins
5. J.D. McKissic
6. Latavius Murray

Wide Receivers

1. Darnell Mooney
2. Randall Cobb
3. Hunter Renfrow
4. Curtis Samuel
5. A.J. Green
6. Van Jefferson

Tight Ends

1. Dalton Schultz
2. Dawson Knox
3. Zach Ertz
4. Ricky Seals-Jones

Defense/Special Teams

Los Angeles Rams rostered in 95 percent of Yahoo leagues. No. 1 D/ST stash if available.

1. Arizona Cardinals
2. Dallas Cowboys
3. Las Vegas Raiders

Kickers

1. Greg Joseph
2. Nick Folk
3. Randy Bullock

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QUARTERBACKS

1. Sam Darnold, Panthers — Rostered in 38 percent of Yahoo leagues (Suggested 4-6% FAAB Bid)

With back-to-back performances in the top-five at his position, Darnold is finally getting the recognition he deserved all along as a matchup-based option against a soft projected schedule. His league-high in rushing scores (5) are no fluke either, being handed the keys with a speed option and RPO in the red zone against Dallas. With Carolina’s schedule opening up even further given the (surprising) letdowns of the Football Team’s (bottom-four in Expected Points Added per play) and Giants’ (27th) defenses, Darnold should be viewed as a low-end QB1 with rushing upside through the fantasy regular season. I would be more than comfortable dropping Ryan Tannehill, Derek Carr, and Matt Ryan for him for the rest of the year.

2. Daniel Jones, Giants — Rostered in 31 percent of Yahoo Leagues (1-2%)

The QB6 in fantasy points per game with 27 carries (third among quarterbacks) through four starts, Jones’ most recent 400-yard blowup as the overall QB7 in Week 4 encouragingly happened with his fewest scrambles to date (4). Dallas’ defense on paper, while fearsome, remains more than susceptible in allowing the league’s third-most yards per play (6.4) and second-most passing yards, continuing to live off double-digit turnovers as a friendlier matchup for fantasy than perceived.

3. Trey Lance, 49ers — Rostered in 31 percent of Yahoo leagues (18-20%)

Unfortunately, we won’t learn more about Jimmy Garoppolo’s calf contusion and outlook until Wednesday’s re-evaluation. But Lance showed why he should be stashed ahead of his first career start — whenever that may be — scoring 20.3 fantasy points as the overall QB13 in just 30 minutes of action. With San Francisco’s bye right around the corner in Week 6, the logical outcome is Lance getting the nod for Sunday’s divisional showdown against Arizona and genuinely ranking as a better option than Matt Ryan, Derek Carr, Kirk Cousins, Ryan Tannehill, and even Russell Wilson for at least one game; coach Kyle Shanahan is still expected to take the decision down to the wire with Friday’s injury report eventually unveiling all. Needless to say, if there’s room to hide Lance on your bench, now’s the time to do so. This ranking is strictly for his outlook in Week 5.

4. Taylor Heinicke, Washington — Rostered in 10 percent of Yahoo leagues (1-2%)

It’s not a voluminous matchup for Heinicke since New Orleans is concertedly hoarding the ball with the league’s second-most seconds per play (31.9s), but he’s bucked all obstacles to this point in finishing as the overall QB12, QB9, and QB5 in three starts for Ryan Fitzpatrick. With 5.7 scrambles per game and the ability to prolong plays, Heinicke should at least be weighed as a high-floor option in slower-paced affairs (and confident spot-starter in any above-average matchup moving forward).

Watch List: Zach Wilson was unsurprisingly afforded time in a plus matchup against the Titans, completing a season-high 61.7% of his passes for 8.7 yards per attempt. Sunday in London paints another favorable spot against a Falcons unit that’s permitted the fourth-most fantasy points to enemy quarterbacks without registering a single interception this year.

RUNNING BACKS

1. Kenneth Gainwell, Eagles – Rostered in 30 percent of Yahoo leagues (8-10%)

The old man asked his wife, “Is it quicker to row or sail across the channel?” She responded, “Rowing will seem quicker at first, but the wind and current will eventually get us there faster once nature takes its course.” To that point, Damien Williams and Samaje Perine offer more production immediately as short-term additions but Gainwell, having out-targeted Miles Sanders 18-14 with two top-22 PPR finishes at his position, is the player to bet on long-term. With 13 touches to Sanders’ 15 the past two games, that sailboat could hit shore sooner than perceived — especially if Philadelphia’s defense continues to lie down and rank near-bottom in most advanced metrics.

Recommendation: Should be rostered in 12-team PPR leagues

2. Damien Williams, Bears – Rostered in 10 percent of Yahoo leagues (20-25%)

Williams handled six consecutive touches in the final quarter for David Montgomery (knee) before suffering a thigh bruise himself and ceding the final drive to rookie Khalil Herbert. Fortunately, Williams will reportedly “be OK” and be available to practice mid-week. Presumably handling every touch over Herbert, who even failed to run a single route in his interim spot, for the “4-5 weeks” Montgomery is sidelined, Williams’ touches in that time take precedence over Perine’s since D-Mont’s absence is expected to extend beyond Joe Mixon‘s (low-ankle sprain). Williams’ ceiling is mushed since Chicago has averaged just 20.3 pass attempts over their last three games, but his outlook as a true bell-cow in the meantime is greater than Perine’s with sixth-rounder Chris Evans lurking. I would drop Montgomery outright for Williams in 10-team leagues since Chicago’s Week 10 bye logically leaves the former as a placeholder until Week 11 at best.

Recommendation: Should be rostered in 10-team leagues

3. Samaje Perine, Bengals – Rostered in 3 percent of Yahoo leagues (15-20%)

Mixon sprained his ankle during the final drive of Thursday’s win and gave way to Perine for four touches to close the game. There’s little evidence the latter would be deployed as a workhorse if Mixon, currently considered week-to-week, were ruled out, but Perine has notably out-touched Evans 12-3 on the year and run 21 routes to the rookie’s nine. Cincinnati also reassured Perine with a two-year, $3.3 million contract in March. With the Packers and Lions on deck, Perine’s short-term outlook is one to chase as a direct replacement for Mixon. I would prioritize Perine over Williams if Mixon is on your roster since winning the former would guarantee a starting running back in your lineup whether the latter is available or not.

Recommendation: Should be rostered in 12-team leagues

4. Alex Collins, Seahawks – Rostered in 2 percent of Yahoo leagues (10-12%)

Chris Carson wasn’t on Seattle’s injury report at any time throughout the week and yet out-snapped Alex Collins 25-22, handling just 52% (14) of the team’s backfield touches compared to Collins’ season-high 44% (12) share. Having said that, Carson appeared on Seattle’s most recent injury report ahead of Thursday night with a neck injury and failed to participate in practice with only 48 hours to turn around. Collins doesn’t provide the same ceiling as Williams and Perine since Carson has totaled three targets on 86 pass attempts in that role, but Collins does provide a team-high in touches to safely slide into any RB2/FLEX spot if Carson is ruled out.

Recommendation: Both should be rostered in deep 12-team leagues

5. J.D. McKissic, Washington — Rostered in 39 percent of Yahoo leagues (Suggested 15-20% FAAB Bid)

McKissic has leveraged the team’s No. 28 pass defense DVOA and increased 12.1% target share into two top-14 PPR finishes (including one top-seven) since Taylor Heinicke took over in Week 2. Although pin-pointing his spike weeks are a tall order, Washington’s 30.5 opponent points per game leave the team no choice but to continue deploying McKissic for a backfield-high 16.5 routes per contest.

Recommendation: Should be rostered in 12-team PPR leagues

6. Latavius Murray, Ravens - Rostered in 48 percent of Yahoo leagues (6-8%)

Baltimore surprisingly healthy-scratched Ty’Son Williams on Sunday, allowing Le’Veon Bell and Devonta Freeman to be active behind Murray. It was still the latter who recorded a season-high 18 carries and the highest rate of touches (78.2%) any of Baltimore’s runners had handled this year, out-touching Bell and Freeman by a combined 18-5. Murray doesn’t offer a ceiling in his age-31 season, averaging 3.4 yards per carry on 44 rushes to date, but his volume is enough to warrant a touch-based floor for as long as Williams rides the pine. I would move Murray ahead of McKissic if deciding between the two in standard leagues.

Recommendation: Should be rostered in 12-team leagues

Watch List: Peyton Barber suffered a foot injury during a kick return against the Chargers and could only muster one touch upon returning. Even so, Kenyan Drake failed to register a single target (to Josh Jacobs’ five) on a season-low 20 snaps. Barber remains an interesting stash since Jacobs, perpetually sidelined, was in and out of the lineup with multiple injuries Monday night...Brandon Bolden took on James White‘s (hip, IR) role against Tampa Bay, registering six targets on 11 routes run. We should actually expect Bolden’s target share to increase in future contests since Damien Harris’ season-highs in snaps (36, 61%) and routes (18) were play-calling anomalies with just six running back carries all night...Darrel Williams again handled a season-high in touches (12) as Clyde Edwards-Helaire set season-lows in snaps (52%) and routes run on Patrick Mahomes’ dropbacks (46%). Williams won’t ever provide standalone value, and CEH offers a skillset that no one else in this backfield has, but it’s still something to keep in mind if Williams’ shares continue surging...Los Angeles’ backfield usage behind Austin Ekeler Monday night — 11 up-the-middle runs for Larry Rountree with Justin Jackson recording three carries and four targets — is what we should expect if Ekeler were injured this year.

Deep Cuts: Wayne Gallman was active for his season debut Sunday, handling six carries on 10 snaps and out-performing Mike Davis (13/14) on the ground. Since Cordarrelle Patterson, an obvious sell-high candidate after spiking three touchdowns on a season-low 23 snaps, is playing a unique chess piece role all to himself, I would not rule out Davis being healthy-scratched for Gallman at some point this year...Rodney Smith saw five targets to Chuba Hubbard‘s two on Sunday but three notably occurred in the second half with the Panthers trailing by two-plus scores. Chuba Hubbard‘s 81% share of the team’s carries was still similar to Christian McCaffrey‘s mark (87.5%) in Weeks 1 and 2.

WIDE RECEIVERS

1. Darnell Mooney, Bears – Rostered in 38 percent of Yahoo leagues (Suggested 8-10% FAAB Bid)

Justin Fields’ fourth-highest rate (17.3%) of throws 20-plus yards downfield has helped unlock Mooney for team-highs in targets (11, 30.5%) and air yards (73.5 per game) over the last two games. Chicago has only attempted 20 and 17 passes in that stint, ultimately limiting Mooney’s ceiling in any matchup, but his role as a nine-route runner remains unchallenged by anyone on the roster. Be wary in bidding since Andy Dalton is expected to start (and plummet Mooney’s outlook) the moment he’s healthy.

Recommendation: Should be rostered in 12-team leagues

2. Randall Cobb, Packers – Rostered in 7 percent of Yahoo leagues (8-10%)

In Green Bay’s first game without Marquez Valdes-Scantling (hamstring, IR), Cobb ran the third-most routes (25) behind Davante Adams (39) and Allen Lazard (37) but leveraged his season-high in snaps (46%) for six targets and, more importantly, two touchdowns. With the Bengals, Bears, Football Team, Cardinals, and Chiefs on deck, the veteran slot wideout allows access to a handful of favorable matchups just in time for spot-starts during byes from Week 6 on.

Recommendation: Should be rostered in 12-team leagues

3. Hunter Renfrow, Raiders – Rostered in 27 percent of Yahoo leagues (5-8%)

Even in running the fourth-most routes (38, 66.6%) on his own team Monday night, Renfrow continued his streak of six targets and five catches in every game as the WR26 in average fantasy points through Week 4. There are infinite wideouts with significantly higher ceilings available on shallow waiver wires, but Renfrow’s weekly floor should be considered as an asset as the bye weeks approach.

Recommendation: Should be rostered in 12-team PPR leagues

4. Curtis Samuel, Washington – Rostered in 40 percent of Yahoo leagues (4-6%)

Samuel was eased onto the field for his regular-season debut with Washington, registering 25-of-67 offensive snaps with four targets (12%) on just 16 routes. It’s slightly discouraging OC Scott Turner utilized Samuel (4.7 yards per target) so close to the line of scrimmage — he did so with 4.2 YPT when Samuel overlapped with Turner for Carolina’s last four games in 2019, too — but his sudden opportunity is too great to ignore while Dyami Brown (knee), Cam Sims (hamstring), and Logan Thomas (hamstring, week-to-week) mend. Samuel should at least provide a high floor in the short-term.

Recommendation: Should be rostered in 12-team leagues

5. A.J. Green, Bengals – Rostered in 25 percent of Yahoo leagues (4-6%)

As DeAndre Hopkins has battled through a rib injury and, at times, Jalen Ramsey‘s coverage the past three games, Green has quietly led the team with more air yards (210) than downfield threat Christian Kirk (209) and as many targets as Chase Edmonds (18) for the team lead. With just 14 fewer routes than Hopkins on the year and back-to-back finishes as the overall WR22 and WR17, Green has proved he can provide relief for lineups in softer matchups — what the 49ers, Texans, and Packers offer in three of Arizona’s next four games.

Recommendation: Should be rostered in 12-team leagues

6. Van Jefferson, Rams – Rostered in 5 percent of Yahoo leagues (4-6%)

While coach Sean McVay has picked his spots to dust off DeSean Jackson, Jefferson has been a mainstay with 4.5 targets per game and a route on 83% of Matthew Stafford’s — the overall QB8 in fantasy points per game thus far — dropbacks. Seattle’s defense, having allowed the fourth-most completed air yards in the league through Week 4, meshes perfectly with how Jefferson is being deployed.

Recommendation: Should be rostered in 12-team leagues

Watch List: Rashod Bateman (groin) was limited in practice last week but was not activated from injured reserve in the first seven days of his three-week window. Sammy Watkins meanwhile has seen at least seven targets in every game. Bateman is still a terrific stash long-term, but I question how much he’ll actually be used going into Baltimore’s Week 8 bye. If you have no intentions of playing any of the receivers above until that time, stashing Bateman should become your top approach among available receivers...DeVante Parker splashed his best production of the season (4/77/1) without Will Fuller (hand) for a majority of play, leading Miami in targets with nine (30% share). Tampa Bay’s defense, currently allowing 327.5 passing yards per game, at least offers a terrific on-paper matchup for Parker if you’re in need of help this week...Jamison Crowder debuted with a team-high 26% target share and 7/61/1 on 28 routes (74%) from Zach Wilson, but did so while Elijah Moore (concussion) was sidelined. With the latter expected back in London this upcoming week, expectations for both should be tempered until this receiving corps naturally sorts itself out...Josh Reynolds and Nick Westbrook-Ikhine led the Titans with 53 routes run apiece on Sunday, combining for 17 targets (9 and 8) on Ryan Tannehill‘s 49 throws. Unfortunately, A.J. Brown‘s (hamstring, week-to-week) and Julio Jones’ (hamstring) unknown statuses muck up any intelligent bidding for either of the aforementioned two in a plus spot against Jacksonville’s stone-worst pass defense DVOA...Kadarius Toney ran 40 routes to Kenny Golladay‘s 45 in place of Sterling Shepard (hamstring) on Sunday, staying in the slot for 31 of his season-high 50 snaps. As a one-for-one replacement for Shepard from that spot on the field, Toney offers a high floor for as long as the latter is held out. Sunday’s matchup against Dallas, currently projected with Vegas’ third-highest total in Week 5, could arguably elevate the rookie to a WR2/3 finish in PPR leagues...Note that Michael Gallup is eligible to come off injured reserve ahead of Week 5, though his initial timetable (3-5 weeks) could extend his absence for now. I would only add him to deeper 4-0/3-1 benches with the idea he might be able to help in a FLEX spot at some point down the road.

Deep Leagues: Kalif Raymond has registered six more targets than T.J. Hockenson (16-10) the last two weeks, nearly tripling the latter in air yards (200-76) in that stint, too. With Tyrell Williams (concussion) out for the foreseeable future, leveraging Detroit’s perpetual negative game scripts into shares of Raymond isn’t the worst idea, especially with Minnesota’s defense next in line...Randall Cobb spiked two touchdowns sans Marquez Valdes-Scantling (hamstring, IR) on Sunday, but it was Allen Lazard who ran just two fewer routes behind Davante Adams (39-37). He’s worth stashing as a contingency WR just in case another injury rears its head amongst Green Bay’s receiving room.

TIGHT ENDS

1. Dalton Schultz, Cowboys — Rostered in 35 percent of Yahoo leagues (Suggested 8-10% FAAB Bid)

The overall TE1 and TE4 in Dallas’ last two games, Schultz most recently separated from Blake Jarwin with 23 routes (on Dak Prescott’s 29 dropbacks) to Jarwin’s 10 against Carolina. With a 22.5% target share sans Michael Gallup since Week 2, Schultz should be considered a top-five tight end moving forward. I have him ranked ahead of Kyle Pitts (among others) for the rest of the season.

2. Dawson Knox, Bills — Rostered in 48 percent of Yahoo leagues (8-10%)

With a 15.7% target share and route on 79% of Josh Allen’s dropbacks the past three games, Knox’s four touchdowns in that span are the result of his elite on-field usage rather than box score luck. With a plethora of injuries already affecting the impact of serviceable options, Knox’s role for the league’s second-fastest offense in neutral game script qualifies him as a viable FLEX play outside of his obvious onesie slot.

3. Zach Ertz, Eagles — Rostered in 26 percent of Yahoo leagues (1-2%)

Dallas Goedert has run more routes than Ertz (69-61) over the last two games but it’s the veteran who has stockpiled 15 targets (17.2%) and a team-high four red zone opportunities from Jalen Hurts in that stint. Philadelphia’s upcoming stretch against the Panthers, Buccaneers, Lions, and Raiders features two funnel defenses currently ranked inside the top-five in fantasy points per game allowed to enemy tight ends (while Detroit’s defense offers little pushback).

4. Ricky Seals-Jones, Cardinals — Rostered in 0 percent of Yahoo leagues (1%)

The nation’s former No. 2 overall recruit behind Derrick Henry in 2013, Seals-Jones stepped in for Logan Thomas (hamstring, week-to-week) on Sunday and logged a career-high 93% of Washington’s offensive snaps, running a route on 83% of Taylor Heinicke’s dropbacks. RSJ at least offers the size (6’5/243) and speed (4.69 40) as an agile athlete to emerge as a viable receiving threat for however long Dyami Brown (knee), Cam Sims (hamstring), and Thomas are sidelined.

Watch List: Colts altered its 12 personnel on Sunday, playing Mo Alie-Cox (49 snaps) and fourth-round rookie Kylen Granson (30) over Jack Doyle (21) for the first time all year. Doyle was on the injury report with a back injury all week, so I wouldn’t go overweight on this situation just yet. But Alie-Cox, who finished fifth among all tight ends in Yards Per Route Run (2.07) last year, is a player to be ahead of if his usage holds...Dan Arnold was brought along slowly in his first game with the Jaguars, running 12 routes on 18 snaps played. A significant bump in both categories is guaranteed following 10 days rest ahead of Week 5...As expected, Cam Brate ran 33 routes to O.J. Howard‘s 16 on Sunday, finishing third in targets (6) behind Mike Evans (12) and Chris Godwin (11). Brate is clearly Rob Gronkowski‘s replacement to chase in TE-Premium leagues.

Deep Leagues: I question whether C.J. Uzomah can sustain any amount of production once Tee Higgins (shoulder) returns, especially since Thursday was Uzomah’s first performance all year with more than two targets...How many receivers can Kyler Murray support? That’s the issue in rostering Maxx Williams, who has averaged four targets on 22 routes per game as the overall TE13. Chalk Williams up to a thin DFS option benefitting from DeAndre Hopkins’ decreased 16.8% target share in Arizona’s last three games.

DEFENSE/SPECIAL TEAMS

1. Arizona Cardinals – Rostered in 33 percent of Yahoo leagues

Although Trey Lance offers a high rushing floor immediately, it’s possible Arizona’s front-seven swarms him if LT Trent Williams (shoulder) and C Alex Mack (hand) can’t play through their injuries in Week 5. Note that DC Vance Joseph has worrisomely called the sixth-highest rate of blitzes through four games.

2. Dallas Cowboys – Rostered in 23 percent of Yahoo leagues

Even in ‘thriving’ as a dual-threat option from under center through Week 4, Daniel Jones has unsurprisingly fumbled three times while taking on a couple of sacks per game. Dallas’ defense could even benefit from increased play volume — signaling for more opportunities for turnovers — since both team totals in this game have increased since initially opening.

3. Las Vegas Raiders – Rostered in 13 percent of Yahoo leagues

Justin Fields has accepted eight sacks and 21 total pressures in his last two starts behind Chicago’s shaky pass-pro. Consider Las Vegas’ sack-based floor among the week’s top plays. Don’t be shy with your FAAB since the Raiders square off against the Broncos, Eagles, and Giants after Sunday.

Watch List: If the Panthers were dropped due to their suboptimal matchup against Dallas anywhere, they’re worth retrieving ahead of October’s schedule against the Eagles, Vikings, Giants, and Falcons.

KICKERS

Only a fool wouldn’t pass the ball to Michael Jordan in his prime, so it only makes sense that I pull each week’s kicker streamers from Denny Carter’s column and #adjust them accordingly. For in-depth analysis, you can read his entire piece here:

1. Greg Joseph, Vikings – Rostered in 10 percent of Yahoo leagues

2. Nick Folk, Patriots – Rostered in 11 percent of Yahoo leagues

3. Randy Bullock, Titans – Rostered in 1 percent of Yahoo leagues