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NFL Player News

Rotoworld

  • CHI Running Back #0
    Bears agreed to terms with RB D’Andre Swift, formerly of the Eagles, on a three-year, $24.5 million contract.
    ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports the deal includes $15.3 million guaranteed. It’s a questionable commitment in a loaded running back class for a team that already wasn’t hurting for running back depth. Swift finally stayed healthy last season as he cruised to new career highs in Philadelphia, but he was inefficient both as a rusher and pass catcher behind one of the league’s best run-blocking lines. That’s at least from an advanced metric perspective, including average rush yards over expected. From a traditional yards per carry lens, his 4.6 was fine. That’s the complaint. The positive, of course, is that Swift is a weapon-ish player capable of contributing on all three downs as the Bears ready to welcome phenom QB Caleb Williams. Swift will definitely remain in the RB2 mix in fantasy. His arrival is real bad news for Khalil Herbert and Roschon Johnson.
  • TEN Tight End #85
    Chig Okonkwo caught 1-of-3 targets for five yards in Tennessee’s Week 4 win over the Dolphins.
    Okonkwo finally failed to catch some targets with his first two incompletions of the season. Josh Whyle also had a catch for five yards. Okonkwo handily outperformed Kyle Pitts this week, you can’t deny it.
  • TEN Wide Receiver #83
    Tyler Boyd caught 2-of-2 targets for 31 yards in Tennessee’s Week 4 win over the Dolphins.
    Boyd has caught at least two passes for anywhere between 18-to-33 yards in all four Titans games this year. That’s a fun, reliable usage footnote! It’s sadly not terribly interesting for people who want to score fantasy football points. Boyd will be on bye next week, so look elsewhere for your third FLEX in your 20-team league.
  • TEN Wide Receiver #0
    Calvin Ridley caught 1-of-3 targets for five yards in Tennessee’s Week 4 win over the Dolphins, adding a 10-yard rush on his only carry.
    It’s almost identical to his line last week, but at least this one came with the Titans game-scripting the Dolphins to the point where they barely needed to throw. Ridley is making so much money we almost have to believe he’ll have some WR3 games down the stretch after his Week 5 bye, but 141 yards in four games is not an exciting result at the quarter pole.
  • TEN Wide Receiver #10
    DeAndre Hopkins caught 2-of-4 targets for 31 yards in Tennessee’s Week 4 win against the Dolphins.
    That was still a large share of 102 total passing yards, but the Titans were able to sit on the ball for most of the second half without being seriously threatened by Tyler Huntley. It was a disappointment after his Week 3 surge, and there are likely better days ahead for Hopkins in fantasy this year. But even if he does have a large share of the passing offense, it’s hard to ignore how little that could be if Mason Rudolph takes over the starting job in Tennessee. Hopkins may just be a bye week fill-in in most fantasy leagues down the stretch.
  • TEN Running Back #2
    Tyjae Spears rushed 15 times for 39 yards and a touchdown in Tennessee’s Week 4 win over the Dolphins.
    He added two receptions for zero yards. Spears scored as a wildcat quarterback, faking a handoff to Tony Pollard and running straight up the middle from the seven for an easy touchdown. This was obviously the perfect scenario for him to have a big workload as the Dolphins barely threatened, but it was nice to see him find 17 touches after just 22 in the first three weeks. Spears is an RB3/FLEX back headed into Tennessee’s Week 5 bye.
  • TEN Running Back #20
    Tony Pollard rushed 22 times for 88 yards and a touchdown, adding two catches for 20 yards on two targets, in Tennessee’s Week 4 win over the Dolphins.
    Pollard salvaged the day with a four-yard touchdown scamper with 24 seconds left in the game that was, as Al Michaels would say, important to some. Pollard had set up Tennessee’s first touchdown with a 41-yard backbreaker that set up first-and-goal at the 7, but Tyjae Spears vultured the touchdown. He heads into the Week 5 bye established as Tennessee’s lead back, but needing the Titans other offensive weapons and overall direction to trend up to be more than a low-end RB2.
  • TEN Quarterback #11
    Mason Rudolph completed 9-of-17 passes for 85 yards in Tennessee’s 31-12 Week 4 win over the Dolphins.
    You can take the Steelers-Ravens out of Mason Rudolph versus Tyler Huntley, but you can’t stop the bootleg version from being released on the MNF undercard. Taking over after the first couple of drives of the game, Rudolph’s long pass of 27 yards to Tyler Boyd set up a field goal to put the Titans up 9-3 at halftime. The Titans appear to have a fantasy-irrelevant quarterback controversy brewing over their Week 5 bye, which is somehow a situation Mason Rudolph finds himself in every year.
  • MIA Linebacker #15
    Dolphins EDGE Jaelan Phillips (knee) left Monday night’s game against the Titans and will not return.
    Phillips originally tweaked the knee earlier in the game, but appeared to re-aggravate it in a non-contact situation in the third quarter. The Dolphins could scarcely afford to lose one of their best defensive linemen, but here we are. The quick rule-out is ominous for Phillips’ rest-of-season outlook.
  • MIA Safety #21
    Jordan Poyer (shin) left Miami’s Week 4 game against the Titans and is questionable to return.
    Poyer did not have a recorded tackle before leaving. The 33-year-old safety had 19 tackles in his first three starts with the Dolphins. Miami will use more Marcus Maye with Poyer out.
  • TEN Quarterback #8
    Will Levis (shoulder) left Tennessee’s Week 4 game against the Dolphins and is questionable to return.
    He hurt his throwing shoulder while diving for a first down, winced while trying to make some throws on the sideline, and then headed to the blue medical tent. Mason Rudolph replaced him. Levis was 3-of-4 for 25 yards and an interception before leaving. Brian Callahan said that Levis would return if he was “physically able to” at halftime, but Rudolph continued running the offense in the second half. It has the feel of a benching as Levis stood on the sideline for the rest of the game with his helmet on.