Strona główna Aktualności Wide Receiver Risers, Fallers – Targets Analysis for Week 15 (2024)

Wide Receiver Risers, Fallers – Targets Analysis for Week 15 (2024)

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by Kevin Tompkins

Targets are paramount when it comes to evaluating pass-catchers for fantasy football. There are no air yards, receiving yards, receptions, or touchdowns without first earning a target. There’s a reason the biggest and most consistent target-earners are among the top fantasy point scorers: they can be relied on by not just their team’s offense to earn targets and produce on those targets.

We’ll take a weekly team-by-team look into these target earners and separate the wheat from the chaff. To properly lead into what we’ll be looking at this season, we’ll have to establish a baseline of the most important things we’re looking at with targets and other receiving metrics that paint the full picture for who we should be rostering, who we should be adding, and who we can drop.

Everything we’ll discuss in this season’s WR/TE/RB Targets, Air Yards, and Snaps trends analysis article will be some of the best metrics correlating to fantasy production. Think of targets as a page in a coloring book, representing the outline yet to be colored. Coloring on that page adds context and flavor to that page. That’s what we’ll do with targets — adding more context than just some target totals and box score stats.

Note: Statistics from our player pages at RotoBaller were included during the compilation of data, while Pro Football Reference, PFF, Fantasy Points Data, rbdsm.com/stats, NFELO, NFL NextGenStats, NFL Pro+, RotoViz, ESPN Stats and Info, SumerSports, and Nathan Jahnke’s Immediate Fantasy Football Takeaways article for that particular week were also used as resources in the creation of this article.

 

Important Links

We’re also providing a full table with statistics for each week HERE besides the tables you see in this article which feature even more statistics!

 

Largest Target Share % Increases from Week 13 To Week 14

Largest Target Share % Decreases from Week 13 To Week 14

 

Arizona Cardinals

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Marvin Harrison Jr. WR 8 4 49 0 51.3% 95.2% 84.5% 12.6 22.2% 32.0% 20.0% 1.23 8.9 WR41
Greg Dortch WR 1 1 5 0 -1.5% 50.0% 38.0% -3.0 2.8% 0.0% 4.8% 0.24 1.5 WR78
Michael Wilson WR 3 2 57 1 17.9% 90.5% 83.1% 11.7 8.3% 12.0% 7.9% 1.50 13.7 WR27
Zay Jones WR 2 1 13 0 16.8% 35.7% 33.8% 16.5 5.6% 8.0% 13.3% 0.87 2.3 WR70
Trey McBride TE 12 7 70 0 25.7% 95.2% 94.4% 4.2 33.3% 32.0% 30.0% 1.75 14.0 TE4
Elijah Higgins TE 11.9% 22.5% 0.0 TE49
Tip Reiman TE 1 1 14 0 -0.5% 9.5% 32.4% -1.0 2.8% 0.0% 25.0% 3.50 2.4 TE34
James Conner RB 4 4 32 1 -3.1% 66.7% 77.5% -1.5 11.1% 8.0% 14.3% 1.14 18 90 0 22.2 RB7
Trey Benson RB 1 1 4 0 -2.5% 16.7% 14.1% -5.0 2.8% 0.0% 14.3% 0.57 2 15 0 2.9 RB48
Emari Demercado RB 4 4 15 0 -4.1% 16.7% 11.3% -2.0 11.1% 8.0% 57.1% 2.14 5.5 RB34

Cardinals Notes From Week 14:

One of these days, the government will step in to help those who drafted Trey McBride with an economic stimulus package with the goal of getting that dude a receiving touchdown. It’s actually insane at this point as a player with this much market share in the receiving game hasn’t gotten a touchdown via the forward pass.

Trey McBride now has the most receptions (76) without a receiving TD in any 12-game span since at least 1970.

— NFL NEWS (@fantasynflnews.bsky.social) December 8, 2024 at 5:15 PM

McBride continues to earn a ton of targets (team-leading 12 in Week 14) and while he had a couple of opportunities for red-zone scores, it just hasn’t worked out. Though the Cardinals and Kyler Murray, to their credit, are looking to get McBride off the schneid. “Always a McBridesmaid, never a McBride,” some are saying.

Michael Wilson’s 41-yard touchdown was the highlight of his day, who went 1-16 on two targets outside of that score. It’s not like he’s been that relevant anyway, but he’s the ubiquitous wide receiver in this offense that just hangs around and is good for one of those catches every third week.

The Cardinals have tried to get Marvin Harrison Jr. going, but he’s been pretty inefficient thanks to a 4-49 effort on eight targets. He should be a nice value in drafts next season in the fifth round as we hope for a second-year leap from somebody we clearly over-drafted this season.

The James Conner-ing continues as his huge role is omnipresent with 122 total yards and a receiving touchdown on 78% snaps. Emari Demercado did his thing in a receiving role catching 4-of-4 passes for just 15 yards, and Trey Benson grabbed a couple carries.

 

Atlanta Falcons

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Drake London WR 6 5 70 0 24.9% 100.0% 100.0% 11.2 20.0% 19.2% 15.8% 1.84 12.0 WR34
Darnell Mooney WR 6 6 142 0 40.0% 94.7% 94.6% 18.0 20.0% 23.1% 16.7% 3.94 20.2 WR14
Ray-Ray McCloud III WR 10 8 98 0 10.7% 86.8% 63.5% 2.9 33.3% 30.8% 30.3% 2.97 1 3 0 16.1 WR21
KhaDarel Hodge WR 2.6% 1.4% 0.0 WR85
Kyle Pitts TE 5 1 14 0 21.8% 76.3% 78.4% 11.8 16.7% 19.2% 17.2% 0.48 2.4 TE34
Charlie Woerner TE 1 1 11 0 4.1% 18.4% 47.3% 11.0 3.3% 0.0% 14.3% 1.57 2.1 TE39
Bijan Robinson RB 2 2 9 0 -1.5% 52.6% 85.1% -2.0 6.7% 7.7% 10.0% 0.45 22 92 1 20.1 RB9
Tyler Allgeier RB 5.3% 17.6% 9 63 1 12.3 RB22

Falcons Notes From Week 14:

The calls are coming from inside the house regarding Kirk Cousins and the fact that the Falcons should be going to Michael Penix for the remainder of the season. I mean, Cousins having eight interceptions to zero touchdowns might have something to do with that. He also hasn’t thrown a touchdown pass since November 3rd. At least the Falcons are condensed in the passing game themselves where the volume helps out our guys.

The top three wide receivers ran routes on 87% or more of Cousins’ dropbacks, which is typical of Drake London, Darnell Mooney, and Ray-Ray McCloud. London was the low man on the totem pole as he received the most attention from the Vikings’ defense. Mooney got back into fantasy managers’ good graces as he was used downfield very early on in an attempt to get him going and that’s exactly what happened, with 142 yards receiving and catching all six of his targets. McCloud earned his most volume of the season and his 8-98 line represented his best fantasy output of the season.

Do we mention Kyle Pitts and his 1-14 line on five targets? I just don’t know where to begin.

Bijan Robinson’s massive role continued with 85% snaps, 22 carries, 101 total yards and a touchdown, but Tyler Allgeier was very effective and efficient with a 9-63 line (7.0 YPC) and a touchdown as well. It was a game up until the fourth quarter when Jordan Addison scored two of his three touchdowns, so the run was very much in play until the middle of the fourth quarter.

Many are saying Robinson is good. Count me in with that contingent that say so.

Bijan Robinson remains a joy to watch

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— Nate Tice (@natetice.bsky.social) December 11, 2024 at 10:46 AM

Baltimore Ravens

ON BYE IN WEEK 14

 

Buffalo Bills

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Curtis Samuel WR 3 2 15 0 0.7% 61.0% 60.0% 1.0 8.1% 8.0% 12.0% 0.60 1 1 0 3.6 WR62
Khalil Shakir WR 7 5 106 1 16.0% 82.9% 78.3% 10.4 18.9% 16.0% 20.6% 3.12 21.6 WR10
Mack Hollins WR 6 4 57 1 24.4% 70.7% 76.7% 18.5 16.2% 20.0% 20.7% 1.97 15.7 WR23
Amari Cooper WR 14 6 95 0 54.2% 63.4% 53.3% 17.6 37.8% 44.0% 53.8% 3.65 15.5 WR24
Jalen Virgil WR 2.4% 1.7% 0.0 WR85
Dawson Knox TE 1 1 5 0 -0.4% 73.2% 81.7% -2.0 2.7% 4.0% 3.3% 0.17 1.5 TE43
Zach Davidson TE 29.3% 26.7% 0.0 TE49
James Cook RB 2 2 9 0 -0.7% 41.5% 45.0% -1.5 5.4% 0.0% 11.8% 0.53 6 20 0 4.9 RB37
Ray Davis RB 1 0 0 0 6.4% 24.4% 21.7% 29.0 2.7% 0.0% 10.0% 0.00 0.0 RB62
Ty Johnson RB 3 2 55 1 -0.7% 31.7% 35.0% -1.0 8.1% 8.0% 23.1% 4.23 13.5 RB19
Reggie Gilliam FB 2.4% 5.0% 0.0 FB3

Bills Notes From Week 14:

Rams vs. Bills was easily in the top two of my favorite games this season, right up there with the Chargers vs. Bengals Sunday Night Football game from a couple of weeks ago and no surprise, because the Bills were absolutely slinging the ball downfield in catch-up mode as they were down 38-21 entering the fourth quarter.

Amari Cooper did his best DeAndre Hopkins impression of earning a ton of targets (14) on only 63% of routes. That’s not a lot of routes for that kind of targeting, so no surprise the 53.8% TPRR was a league-wide high this week for any pass-catcher with more than three targets.

His 246 air yards (17.6 aDOT) were also a league-high in Week 14 and tied for the second-highest total of any pass-catcher this season after Rome Odunze’s 250 air yards in Week 3.

Extending his aDOT out a little bit was Khalil Shakir, who has been typically a shorter aDOT player (sub-5.0 aDOT entering Week 14) but had a couple of long catches.  One of them went for a touchdown and one went to Josh Allen QB sneak range, which happened right after.

Still, Shakir has been awesome this season in a slightly unconventional role that we all pegged him for (slot receiver) in drafts, but he’s probably been the one player of a small handful that has completely changed my opinion about him during the season.

Khalil Shakir deserves more hype. This is the sort of run after catch where people would complain that the video game is broken.

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— Bill Barnwell (@billbarnwell.com) December 8, 2024 at 5:25 PM

Mack Hollins also caught a touchdown and aside from a random Ty Johnson touchdown in which he returned to 30%+ usage in routes and snaps, no other Bill had more than two catches or 15 receiving yards.

With Allen taking a lot of the running back real estate, James Cook’s upside has been taken out at the knees. He did take all six running back carries, but succumbed to the game script and still is getting shuffled in and out with Ray Davis and the aforementioned Johnson. You’re still starting him in the fantasy playoffs though, but it’s not something you necessarily feel great about.

 

Carolina Panthers

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Adam Thielen WR 11 9 102 0 37.8% 74.5% 74.6% 12.0 34.4% 40.9% 31.4% 2.91 19.2 WR18
Xavier Legette WR 9 2 39 0 38.7% 78.7% 87.3% 15.0 28.1% 27.3% 24.3% 1.05 5.9 WR54
David Moore WR 4 2 25 0 13.5% 72.3% 87.3% 11.8 12.5% 13.6% 11.8% 0.74 4.5 WR58
Deven Thompkins WR 1 1 7 0 1.7% 17.0% 15.5% 6.0 3.1% 4.5% 12.5% 0.88 1.7 WR74
Dan Chisena WR 8.5% 8.5% 0.0 WR85
Tommy Tremble TE 1 1 3 1 0.3% 36.2% 64.8% 1.0 3.1% 4.5% 5.9% 0.18 7.3 TE17
Ja’Tavion Sanders TE 1 0 0 0 9.7% 51.1% 49.3% 34.0 3.1% 0.0% 4.2% 0.00 0.0 TE49
Chuba Hubbard RB 5 4 15 0 -1.7% 68.1% 97.2% -1.2 15.6% 9.1% 15.6% 0.47 26 92 1 20.7 RB8
Jonathon Brooks RB 4.3% 4.2% 1 -3 0 -0.3 RB69

Panthers Notes From Week 14:

With the improvement of Bryce Young, fantasy managers of multiple players were hoping it would benefit multiple pass-catchers. Of course, Young isn’t a superstar or anything, so we have to be reasonable about expectations here.

It was fair to assume that Xavier Legette as a first-round rookie wide receiver would stand to benefit. At least in Week 14, that may not be the case as Legette is still having issues with his connection to Young, catching just 2-of-9 targets for 39 yards.

we are so close to living in a world where Bryce Young executed a 97-yard TD drive with 3 incredible plays and no timeouts to beat the Eagles

— Gregg Rosenthal (@greggrosenthal.bsky.social) December 9, 2024 at 11:42 AM

Possibly Ja’Tavion Sanders? Well, he had a starting(ish) role with this Panthers team, and then Tommy Tremble returned and relegated Sanders a bit. Not helping is Sanders landing on his head, where he would be out for Week 13 and then return last week to just 51% routes with one target and zero catches.

It’s been Adam Thielen who has benefited the most out of anybody on this Panthers team, with two double-digit target games in a row and two top 20 finishes among wide receivers. That connection with Young has returned from the beginning of last season where Thielen was a top five fantasy wide receiver. Thielen should be a locked-in flex play for the remainder of the season.

Awful, awful luck for Jonathon Brooks as he re-tore his same ACL from the end of last season. It’s going to be difficult to worry about his future because it feels like it’s going to be more of a 2026 return for Brooks than him being back for any part of 2025.

Of course, the Panthers also paid Chuba Hubbard, who has been one of the best value picks in fantasy football for much of the season and he continues his path of destruction on defenses with 107 total yards and a touchdown on a whopping 30 touches.

Brooks’ injury and third string running back Raheem Blackshear getting hurt on a special teams’ play basically meant every touch was going to Hubbard in this one. The Panthers did sign Mike Boone to back up Hubbard, but Hubbard is full go as a low-end RB1 for the rest of the season.

 

Chicago Bears

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
DJ Moore WR 8 6 49 0 21.6% 97.0% 90.6% 4.1 34.8% 44.4% 25.0% 1.53 10.9 WR35
Keenan Allen WR 5 3 30 0 24.4% 93.9% 88.7% 7.4 21.7% 22.2% 16.1% 0.97 6.0 WR53
Rome Odunze WR 5 4 42 2 49.4% 93.9% 92.5% 15.0 21.7% 27.8% 16.1% 1.35 20.2 WR14
Collin Johnson WR 1 1 6 0 2.0% 3.0% 9.4% 3.0 4.3% 5.6% 100.0% 6.00 1.6 WR76
Cole Kmet TE 90.9% 92.5% 0.0 TE49
Gerald Everett TE 3.0% 15.1% 0.0 TE49
D’Andre Swift RB 1 1 2 0 1.3% 69.7% 79.2% 2.0 4.3% 0.0% 4.3% 0.09 14 38 0 5.0 RB36
Travis Homer RB 3 3 11 0 1.4% 21.2% 13.2% 0.7 13.0% 0.0% 42.9% 1.57 4.1 RB40
Darrynton Evans RB 3.0% 7.5% 3 3 0 0.3 RB60

Bears Notes From Week 14:

There aren’t many easier pass-catching groups to break down from a route’s perspective than the Chicago Bears, where their top three wide receivers and tight end Cole Kmet all run 90%+ routes almost every week and they do not use their backups aside from a route or two.

With D.J. Moore in his (now) usual low-aDOT role, he’s being utilized to get out in space and make something out of what’s there, which Moore can do more often than now. He’s always good for volume and predictably led the Bears in targets (8) on the afternoon. Keenan Allen was a disappointment, but the Rome Odunze stuff hit with two scores and 4-42 after saying for weeks that this Bears offense in the passing game was a “two-man game.”

Sure, there’s always going to be more variance for a guy like Odunze than stalwart veterans like Moore and Allen, but Odunze in his rookie season has more of a learning curve than a lot of other receivers, thanks to breaking in a rookie quarterback, a head coach and offensive coordinator firing, and other factors. Still, he’s likely going to be a nice value moving forward into 2025 with Allen a free agent this offseason.

Kmet was on the field for 93% of snaps, 91% of routes, and was untargeted. Not sure how that works, but I hope he got some good cardio in. D’Andre Swift’s role is clear and dominant despite a dud effort which wasn’t helped by the game script being what it was, down 24-0 at halftime.

 

Cincinnati Bengals

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Ja’Marr Chase WR 17 14 177 2 53.9% 97.8% 93.0% 8.4 40.5% 50.0% 38.6% 4.02 1 14 0 45.1 WR1
Tee Higgins WR 5 2 23 0 16.6% 91.1% 87.3% 8.8 11.9% 11.8% 12.2% 0.56 4.3 WR59
Andrei Iosivas WR 5 4 41 0 11.3% 66.7% 67.6% 6.0 11.9% 8.8% 16.7% 1.37 8.1 WR45
Jermaine Burton WR 13.3% 12.7% 0.0 WR85
Mike Gesicki TE 3 3 24 0 3.4% 37.8% 28.2% 3.0 7.1% 8.8% 17.6% 1.41 5.4 TE24
Drew Sample TE 2 2 13 0 3.0% 37.8% 69.0% 4.0 4.8% 2.9% 11.8% 0.76 3.3 TE31
Tanner Hudson TE 1 1 19 0 2.3% 15.6% 19.7% 6.0 2.4% 2.9% 14.3% 2.71 2.9 TE33
Cam Grandy TE 15.6% 23.9% 0.0 TE49
Chase Brown RB 8 6 65 1 10.3% 71.1% 83.1% 3.4 19.0% 14.7% 25.0% 2.03 14 58 0 24.3 RB5
Khalil Herbert RB 1 1 7 0 -0.8% 6.7% 9.9% -2.0 2.4% 0.0% 33.3% 2.33 2 4 0 2.1 RB52

Bengals Notes From Week 14:

Ja’Marr Chase is a supernova and he’s going to win a ton of people fantasy leagues this season. I know there were some people out there who were waiting for truly elite “week in, week out” production from Chase to justify his draft cost for the last couple of seasons, but we’ve got it and now, the decision between for LSU teammates for WR1 next season is going to be a contentious one.

While Jefferson is my choice as the forever 1.01 until he isn’t, the Chase people are certainly with merit to choose him as well.

The last three 10+ catch, 175+ yard, 2+ touchdown games:

Ja’Marr Chase (tonight)
Ja’Marr Chase (Week 10)
Ja’Marr Chase (Week 5)

— Benjamin Solak (@benjaminsolak.bsky.social) December 9, 2024 at 10:14 PM

The last couple of weeks has seen Tee Higgins match or exceed Chase step for step in production, but Higgins took a massive step back with just five targets, two catches, and 23 yards receiving. Even Andrei Iosivas (4-41) and Mike Gesicki (3-24) were more impactful than Higgins was, but we’ll just chalk that up to a bad day at the office.

Chase Brown is just a stud and was the guy that played off of the dominance of Chase with a 6-65 line plus a receiving touchdown to tack onto 58 yards rushing. His role is massive at 83% snaps and even with Khalil Herbert mixing in slightly more than usual here, remains as must-start as it gets now that we’re in the fantasy playoffs.

 

Cleveland Browns

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Jerry Jeudy WR 6 5 64 1 19.3% 91.1% 91.7% 10.0 16.7% 20.0% 14.6% 1.56 17.4 WR19
Elijah Moore WR 4 3 34 0 12.6% 82.2% 83.3% 9.8 11.1% 12.0% 10.8% 0.92 6.4 WR52
James Proche II WR 2 2 18 0 5.8% 4.4% 2.8% 9.0 5.6% 8.0% 100.0% 9.00 3.8 WR61
Kadarius Toney WR 2.2% 6.9% -2.0 WR122
Michael Woods II WR 3 1 12 0 12.8% 84.4% 87.5% 13.3 8.3% 8.0% 7.9% 0.32 2.2 WR71
David Njoku TE 12 7 42 1 34.4% 88.9% 90.3% 8.9 33.3% 36.0% 30.0% 1.05 17.2 TE2
Jordan Akins TE 1 1 14 0 4.5% 26.7% 18.1% 14.0 2.8% 0.0% 8.3% 1.17 2.4 TE34
Blake Whiteheart TE 1 0 0 0 1.9% 20.0% 18.1% 6.0 2.8% 0.0% 11.1% 0.00 0.0 TE49
Jerome Ford RB 4 3 19 0 9.6% 51.1% 55.6% 7.5 11.1% 8.0% 17.4% 0.83 10 28 0 7.7 RB32
Pierre Strong Jr. RB 2 2 9 0 0.0% 15.6% 9.7% 0.0 5.6% 4.0% 28.6% 1.29 2.9 RB48
Nick Chubb RB 1 0 0 0 -1.0% 26.7% 36.1% -3.0 2.8% 4.0% 8.3% 0.00 11 48 0 4.8 RB38

Browns Notes From Week 14:

It wasn’t the best outing from Jameis Winston in this game, as it was not played under idyllic conditions on Thursday Night Football. That said, Winston did support his main guys, with a 12-target, 7-42 game from David Njoku that at least included a touchdown.

Winston’s other touchdown went to the other man of the last couple weeks, Jerry Jeudy, who led the Browns in receiving yards. With no Cedric Tillman yet again, Elijah Moore (3-34) couldn’t capitalize as well in Week 14 as he has in previous weeks, with seven other Browns being targeted and catching at least one pass.

The Pittsburgh Steelers’ defense had some influence here with three sacks, two interceptions, and a lost fumble gumming up the works for Cleveland in Acrisure Stadium.

Nick Chubb was at the very least efficient with over 4.0 yards per carry on the afternoon, but game script got in the way here. Even then, Chubb just hasn’t been anything close to a gamebreaker in his return, but honestly, that’s to be expected.

Jerome Ford has mixed in a lot more in the receiving game and saw 10 carries to Chubb’s 11. It’s a tough backfield to feel confident in for the rest of the season, where it’s essentially “touchdown-or-bust” each week and the offense is so dependent on the pass to move the ball.

 

Dallas Cowboys

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
CeeDee Lamb WR 7 6 93 1 26.2% 97.1% 96.7% 7.9 25.0% 33.3% 20.6% 2.74 1 1 0 21.4 WR11
Brandin Cooks WR 3 1 3 1 13.8% 77.1% 60.0% 9.7 10.7% 0.0% 11.1% 0.11 7.3 WR49
Jalen Tolbert WR 2 0 0 0 6.1% 65.7% 65.0% 6.5 7.1% 5.6% 8.7% 0.00 0.0 WR85
Ryan Flournoy WR 1 0 0 0 7.6% 2.9% 1.7% 16.0 3.6% 5.6% 100.0% 0.00 0.0 WR85
KaVontae Turpin WR 2 1 16 0 20.8% 20.0% 16.7% 22.0 7.1% 5.6% 28.6% 2.29 2 15 0 4.1 WR60
Jonathan Mingo WR 1 0 0 0 2.4% 17.1% 23.3% 5.0 3.6% 0.0% 16.7% 0.00 0.0 WR85
Jake Ferguson TE 6 3 32 0 14.2% 80.0% 76.7% 5.0 21.4% 27.8% 21.4% 1.14 6.2 TE21
Luke Schoonmaker TE 2 2 22 0 6.1% 25.7% 38.3% 6.5 7.1% 11.1% 22.2% 2.44 4.2 TE27
Brevyn Spann-Ford TE 5.7% 18.3% 0.0 TE49
Ezekiel Elliott RB 1 1 2 0 0.9% 11.4% 10.0% 2.0 3.6% 0.0% 25.0% 0.50 2 4 0 1.6 RB54
Rico Dowdle RB 2 1 10 0 0.9% 62.9% 76.7% 1.0 7.1% 5.6% 9.1% 0.45 18 131 0 15.1 RB16
Hunter Luepke FB 1 1 5 0 0.9% 20.0% 16.7% 2.0 3.6% 5.6% 14.3% 0.71 1.5 FB1

Cowboys Notes From Week 14:

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— rivers mccown (@riversmccown.bsky.social) December 9, 2024 at 10:18 PM

I think this perfectly encapsulates the 2024 Dallas Cowboys.

Outside of CeeDee Lamb’s 6-93 line with a touchdown, none of the 10 other Cowboys’ pass-catchers caught more than three passes or gained more than 32 yards. This is the downside of the Cowboys’ offense, where Lamb may eat fine each week, but expecting Cooper Rush to reliably support multiple pass-catchers in a given week is a bit much.

In his return to the lineup, Jake Ferguson did get back to 77% routes. There was some glimmer of a chance where Luke Schoonmaker may earn a little bit of role following his solid stretch of play with Ferguson out, but his nine total routes out of 35 dropbacks pretty much dropped the hammer on that thought.

Rico Dowdle has been every bit the workhorse for the Cowboys and has been a late-season hammer for fantasy managers with his second-consecutive 100+ yard game on 77% snaps.

 

Denver Broncos

ON BYE IN WEEK 14

 

Detroit Lions

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Amon-Ra St. Brown WR 6 5 43 0 18.3% 83.7% 85.0% 7.5 15.0% 15.6% 16.7% 1.19 1 10 0 10.3 WR37
Jameson Williams WR 8 5 80 0 28.0% 74.4% 68.8% 8.6 20.0% 25.0% 25.0% 2.50 13.0 WR32
Tim Patrick WR 7 6 43 2 20.3% 62.8% 66.3% 7.1 17.5% 12.5% 25.9% 1.59 22.3 WR8
Allen Robinson II WR 4.7% 6.3% 0.0 WR85
Sam LaPorta TE 7 5 54 0 26.5% 81.4% 90.0% 9.3 17.5% 21.9% 20.0% 1.54 10.4 TE10
Brock Wright TE 1 0 0 0 11.0% 44.2% 61.3% 27.0 2.5% 3.1% 5.3% 0.00 0.0 TE49
Shane Zylstra TE 20.9% 20.0% 0.0 TE49
Jahmyr Gibbs RB 6 6 30 1 -2.9% 53.5% 56.3% -1.2 15.0% 15.6% 26.1% 1.30 15 43 0 19.3 RB11
David Montgomery RB 5 5 33 0 -1.2% 34.9% 45.0% -0.6 12.5% 6.3% 33.3% 2.20 14 51 1 19.4 RB10

Lions Notes From Week 14:

The Lions weren’t exactly condensed, but quite a bit of opportunity when to a handful of players, with five or more targets going to six of the seven pass-catchers. Amon-Ra St. Brown and Jameson Williams both contributed, but Tim Patrick hit paydirt twice in his “Josh Reynolds-lite” role.

Kalif Raymond went on IR after Week 12, so that role for right now is open with Patrick, who offers more to the Lions as a dependable target with size (6-foot-4) as a compliment to St. Brown, Williams, and Sam LaPorta.

As prolific as the Lions’ offense should be, the player running 60-70% routes per drop back should be rostered for what he can offer for fantasy managers if needed. He’s a “break glass in case of emergency” start rather than a locked-in fantasy asset for playoff-bound managers.

LaPorta also saw seven targets (5-54) in a role that’s improving with two straight top ten fantasy finishes at tight end, but that’s the first time he’s done that this season. To say LaPorta has disappointed fantasy managers is an understatement.

Both Jahmyr Gibbs (73 total yards) and David Montgomery (84 total yards) saw at least five targets and 14 rushing attempts with Gibbs seeing slightly more work with one more target and one more rushing attempt. Montgomery, however, got the touchdown in the backfield while Gibbs caught a receiving touchdown. It’s the league’s most symbiotic and productive backfield for real-life and fantasy purposes.

 

Green Bay Packers

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Jayden Reed WR 1 0 0 0 2.2% 62.5% 50.0% 4.0 5.6% 10.0% 6.7% 0.00 0.0 WR85
Christian Watson WR 6 4 114 0 48.9% 91.7% 92.0% 14.5 33.3% 30.0% 27.3% 5.18 13.4 WR30
Dontayvion Wicks WR 5 4 49 0 28.7% 75.0% 78.0% 10.2 27.8% 40.0% 27.8% 2.72 8.9 WR41
Bo Melton WR 20.8% 18.0% 0.0 WR85
Malik Heath WR 12.5% 12.0% 0.0 WR85
Tucker Kraft TE 5 3 41 1 19.1% 95.8% 88.0% 6.8 27.8% 20.0% 21.7% 1.78 13.1 TE8
Ben Sims TE 1 1 2 0 1.1% 29.2% 36.0% 2.0 5.6% 0.0% 14.3% 0.29 1.2 TE46
John FitzPatrick TE 4.2% 12.0% 0.0 TE49
Josh Jacobs RB 41.7% 80.0% 18 66 3 24.6 RB4
Emanuel Wilson RB 4.2% 6.0% 1 7 0 0.7 RB58
Chris Brooks RB 25.0% 28.0% 1 3 0 0.3 RB60

Packers Notes From Week 14:

When you see that the Packers and Jordan Love had a grand total of 20 pass attempts and 44 total plays, the lowest totals on both in Week 14, you can expect there wasn’t much in the way of passing volume.

For some ridiculous reason, it didn’t even seem like Jayden Reed was even part of a gameplan, with just one target and zero catches on 63% routes. Christian Watson provided much of the downfield element for the Packers with 114 yards on four catches but cost the Packers in the real-life game with a fumble and an offensive pass interference penalty that took points off of the board for the Packers.

QJ but with a better publicist

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— kliff kicksbury (@biharikabab.bsky.social) December 5, 2024 at 8:02 PM

Dontayvion Wicks saw 75% routes with Romeo Doubs out yet again with his concussion. Tucker Kraft caught the only touchdown from Love as the scoring was hogged by one certain running back who has been making a habit of that lately.

Yes, that would be Josh Jacobs, who has been a top five fantasy running back in each of the last four weeks, with eight touchdowns that span and three in Week 14 on 66 yards rushing and 80% snaps. He’s been racking up green-zone touchdowns and converting them into scores at a crazy rate.

 

Houston Texans

ON BYE IN WEEK 14

 

Indianapolis Colts

ON BYE IN WEEK 14

 

Jacksonville Jaguars

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Brian Thomas Jr. WR 10 8 86 0 71.9% 97.1% 79.7% 10.2 37.0% 47.4% 30.3% 2.61 16.6 WR20
Parker Washington WR 2 2 15 0 9.2% 91.2% 74.6% 6.5 7.4% 10.5% 6.5% 0.48 3.5 WR63
Tim Jones WR 2.9% 23.7% 0.0 WR85
Devin Duvernay WR 3 3 8 0 4.2% 58.8% 49.2% 2.0 11.1% 15.8% 15.0% 0.40 1 -7 0 3.1 WR64
Joshua Cephus WR 11.8% 10.2% 0.0 WR85
Evan Engram TE 5 4 33 0 10.6% 85.3% 71.2% 3.0 18.5% 15.8% 17.2% 1.14 7.3 TE17
Luke Farrell TE 11.8% 39.0% 0.0 TE49
Brenton Strange TE 1 1 21 0 9.9% 32.4% 44.1% 14.0 3.7% 5.3% 9.1% 1.91 3.1 TE32
Travis Etienne RB 4 4 50 0 -2.3% 52.9% 47.5% -0.8 14.8% 5.3% 22.2% 2.78 4 20 0 11.0 RB25
Tank Bigsby RB 2 1 7 0 -3.5% 26.5% 52.5% -2.5 7.4% 0.0% 22.2% 0.78 18 55 1 13.2 RB20

Jaguars Notes From Week 14:

You’ve got to be pretty damn good if you’re Brian Thomas Jr., in THIS particular quagmire of an offense, with THIS abomination of a quarterback in Mac Jones and you’re still able to produce an 8-86 line on a team-leading 10 targets.

Evan Engram ran a bunch of routes and came out with a mediocre 4-33 line on a tiny 3.0-yard aDOT, further illustrating Jones’ limitations at quarterback for this Jaguars’ team who couldn’t get out of their own way, yet scoring 10 points was enough to beat the lowly Titans.

In one of the clearest signs of a baton passing from one running back to another, Tank Bigsby grabbed the baton from Travis Etienne and literally ran with it. In a game with both Bigsby and Etienne both active and playing the entire game, Bigsby had a clear touch advantage on the ground 18-to-4, with Etienne grabbing more of the passing work, third downs, two-minute drill, and the lone goal-line snap.

While the touch disparity between the two backs could even out a little bit more in the next couple of weeks, Bigsby is back into flex consideration for the rest of the season with the Jets, Raiders, and Titans remaining on their fantasy schedule.

 

Kansas City Chiefs

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Xavier Worthy WR 6 5 41 0 8.0% 81.4% 82.6% 3.4 17.6% 12.0% 17.1% 1.17 1 5 0 9.6 WR39
Justin Watson WR 41.9% 50.7% 0.0 WR85
JuJu Smith-Schuster WR 2 2 31 0 7.5% 51.2% 49.3% 9.5 5.9% 4.0% 9.1% 1.41 5.1 WR56
DeAndre Hopkins WR 8 4 32 1 62.8% 65.1% 55.1% 20.0 23.5% 32.0% 28.6% 1.14 13.2 WR31
Travis Kelce TE 6 5 45 0 18.9% 88.4% 85.5% 8.0 17.6% 16.0% 15.8% 1.18 9.5 TE12
Noah Gray TE 5 4 26 0 3.9% 46.5% 60.9% 2.0 14.7% 20.0% 25.0% 1.30 6.6 TE19
Baylor Cupp TE 1 0 0 0 -0.4% 7.0% 5.8% -1.0 2.9% 0.0% 33.3% 0.00 0.0 TE49
Isiah Pacheco RB 4 2 6 0 0.5% 32.6% 46.4% 0.3 11.8% 8.0% 28.6% 0.43 14 55 0 8.1 RB31
Samaje Perine RB 1 1 16 0 -0.4% 23.3% 24.6% -1.0 2.9% 4.0% 10.0% 1.60 1 3 0 2.9 RB48
Carson Steele RB 4.7% 8.7% 0.0 RB62
Kareem Hunt RB 1 1 13 0 -0.8% 30.2% 29.0% -2.0 2.9% 4.0% 7.7% 1.00 5 16 0 3.9 RB41

Chiefs Notes From Week 14:

The Chiefs continue their comedy act as their kicker Matthew Wright hit the upright with a game-winning field goal and it still went in, clinching the AFC West despite their best (or worst) efforts. Nothing about this team screams good except their 12-1 record, but they seem to do enough each week.

They tried to get DeAndre Hopkins going deep (160 air yards – second-most in Week 14, 20.2-yard aDOT) but eventually connected with a touchdown from nine yards out. Xavier Worthy’s aDOT crept much closer to the line of scrimmage (3.4 yards) and earned some volume and tried to get him the D.J. Moore gameplan of getting him the ball and letting him make plays in space.

Travis Kelce was around with a 5-45 game as well, but nobody really stood out in this game offensively with Patrick Mahomes only tallying 210 yards passing.

Growing his role more after coming back from a nine-game layoff was Isiah Pacheco, who doubled up his carries to 14 from last week and jumped up to 46% snaps from last week’s 37%. He’s at the very least worthy of a flex spot for the fantasy playoffs, but Kareem Hunt’s value predictably goes right into contingency territory with no standalone role to speak of with Samaje Perine also involved in his insulated role within the offense.

 

Las Vegas Raiders

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Jakobi Meyers WR 9 7 67 0 27.4% 97.6% 91.0% 7.4 27.3% 29.6% 22.5% 1.68 13.7 WR27
Tre Tucker WR 5 2 7 0 32.5% 92.7% 88.1% 15.8 15.2% 14.8% 13.2% 0.18 2.7 WR68
Terrace Marshall Jr. WR 1 1 6 0 1.6% 19.5% 22.4% 4.0 3.0% 3.7% 12.5% 0.75 1.6 WR76
Brock Bowers TE 5 3 49 0 14.4% 87.8% 85.1% 7.0 15.2% 14.8% 13.9% 1.36 1 3 0 8.2 TE16
Michael Mayer TE 9 7 68 0 26.6% 73.2% 82.1% 7.2 27.3% 25.9% 30.0% 2.27 13.8 TE5
Harrison Bryant TE 7.3% 19.4% 0.0 TE49
Ameer Abdullah RB 2 1 -3 0 -0.8% 39.0% 38.8% -1.0 6.1% 3.7% 12.5% -0.19 1 1 0 0.8 RB56
Sincere McCormick RB 2 2 11 0 -1.6% 24.4% 61.2% -2.0 6.1% 7.4% 20.0% 1.10 15 78 0 10.9 RB26

Raiders Notes From Week 14:

Playing in his third game as a pro, Sincere McCormick has already earned a 61% snap share and has averaged 5.2 yards per carry in his first two games of legitimate, volume-earning work. With Alexander Mattison and Zamir White out, McCormick has earned a big share of the Raiders’ backfield and has relegated Ameer Abdullah back to spell and passing-down duties.

#Raiders HC Antonio Pierce on whether Sincere McCormick is RB1 when Alexander Mattison returns:

“Yep. He’s deserved it. Last week, he was running his tail off. So, keep running it, keep pushing those numbers up, see if we can get him to 100.”

(reliability rating in comments)

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— The Coachspeak Index (@coachspeakindex.bsky.social) December 11, 2024 at 2:46 PM

With McCormick set to take on the Falcons, Jaguars, and Saints in the next three games, he could very well be a league-winning running back and that usually doesn’t pop on the scene this late into the season.

All of the Raiders’ opponents know that Brock Bowers is the guy they want to get the ball to at every opportunity, Week 14 was one of those weeks where he was just taken away, which explains why Michael Mayer had nine targets (7-68) and the Jakobi Meyers (7-67) train kept rolling.

Meyers is a perfectly cromulent WR3 option that will get you some spike weeks out of the WR position just because the depth behind Meyers is so painful.

 

Los Angeles Chargers

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Joshua Palmer WR 9 6 78 0 46.8% 94.4% 86.7% 14.9 32.1% 34.8% 26.5% 2.29 13.8 WR26
DJ Chark WR 1 1 9 0 1.4% 30.6% 25.0% 4.0 3.6% 4.3% 9.1% 0.82 1.9 WR73
Quentin Johnston WR 7 5 48 1 27.8% 83.3% 80.0% 11.4 25.0% 26.1% 23.3% 1.60 15.8 WR22
Derius Davis WR 3 2 1 0 6.3% 33.3% 36.7% 6.0 10.7% 13.0% 25.0% 0.08 1 0 0 2.1 WR72
Jalen Reagor WR 1 1 4 0 1.0% 36.1% 31.7% 3.0 3.6% 0.0% 7.7% 0.31 1.4 WR82
Will Dissly TE 2 2 19 0 1.0% 44.4% 40.0% 1.5 7.1% 8.7% 12.5% 1.19 3.9 TE28
Stone Smartt TE 3 3 54 0 15.0% 36.1% 36.7% 14.3 10.7% 13.0% 23.1% 4.15 8.4 TE15
Tucker Fisk TE 1 1 0 0 -0.3% 16.7% 35.0% -1.0 3.6% 0.0% 16.7% 0.00 1.0 TE47
Gus Edwards RB 27.8% 43.3% 10 36 1 9.6 RB27
Kimani Vidal RB 1 0 0 0 1.0% 47.2% 53.3% 3.0 3.6% 0.0% 5.9% 0.00 8 34 0 3.4 RB44
Hassan Haskins RB 2.8% 1.7% 0.0 RB62

Chargers Notes From Week 14:

With no “smiley boy” Ladd McConkey active for the Chargers, Joshua Palmer took a more increased role, especially downfield. It could have been a much better night, though.

Palmer still had a nice night with nine targets and a 9-78 line with Quentin Johnston chipping in with some volume and getting Justin Herbert’s lone touchdown pass on the night. Will Dissly hurt his shoulder on the first half’s final play and didn’t return. It looks like Stone Smartt will take more of the receiving role in the interim for the Chargers.

It’s worth noting that the Chargers are a team that loves to rotate several tight ends, including Tucker Fisk and Eric Tomlinson, who is still on the Chargers’ practice squad after some games of utilization this season. Both Fisk and Tomlinson are glorified offensive linemen, so Smartt does represent the best receiving option of any of the tight ends still on the roster.

Both Gus Edwards and Kimani Vidal were involved, with Edwards getting a slight 10-to-8 edge over Vidal, but Vidal taking a sizable snaps and routes edge. In this new, murky post-J.K. Dobbins Chargers backfield, it’s still a work in progress, though I’d stash Vidal for any upside and would feel not super great about starting Edwards as it would be very difficult to expect anything other than a touchdown’s worth of fantasy upside.

 

Los Angeles Rams

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Cooper Kupp WR 7 5 92 1 37.4% 75.0% 83.1% 13.8 25.0% 28.0% 33.3% 4.38 20.2 WR14
Puka Nacua WR 13 12 162 1 34.7% 92.9% 76.6% 6.9 46.4% 52.0% 50.0% 6.23 5 16 1 41.8 WR2
Demarcus Robinson WR 1 0 0 0 10.4% 71.4% 61.0% 27.0 3.6% 4.0% 5.0% 0.00 0.0 WR85
Tutu Atwell WR 3 3 45 0 13.6% 60.7% 45.5% 11.7 10.7% 12.0% 17.6% 2.65 7.5 WR48
Tyler Johnson WR 14.3% 20.8% 0.0 WR85
Colby Parkinson TE 1 1 11 0 1.9% 46.4% 48.1% 5.0 3.6% 0.0% 7.7% 0.85 2.1 TE39
Davis Allen TE 21.4% 28.6% 0.0 TE49
Hunter Long TE 1 0 0 0 0.8% 10.7% 23.4% 2.0 3.6% 4.0% 33.3% 0.00 6.0 TE22
Kyren Williams RB 2 2 10 0 1.2% 78.6% 83.1% 1.5 7.1% 0.0% 9.1% 0.45 29 87 2 23.7 RB6
Blake Corum RB 10.7% 16.9% 8 34 0 3.4 RB44

Rams Notes From Week 14:

This Rams’ passing game is literally two players: Puka Nacua and Cooper Kupp. Both receivers accounted for 71% of the team’s targets, 254 of Matthew Stafford’s 320 passing yards, and both receiving touchdowns. Nacua even had five rush attempts and a touchdown too, further proving his alpha status over Kupp, who had a really nice day himself.

No other Ram besides Tutu Atwell’s 3-45 had more than two targets or 11 receiving yards, to illustrate just how condensed this Rams offense is.

Speaking of the run, that was the theme here with 42 rushing attempts and Kyren Williams having 29 of them. 83% of snaps for Williams is such a monster role and even with Blake Corum seeing eight carries himself, Williams is still a locked-in starter and in no danger of losing his role. No matter how much people want that to happen.

 

Miami Dolphins

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Tyreek Hill WR 14 10 115 1 53.4% 97.9% 97.2% 9.9 31.1% 34.4% 29.8% 2.45 27.5 WR6
Jaylen Waddle WR 12 9 99 0 39.7% 85.4% 81.9% 8.6 26.7% 34.4% 29.3% 2.41 20.9 WR12
Malik Washington WR 1 0 0 0 7.3% 41.7% 41.7% 19.0 2.2% 3.1% 5.0% 0.00 0.0 WR85
Dee Eskridge WR 2.1% 5.6% 0.0 WR85
Odell Beckham Jr. WR 1 1 1 0 0.0% 18.8% 13.9% 0.0 2.2% 0.0% 11.1% 0.11 1.1 WR84
Jonnu Smith TE 4 3 44 1 2.8% 79.2% 63.9% 1.8 8.9% 9.4% 10.5% 1.16 13.4 TE7
Durham Smythe TE 1 0 0 0 1.5% 12.5% 19.4% 4.0 2.2% 0.0% 16.7% 0.00 0.0 TE49
Julian Hill TE 1 1 14 0 2.3% 27.1% 44.4% 6.0 2.2% 3.1% 7.7% 1.08 2.4 TE34
De’Von Achane RB 7 6 45 0 -4.3% 81.3% 83.3% -1.6 15.6% 15.6% 17.9% 1.15 14 24 1 18.9 RB13
Jaylen Wright RB 3 2 6 0 -3.1% 18.8% 19.4% -2.7 6.7% 0.0% 33.3% 0.67 2 7 0 3.3 RB46
Jeff Wilson Jr. RB 1 1 7 0 0.4% 6.3% 5.6% 1.0 2.2% 0.0% 33.3% 2.33 1 4 0 2.1 RB52
Alec Ingold FB 14.6% 23.6% 0.0 FB3

Dolphins Notes From Week 14:

The Miami Dolphins make have looked more “classic Miami Dolphins” in Week 14 than at any point this season. Of course, we mean the hyper-condensed offense at the top of the wide receiver pecking order, a clear third target, and then targets spread out amongst everybody else.

We got all that and then some with Tyreek Hill (10-115) and Jaylen Waddle (9-99) combining for 59% of targets (26-of-45 total targets) and Hill grabbing one of the two touchdowns. Jonnu Smith bailed out his fantasy managers who started him with a 3-44 line and a touchdown; all of which came in overtime.

De’Von Achane ran poorly and inefficiently (24 rushing yards on 14 attempts) but scored a touchdown on the ground and chipped in with six catches for 45 yards. He went into the blue tent in the second quarter with a possible concussion but returned to the game with his usual Guardian cap and still ended up with a massive 83% snaps despite getting checked out.

 

Minnesota Vikings

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Justin Jefferson WR 7 7 132 2 37.5% 100.0% 95.0% 16.4 28.0% 17.6% 20.0% 3.77 32.2 WR4
Jordan Addison WR 10 8 133 3 45.8% 85.7% 75.0% 14.0 40.0% 52.9% 33.3% 4.43 39.3 WR3
Jalen Nailor WR 54.3% 40.0% 0.0 WR85
Brandon Powell WR 11.4% 16.7% 0.0 WR85
Trent Sherfield Sr. WR 17.1% 16.7% 0.0 WR85
T.J. Hockenson TE 5 4 45 0 15.7% 82.9% 61.7% 9.6 20.0% 23.5% 17.2% 1.55 8.5 TE14
Johnny Mundt TE 5.7% 18.3% 0.0 TE49
Josh Oliver TE 1 1 26 0 2.0% 20.0% 50.0% 6.0 4.0% 0.0% 14.3% 3.71 3.6 TE30
Aaron Jones RB 2 2 11 0 -1.0% 40.0% 63.3% -1.5 8.0% 5.9% 14.3% 0.79 13 73 1 16.4 RB14
Cam Akers RB 22.9% 31.7% 5 37 0 3.7 RB42
C.J. Ham FB 17.1% 31.7% 0.0 FB3

Vikings Notes From Week 14:

There are condensed offenses and then there are the Minnesota Vikings, who thrived with five Sam Darnold passing touchdowns. Jordan Addison was the massive story with three of those touchdowns, plus a team-leading 10 targets and an 8-133 line on top of that. Don’t forget Planet Earth’s best wide receiver Justin Jefferson, who “only” had two touchdowns and a 7-132 line.

Only three other pass-catchers caught passes from Darnold in Week 14, with T.J. Hockenson chipping in on 83% routes. Not a lot left for anybody else when your top two wide receivers are combining for five touchdown grabs.

Aaron Jones’ solid role continues as he put up 84 total yards and squeezed in a late touchdown with under four minutes to go. Cam Akers saw some work late as well with the Vikings scoring the final 21 points after ending the third quarter deadlocked at 21 apiece.

 

New England Patriots

ON BYE IN WEEK 14

 

New Orleans Saints

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Cedrick Wilson Jr. WR 1 1 18 0 5.9% 30.6% 35.3% 18.0 3.3% 4.5% 9.1% 1.64 2.8 WR66
Marquez Valdes-Scantling WR 7 4 51 0 40.8% 86.1% 70.6% 17.9 23.3% 31.8% 22.6% 1.65 9.1 WR40
Kevin Austin Jr. WR 4 1 5 0 25.4% 69.4% 66.2% 19.5 13.3% 18.2% 16.0% 0.20 1.5 WR78
Dante Pettis WR 2 0 0 0 5.5% 33.3% 30.9% 8.5 6.7% 9.1% 16.7% 0.00 0.0 WR85
Juwan Johnson TE 5 4 50 1 14.0% 77.8% 72.1% 8.6 16.7% 22.7% 17.9% 1.79 15.0 TE3
Foster Moreau TE 2 2 40 0 6.2% 41.7% 72.1% 9.5 6.7% 9.1% 13.3% 2.67 6.0 TE22
Dallin Holker TE 1 1 10 0 -1.0% 8.3% 8.8% -3.0 3.3% 0.0% 33.3% 3.33 2.0 TE41
Alvin Kamara RB 5 5 35 0 1.3% 63.9% 72.1% 0.8 16.7% 4.5% 21.7% 1.52 17 44 0 12.9 RB21
Jamaal Williams RB 2 2 10 0 1.3% 5.6% 7.4% 2.0 6.7% 0.0% 100.0% 5.00 3 5 0 3.5 RB43
Kendre Miller RB 1 0 0 0 0.7% 16.7% 26.5% 2.0 3.3% 0.0% 16.7% 0.00 10 32 1 9.2 RB28
Adam Prentice FB 27.8% 38.2% 0.0 FB3

Saints Notes From Week 14:

While it may feel like water torture here or something I’m forced to scribe with guards watching my every move, I get to write about what is still one of the 32 member clubs of the National Football League (for now), the New Orleans Saints.

Unfortunately, they are very real. Alvin Kamara is very much a real NFL football player no matter what club he is on, as he continues to pile up fantasy production with 79 total yards and five receptions in a down game.

Back from his four-game banishment in former head coach Dennis Allen’s last gasp as Saints’ head coach, Kendre Miller looked solid and even scored a touchdown. How soon we forget the Week 18 Miller experience where he went 13 carries, 73 yards and a touchdown. With Kamara looking a little creaky, that could be on the menu in the next couple weeks.

Derek Carr may be lost for the remainder of the season due to a left hand (non-throwing) injury suffered while diving for first down late in their Week 14 win. That further downgrades a pass-catching group from deplorable to simply hopeless.

When Marquez ValdesScantling turns into your target-earning option, there’s questions. MVS, to his credit, ran more than just downfield routes and earned a team-high seven targets. Tight end Juwan Johnson caught Carr’s only touchdown throw of the day and that plus Miller’s touchdown was good enough to defeat our next team…

 

New York Giants

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Malik Nabers WR 9 5 79 0 31.9% 92.9% 93.6% 14.0 22.5% 31.0% 17.3% 1.52 14.9 WR25
Wan’Dale Robinson WR 9 4 38 0 22.4% 98.2% 98.7% 9.8 22.5% 27.6% 16.4% 0.69 7.8 WR47
Darius Slayton WR 6 2 27 0 24.6% 85.7% 84.6% 16.2 15.0% 17.2% 12.5% 0.56 4.7 WR57
Jalin Hyatt WR 2 0 0 0 7.9% 23.2% 23.1% 15.5 5.0% 3.4% 15.4% 0.00 0.0 WR85
Daniel Bellinger TE 5 5 45 0 6.6% 82.1% 78.2% 5.2 12.5% 10.3% 10.9% 0.98 9.5 TE12
Chris Manhertz TE 5.4% 19.2% 0.0 TE49
Greg Dulcich TE 1.8% 1.3% 0.0 TE49
Devin Singletary RB 16.1% 17.9% 2 8 0 0.8 RB56
Tyrone Tracy Jr. RB 9 5 38 0 6.6% 71.4% 83.3% 2.9 22.5% 10.3% 22.5% 0.95 16 45 1 19.3 RB11

Giants Notes From Week 14:

…yeah, it’s the New York Giants. Of all the talk about how bad the New Orleans Saints are, the Giants just might be worse. At least they have young offensive talent in Malik Nabers and Tyrone Tracy Jr., but the quarterback situation might be worse than the Saints.

Drew Lock started out 0-for-8 passing and ended the day with a -12.2% completion percentage over expectation (CPOE) and just 21 completions on 49 pass attempts. It was u-g-l-y, and Lock clearly has no alibi. With Lock now injured, the Giants turn to Tommy DeVito, but does it really matter?

Tracy (5-38), Nabers (5-79), and Wan’Dale Robinson (4-38) led the team with nine targets apiece and Daniel Bellinger took injured tight end Theo Johnson’s role as Bellinger is essentially a one-for-one Johnson replacement with 82% routes per dropback and a 5-45 line.

Tracy retains his massive role and should for the rest of the season, with just shy of 3.0 yards per carry. He at least buoyed the lack of efficiency on the ground with his receiving work and a rushing touchdown.

 

New York Jets

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Garrett Wilson WR 10 9 114 0 39.1% 100.0% 98.5% 10.4 26.3% 29.6% 23.3% 2.65 20.4 WR13
Xavier Gipson WR 2.3% 1.5% 0.0 WR85
Allen Lazard WR 1 1 18 0 6.0% 76.7% 77.9% 16.0 2.6% 3.7% 3.0% 0.55 2.8 WR66
Davante Adams WR 10 9 109 1 25.9% 95.3% 85.3% 6.9 26.3% 29.6% 24.4% 2.66 25.9 WR7
Tyler Conklin TE 4 3 33 0 9.8% 74.4% 79.4% 6.5 10.5% 14.8% 12.5% 1.03 6.3 TE20
Jeremy Ruckert TE 1 0 0 0 5.6% 25.6% 29.4% 15.0 2.6% 3.7% 9.1% 0.00 0.0 TE49
Kenny Yeboah TE 7.0% 17.6% 0.0 TE49
Braelon Allen RB 5 4 38 0 -0.4% 51.2% 54.4% -0.2 13.2% 14.8% 22.7% 1.73 11 43 0 12.1 RB23
Isaiah Davis RB 7 3 27 0 13.9% 46.5% 52.9% 5.3 18.4% 3.7% 35.0% 1.35 10 40 1 15.7 RB15
Kene Nwangwu RB 2.3% 1.5% 0.0 RB62

Jets Notes From Week 14:

Now to be outdone by the Dolphins in their condensed nature at the top of the wide receiver food chain were the New York Jets, who had 10 targets each from Garrett Wilson and Davante Adams for 53% of the targets with Adams scoring the Jets’ lone touchdown through the passing game. Besides the running backs, only Tyler Conklin (3-33) had more than one target.

Without Breece Hall active for the Jets, the backfield was about as even as it gets for rookies Braelon Allen and Isaiah Davis. With Davis active last week, I had said it was difficult to imagine a week if Hall was inactive that Allen didn’t split with Davis, and that’s exactly what happened.

Allen took one more carry (11-to-10) than Davis, but Davis had the rushing touchdown. Davis earned more targets (7) than Allen (5), but Allen caught more and had the better receiving day. Neither had a significant routes or snaps edge on each other, so all of that to say: start either as a low-end flex option if Hall remains out for Week 15.

 

Philadelphia Eagles

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
A.J. Brown WR 4 4 43 0 33.0% 96.3% 94.8% 8.0 22.2% 40.0% 15.4% 1.65 8.3 WR44
DeVonta Smith WR 5 4 37 1 35.1% 100.0% 89.7% 6.8 27.8% 40.0% 18.5% 1.37 13.7 WR27
Jahan Dotson WR 2 1 5 0 10.3% 63.0% 41.4% 5.0 11.1% 0.0% 11.8% 0.29 1.5 WR78
Johnny Wilson WR 1 0 0 0 9.3% 33.3% 50.0% 9.0 5.6% 0.0% 11.1% 0.00 0.0 WR85
Grant Calcaterra TE 3 3 16 1 12.4% 92.6% 91.4% 4.0 16.7% 10.0% 12.0% 0.64 10.6 TE9
E.J. Jenkins TE 3.7% 3.4% 0.0 TE49
C.J. Uzomah TE 7.4% 24.1% 0.0 TE49
Saquon Barkley RB 1 0 0 0 -3.1% 48.1% 75.9% -3.0 5.6% 10.0% 7.7% 0.00 20 124 0 14.4 RB17
Kenneth Gainwell RB 2 2 7 0 3.1% 33.3% 24.1% 1.5 11.1% 0.0% 22.2% 0.78 3 26 0 5.3 RB35

Eagles Notes From Week 14:

As it stands right now through 14 weeks of the NFL regular season, the Eagles have the lowest PROE in the league at -6.6%, ahead of teams like the Colts and Steelers. The Eagles will pass only when they have to, and they haven’t reached 30 or more pass attempts in a game since Week 4, just before their Week 5 bye. In fact, since Week 4, Jalen Hurts hasn’t had a game with 18 completions.

DeVonta Smith made his return to his awesome 100% route participation role, and led the Eagles in targets (5), co-led with A.J. Brown in receptions (4), and scored one of Hurts’ two touchdown passes.

In this condensed offense that now is without Dallas Goedert following his placement on IR, Grant Calcaterra will be running a ton of routes (93% in Week 14) for one of the most prolific offenses in the NFL and kicked off his starting gig with three receptions for 16 yards and a touchdown. It may not look like much, but that was still top ten amongst tight ends on the week.

For those who started Calcaterra, that was a great step, but he’s still lower on the totem pole than most streamers because of the lack of passing volume in the Eagles’ offense.

Ho hum, just another 124 rushing yards for Saquon Barkley. No touchdown, but still. He’s been awesome all season. There’s not much else to say about Barkley, the wire-to-wire league winner.

 

Pittsburgh Steelers

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Van Jefferson WR 1 1 10 1 6.2% 72.4% 73.8% 10.0 5.0% 0.0% 4.8% 0.48 8.0 WR46
Calvin Austin III WR 3 1 4 0 9.9% 51.7% 35.4% 5.3 15.0% 21.4% 20.0% 0.27 1.4 WR82
Scotty Miller WR 4 3 38 0 28.2% 44.8% 52.3% 11.3 20.0% 28.6% 30.8% 2.92 6.8 WR50
Ben Skowronek WR 27.6% 30.8% 0.0 WR85
Mike Williams WR 4 3 36 0 47.5% 44.8% 29.2% 19.0 20.0% 21.4% 30.8% 2.77 6.6 WR51
Pat Freiermuth TE 3 3 48 1 20.6% 72.4% 61.5% 11.0 15.0% 7.1% 14.3% 2.29 13.8 TE5
Darnell Washington TE 41.4% 58.5% 0.0 TE49
Connor Heyward TE 13.8% 16.9% 0.0 TE49
MyCole Pruitt TE 1 1 -1 0 -1.9% 17.2% 30.8% -3.0 5.0% 0.0% 20.0% -0.20 0.9 TE48
Najee Harris RB 20.7% 41.5% 16 53 1 11.3 RB24
Jaylen Warren RB 3 2 25 0 -7.5% 69.0% 52.3% -4.0 15.0% 14.3% 15.0% 1.25 9 47 0 9.2 RB28
Cordarrelle Patterson RB 1 1 -2 0 -3.1% 13.8% 13.8% -5.0 5.0% 7.1% 25.0% -0.50 4 3 0 -0.9 RB70

Steelers Notes From Week 14:

With no George Pickens as a surprise inactive in Week 14, the passing game minus him was about what you’d expect: 158 passing yards to mostly a bunch of depth receivers rotating in an out with no rhyme or reason. Pat Freiermuth led the team in receiving yards with 48 and caught a third-quarter touchdown to put the Steelers up 27-7 and comfortably ahead.

Freiermuth and Van Jefferson tied for the most routes on the team but still, that only amounted to 72%. Jefferson scored on his only target, which is apropos. Mike Williams only ran routes on 45% of Russell Wilson’s dropbacks for some reason.

Najee Harris wasn’t very efficient with a sub-4.0 yards per carry but scored a second-quarter touchdown from a yard out to put the Steelers in the lead for good. Jaylen Warren (72 total yards, 69% routes, 52% snaps – both routes/snaps ahead of Harris) was very much involved too and looked markedly better than Harris, but we know how this goes with ol’ Arthur Smith.

 

San Francisco 49ers

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Deebo Samuel Sr. WR 2 2 22 0 6.7% 86.7% 78.7% 9.0 8.0% 9.5% 7.7% 0.85 5 13 0 5.5 WR55
Jauan Jennings WR 8 7 90 2 32.0% 83.3% 73.8% 10.8 32.0% 33.3% 32.0% 3.60 28.0 WR5
Ricky Pearsall WR 2 1 5 0 12.2% 70.0% 49.2% 16.5 8.0% 9.5% 9.5% 0.24 1.5 WR78
Chris Conley WR 16.7% 24.6% 0.0 WR85
Jacob Cowing WR 1 0 0 0 9.2% 10.0% 4.9% 25.0 4.0% 4.8% 33.3% 0.00 0.0 WR85
George Kittle TE 6 6 151 0 17.8% 76.7% 85.2% 8.0 24.0% 28.6% 26.1% 6.57 21.1 TE1
Eric Saubert TE 1 1 4 0 1.5% 16.7% 27.9% 4.0 4.0% 0.0% 20.0% 0.80 1.4 TE44
Isaac Guerendo RB 2 2 50 0 9.2% 56.7% 55.7% 12.5 8.0% 4.8% 11.8% 2.94 15 78 2 26.8 RB2
Patrick Taylor Jr. RB 1 0 0 0 0.0% 16.7% 32.8% 0.0 4.0% 4.8% 20.0% 0.00 7 25 1 8.5 RB30
Ke’Shawn Vaughn RB 3.3% 4.9% 2 4 0 0.4 RB59
Kyle Juszczyk FB 2 1 3 0 11.5% 33.3% 50.8% 15.5 8.0% 4.8% 20.0% 0.30 1.3 FB2

49ers Notes From Week 14:

Did people jump too hastily on the “the 49ers are dead” bandwagon? Well, it’s my civic duty to announce that that proclamation may be a bit too premature. No game further illustrates that point than in Week 14 against the Chicago football Bears, who couldn’t look more puzzled and frazzled (and I hate to use that word) against the 49ers’ defense and when trying to defend Jauan Jennings and George Kittle.

Jennings and Kittle may be the last two remnants of solid, usable fantasy pass-catchers out of this team, but they’re crushing it right now. Especially Kittle, who put up a massive 151-yard game from the tight end position. Jennings caught two touchdowns and 7-of-8 targets for 90 yards.

Sure, the 49ers may be on their RB4, RB5, and RB6 heading into Week 15’s game tonight against the Rams. Sure, Deebo Samuel might actually be a useless cadaver of a fantasy asset right now, but they seem to find a way to look good when they need to. Samuel has averaged 4.7 fantasy points in the last four weeks and less than three receptions for 21 yards in that same stretch. It’s not great!

Back to the running game, where Isaac Guerendo looked excellent but now has a foot injury which has him questionable for Week 15. If he can’t go, it’s going to be a combination of Patrick Taylor Jr., Ke’Shawn Vaughn and Israel Abanikanda toting the rock for the 49ers. Just like we drew it up, of course.

I’d be starting Taylor if I was incredibly hard up for a running back just because he gets a solid role even if Guerendo is active. I just don’t know how much fantasy ceiling a player like Taylor has where he’s destined for a PPR-centric role ala Justice Hill, just without the snap share.

 

Seattle Seahawks

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
DK Metcalf WR 6 4 49 0 36.6% 86.7% 79.4% 10.2 20.7% 31.6% 23.1% 1.88 8.9 WR41
Tyler Lockett WR 1 0 0 0 13.1% 90.0% 66.7% 22.0 3.4% 5.3% 3.7% 0.00 0.0 WR85
Jaxon Smith-Njigba WR 5 5 82 1 35.2% 96.7% 96.8% 11.8 17.2% 21.1% 17.2% 2.83 1 4 0 19.6 WR17
Jake Bobo WR 16.7% 27.0% 0.0 WR85
Noah Fant TE 4 3 18 0 21.0% 73.3% 58.7% 8.8 13.8% 21.1% 18.2% 0.82 4.8 TE26
Pharaoh Brown TE 2 1 6 0 4.2% 10.0% 25.4% 3.5 6.9% 0.0% 66.7% 2.00 1.6 TE42
AJ Barner TE 1 1 13 0 -1.2% 16.7% 38.1% -2.0 3.4% 0.0% 20.0% 2.60 2.3 TE38
Zach Charbonnet RB 7 7 59 0 -8.4% 63.3% 79.4% -2.0 24.1% 15.8% 36.8% 3.11 22 134 2 38.3 RB1
Kenny McIntosh RB 2 2 7 0 0.6% 23.3% 23.8% 0.5 6.9% 5.3% 28.6% 1.00 7 38 0 6.5 RB33
George Holani RB 1 1 -1 0 -1.2% 6.7% 3.2% -2.0 3.4% 0.0% 50.0% -0.50 0.9 RB55

Seahawks Notes From Week 14:

The Seahawks’ offense was led by Zach Charbonnet, who thrived without Kenneth Walker III, out with a calf and ankle injury. Charbonnet took a robust 79% snaps and turned that into 193 total yards and two touchdowns. He was the engine, but the passing game had its moments with some Geno Smith volume.

Charbonnet actually led the Seahawks in targets as well with a 7-59 line in what can on be described as a vintage Saquon Barkley on the Giants-style game where his volume role manifested in both rushing AND receiving.

Jaxon Smith-Njigba was the only real fantasy play amongst the receivers and tight ends as he grabbed Smith’s only passing touchdown on the day. JSN could have had another where Smith-Njigba caught a ball over the middle but had to slow up and catch it low which curbed his momentum, because that would have been an 80-yard touchdown.

DK Metcalf was present and accounted for but didn’t really contribute a ton and speaking of not contributing a ton, Tyler Lockett was held without a reception in a game for the first time since Week 13 of 2019. All good things must come to an end, as Lockett has looked more like a real estate agent than a productive NFL football player in 2024.

 

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Mike Evans WR 5 4 69 0 28.0% 82.9% 82.3% 13.4 19.2% 20.0% 17.2% 2.38 10.9 WR35
Jalen McMillan WR 7 4 59 2 27.2% 82.9% 79.0% 9.3 26.9% 26.7% 24.1% 2.03 21.9 WR9
Trey Palmer WR 14.3% 11.3% 0.0 WR85
Rakim Jarrett WR 17.1% 16.1% 0.0 WR85
Sterling Shepard WR 6 4 63 0 23.3% 65.7% 48.4% 9.3 23.1% 20.0% 26.1% 2.74 10.3 WR37
Cade Otton TE 4 3 70 0 20.6% 82.9% 96.8% 12.3 15.4% 20.0% 13.8% 2.41 10.0 TE11
Payne Durham TE 20.0% 40.3% 0.0 TE49
Rachaad White RB 2 2 19 1 0.4% 57.1% 75.8% 0.5 7.7% 6.7% 10.0% 0.95 17 90 1 24.9 RB3
Bucky Irving RB 1 1 15 0 -1.3% 14.3% 16.1% -3.0 3.8% 6.7% 20.0% 3.00 4 3 0 2.8 RB51
Sean Tucker RB 1 0 0 0 1.7% 20.0% 17.7% 4.0 3.8% 0.0% 14.3% 0.00 3 47 0 4.7 RB39

Buccaneers Notes From Week 14:

Jalen McMillan was a late-Day 2 pick for the Buccaneers and in Week 1, he caught a touchdown and ran 88% of routes per drop back. It was supposed to be a solid ramp-up, but then McMillan got hurt throughout the middle of the season and had a two-game stretch where he earned 15 targets in two games. McMillan got hurt again and couldn’t get much of a foothold in the offense until after their Week 11 bye.

Over the last two weeks, McMillan has run 85% of routes per drop back and Week 14 was McMillan’s best game of the season by far with 4-59 and two touchdowns, so hopefully this can be some momentum building for next season with Chris Godwin a free agent in 2025 and no clue if the Bucs bring him back after he dislocated his ankle which ended his 2024 season.

The rest of the Buccaneers’ receivers were fine with Mike Evans (4-69) and Sterling Shepard (4-63) grabbing the rest of the volume, plus Cade Otton (3-70) chipping in a bit more than he has in recent weeks.

With Bucky Irving pretty banged up and having to leave the game in the first half with his back and hip injury, the game was pretty much all Rachaad White’s and he didn’t disappoint with 109 total yards and two touchdowns on 76% snaps. Sean Tucker saw some action too and peeled off a nice 34-yard run to show his ability as well.

If Irving remains out or at least limited as he didn’t practice on Wednesday, White should be upgraded big time for the fantasy playoffs with Tucker getting some work in as well.

 

Tennessee Titans

Name Pos Targets Rec. Rec. Yards TD Air Yards % Route % Snap % aDOT Target Share % First Read Target % TPRR YPRR Rush Att. Rush Yds. Rush TD PPR FPTS PPR Finish
Calvin Ridley WR 11 7 59 0 39.9% 91.2% 82.8% 6.1 37.9% 57.1% 35.5% 1.90 12.9 WR33
Tyler Boyd WR 3 1 7 0 27.3% 73.5% 59.4% 15.3 10.3% 4.8% 12.0% 0.28 1.7 WR74
Nick Westbrook-Ikhine WR 2 1 19 0 19.6% 91.2% 93.8% 16.5 6.9% 9.5% 6.5% 0.61 2.9 WR65
Bryce Oliver WR 1 1 16 0 5.4% 5.9% 9.4% 9.0 3.4% 4.8% 50.0% 8.00 2.6 WR69
Chig Okonkwo TE 4 3 8 0 11.4% 67.6% 71.9% 4.8 13.8% 9.5% 17.4% 0.35 3.8 TE29
Josh Whyle TE 2 2 31 0 1.2% 14.7% 7.8% 1.0 6.9% 4.8% 40.0% 6.20 5.1 TE25
Nick Vannett TE 2 1 4 0 3.6% 29.4% 43.8% 3.0 6.9% 0.0% 20.0% 0.40 1.4 TE44
David Martin-Robinson TE 5.9% 7.8% 0.0 TE49
Tony Pollard RB 2 2 22 0 -4.2% 41.2% 62.5% -3.5 6.9% 4.8% 14.3% 1.57 21 102 0 14.4 RB17
Tyjae Spears RB 2 1 2 0 -4.2% 47.1% 37.5% -3.5 6.9% 4.8% 12.5% 0.13 6 21 0 3.3 RB46
Julius Chestnut RB 5.9% 3.1% 0.0 RB62

Titans Notes From Week 14:

It WAS a great matchup for the Tennessee Titans this week against a generationally BAD Jacksonville Jaguars pass defense that featured a defense that is:

  • dead last in EPA per pass attempt
  • second-to-last in defensive DVOA
  • allows the second-most fantasy points per game to quarterbacks

But in typical Titans fashion, they stink in the passing game and couldn’t capitalize. Sure, the brutal, sack on Will Levis by Josh Hines-Allen that had a ton of body weight directly on his shoulder may have had a lasting effect on Levis for the second half

The passing game was essentially Calvin Ridley’s 7-59 on a team-leading 11 targets and the jinxing I did earlier in the week on Nick Westbrook-Ikhine where I made a pie bet with co-host Keith Flemming and led me to NOT get a pie to the face this week. #thankful

Westbrook-Ikhine did get a chance at touchdown redemption late in the game on a back-corner fade, but the defender broke up the pass. Besides Ridley, no other receiver had over three catches or 31 yards receiving, so you can’t be serious if you’re trying to install one of these other Titans’ pass-catchers into a fantasy playoffs lineup.

Tony Pollard on the other hand, remains excellent and should have had a touchdown on his ledger besides his 124 total yards from scrimmage, but his four-yard touchdown was called back on a holding penalty. The Titans had six plays from inside the four-yard line on that drive and turned the ball over on downs. The Titans didn’t deserve to score a touchdown and 100% deserved to lose to the Jaguars.

 

Washington Commanders

ON BYE IN WEEK 14

 

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