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The Primer: Week 9 Edition (2021 Fantasy Football)


Cleveland Browns vs Cincinnati Bengals

Date/Time: Sunday November 7, 1:00pm ET
BettingPros Consensus Spread: Bengals -2.5
BettingPros Consensus Over/Under: 47 points
Implied Vegas point totals
: Bengals 24.75, Browns 22.25

Quarterback

Baker MayfieldAlready limited in his physical abilities, it isn’t ideal that Mayfield is playing through a fracture in his shoulder for the rest of 2021. Kevin Stefanski does his best to hide Baker even when he’s fully healthy, and that’ll likely continue in this AFC North showdown. The Bengals enter Week 9 as a team to attack on the ground (9th in EPA per dropback and 17th in EPA per rush). This obviously aligns with Cleveland’s offensive identity, so we can expect more of the same from their offense this Sunday. Mayfield is a low-upside QB2 against Cincinnati’s underrated defense.

Joe BurrowWhether you judge it by efficiency (EPA per play) or accuracy (CPOE), Burrow is having a rock-solid sophomore season. He ranks eighth in the NFL in both of those metrics entering Week 9. It’s clear now that the franchise wanted to ease him in following last season’s gruesome knee injury. Since Week 4 the offense has been throwing more in neutral situations, which is obviously good for Burrow’s box score prospects. His Sunday opponent has struggled against upper-echelon offenses (Cardinals, Chargers) while performing well against low-end units (Bears, Broncos). I’d like to think the Bengals fit more into the former description.

Running Backs

Nick ChubbThe 25-year-old returned from his calf injury in Week 8 against the Steelers, resuming his usual role even though the team was without Kareem Hunt. Chubb saw some additional carries but was limited to less than two targets for the fifth straight contest. His fantasy production once again relies on efficiency, long runs, and TDs. This typically isn’t the type of profile we want to bet on, but luckily for Chubb managers we know he’s an outlier at this point in his career. Cincinnati is more vulnerable against the run than they are the pass, which puts Chubb in line for another week of RB1 production.

D’Ernest JohnsonThe Week 7 waiver wire hero basically took over the Hunt role once Chubb returned in Week 8. Johnson handled nearly all of the long-down-and-distance snaps against Pittsburgh in addition to the two-minute work. He even found the end zone on an impressive 11-yard scamper. Johnson has multiple paths to a fantasy-relevant performance this weekend. He could either spell Chubb if the Browns go into clock-killing mode, or he could be used as a pass-catcher if the team gets down early. Either way, it isn’t a role we can project for more than a handful of touches. Consider him an RB4.

Joe MixonSo far, so good for fantasy players who rolled the dice on Mixon back in August as the 25-year-old is up to seven touchdowns in eight games. He’s handling the vast majority of Cincinnati rushing attempts while also mixing in some receptions out of the backfield. Mixon hasn’t been the primary passing-down RB in either of his past two games, but he has seen 5+ targets in two of his past three contests. The profile isn’t perfect, but it’s enough to make him a matchup-proof RB1 in today’s landscape.

Samaje PerineMeanwhile, Perine has taken over the long-down-and-distance snaps as well as the two-minute work in Weeks 7-8. He doesn’t have any standalone fantasy value but can safely be considered the handcuff to roster in leagues with deep benches.

Wide Receivers

Jarvis LandryHis 2.25 yards per route run for the season is impressive. Since returning from injury in Weeks 7-8, Landry has seen a target on 32% of his routes in each game. Something strange is going on with his pass-catching teammate (more on that below), which could mean more alpha usage for Landry rest-of-season. Of course, alpha usage doesn’t mean quite as much when we’re talking about an offense as run-heavy as the Browns (and don’t forget Mayfield’s shoulder injury). The 28-year-old is on the WR3/4 borderline for this one.

Odell Beckham JrAs of this writing, Jason La Canfora is reporting that the Browns are “not willing to waive” OBJ as the team attempts to reach a financial resolution with him. He wasn’t at practice on Wednesday and it seems unlikely that he’ll play against the Bengals. The trade deadline has already passed, but the best bet for Beckham’s 2021 fantasy value would be to land on another team. If your league is deep enough to the point that you’ve been rostering him to this point then it might make sense to hold onto him to see if he can find his way out of Cleveland. He earned just one target in Week 8. Update: The Browns are set to release Beckham ahead of their Week 9 game.

Ja’Marr ChaseCincinnati’s other LSU phenom finally saw some efficiency regression in Week 8 against the Jets, catching just 3-of-9 targets for 32 yards. Of course, this being Ja’Marr Chase, he still found the end zone. We’re well past the point of questioning whether or not Chase is a locked-in WR1. Of course he is. His 2.99 yards per route run rank fourth in the NFL, and there might be some touchdown regression coming, but it could also be offset a bit if the Bengals keep throwing more. You love to see it.

Tee HigginsWhereas Chase has been running hot, there’s still a buy-low window for Higgins, who put up a season-high 97 yards on just six targets in Week 8. He’s actually being targeted on more of his routes (26%) than Chase (22%), but the ADOTs are far apart. Higgins is at 10.7 with Chase at 15.0 for the year. Higgins is more of a possession receiver, so this utilization makes sense. Consider him a low-end WR2 for Week 9 and rest-of-season.

Tyler BoydMeanwhile, Boyd’s ADOT sits at just 6.8 through eight games. More so than Higgins and especially more so than Chase, Boyd really needs the offense to pick up the neutral passing rate. Until then, he shouldn’t be considered more than a borderline WR3/4 in full-PPR leagues.

Tight Ends

David Njoku, Austin HooperCleveland splits their tight end duties pretty evenly between these two. The biggest difference is that Njoku’s ADOT is 9.8 compared to 4.5 for Hooper. This renders Njoku the superior upside play, as evidenced by the 7-149-1 line he put up in Week 5. The Browns might have to start throwing to their tight ends more if Beckham doesn’t play for them again this year, but until we see a notable change in the receiving profiles both Njoku and Hooper are TE2s.

C.J. UzomahHe has popped up for some big games as of late, but it has mainly come on busted coverages and limited targets. The classic “better in best ball” profile, Uzomah is an upside, low-end TE2 for Week 9.

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New England Patriots vs Carolina Panthers

Date/Time: Sunday November 7, 1:00pm ET
BettingPros Consensus Spread: Patriots -3.5
BettingPros Consensus Over/Under: 41 points
Implied Vegas point totals
: Patriots 22.25, Panthers 18.75

Quarterback

Mac Jones: Jones ranks QB22 in fantasy scoring on the season, but since Week 4 he’s been QB14. That’s pretty impressive when you consider the mediocre group of wide receivers Jones has, and that he lost pass-catching RB James White weeks ago. Jones has a daunting matchup this week against a tough Carolina pass defense that smothered Matt Ryan and the Falcons last week. Jones profiles as a midrange QB2 this week.

Sam Darnold: The freefall continues. Darnold threw for 129 yards and no touchdowns last week in Carolina’s 19-15 victory over Atlanta. Over his last four games, Darnold has completed 52.8% of his passes, averaging 4.9 yards per pass attempt and 156.3 yards per game. He has two TD passes and five interceptions over that span. At least Darnold ran for 66 yards against the Falcons last week. But after five TD runs in his first four games, Darnold has gone four games without a rushing touchdown. He’s a low-end QB2 this week against the Patriots and not a DFS consideration.

Running Backs

Damien Harris: With 69-345-5 rushing over his last four games, Harris has been the RB7 since Week 5 – pretty impressive considering that he’s had just three catches for 14 yards over that span. Harris had a season-high 23 carries last week in the Patriots’ upset road win over the Chargers, and he might be in for another heavy workload in Week 9 against a Carolina defense that’s tough to throw on. Harris is a high-end RB2 in season-long leagues, but he’s a fade at $6,000 on DraftKings because of his scant usage as a pass-catcher.

Chuba Hubbard: With Panthers head coach Matt Rhule and offensive coordinator Joe Brady doing their best to try to hide slumping QB Sam Darnold, Hubbard carried 24 times for 82 yards and a touchdown in a 19-15 win over the Falcons last weekend. In Week 9, the Panthers face a New England defense that’s easier to run on than throw on, so Hubbard could get another generous helping of carries. This could conceivably be Hubbard’s last start, with Christian McCaffrey getting closer to a return from a hamstring injury.

Wide Receivers

Jakobi Meyers: Meyers scored on a two-point conversion last week, but his career-long touchdown drought lingers on. Not only that, but Meyers’ reception and yardage totals are shrinking, too. He’s had five or fewer catches and 56 or fewer yards in each of his last four games. Meyers has a tough Week 9 matchup against a Carolina defense that’s allowing 19.3 fantasy points per game to opposing wide receivers. He’ll be playing most of his snaps against Panthers CB A.J. Bouye, who’s enjoying a good season. Meyers is no more than a high-end WR4.

Nelson Agholor: This week’s matchup against a good Panthers pass defense is a tricky one for Agholor, but he had a tricky matchup against the Chargers last week and had 3-60-0 – his highest yardage output since Week 1. Still, Agholor falls outside the top 50 at wide receiver this week, landing at WR58.

D.J. Moore: Moore has now gone four games without getting 100 yards or a touchdown, though he really should have had a touchdown in Week 8. Moore hauled in a short pass from Sam Darnold, got both feet down in the end zone, then lost the ball as he was going to the ground – pretty much a classic case of the Calvin Johnson play in 2010 that prompted a tweaking of the what-constitutes-a-catch rules. It was determined on the field that Moore didn’t catch the ball, it went to the replay booth, and the booth upheld the call on the field. Boo. Anyway, D.J. Moore has averaged fewer fantasy points per game over the last four weeks than Chris Moore of the Texans, which … um, isn’t a good thing. Moore still rates as a low-end WR1 this week as the alpha receiver for the Panthers, but the Carolina passing attack has really gone to seed, and it’s kneecapping Moore’s fantasy value.

Robby Anderson: Things have gone from bad to worse for Anderson. In Weeks 6-7, he was targeted 20 times and produced just 25 yards. That’s epic inefficiency, but at least he was getting targets. In Week 8, Anderson saw just one target, had the ball jarred loose when he was rocked by a good clean hit from Falcons safety Erik Harris, briefly left the game, then returned to be a complete non-factor. It’s hard to imagine how Anderson can keep getting snaps when he’s so ineffective. He’s the WR58 in the Week 9 rankings, and that feels incredibly generous.

Tight Ends

Hunter Henry and Jonnu Smith: After scoring a touchdown in four consecutive games, Hunter Henry was finally kept out of the end zone in Week 8. What should concern Henry investors is that he’s had five catches on nine targets over his last three games and has been relying on touchdowns. Three games is a relatively small sample size, so maybe it’s nothing to worry about. Henry still ranks TE9 this week. Smith played 49 snaps last week – his highest snap count since Week 1 – but had only 2-13-0 on two targets. Smith is the TE24 in fantasy scoring, and he’s a midrange TE2 in this week’s rankings.

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Denver Broncos vs Dallas Cowboys

Date/Time: Sunday November 7, 1:00pm ET
BettingPros Consensus Spread: Cowboys -9.5
BettingPros Consensus Over/Under: 49.5 points
Implied Vegas point totals
: Cowboys 29.5, Broncos 20

Quarterback

Teddy Bridgewater: Bridgewater may have saved his job by game-managing the Broncos to a 17-10 Week 8 win against Washington that ended a four-game Denver losing streak. By no means was it a tour-de-force performance, but Bridgewater completed 19 of 26 passes for 213 yards with one touchdown and no interceptions. Bridgewater doesn’t have an especially easy matchup this week in Dallas against a Cowboys pass defense that ranks seventh in opponent passer rating and 10th in DVOA. One thing working in Teddy’s favor is that the return of WR Jerry Jeudy from a high-ankle sprain last week gives him a terrific arsenal of pass-catching weaponry. He’s the QB16 for Week 9.

Dak Prescott or Cooper Rush: Reports suggest that Prescott probably could have played in Week 8 had it been a critical game for the Cowboys, but the team’s decision-makers opted to play it safe and not risk aggravation of the quarterback’s calf injury. Dak is likely to be back this week against the Broncos, and WR Michael Gallup could be back from his calf injury, too, making the Cowboys’ passing attack even more potent. Dallas faces a Denver defense that’s been tough against the pass. The Broncos have allowed nine TD passes in eight games and are allowing just 15.2 fantasy points per game to opposing quarterbacks, but Denver will be without high-quality CB Bryce Callahan, who just went on IR with a knee injury. Prescott is the QB6 this week, though he’s slightly overpriced on DraftKings at $6,900. If Prescott doesn’t return and Rush has to make another start, perhaps we won’t have to worry as much about how it will affect Dallas pass catchers after seeing Rush throw for 325 yards and two TDs against the Vikings last week, but we probably wouldn’t be starting Rush in our season-long leagues.

Running Backs

Melvin Gordon and Javonte Williams: Expect the usual near-50/50 workload split between Gordon and Williams when the Broncos visit the Cowboys this weekend. Gordon had a 30-23 edge over his younger teammate in Week 8 snaps. He also lost a fumble with Denver leading 17-10 late in the game, but it seems unlikely that the Broncos would punish Gordon for it since it came two plays after a Williams fumble that the Broncos were able to recover. Gordon currently ranks RB16 in fantasy scoring, while Williams is RB25. The scoring gap is mostly attributable to Gordon having five touchdowns and Williams having only two. I continue to put them side by side in the weekly rankings, with Williams one spot higher based on my belief that the young buck has greater potential than the seventh-year veteran. Williams is the RB24 this week against a middling Dallas run defense, Gordon the RB25.

Ezekiel Elliott and Tony Pollard: Elliott has gone two games without a touchdown, but he had 33 carries and 11 catches in those two games, so his investors probably aren’t grumbling too much. After being targeted 11 times over the Cowboys’ first five games, Zeke has seen 15 targets in his last two games. It’s probably not realistic to expect him to average 7.5 targets a game, but it’s encouraging to see his usage in the passing game expand. This week, Elliott goes up against a Denver defense that’s better against the pass than the run. The Broncos’ run defense ranks 26th in Football Outsiders’ DVOA metric and made Browns third-stringer D’Ernest Johnson look like a star two weeks ago. Elliott checks in at RB7 this week. Pollard had a five-game streak of double-digit carries snapped in Week 8 and was held to just 27 yards from scrimmage in the Cowboys’ road win over the Vikings. That’s no cause for concern since his workload has been fairly consistent He’s a low-end RB3 this week and a viable lineup option in a four-team bye week.

Wide Receivers

Courtland Sutton: It’s probably not a coincidence that in Jerry Jeudy‘s first game back from a high-ankle sprain that he sustained in the season opener, Sutton put up his worst numbers since Week 1, finishing with 2-40-0 on four targets last week against a bad Washington defense. Sutton is a terrific receiver, but so is Jeudy, and Tim Patrick and Noah Fant are going to see targets, too. A target logjam wouldn’t be as concerning if Denver had a quality quarterback, but Teddy Bridgewater is average at best. In addition to the target pressure faces, he’s likely to see a lot of Cowboys CB Trevon Diggs, a rising star. Sutton is on the low-end WR2/high-end WR3 fringe this week.

Jerry Jeudy: In his first game back from a high-ankle sprain that had kept him sidelined since the season opener, Jeudy caught 4 of 4 targets for 39 yards and also had one carry for no gain. I’m a big believer in Jeudy’s talent – he’s an exceptional route runner who’s also dazzling after the catch – but his in-house target competition includes Courtland Sutton, Tim Patrick, and Noah Fant. I’ve got Jeudy WR25 this week, right behind Sutton, but that’s an admittedly optimistic ranking from a Jeudy loyalist.

Tim Patrick: Not surprisingly, Jerry Jeudy‘s Week 8 return from a high-ankle sprain cost Patrick targets, although he made the most of them, catching 3-64-0 on a season-low three targets. Patrick is barely rosterable in 12-team leagues now that Jeudy is back, and he’s the WR54 this week.

CeeDee Lamb: Lamb comes into a Week 9 matchup on a hot streak, with 19-345-3 over his last three games. The return of Michael Gallup from a calf injury could siphon away a target or two, but Lamb is too good for his investors to sweat a little in-house target competition. He’s the WR9 this week and a solid DraftKings value at $7,200.

Amari Cooper: After producing fewer than 70 receiving yards in five straight games, Cooper had 8-122-1 on 13 targets against the Vikings in Week 8, making a pretty catch on an end-zone fade for the game-winning TD with under a minute remaining in regulation. Michael Gallup‘s return from a calf injury spreads targets a little thinner in Dallas, but the Cowboys have a prolific offense that can support multiple pass catchers. Cooper is a midrange WR2 this week, and he’s a bargain on DraftKings at only $5,700.

Michael Gallup: Gallup, who’s been on the shelf with a calf injury he sustained in the season opener, was designated to return from IR last week but wasn’t activated. He’s likely to be back this week when the Cowboys face the Broncos. We know he’s a quality receiver, but we also know his target count will be hard to predict as the No. 3 receiver in Dallas behind CeeDee Lamb and Amari Cooper. Gallup lands at WR44 in the Week 9 rankings.

Tight Ends

Albert Okwuegbunam: Noah Fant has been placed on the COVID-19 list, making Okwuegbunam a viable Week 9 fantasy play. Despite playing second fiddle to Fant, Okwuegbunam has posted 12-91-1 in only five games. (He missed three games with a hamstring injury.) The athletic Albert O. is a high-end TE2 against Dallas this week and a viable option for those streaming the TE position.

Dalton Schultz: Schultz has been one of the more pleasant surprises of the fantasy season, catching 33-370-3 and averaging 10.2 fantasy points per game (0.5 PPR). He was a disappointment last week, with 2-11-0 on seven targets in the road win over the Vikings, and you have to wonder if the return of WR Michael Gallup from a calf injury will cut into Schultz’s target load. Schultz has been averaging 6.3 targets per game, and a slight target haircut could drop him from an every-week starter to a fringe TE1. I’ve got him ranked TE8 this week, but there’s a big drop-off from TE6 or TE7 to the Schultz tier.

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Minnesota Vikings vs Baltimore Ravens

Date/Time: Sunday November 7, 1:00pm ET
BettingPros Consensus Spread: Ravens -6
BettingPros Consensus Over/Under: 49.5 points
Implied Vegas point totals
: Ravens 27.75, Vikings 21.75

Quarterback

Kirk Cousins: Here’s the good news for Cousins stakeholders heading into a Week 9 matchup against the Ravens: It’s not a prime-time game. Cousins was ineffective and inefficient last Sunday night in a 20-16 loss to the Cowboys, who were starting backup QB Cooper Rush. Cousins completed 23 of 35 passes for 184 yards with one touchdown and no interceptions, and his career record in prime-time games now stands at 8-17. In Week 9, he’ll face a Ravens pass defense that has Jekyll-and-Hyde tendencies. Statistically, the Ravens have a middle-of-the-road pass D, but they’ve given up 400-yard passing games to three different quarterbacks this season: Derek Carr, Carson Wentz, and Joe Burrow. Cousins has been pretty Jekyll and Hyde himself, averaging 24.1 fantasy points in his first three games and 16.8 fantasy points in his last four. He’s the QB10 this week, and I want no part of him at $6,200 on DraftKings.

Lamar Jackson: This season is setting up perfectly for Jackson investors. The Ravens are throwing more because their defense has slipped and because they’re trying to fill the RB position with the over-the-hill gang. Last year, Baltimore had a defense that ranked ninth in DVOA and a potent 1-2 punch at running back with J.K. Dobbins and Gus Edwards. This year, the Ravens’ defense ranks 24th in DVOA, and season-ending injuries to Dobbins and Edwards have forced Baltimore to try spackling the position with Latavius Murray, Devonta Freeman, Ty’Son Williams, and Le’Veon Bell. As a result, Jackson is being forced to throw more because game scripts haven’t been as friendly and because the Ravens can’t lean on their running game. Jackson has thrown 225 passes through seven games. He threw 190 passes in his first seven games last year. That’s five more pass attempts per game, and at his current average of 8.5 yards per pass attempt, that works out to an extra 42.5 passing yards per game. Jackson is also assuming more of the rushing load. He has 76 rushing attempts so far in 2021; he had 66 rushing attempts through seven games in 2020. Jackson has more than double the rushing yardage of any Baltimore RB. Although the Vikings haven’t been an easy matchup, allowing just 16,5 fantasy points per game to opposing quarterbacks, Jackson is the overall QB2 this week and has a sky-high ceiling. At $7,300 on DraftKings, he’s the best QB value on the board.

Running Backs

Dalvin Cook: Playing his usual workhorse role, Cook has had 18 or more carries in 4 of 5 games this season, and the Vikings figure to lean on him hard this week in a road game against the Ravens and their middle-of-the-road run defense. It would be nice if Vikings QB Kirk Cousins and offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak remembered that Cook is a useful weapon in the passing game. He’s seen only four targets over the last two weeks and didn’t have a single catch in the Vikings’ Week 9 loss to the Cowboys. Cook is the overall RB3 this week and a solid DraftKings cash game value at $7,700.

Latavius Murray and Devonta Freeman: Murray may or may not be back from an ankle injury this week. He leads the Ravens’ RBs in carries (59), rushing yards (212), and TD runs (4). With Murray out in Week 7, the Ravens divided 11 carries between Freeman, Le’Veon Bell, and Ty’Son Williams. Bell got a plurality of those carries with five, which he turned into a grand total of five yards. Bell looks like he’s cooked, and it appears the Ravens don’t have much trust in Williams. That leaves Murray and Freeman as the only fantasy-relevant guys in this backfield, and they’re just barely relevant. Both will fall into high-end RB4 territory if Murray plays this week against the Vikings. If Murray is out, Freeman will move up a few spots, but not many because he’d still be splitting carries with Bell and/or Williams.

Wide Receivers

Justin Jefferson: The second-year man from LSU has been terrific this season, but he had his first truly poor fantasy output of the year in Week 8, posting a 2-21-0 stat line. Jefferson was inexplicably targeted only four times against Dallas. On one of those targets, he made a spectacular double move that left Cowboys CB Anthony Brown lunging for air, but Vikings QB Kirk Cousins overthrew the wide-open Jefferson, leaving a big gain on the table. Jefferson is probably going to see a lot of CB Marlon Humphrey, the Ravens’ best cover man, but you’re obviously not sitting Jefferson due to a tricky matchup. He’s a midrange WR1 this week. At $7,500 on DraftKings, he’s not an especially good value.

Adam Thielen: Over a four-game stretch in Weeks 2-5, Thielen’s yardage totals were 39, 50, 46, and 40. In the two games since, he’s had 11-126-1 and 6-78-1. This could be a sneaky-good spot for Thielen since the Ravens play a lot of man coverage and Thielen generally fares better against man than zone. The Ravens also have a pass-funnel defense, with opponents throwing on them 66% of the time. Thielen is a midrange WR2 this week.

K.J. Osborn: The Vikings’ No. 3 receiver continues to play somewhere between 50% and 60% of the Vikings’ offensive snaps most weeks, but his usage has tapered off after a hot start. Osborn had 12-167-1 in his first two games but has had 16-154-1 in the five games since and has finished with fewer than 30 receiving yards in four of those games. He ranks WR59 this week.

Marquise Brown: Brown has had some problems with drops this season, but it’s hard to argue with what he’s done so far. Through seven games, Hollywood has 37-566-6 on 57 targets. He’s averaging 15.3 yards per catch and a career-best 9.9 yards per target, and he’s WR9 in fantasy scoring (0.5 PPR). The Ravens host the Vikings on Sunday and Brown is likely to run most of his routes against Minnesota CB Bashaud Breeland – an epic mismatch in Brown’s favor. I have Brown ranked WR16, and that might be too conservative. I love his DraftKings value this week at $6,000.

Rashod Bateman: After missing the first five games of the season with a core injury, Bateman has quickly carved out a role for himself. He’s played about two-thirds of the Ravens’ offensive snaps in the last two games and has 7-109-0 on 12 targets. The rookie from the University of Minnesota is brimming with talent, and if the Ravens’ passing volume remains elevated (see the Lamar Jackson blurb above for more on this), Bateman is going to have some nice games. He’s a high-end WR4 this week.

Tight Ends

Tyler Conklin: Conklin continues to have a solid if unspectacular season, with a 27-297-1 stat line making him the TE17 in 0.5 PPR fantasy scoring. The usage is encouraging, with Conklin running routes on 68.2% of dropbacks. He’s the TE17 this week against a Ravens defense giving up 10.7 fantasy points per game to tight ends.

Mark Andrews: Andrews has been terrific this season and is on pace to finish with 90-1,253-7. He leads all tight ends with an average of 13.2 fantasy points per game (0.5 PPR), and of course you’re starting him this week even though he faces a Minnesota defense that’s giving up only 5.5. fantasy points per game to opposing TEs. Andrews is a fine DraftKings value at $5,500.

This season, the Primer is presented by Pristine Auction. They are going to be providing giveaways throughout the season. See below for how to win a signed D’Andre Swift jersey!

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