A
Axe Elf
QBs
Sleepers
Ben Roethlisberger
The Pittsburgh offense gets a boost with Le’Veon Bell returning this week, hopefully to give the ground game some credibility and take some pressure off of the pass rush and coverage. Roethlisberger is developing timing and chemistry with Antonio Brown, and Emmanuel Sanders and Jerricho Cotchery have lent themselves to an effective three-headed receiver corps lately. Heath Miller will be starting his second game back from injury, and adds another solid red zone target and dump-off option. On top of all this, Minnesota is 28th in the league against the pass, allowing 300/3 to Jay Cutler and even more to first-time starters Brian Hoyer and Josh Gordon last week. Precipitation is not forecast for London until Monday, but Roethlisberger should rain fire on the Vikings’ secondary to the tune of 325/3/1.
Brian Hoyer
I guess I’m drinking the Kool-Aid here, just because Cleveland has shown that they are 100% committed to what they are doing--whatever that might be--and right now, that is throwing the ball 50+ times per game. Now Cincinnati isn’t Minnesota, but they’re not completely shutting down passing attacks, either, allowing basically 250 yards and a TD or two per game to the likes of Cutler and Roethlisberger. They have pulled down at least one INT per game, though, so that tempers my expectations a little. If your league only subtracts one point for INTs, I would start Hoyer with confidence, and if you’re looking to replace Aaron Rodgers or Cam Newton for their Week 4 bye, you could do worse on the waiver wire. Hoyer should have the most yardage of any Bengals’ foe yet, 285, with 3 TDs and 2 INTs.
EJ Manuel
With Spiller gimpy and the Ravens MUCH better at stopping the run than the pass (#4 vs #21), head coach Doug Marrone and offensive coordinator Nathaniel Hackett will need to abandon their run-first scheme and call on the developing rookie QB to throw into the secondary early and often. I’m not expecting fireworks, but 275/2 would be a startable outing with 30 yards rushing--and he’s averaged 270/1 with 27 yards rushing the last two weeks anyway.
Stinkers
Andrew Luck
Here’s a little newsflash--Jacksonville has the 9th-best pass defense in the NFL! That’s not because they’re so good, though; that’s because no team needs to throw against them in the second half. That should be the case again this week, to the chagrin of Luck owners. Whatever Luck gets, he will mostly be done by halftime--I’ll put the O/U at 175/1. On the upside, Luck has only 1 INT on the season, so that category should remain unused this week.
Russell Wilson
I don’t usually call games, just players, but I’m calling the upset here. Seattle goes on the road to face another great defense stinging from their loss to Baltimore last week. Seattle may be a little complacent after facing the likes of Carolina and Jacksonville, and with apologies to San Francisco, Houston is likely the best team they have faced yet. Anyway, with Houston #2 against the pass, Wilson averaging 171 yards per game over the last two weeks, and being rather short in stature for throwing over JJ Swatt, this would be an excellent week to fade Wilson if you have other options. 200 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT.
Sam Bradford
Bradford isn’t considered among the elite QBs in the league, so some may criticize my inclusion of him as a Stinker. Still, he is averaging 2 TDs and almost 300 yards per game, and if that’s what you’re thinking for this week, then you have another think coming. The 49ers are 8th in the league against the pass--and that’s after facing some of the better QBs around in Rodgers, Wilson and Luck. San Francisco is hungry for a win, and that’s going to start with shutting down the strength of the Rams’ offense--Sam Bradford. 225/1/1
Sleepers
Ben Roethlisberger
The Pittsburgh offense gets a boost with Le’Veon Bell returning this week, hopefully to give the ground game some credibility and take some pressure off of the pass rush and coverage. Roethlisberger is developing timing and chemistry with Antonio Brown, and Emmanuel Sanders and Jerricho Cotchery have lent themselves to an effective three-headed receiver corps lately. Heath Miller will be starting his second game back from injury, and adds another solid red zone target and dump-off option. On top of all this, Minnesota is 28th in the league against the pass, allowing 300/3 to Jay Cutler and even more to first-time starters Brian Hoyer and Josh Gordon last week. Precipitation is not forecast for London until Monday, but Roethlisberger should rain fire on the Vikings’ secondary to the tune of 325/3/1.
Brian Hoyer
I guess I’m drinking the Kool-Aid here, just because Cleveland has shown that they are 100% committed to what they are doing--whatever that might be--and right now, that is throwing the ball 50+ times per game. Now Cincinnati isn’t Minnesota, but they’re not completely shutting down passing attacks, either, allowing basically 250 yards and a TD or two per game to the likes of Cutler and Roethlisberger. They have pulled down at least one INT per game, though, so that tempers my expectations a little. If your league only subtracts one point for INTs, I would start Hoyer with confidence, and if you’re looking to replace Aaron Rodgers or Cam Newton for their Week 4 bye, you could do worse on the waiver wire. Hoyer should have the most yardage of any Bengals’ foe yet, 285, with 3 TDs and 2 INTs.
EJ Manuel
With Spiller gimpy and the Ravens MUCH better at stopping the run than the pass (#4 vs #21), head coach Doug Marrone and offensive coordinator Nathaniel Hackett will need to abandon their run-first scheme and call on the developing rookie QB to throw into the secondary early and often. I’m not expecting fireworks, but 275/2 would be a startable outing with 30 yards rushing--and he’s averaged 270/1 with 27 yards rushing the last two weeks anyway.
Stinkers
Andrew Luck
Here’s a little newsflash--Jacksonville has the 9th-best pass defense in the NFL! That’s not because they’re so good, though; that’s because no team needs to throw against them in the second half. That should be the case again this week, to the chagrin of Luck owners. Whatever Luck gets, he will mostly be done by halftime--I’ll put the O/U at 175/1. On the upside, Luck has only 1 INT on the season, so that category should remain unused this week.
Russell Wilson
I don’t usually call games, just players, but I’m calling the upset here. Seattle goes on the road to face another great defense stinging from their loss to Baltimore last week. Seattle may be a little complacent after facing the likes of Carolina and Jacksonville, and with apologies to San Francisco, Houston is likely the best team they have faced yet. Anyway, with Houston #2 against the pass, Wilson averaging 171 yards per game over the last two weeks, and being rather short in stature for throwing over JJ Swatt, this would be an excellent week to fade Wilson if you have other options. 200 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT.
Sam Bradford
Bradford isn’t considered among the elite QBs in the league, so some may criticize my inclusion of him as a Stinker. Still, he is averaging 2 TDs and almost 300 yards per game, and if that’s what you’re thinking for this week, then you have another think coming. The 49ers are 8th in the league against the pass--and that’s after facing some of the better QBs around in Rodgers, Wilson and Luck. San Francisco is hungry for a win, and that’s going to start with shutting down the strength of the Rams’ offense--Sam Bradford. 225/1/1