

2 Fantasy receiver in all leagues," Eisenberg wrote. "Meyers has been fantastic this season, and it's worth trusting him again as a No.

"He could prove to be a valuable weapon for Sam Ehlinger in Week 9 and beyond now that [Nyhiem[ Hines was traded to Buffalo," Eisenberg wrote. The Patriots will be tasked with slowing down Deon Jackson, who figures to get some opportunities even if Jonathan Taylor is healthy enough to play. The crowded backfield of Edwards-Helaire, Isiah Pacheco and Jerick McKinnon makes this a tough play. He has five games in a row with at least 15 total touches, and that shouldn't change in Week 9 even with Wilson now in Miami." "The Bears have allowed a running back to score or gain at least 100 total yards in seven games in a row, and Mostert has scored at least 18 PPR points in two of his past four games. 2 runnin gback in all leagues, as new addition Jeff Wilson likely won't cut into Mostert's usage this week. "For the season, the Vikings allow 20.1 Fantasy points per game to opposing quarterbacks, and Heinicke is averaging 20.5 Fantasy points per game in his past two outings against Green Bay and Indianapolis." Running BackĮisenberg has Mostert as the No. "Heinicke should fare better against the Vikings this week, and Minnesota has allowed 55 Fantasy points over the past two games against the Dolphins and Cardinals," Eisenberg wrote. You’re only trusting Justin Fields (CHI) in superflex formats at this point.Once a Patriots practice squadder, Heinicke continues to make a name for himself in the NFL. Cole Kmet (CHI) remains touchdown-dependent with only 12 targets in five games. Only four carries with Montgomery active means Khalil Herbert (CHI) returns to your bench until further notice.
Fantasy football who to start full#
Who to sit: I’m fading Antonio Gibson (WAS) despite the matchup, until we have a better sample size of how this backfield will work at full strength. Darnell Mooney (CHI) deserves flex consideration if you’re desperate against a defense that has allowed seven TDs to wide receivers in the last four games.

I wouldn’t blame you if you considered the Commanders D/ST a streaming option against an offense that’s set the passing game back 50 years. JD McKissic (WAS) maintains his flex value in PPR as the overall RB32. Carson Wentz (WAS) deserves streaming consideration against a middle-of-the-road defense. Who to start: Curtis Samuel (WAS) has at least six receptions or a TD in four of five games. Obvious starters: Terry McLaurin (WAS), David Montgomery (CHI). He’s either in your lineup the rest of the way and you’re okay with his “bust” weeks or he needs to be someone else’s problem. Look, I’m not going to argue that the football personification of a Swiss Army knife isn’t fun to watch, or that he shouldn’t be rostered in fantasy, but I wouldn’t waste my time trying to guess when to start him. Thoughts on Taysom Hill: Hill is currently the overall TE3 in standard formats - TE7 in PPR with only one reception for two yards this season - on the strength of just two games. Saints 39, Seahawks 32: Geno Smith is the overall QB7 through five games, but only Josh Allen has been a more productive fantasy quarterback the past three weeks. Only 12 wide receivers are averaging more points per game in standard formats - only seven are averaging more points per game in PPR. Patriots 29, Lions 0: Jakobi Meyers sit out Week 3 and Week 4 with a knee issue, but he returned against Detroit and looked the part of a WR1 (even with a rookie at quarterback making his first start).
