Tag: fantasy

  • Fantasy Baseball Offseason Tracker: Andres Gimenez dealt to Blue Jays while Jake Burger goes to the Rangers

    The biggest free agent domino has fallen. Juan Soto is off the market with a record-setting 15-year, $765 million deal with the Mets. Not to be deterred, the Yankees then awarded an eight-year $218 million contract to Max Fried, the biggest ever guaranteed deal for a left-handed pitcher. Both moves came on the heels of the Giants’ seven-year, $182 million deal with shortstop Willy Adames.

    That’s right, the Hot Stove is in full swing, and Chris Towers and I are here to guide you through the transactions of actual consequence for Fantasy Baseball. This is the place where we’ll react to them as they happen, breaking down what they mean for 2025 drafts.

    So bookmark this page and keep checking back. As the news comes in, you’ll be glad you have one stop for keeping track of it all

    Jake Burger traded to Rangers

    Burger brings plenty of power, but that’s about it. It wasn’t a problem when he played for the White Sox and Marlins, who were desperate to fill out their lineup with anything worthwhile, but the threshold for playing time is much higher with the Rangers. Perhaps he’s insurance for another Josh Jung injury at third base. Perhaps he’s a platoon partner for Nathaniel Lowe at first. Perhaps he’s a part-time DH for those days when Leody Taveras’ bat just isn’t cutting it in center field. More likely, Burger is all of the above, but whether that’ll amount to full-time at-bats is hard to say as of now. So while the lineup and venue improve for Burger, I’m inclined to downgrade him somewhat due to the uncertainty of the role, dropping him behind names like Paul Goldschmidt and Ryan Mountcastle at first base and Nolan Arenado and Josh Jung at third. –Scott White

    Andres Gimenez to Blue Jays, Spencer Horwitz to Pirates in three-team deal

    This one is technically more of a flip since all three of the Pirates’ contributions to the deal (Luis Ortiz, Josh Hartle and Michael Kennedy) are going to the Guardians, but since Horwitz didn’t even have time to pack his bags, I’ll call it a three-team deal. The most Fantasy-relevant player on the move is Gimenez. His arrival in Toronto is a little disappointing for Will Wagner, Davis Schneider and Orelvis Martinez, all interesting players who might have pushed Horwitz for playing time but won’t overtake Gimenez. Horwitz himself would seem to be the big winner, presuming the Pirates give him full run at first base (he was stretched at second, and the Pirates have ample alternatives there). The 27-year-old is a bat-control specialist who showed surprising power as a rookie and could approach 20 homers with a .280 or so batting average if given ample runway.

    As for Gimenez, his value doesn’t change much. There may be a slight park downgrade, though not enough to change his power output meaningfully. He’s my No. 14 second baseman in 5×5 scoring and No. 15 in points. One sneaky aspect of this deal is that the Guardians seem to think Travis Bazzana, the No. 1 overall pick in this past year’s draft, is close to major league-ready. By flipping Horwitz, they’ve left themselves without an obvious starter at second base, and while it probably won’t be Bazzana to start out, there’s a good chance it will be by season’s end. –Scott White

    Nathan Eovaldi signs with Rangers

    We already have a pretty good idea how things will play out for Eovaldi in Texas seeing as he spent the past two years there. It was, in fact, the best two-year stretch of his career, which is why he was rewarded with a three-year, $75 million deal. He remains a hard-thrower at age 34, and that ample velocity, while driving his success, can be difficult to sustain over the full major-league calendar, which makes for a bumpy ride at times. So there will be stretches when Eovaldi looks better than his mid-to-high-threes ERA and stretches when he looks worse, but the end result will be respectable ratios with a quality win total because of how deep he works into games when healthy. I rank Eovaldi just inside my top 60 pitchers for 2025. –Scott White

    Max Fried signs with Yankees

    Having just lost Juan Soto to the crosstown rival Mets, the Yankees pivoted in a big way Tuesday, agreeing to an eight-year, $218 million contract with former Braves ace Max Fried. It’s the largest ever guaranteed contract for a left-handed pitcher, and on the surface anyway, it’s a nice fit. But here’s where I point out that this free agent deal, like every other free agent deal, is pending a physical, and while normally that’s a matter of crossing t’s and dotting i’s, I can’t shake the feeling that there might be a hiccup in Fried’s case. For the complete lowdown, check out my full-length article. –Scott White

    Yimi Garcia signs with Blue Jays

    This signing matters for Fantasy only because the Blue Jays are lacking a tried-and-true closer after non-tendering Jordan Romano (who has since signed with the Phillies). You may remember Garcia got the first chance to fill-in as closer when Romano was sidelined by injury last season and fared well enough in the role, but then the Blue Jays dealt him to Seattle, where he developed his own elbow troubles. Healthy now, Garcia could claim the closer role from Chad Green, who spent longer in it last season but also had a curiously low strikeout rate, or the Blue Jays could opt to bring in someone more established still. It’s an evolving situation, but if nothing else, we can say Garcia has landed in a spot where he has a chance for saves. –Scott White

    Thairo Estrada signs with Rockies

    The Rockies had an opening at second base after non-tendering Brendan Rodgers and will fill it with Estrada on a one-year, $3.25 million deal. The modest terms would suggest he’s merely a bridge to prospect Adael Amador eventually claiming the role. Amador was rushed to the majors as a 21-year-old and showed he wasn’t ready, but if he were to make big strides this year, Estrada doesn’t represent much of a roadblock.

    The 28-year-old was a useful Fantasy option in 2022 and 2023, contributing a little bit of pop with some speed — a poor man’s Tommy Edman, you might say — but he fell off hard last season while contending with a bum wrist. Coors Field makes for a cushy environment to rebuild his value, and fittingly, he’s hit .348 (32 for 92) with four home runs in 24 career games there. He’ll still likely be drafted outside the top 20 second baseman but has sleeper appeal in Rotisserie league especially. –Scott White

    The battle for the ninth inning in Philadelphia feels a bit less wide open after this signing, but Romano is obviously no sure bet coming off a season ruined by elbow injuries. There’s a reason the Blue Jays, who intend to compete in 2025, non-tendered him with club control left. When Romano is right, he’s a fringe-elite closer, with a three-year stretch from 2021 through 2023 where he posted a 2.37 ERA and 30.3% strikeout rate – a stretch that included consecutive 36-save seasons. The big question here is whether Romano can truly be “right” coming off a season where he dealt with elbow pain from Spring Training right up until he had surgery on the elbow in August. 

    He should open spring as the favorite for saves in Philadelphia, and that can be a very good spot to be in if you are looking to rack up saves. But if Romano isn’t himself, Orion Kerkering, Jose Alvarado, and possibly Matt Strahm are there to step up as possible alternatives. I think the likeliest outcomes are, either Romano is healthy and is the closer for as long as he is right, or he struggles pretty early and this whole bullpen is the same kind of muddled mess it was for much of last season. That makes Romano a viable option for saves in the middle rounds of drafts, but I’d be wary of investing much more than that into him given how poorly 2024 went for the soon-to-be 32-year-old. –Chris Towers

    The comp doesn’t work perfectly. Cobb was never as good as Jack Flaherty at their respective peaks, and he is nearly a decade older than Flaherty was when he signed with the Tigers last offseason. But you can see the appeal for a veteran like Cobb, who is trying to rebuild his value after a mostly lost 2024 season that saw him deal with hip, shoulder, and finger injuries. Tigers pitching coach Chris Fetter has received a lot of praise in recent seasons for the work he has done with the likes of Flaherty and, obviously, Tarik Skubal, and they’ll hope to help Cobb find success on a one-year deal.

    Now, the thing here is, Cobb has actually been quite good when he’s been able to stay on the mound in recent years, posting a 3.75 ERA over his past four seasons. The Tigers have been very good at coaxing more velocity out of their arms in recent years, and that wouldn’t be a bad thing for Cobb, whose velocity was down a tick when he was able to get on the mound in 2024. It’s also a great ballpark for any pitcher to call home, which should help Cobb continue to limit damage on balls in play. He isn’t a star, or anything, but if the early-season schedule looks favorable, Cobb could be an interesting late-round flier for 2025. –Chris Towers

    Treinen had just one save for the Dodgers during the regular season, but he was their most trusted reliever during the postseason, taking on a high-leverage role that netted him three saves. Presumably, they’re bringing him back to fill that role, which would make him the early favorite for saves in Los Angeles. We should know by now, though, that manager Dave Roberts doesn’t adhere to bullpen conventions and will mix in a fair amount of Michael Kopech and Evan Phillips as well, but notably, Treinen has the most closing experience of the three. He had 38 saves to go along with a 0.78 ERA, 0.83 WHIP and 11.2 K/9 for the Athletics in 2018, and over his final 30 appearances this past season, he had 1.24 ERA, 0.85 WHIP and 9.9 K/9. I’ll be ranking him just outside of my top 15 relievers for 2025 since there’s some uncertainty surrounding his role, but clearly, he has the upside for more. –Scott White

    Juan Soto signs with Mets

    The Mets finally landed the big fish they’ve been angling for in free agency, as Juan Soto has agreed to sign a record-breaking contract that will keep him in Queens until 2039. Soto’s deal will pay him $765 million over the next 15 seasons, besting the total value of Shohei Ohtani’s contract from a year ago by $65 million. But does it really matter where Soto is playing when considering his Fantasy value? To find out, check out my full-length article on the signing, which also addresses the impact on the rest of the Mets lineup and the free agent market as a whole. –Chris Towers

    Conforto’s 2024 stat line may not look particularly impressive, but it was his best since the 2019-20 stretch that made him one of the most highly regarded outfielders in Fantasy. Even more notable is what happened under the hood. His .479 xSLG was just as good as those peak seasons as his average (90.2 mph) and max (113.6 mph) exit velocities jumped to 68th and 90th percentile, respectively. A quick look at the splits will tell you Oracle Park wasn’t doing him any favors. Away from there, he hit .253 with and .852 OPS and 17 of his 20 home runs overall. The Dodgers certainly took notice, and judging by the data, there’s a chance he goes the Teoscar Hernandez and J.D. Martinez route of blowing away expectations on a one-year deal. The Dodgers’ recent with such signings is all the more incentive for me to mark Conforto as a sleeper, ranking him just outside of my top 50 outfielders. –Scott White

    Willy Adames signs with Giants

    I had already positioned myself as an Adames skeptic for next year, ranking him 10th at shortstop after he just placed fifth there, and this signing only fortifies my position. Oracle Park isn’t quite the neutralizer it once was, but it still rates as the third-worst home run venue for right-handed hitters over the past three years while American Family Field rates as the sixth-best. On the other hand, Adames has batted .321 (18 for 56) with an .827 OPS in 16 career games in San Francisco, and Statcast estimates that he would have hit 31 home runs playing every game there last year vs. the 32 he actually hit. So maybe it won’t be so bad?

    The issue is in using Adames’ 2024 as a basis for comparison when it was almost certainly his best-case outcome. His exit velocities, strikeout rate and batted-ball angles were all in line with career norms, and yet his batting average (.251) was his highest in three years, his home runs (32) were his most ever, and he also stole 21 bases when he had never reached even double digits before. It also probably goes without saying that he won’t have a combined 205 runs and RBI as the most feared hitter in a mediocre Giants lineup. So if this signing makes you skeptical of a repeat performance, that’s probably for the best. You already should have been. –Scott White

    Seems like the Orioles are moving in their left field fence just in time. O’Neill just had a resurgent season with the Red Sox in part because he made a concerted effort to pull the ball in the air more — a fine strategy for a right-handed hitter at Fenway Park but one that would have brought such a player to ruin at Camden Yards the past couple years. Fortunately, the reported changes to the left field fence there should make it a more neutral environment for right-handed hitters, and notably, O’Neill’s career season (2021) came in St. Louis, which is also a challenging place for right-handers to hit it out.

    Perhaps, then, the more significant variable for O’Neill than venue is his own health. Cutting a muscular figure, the 29-year-old has been particularly susceptible to strains, playing just 65 percent of his team’s games the past four years, and even when healthy, his limited bat control (he struck out a career worst 33.6 percent last year) has made for unpredictable outcomes. He has the upside of top-20 outfielder, but the concerns piled on top of concerns drop him to 36th in my outfield rankings. –Scott White

    After three years as the Yankees on-again, off-again closer, Holmes is switching not just leagues but also roles, getting a shot as a starter on a three-year, $38 million deal. The role isn’t totally foreign to him, seeing as he spent much of his minor-league career as a starter, and in the years since, he’s developed a more trustworthy arsenal and stable enough command to attempt this move back. While his sinkerball approach may have been ill-suited for closing, leaving him too vulnerable to hits in high-leverage moments, it’s likely to minimize damage over extended stretches. For all the tense moments as a closer, the ERA was always good, after all. This signing raises Holmes’ Fantasy appeal in the hopes he can follow in the footsteps of successful relievers-turned-starters like Michael King, Reynaldo Lopez and Bowden Francis, and interest should be especially high in Head-to-Head points leagues, where he figures to be one of the top 15 relievers drafted. –Scott White 

    It’s a one-year pact with a player option for a second just in base Bieber’s recovery from Tommy John surgery goes poorly. His entire future in Fantasy of course hinges on that recovery. You’ll remember the former Cy Young winner seemed to be on the verge of regaining ace standing after an offseason spent working with Driveline Baseball, regaining the bite on his slider and dominating through two starts. But then his elbow began barking, and well, you know the rest. The earliest we can hope to see Bieber is June 2025, which means he’ll only be worth stashing in leagues with ample IL stash. Which version of Bieber shows up then is anybody’s guess, but it’s encouraging that the organization that knows him best opted to re-up with him. –Scott White 

    After playing with two AL East teams in the same game last season, Jansen continues his tour around the division by joining the Rays, where he will likely be the starting catcher. That didn’t go quite so well for either Toronto or Boston in 2024, as Jansen struggled through one of his worst seasons ever, hitting just .205/.309/.349, so the Rays are surely hoping for a bounce-back on this one-year deal. Jansen makes a lot of contact and has a decent eye at the plate, but his quality of contact has been in a freefall in his late 20s, with his expected wOBA on contact dropping from .408 in 2022 to .291 last season. If he can rediscover some of the pop he has last in recent years, he could be a decent No. 2 catcher, especially with the Rays making a move to what we think will be a hitter-friendly home at George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa this season. Jansen is a viable, low-end No. 2 catcher for deeper formats, but shouldn’t be viewed as a priority, even in 15-team leagues. –Chris Towers

    Luis Severino signs with the Athletics

    The A’s made a surprising splash in free agency with their three-year contract with Severino for $67 million, the largest guaranteed contract in franchise history. It’s a less-than-ideal landing spot for Severino’s Fantasy value in 2025, unfortunately, as the A’s still figure to be a pretty middling team (at best) in 2025 and are moving from a pitcher friendly park to one that may play at least a bit closer to average. That would be a downgrade for Severino, after he spent a year rebuilding his value in a very pitcher-friendly park with the Mets. 

    To his credit, Severino did a great job rebuilding that value with the Mets, and he did so by showing a lot more flexibility as a pitcher than ever before. At his best, Severino didn’t really need much of a gameplan, as he just pumped four-seamers and sliders past hitters, throwing those two pitches 85-90% of the time. In 2024, he introduced a sweeper and greatly increased his sinker usage, giving him six pitches he threw at least 7% of the time. The Mets have become a very good pitching development organization, and Severino benefited from his time with them. The likeliest outcome here is that Severino isn’t much more than a rotation filler for Fantasy, but if he can stay healthy, he’ll have moments of usefulness. And, if the strikeout rate jump he tapped into in the second half of the season (26.2%) sticks, maybe he can even be a bit more than that. But he probably doesn’t need to be much more than a late-rounder in drafts, and even that might be overstating it if he has a poor early schedule. –Chris Towers

    About four months away from the start of the season, it’s nearly impossible to say what the Red Sox plans for the back end of the bullpen are, but Chapman surely figures to be part of them now. Their returning saves leader is a tie between Justin Slaten and Josh Winckowski, who all had two each last season, while their most experienced in-house closer option is Liam Hendriks, who has pitched just five innings since 2022 after recovering from leukemia and then Tommy John surgery. Chapman is no longer the lights-out closer he was at his best, but the soon-to-be 37-year-old still strikes out nearly 40% of opposing batters (despite losing a tick or two off fastball last season) and can get the job done on a one-year deal. At this point, it makes sense to treat him like the favorite for the ninth inning in Boston in 2025, at least until we see what Hendriks looks like in the spring – for what it’s worth, Hendricks’ fastball velocity was down 2-3 mph in his brief minor-league rehab assignment toward the end of last season, which doesn’t bode well. –Chris Towers

    Another retread-gone-right, Boyd is earned a two-year deal with the Cubs after a successful eight-start run with the Guardians in 2024. Boyd posted a 2.72 ERA in his return from Tommy John surgery last season, with underlying peripherals that mostly backed it up – thanks, in large part, to a strong 27.7% strikeout rate. Boyd’s velocity was mostly back up to pre-injury levels, though that still makes him a soft-tosser at this point, so his success will be based on his effective his slider/changeup combo can be. Both pitches were excellent in 2024, but the underlying pitch characteristics don’t necessarily back up what he accomplished, with most pitch modeling metrics suggesting Boyd was a below-average pitcher in 2024. A year further removed from surgery, maybe Boyd can take another step forward and find success with a pretty clear path to a rotation spot for the Cubs, but he doesn’t have to be much more than a late-round, bench-spot flier even in deeper leagues. –Chris Towers

    The Mets have a rotation to rebuild, and the first step was adding a pitcher coming off a down year split between the Reds and Brewers. Or maybe calling it a “down year” is soft-pedaling given that it was Montas’ first back from surgery to the labrum in his right shoulder. His velocity was basically up to snuff, though, and he did see his K/9 rate jump from 7.5 in his 19 starts with the Reds to 11.0 in his 11 starts with the Brewers. Even prior to the 2023 shoulder surgery, his career was defined by inconsistency due to the on-again, off-again nature of his splitter. The Mets fared well with reclamation projects like Sean Manaea and Luis Severino last season and have agreed to pay Montas $34 million over the next two, so they clearly see something they like. We shouldn’t rule out a bounce-back season, particularly since the cost in Fantasy will be so low. –Scott White 

    To the surprise of no one, the Dodgers have landed the first marquee free agent of the offseason, agreeing to a five-year $182 million deal with Blake Snell Tuesday. It’s a big commitment for what’s been the model organization the past few years and may go a long way toward allaying fears about Snell’s irregularities. While he’s put together a  2.82 ERA, 1.16 WHIP and 12.0 K/9 over the past three seasons, much has been made about the way he came about those numbers. For more, check out my full-length article breaking down the signing. –Scott White 

    The three-year, $63 million deal is a modest one for a pitcher who seemed to have real momentum heading into the offseason, having just put together a 2.70 ERA, 0.93 WHIP and 11.4 K/9 in his 10 starts for the Astros. The improved performance coincided with Kikuchi roughly doubling his slider usage, and his 2025 destination matters less for his Fantasy value than whether or not he sticks to that approach.

    He has always missed bats at a good rate but has gotten inconsistent results due to questionable pitch selection and a penchant for hard contact. Going to the Angels gives him a lower margin for error than if he had gone to a true contender and also does nothing to soften his vulnerability to the long ball, but again, his success is tied more to continuing his slider-heavy approach. And for that, we’ll just have to wait and see. I cautiously rank him just inside my top 50 starting pitchers for 2025, but he has the upside for more. –Scott White

    Unfortunately, this trade is close to a worse-case scenario for the two major players involved. India goes from the most favorable park for home runs — i.e., one of the few where his fringy power plays — to one of the least favorable. According to Statcast, his 63 career home runs would be 42 if he played every game  at Kauffman Stadium. Obviously, the reverse move is bad for Singer, a pitcher who’s on the more pitch-to-contact side of the ledger, but since he generally puts the ball on the ground, maybe it’s not as bad. Then again, he has a career 3.92 ERA at home in Kauffman Stadium compared to a 4.74 ERA everywhere else.

    Neither India nor Singer figured to be a hot commodity prior to this trade, and both might go undrafted now in shallower leagues. India is a little more useful in points leagues because of his on-base skills, and both he and Singer at least stand to be high-volume plays. India’s removal does free up some of the Reds’ infield logjam with Matt McLain expected back, penciling in Noelvi Marte at third base again. –Scott White

    Rather than test the free agent market, Martinez accepted the Reds’ qualifying offer of $21.05 million, which isn’t altogether surprising given that it now represents roughly 40 percent of his career MLB earnings. That the Reds extended the offer is telling. They had a front-row seat to the 34-year-old’s career season and bought in hard at an amount that virtually guarantees he’ll be a full-time starter rather than reverting to a swingman role.

    Perhaps, then, we should take Martinez just as seriously. He’s always had a killer changeup, and he became a strike-thrower of the highest order in 2024, boasting the third-best walk rate among pitchers with at least 100 innings. His home run prevention was probably too good to be true, particularly for pitching half his games in Cincinnati, but he won’t be priced for another 3.10 ERA. More likely, he’ll be sort of a poor man’s Jose Berrios or Zach Eflin, good for piling up innings with a low WHIP, and he takes on added value in Head-to-Head points leagues due to his relief pitcher eligibility.  –Scott White

    Finally freed of his catching tandem with Sean Murphy, d’Arnaud was quick to put himself in another one, this time with up-and-comer Logan O’Hoppe. It’s frustrating for a couple reasons, one being that O’Hoppe loses some of the volume that made him so attractive for Fantasy, likely going from a 75 percent workload share to 60 percent or less, and the other being that d’Arnaud himself could have pursued a full-time role. Instead, d’Arnaud figures to remain a fringe second catcher for two-catcher leagues, and while O’Hoppe doesn’t necessarily slide down the rankings — he was already regarded as a low-end No. 1 — his upside takes a hit. Maybe his .196 batting average in the second half is evidence he was overworked, but even if it improves, his counting stats will be capped.

    Meanwhile, Murphy has a golden opportunity to reestablish himself in Atlanta after bombing for the past season-and-a-half there. Injuries have likely contributed to his struggles, as has irregular playing time due to the presence of d’Arnaud, but he’ll need to prove himself quickly to hold off prospect Drake Baldwin. –Scott White

    Only three months after acquiring him from the Giants, the Braves flipped Soler to the Angels in what was essentially a salary dump. They ended up non-tendering the player they got back in the deal, Griffin Canning. You might think Soler’s departure reflects well on Ronald Acuna’s recovery from a torn ACL, but GM Alex Anthopoulos later confessed that the star outfielder likely won’t be ready for the start of 2025. As for Soler, he has an easy claim to the Angels’ DH spot and will play in a pretty nice venue, particularly for home runs, but his success has never depended on such factors. He’s a mercurial performer coming off a down season but still has the 35-homer upside to pay off handsomely as a fourth or fifth outfielder. –Scott White

  • Fantasy Baseball Offseason Tracker: Willy Adames worse off with Giants; Mets will try Clay Holmes as starter

    The biggest free agent domino has fallen. Juan Soto is of the market with a record-setting 15-year, $765 million deal with the Mets. This comes on the heels of the Giants’ seven-year, $182 million deal with shortstop Willy Adames during what was an eventful weekend heading into the Winter Meetings.

    That’s right, the Hot Stove is heating up, and Chris Towers and I are here to guide you through the transactions of actual consequence for Fantasy Baseball. This is the place where we’ll react to them as they happen, breaking down what they mean for 2025 drafts.

    So bookmark this page and keep checking back. As the news comes in, you’ll be glad you have one stop for keeping track of it all.

    Treinen had just one save for the Dodgers during the regular season, but he was their most trusted reliever during the postseason, taking on a high-leverage role that netted him three saves. Presumably, they’re bringing him back to fill that role, which would make him the early favorite for saves in Los Angeles. We should know by now, though, that manager Dave Roberts doesn’t adhere to bullpen conventions and will mix in a fair amount of Michael Kopech and Evan Phillips as well, but notably, Treinen has the most closing experience of the three. He had 38 saves to go along with a 0.78 ERA, 0.83 WHIP and 11.2 K/9 for the Athletics in 2018, and over his final 30 appearances this past season, he had 1.24 ERA, 0.85 WHIP and 9.9 K/9. I’ll be ranking him just outside of my top 15 relievers for 2025 since there’s some uncertainty surrounding his role, but clearly, he has the upside for more. –Scott White

    Juan Soto signs with Mets

    The Mets finally landed the big fish they’ve been angling for in free agency, as Juan Soto has agreed to sign a record-breaking contract that will keep him in Queens until 2039. Soto’s deal will pay him $765 million over the next 15 seasons, besting the total value of Shohei Ohtani’s contract from a year ago by $65 million. But does it really matter where Soto is playing when considering his Fantasy value? To find out, check out my full-length article on the signing, which also addresses the impact on the rest of the Mets lineup and the free agent market as a whole. –Chris Towers

    Conforto’s 2024 stat line may not look particularly impressive, but it was his best since the 2019-20 stretch that made him one of the most highly regarded outfielders in Fantasy. Even more notable is what happened under the hood. His .479 xSLG was just as good as those peak seasons as his average (90.2 mph) and max (113.6 mph) exit velocities jumped to 68th and 90th percentile, respectively. A quick look at the splits will tell you Oracle Park wasn’t doing him any favors. Away from there, he hit .253 with and .852 OPS and 17 of his 20 home runs overall. The Dodgers certainly took notice, and judging by the data, there’s a chance he goes the Teoscar Hernandez and J.D. Martinez route of blowing away expectations on a one-year deal. The Dodgers’ recent with such signings is all the more incentive for me to mark Conforto as a sleeper, ranking him just outside of my top 50 outfielders. –Scott White

    Willy Adames signs with Giants

    I had already positioned myself as an Adames skeptic for next year, ranking him 10th at shortstop after he just placed fifth there, and this signing only fortifies my position. Oracle Park isn’t quite the neutralizer it once was, but it still rates as the third-worst home run venue for right-handed hitters over the past three years while American Family Field rates as the sixth-best. On the other hand, Adames has batted .321 (18 for 56) with an .827 OPS in 16 career games in San Francisco, and Statcast estimates that he would have hit 31 home runs playing every game there last year vs. the 32 he actually hit. So maybe it won’t be so bad?

    The issue is in using Adames’ 2024 as a basis for comparison when it was almost certainly his best-case outcome. His exit velocities, strikeout rate and batted-ball angles were all in line with career norms, and yet his batting average (.251) was his highest in three years, his home runs (32) were his most ever, and he also stole 21 bases when he had never reached even double digits before. It also probably goes without saying that he won’t have a combined 205 runs and RBI as the most feared hitter in a mediocre Giants lineup. So if this signing makes you skeptical of a repeat performance, that’s probably for the best. You already should have been. –Scott White

    Seems like the Orioles are moving in their left field fence just in time. O’Neill just had a resurgent season with the Red Sox in part because he made a concerted effort to pull the ball in the air more — a fine strategy for a right-handed hitter at Fenway Park but one that would have brought such a player to ruin at Camden Yards the past couple years. Fortunately, the reported changes to the left field fence there should make it a more neutral environment for right-handed hitters, and notably, O’Neill’s career season (2021) came in St. Louis, which is also a challenging place for right-handers to hit it out.

    Perhaps, then, the more significant variable for O’Neill than venue is his own health. Cutting a muscular figure, the 29-year-old has been particularly susceptible to strains, playing just 65 percent of his team’s games the past four years, and even when healthy, his limited bat control (he struck out a career worst 33.6 percent last year) has made for unpredictable outcomes. He has the upside of top-20 outfielder, but the concerns piled on top of concerns drop him to 36th in my outfield rankings. –Scott White

    After three years as the Yankees on-again, off-again closer, Holmes is switching not just leagues but also roles, getting a shot as a starter on a three-year, $38 million deal. The role isn’t totally foreign to him, seeing as he spent much of his minor-league career as a starter, and in the years since, he’s developed a more trustworthy arsenal and stable enough command to attempt this move back. While his sinkerball approach may have been ill-suited for closing, leaving him too vulnerable to hits in high-leverage moments, it’s likely to minimize damage over extended stretches. For all the tense moments as a closer, the ERA was always good, after all. This signing raises Holmes’ Fantasy appeal in the hopes he can follow in the footsteps of successful relievers-turned-starters like Michael King, Reynaldo Lopez and Bowden Francis, and interest should be especially high in Head-to-Head points leagues, where he figures to be one of the top 15 relievers drafted. –Scott White 

    It’s a one-year pact with a player option for a second just in base Bieber’s recovery from Tommy John surgery goes poorly. His entire future in Fantasy of course hinges on that recovery. You’ll remember the former Cy Young winner seemed to be on the verge of regaining ace standing after an offseason spent working with Driveline Baseball, regaining the bite on his slider and dominating through two starts. But then his elbow began barking, and well, you know the rest. The earliest we can hope to see Bieber is June 2025, which means he’ll only be worth stashing in leagues with ample IL stash. Which version of Bieber shows up then is anybody’s guess, but it’s encouraging that the organization that knows him best opted to re-up with him. –Scott White 

    After playing with two AL East teams in the same game last season, Jansen continues his tour around the division by joining the Rays, where he will likely be the starting catcher. That didn’t go quite so well for either Toronto or Boston in 2024, as Jansen struggled through one of his worst seasons ever, hitting just .205/.309/.349, so the Rays are surely hoping for a bounce-back on this one-year deal. Jansen makes a lot of contact and has a decent eye at the plate, but his quality of contact has been in a freefall in his late 20s, with his expected wOBA on contact dropping from .408 in 2022 to .291 last season. If he can rediscover some of the pop he has last in recent years, he could be a decent No. 2 catcher, especially with the Rays making a move to what we think will be a hitter-friendly home at George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa this season. Jansen is a viable, low-end No. 2 catcher for deeper formats, but shouldn’t be viewed as a priority, even in 15-team leagues. –Chris Towers

    Luis Severino signs with the Athletics

    The A’s made a surprising splash in free agency with their three-year contract with Severino for $67 million, the largest guaranteed contract in franchise history. It’s a less-than-ideal landing spot for Severino’s Fantasy value in 2025, unfortunately, as the A’s still figure to be a pretty middling team (at best) in 2025 and are moving from a pitcher friendly park to one that may play at least a bit closer to average. That would be a downgrade for Severino, after he spent a year rebuilding his value in a very pitcher-friendly park with the Mets. 

    To his credit, Severino did a great job rebuilding that value with the Mets, and he did so by showing a lot more flexibility as a pitcher than ever before. At his best, Severino didn’t really need much of a gameplan, as he just pumped four-seamers and sliders past hitters, throwing those two pitches 85-90% of the time. In 2024, he introduced a sweeper and greatly increased his sinker usage, giving him six pitches he threw at least 7% of the time. The Mets have become a very good pitching development organization, and Severino benefited from his time with them. The likeliest outcome here is that Severino isn’t much more than a rotation filler for Fantasy, but if he can stay healthy, he’ll have moments of usefulness. And, if the strikeout rate jump he tapped into in the second half of the season (26.2%) sticks, maybe he can even be a bit more than that. But he probably doesn’t need to be much more than a late-rounder in drafts, and even that might be overstating it if he has a poor early schedule. –Chris Towers

    About four months away from the start of the season, it’s nearly impossible to say what the Red Sox plans for the back end of the bullpen are, but Chapman surely figures to be part of them now. Their returning saves leader is a tie between Justin Slaten and Josh Winckowski, who all had two each last season, while their most experienced in-house closer option is Liam Hendriks, who has pitched just five innings since 2022 after recovering from leukemia and then Tommy John surgery. Chapman is no longer the lights-out closer he was at his best, but the soon-to-be 37-year-old still strikes out nearly 40% of opposing batters (despite losing a tick or two off fastball last season) and can get the job done on a one-year deal. At this point, it makes sense to treat him like the favorite for the ninth inning in Boston in 2025, at least until we see what Hendriks looks like in the spring – for what it’s worth, Hendricks’ fastball velocity was down 2-3 mph in his brief minor-league rehab assignment toward the end of last season, which doesn’t bode well. –Chris Towers

    Another retread-gone-right, Boyd is earned a two-year deal with the Cubs after a successful eight-start run with the Guardians in 2024. Boyd posted a 2.72 ERA in his return from Tommy John surgery last season, with underlying peripherals that mostly backed it up – thanks, in large part, to a strong 27.7% strikeout rate. Boyd’s velocity was mostly back up to pre-injury levels, though that still makes him a soft-tosser at this point, so his success will be based on his effective his slider/changeup combo can be. Both pitches were excellent in 2024, but the underlying pitch characteristics don’t necessarily back up what he accomplished, with most pitch modeling metrics suggesting Boyd was a below-average pitcher in 2024. A year further removed from surgery, maybe Boyd can take another step forward and find success with a pretty clear path to a rotation spot for the Cubs, but he doesn’t have to be much more than a late-round, bench-spot flier even in deeper leagues. –Chris Towers

    The Mets have a rotation to rebuild, and the first step was adding a pitcher coming off a down year split between the Reds and Brewers. Or maybe calling it a “down year” is soft-pedaling given that it was Montas’ first back from surgery to the labrum in his right shoulder. His velocity was basically up to snuff, though, and he did see his K/9 rate jump from 7.5 in his 19 starts with the Reds to 11.0 in his 11 starts with the Brewers. Even prior to the 2023 shoulder surgery, his career was defined by inconsistency due to the on-again, off-again nature of his splitter. The Mets fared well with reclamation projects like Sean Manaea and Luis Severino last season and have agreed to pay Montas $34 million over the next two, so they clearly see something they like. We shouldn’t rule out a bounce-back season, particularly since the cost in Fantasy will be so low. –Scott White 

    To the surprise of no one, the Dodgers have landed the first marquee free agent of the offseason, agreeing to a five-year $182 million deal with Blake Snell Tuesday. It’s a big commitment for what’s been the model organization the past few years and may go a long way toward allaying fears about Snell’s irregularities. While he’s put together a  2.82 ERA, 1.16 WHIP and 12.0 K/9 over the past three seasons, much has been made about the way he came about those numbers. For more, check out my full-length article breaking down the signing. –Scott White 

    The three-year, $63 million deal is a modest one for a pitcher who seemed to have real momentum heading into the offseason, having just put together a 2.70 ERA, 0.93 WHIP and 11.4 K/9 in his 10 starts for the Astros. The improved performance coincided with Kikuchi roughly doubling his slider usage, and his 2025 destination matters less for his Fantasy value than whether or not he sticks to that approach.

    He has always missed bats at a good rate but has gotten inconsistent results due to questionable pitch selection and a penchant for hard contact. Going to the Angels gives him a lower margin for error than if he had gone to a true contender and also does nothing to soften his vulnerability to the long ball, but again, his success is tied more to continuing his slider-heavy approach. And for that, we’ll just have to wait and see. I cautiously rank him just inside my top 50 starting pitchers for 2025, but he has the upside for more. –Scott White

    Unfortunately, this trade is close to a worse-case scenario for the two major players involved. India goes from the most favorable park for home runs — i.e., one of the few where his fringy power plays — to one of the least favorable. According to Statcast, his 63 career home runs would be 42 if he played every game  at Kauffman Stadium. Obviously, the reverse move is bad for Singer, a pitcher who’s on the more pitch-to-contact side of the ledger, but since he generally puts the ball on the ground, maybe it’s not as bad. Then again, he has a career 3.92 ERA at home in Kauffman Stadium compared to a 4.74 ERA everywhere else.

    Neither India nor Singer figured to be a hot commodity prior to this trade, and both might go undrafted now in shallower leagues. India is a little more useful in points leagues because of his on-base skills, and both he and Singer at least stand to be high-volume plays. India’s removal does free up some of the Reds’ infield logjam with Matt McLain expected back, penciling in Noelvi Marte at third base again. –Scott White

    Rather than test the free agent market, Martinez accepted the Reds’ qualifying offer of $21.05 million, which isn’t altogether surprising given that it now represents roughly 40 percent of his career MLB earnings. That the Reds extended the offer is telling. They had a front-row seat to the 34-year-old’s career season and bought in hard at an amount that virtually guarantees he’ll be a full-time starter rather than reverting to a swingman role.

    Perhaps, then, we should take Martinez just as seriously. He’s always had a killer changeup, and he became a strike-thrower of the highest order in 2024, boasting the third-best walk rate among pitchers with at least 100 innings. His home run prevention was probably too good to be true, particularly for pitching half his games in Cincinnati, but he won’t be priced for another 3.10 ERA. More likely, he’ll be sort of a poor man’s Jose Berrios or Zach Eflin, good for piling up innings with a low WHIP, and he takes on added value in Head-to-Head points leagues due to his relief pitcher eligibility.  –Scott White

    Finally freed of his catching tandem with Sean Murphy, d’Arnaud was quick to put himself in another one, this time with up-and-comer Logan O’Hoppe. It’s frustrating for a couple reasons, one being that O’Hoppe loses some of the volume that made him so attractive for Fantasy, likely going from a 75 percent workload share to 60 percent or less, and the other being that d’Arnaud himself could have pursued a full-time role. Instead, d’Arnaud figures to remain a fringe second catcher for two-catcher leagues, and while O’Hoppe doesn’t necessarily slide down the rankings — he was already regarded as a low-end No. 1 — his upside takes a hit. Maybe his .196 batting average in the second half is evidence he was overworked, but even if it improves, his counting stats will be capped.

    Meanwhile, Murphy has a golden opportunity to reestablish himself in Atlanta after bombing for the past season-and-a-half there. Injuries have likely contributed to his struggles, as has irregular playing time due to the presence of d’Arnaud, but he’ll need to prove himself quickly to hold off prospect Drake Baldwin. –Scott White

    Only three months after acquiring him from the Giants, the Braves flipped Soler to the Angels in what was essentially a salary dump. They ended up non-tendering the player they got back in the deal, Griffin Canning. You might think Soler’s departure reflects well on Ronald Acuna’s recovery from a torn ACL, but GM Alex Anthopoulos later confessed that the star outfielder likely won’t be ready for the start of 2025. As for Soler, he has an easy claim to the Angels’ DH spot and will play in a pretty nice venue, particularly for home runs, but his success has never depended on such factors. He’s a mercurial performer coming off a down season but still has the 35-homer upside to pay off handsomely as a fourth or fifth outfielder. –Scott White

  • NFL Week 14 picks, schedule, odds, injuries, fantasy tips

    The Week 14 NFL schedule for the 2024 season is stacked with great matchups, and we have you covered with what you need to know heading into the weekend.

    Our NFL Nation reporters bring us the biggest keys to every game, and analytics writer Seth Walder makes a bold prediction for each matchup. The ESPN Research team provides a big stat to know and a betting nugget for each contest, while our Football Power Index (FPI) goes inside the numbers with a game projection and a look at the playoff picture. Fantasy analyst Eric Moody finds fantasy football X factors, and three analysts — Kalyn Kahler, Moody and Walder — give us final score picks for every game. Everything you want to know is here in one spot to help you get ready for a loaded weekend of NFL football.

    Let’s get into the full Week 14 slate, including an NFC West battle between the Seahawks and Cardinals and Kirk Cousins’ return to Minnesota. It all ends with a “Monday Night Football” matchup between the Bengals and Cowboys on ESPN. (Game times are Sunday unless otherwise noted.)

    Jump to a matchup:
    CLE-PIT | NYJ-MIA | ATL-MIN
    NO-NYG | CAR-PHI | JAX-TEN
    LV-TB | SEA-ARI | BUF-LAR
    CHI-SF | LAC-KC | CIN-DAL

    Thursday: DET 34, GB 31
    Bye: BAL, DEN, HOU, IND, NE, WSH

    1 p.m. ET | CBS | ESPN BET: PIT -6.5 (43.5 O/U)

    Browns storyline to watch: Browns defensive end Myles Garrett single-handedly wrecked the Steelers’ plans on offense in the team’s Week 12 matchup, a Browns win. Garrett recorded three first-half sacks and a forced fumble, which earned him Player of the Week honors. Pittsburgh is sure to have a better plan to limit Garrett, who is looking for a bounce-back game after registering a season-low pressure rate of 3.8% in the Browns’ Week 13 loss to the Broncos. — Daniel Oyefusi

    Steelers storyline to watch: The Steelers lead the league with 25 takeaways, including three in their first matchup against Cleveland. In that game, though, the Steelers managed only seven points off those takeaways. In his five games as the Browns’ starting quarterback, Jameis Winston has thrown 10 touchdowns to seven interceptions. The key to the Steelers avenging their Week 12 loss is capitalizing on those turnovers with more points. — Brooke Pryor

    Stat to know: Cleveland hasn’t swept the regular-season series with Pittsburgh since 1988 and is looking to win three straight meetings for the first time since a seven-game run from 1986 to 1989.

    Bold prediction: Steelers defensive tackle Keeanu Benton will record his first sack of the season. Benton’s 12% pass rush win rate at defensive tackle ranks ninth at the position. The fact he has zero sacks thus far is fluky. — Walder

    What’s at stake: The Steelers have pretty much locked up a spot in the playoffs, with a 99.3% chance to make the postseason. But they have a 71% chance at winning the AFC North, with the Ravens lurking at 29%. Read more.

    Injuries: Browns | Steelers

    Fantasy X factor: Steelers wide receiver George Pickens. Pickens has been on fire, scoring 16-plus fantasy points in four of his past six games while averaging 7.6 targets. His rapport with quarterback Russell Wilson has been a catalyst for this statistical production, and now he faces a Browns defense allowing the ninth-most fantasy points per game to receivers. See Week 14 rankings. — Moody

    Betting nugget: The Browns are 8-4-1 against the spread (ATS) as at least four-point underdogs under coach Kevin Stefanski. Read more.

    Kahler’s pick: Steelers 24, Browns 20
    Moody’s pick: Steelers 24, Browns 10
    Walder’s pick: Steelers 23, Browns 14
    FPI prediction: PIT, 59.4% (by an average of 3.6 points)

    Matchup must-reads: Jeudy’s Denver return ‘a lot of boos … catches’ … Steelers OLB Highsmith expected back Sunday … Browns perform noodle game celebration vs. Broncos


    1 p.m. ET | CBS | ESPN BET: TEN -3.5 (39.5 O/U)

    Jaguars storyline to watch: With Trevor Lawrence on injured reserve (concussion/shoulder), quarterback Mac Jones now begins a five-game audition for a chance to compete for a potential starting job in 2025. It’s going to be tough: The Titans have the league’s top-ranked pass defense (allowing 171.8 yards per game). Jones struggled in his two starts this season, leading the Jaguars to a combined 13 points and 313 yards. — Michael DiRocco

    Titans storyline to watch: The Titans’ run defense was gashed for 264 yards by the Commanders last week. It will be critical for Tennessee to bounce back against the Jaguars, who will be without Lawrence. “We’ve got to get back to stopping the run, populate the line of scrimmage and properly fit out gaps,” defensive coordinator Dennard Wilson said. “We can’t allow what happened last week to happen again. It’s time for us to bow up and show what we really can do against the run game.” — Turron Davenport

    Stat to know: The Jaguars have nine straight road losses dating to last season, which is the longest active streak in the NFL.

    Bold prediction: Titans kicker Nick Folk will go 4-for-4 on field goals, including two from 50-plus yards. He has quietly turned into one of the very best kickers in the NFL and is 11-of-12 from 50-plus yards the past two seasons. — Walder

    What’s at stake: The Jaguars and Titans are both among the seven teams with the best odds at the No. 1 pick in the 2025 NFL draft, per ESPN’s FPI. Jacksonville is in third, currently holding a 20.7% chance at the top selection. Read more.

    Injuries: Jaguars | Titans

    Fantasy X factor: Titans wide receiver Calvin Ridley. Last week, the revenge game narrative worked out for Browns receiver Jerry Jeudy (40.5 fantasy points against the Broncos). Now, Ridley faces his former team, the Jaguars, who allow the third-most fantasy points per game to wide receivers. He has seen eight or more targets in five of his past eight games. See Week 14 rankings. — Moody

    Betting nugget: The Jaguars are 5-1 ATS in their past six games. Jones is 3-14 ATS in his past 17 starts. Read more.

    Kahler’s pick: Titans 24, Jaguars 14
    Moody’s pick: Titans 28, Jaguars 14
    Walder’s pick: Jaguars 19, Titans 16
    FPI prediction: TEN, 58.8% (by an average of 3.4 points)

    Matchup must-reads: Why the Jaguars placed QB Lawrence on injured reserve … WR Burks to miss rest of season with knee injury

    play

    0:29

    Why Tyler Fulghum likes the under in Titans-Jaguars

    Tyler Fulghum explains why he likes the under in the Titans-Jaguars matchup.


    1 p.m. ET | CBS | ESPN BET: MIA -5.5 (44.5 O/U)

    Jets storyline to watch: Aaron Rodgers & Co. still are looking for their first 30-point game. The last time the Jets went this far into the season without scoring 30 in a game was in 2020, when they finished 2-14 with no 30-point games. But history says it won’t happen this week. The offense has scored only three touchdowns in the past six trips to Miami. The Jets’ last 30-point performance in Miami was in 2014, which also was their last win in South Florida. — Rich Cimini

    Dolphins storyline to watch: After last week’s loss to the Packers, the Dolphins probably need to win out to keep their remote playoff hopes alive. Luckily for them, quarterback Tua Tagovailoa has never lost to the Jets. The Dolphins’ lone loss to New York since 2020 came in 2022 when Tagovailoa was injured. Sunday’s game could also be a bounce-back opportunity for a Miami run game that has averaged 63.3 yards per game over the past four weeks. The Jets’ defense has allowed more than 107.3 rushing yards per game in that same span. — Marcel Louis-Jacques

    Stat to know: Rodgers now has 34 consecutive starts with fewer than 300 passing yards. No other quarterback has an active streak of at least 20 starts.

    Bold prediction: A Dolphins wide receiver will catch a 40-plus-yard touchdown on a go route or deep fade. Miami has the lowest rate of throws of 20-plus air yards in the league this year, but the Jets run the single-high coverage 64% of the time (third most). The Dolphins could take a shot or two downfield against a struggling Sauce Gardner. — Walder

    What’s at stake: The Dolphins’ chances at the playoffs will increase to 13.8% with a win and drop to 2.3% with a loss (independent of other results), per ESPN Analytics. The Jets would be eliminated from the playoffs with a loss. Read more.

    Injuries: Jets | Dolphins

    Fantasy X factor: Tagovailoa. The Jets’ defense has struggled, allowing 24-plus fantasy points to four quarterbacks since Week 6. Tagovailoa has scored 23-plus fantasy points in three straight games. He has the supporting cast and an offensive-minded head coach in Mike McDaniel to take full advantage of this matchup. See Week 14 rankings. — Moody

    Betting nugget: The Jets are 0-3 ATS as underdogs this season and 2-9 ATS in their past 11 games as underdogs. Read more.

    Kahler’s pick: Dolphins 28, Jets 17
    Moody’s pick: Dolphins 24, Jets 20
    Walder’s pick: Dolphins 24, Jets 20
    FPI prediction: MIA, 57.2% (by an average of 2.5 points)

    Matchup must-reads: Rodgers: Hope to finish well, but not out to prove anything … Cold weather affected Dolphins, LB Brooks says


    1 p.m. ET | FOX | ESPN BET: MIN -6 (45.5 O/U)

    Falcons storyline to watch: Quarterback Kirk Cousins is coming off perhaps the worst three-game stretch of his 13-year career going into a road game against his former team. The pressure is certainly on given the Falcons’ three-game losing streak has cost them their once-commanding NFC South lead. Cousins has six interceptions in the past three games, and the Vikings lead the league in the category (18). — Marc Raimondi

    Vikings storyline to watch: Quarterback Sam Darnold’s past three games have been his best of the season, with a combined 811 yards, seven total touchdowns and no interceptions. His performance will be on center stage Sunday as he is playing at a notably higher level than his predecessor, Cousins, and with a $10 million contract that is a fraction of the Falcons QB’s deal. Coach Kevin O’Connell says Darnold is playing with “almost a surgical level of ‘doing my job’ and not trying to do too much, but also knowing that ‘my job might be to try to put a ball in a tight window here and there.’” — Kevin Seifert

    Stat to know: Cousins is the first quarterback with zero passing touchdowns and six interceptions in a six-game span since Cleveland’s Brian Hoyer in 2014.

    play

    0:36

    Why Tyler Fulgham is buying the underdog Falcons this week

    Tyler Fulgham explains why he likes the Falcons plus the points vs. the Vikings.

    Bold prediction: Darnold will throw for 300 yards and won’t be sacked. Minnesota has a major advantage in the trenches on offense as it ranks fifth in pass block win rate (68.1%). The Falcons rank 29th in pass rush win rate (32.9%). — Walder

    What’s at stake: According to ESPN Analytics, the Falcons have the highest chance at the NFC’s fourth seed (30%), and the Vikings have the highest chance at the fifth seed (49%). Read more.

    Injuries: Falcons | Vikings

    Fantasy X factor: Vikings wide receiver Justin Jefferson. Darnold faces a Falcons defense allowing the eighth-most fantasy points to quarterbacks, which directly benefits Jefferson, who’s averaging 8.3 targets per game. Atlanta also gives up the third-most receptions to receivers. Expect a big day from Jefferson and Jordan Addison. See Week 14 rankings. — Moody

    Betting nugget: The Falcons are 1-5 ATS against teams with winning records this season (0-4 ATS in the past four). Read more.

    Kahler’s pick: Vikings 24, Falcons 21
    Moody’s pick: Vikings 38, Falcons 27
    Walder’s pick: Vikings 27, Falcons 26
    FPI prediction: MIN, 62.8% (by an average of 4.6 points)

    Matchup must-reads: What QB Cousins, Falcons need to do to regain playoff form … NFC North: Will Lions, Vikings or Packers win the division? … How new QB Jones affects Vikings, Darnold, McCarthy


    1 p.m. ET | FOX | ESPN BET: NO -4 (40.5 O/U)

    Saints storyline to watch: With Taysom Hill out for the season (torn ACL), the Saints are now without three offensive players who were responsible for 11 touchdowns: Hill, RB Rashid Shaheed (knee) and WR Chris Olave (concussion). That means they’ll likely continue to lean on receivers Marquez Valdes-Scantling and Kevin Austin Jr., two players the team has leaned on in the past three games under interim coach Darren Rizzi. The Saints are getting healthier in other ways, though, with running back Kendre Miller and wide receiver Bub Means returning to practice. — Katherine Terrell

    Giants storyline to watch: The Giants are trying to snap a seven-game skid and will do so with Drew Lock starting at quarterback. Coach Brian Daboll said he’s going with Lock because he did some good things against the Cowboys on Thanksgiving, and they want to see what he can do with a full week of preparation. He’ll get a chance against New Orleans’ defense, which ranks 29th in passing yards per game (249.1). — Jordan Raanan

    Stat to know: Saints quarterback Derek Carr has a 6-0 touchdown-to-interception ratio since returning in Week 9 from an oblique injury. That’s the most passing touchdowns without an interception by any quarterback in that span.

    Bold prediction: Giants running back Tyrone Tracy Jr. will average at least 5 yards per carry. This should be doable considering the Saints have the 31st-ranked run defense by EPA (minus-14.68). — Walder

    What’s at stake: As it stands, the Giants have a 31% chance to earn the No. 1 draft pick in 2025, which is the highest by any team in the league, per ESPN Analytics. That figure will jump to 42% with a loss to the Saints and would fall to 10% with a win. Read more.

    Injuries: Saints | Giants

    Fantasy X factor: Saints tight end Juwan Johnson. New Orleans is running low on receiving playmakers. Last week, against the Rams, Johnson caught 5 of 7 targets for 36 yards. While the matchup against the Giants is difficult for tight ends, the targets should still be there. Johnson could be a solid pickup this week for managers scrambling for options in deeper formats. See Week 14 rankings. — Moody

    Betting nugget: Over the past three seasons, the Saints are 7-15 ATS as favorites. They are 0-1 outright in that role this season. Read more.

    Kahler’s pick: Saints 28, Giants 16
    Moody’s pick: Saints 27, Giants 20
    Walder’s pick: Saints 22, Giants 16
    FPI prediction: NO, 64.5% (by an average of 5.5 points)

    Matchup must-reads: Torn ACL ends Saints TE Hill’s season … Giants’ Nabers on ‘drops’ comments, up-and-down rookie year


    1 p.m. ET | FOX | ESPN BET: PHI -13 (45.5 O/U)

    Panthers storyline to watch: The Eagles have NFL rushing leader Saquon Barkley, who is averaging 124.9 yards per game. The Panthers are allowing a league-worst 160.1 rushing yards per game, including 236 yards last week against Tampa Bay. That’s pretty much all you need to know, aside from the fact that Panthers quarterback Bryce Young is playing well, passing for 263-plus yards in each of the past two games. He has not had an interception in three straight games. — David Newton

    Eagles storyline to watch: Philadelphia’s defense has been playing at an elite clip since its Week 5 bye. The Eagles are first in points allowed (13.4 per game), yards per play (4.1), sacks (30) and forced fumbles (15) from Week 6 on. They’ll face a Carolina offense that ranks 30th in both yards (292) and points per game (18.1). — Tim McManus

    Stat to know: With a loss, Young would be the fourth quarterback since 2000 to lose 20 of his first 25 career starts, joining Blaine Gabbert (2011-13), Justin Fields (2021-22) and Trevor Lawrence (2021-22), who all started 5-20.

    Bold prediction: Eagles linebacker Zack Baun will record 12-plus combined tackles. The Panthers have run the ball well lately, and I think they’re going to rely on the ground game because their receivers will struggle to get open against the Eagles’ secondary. Baun is recording a tackle on 17% of plays. — Walder

    What’s at stake: The Panthers will be eliminated from playoff contention with a loss, marking their seventh straight season without a playoff appearance (the longest drought in franchise history). Read more.

    Injuries: Panthers | Eagles

    Fantasy X factor: Eagles wide receiver A.J. Brown. Barkley is set to dominate because the Panthers give up the most fantasy points to running backs. But don’t forget about Brown, who is in a great spot against Carolina cornerback Jaycee Horn. With the success DeAndre Hopkins and Mike Evans had against Horn recently, Brown has the potential to be a top receiver this week. See Week 14 rankings. — Moody

    Betting nugget: Both teams enter this game on four-game cover streaks, which are tied for the longest active streak in the NFL. Read more.

    Kahler’s pick: Eagles 28, Panthers 24
    Moody’s pick: Eagles 28, Panthers 16
    Walder’s pick: Eagles 23, Panthers 10
    FPI prediction: PHI, 85.7% (by an average of 16.1 points)

    Matchup must-reads: Bucs’ Mayfield thinks Panthers’ Young can ‘do anything he wants’ … Secret of the Eagles’ 2024 success? Defense has done a 180

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    0:38

    Why Tyler Fulghum is laying the points with the Eagles

    Tyler Fulghum details why he expects the Eagles to win big vs. the Panthers.


    1 p.m. ET | CBS | ESPN BET: TB -6.5 (46.5 O/U)

    Raiders storyline to watch: Can Raiders rookie tight end Brock Bowers continue his record ascent against the NFL’s No. 30 pass defense (258.3 yards allowed per game)? Bowers, who has 27 catches and two touchdowns in his past three games combined, needs only three receptions against the Buccaneers to surpass Sam LaPorta’s year-old record for most catches by a rookie tight end in a single season. LaPorta caught 86 passes for the Lions in 2023. — Paul Gutierrez

    Buccaneers storyline to watch: The Bucs are 2-0 since their bye week. A win combined with a Falcons loss would move them into sole possession of first place in the NFC South. Over the past two weeks, the Bucs have averaged 196.5 yards on the ground — fourth best in the league. But star rookie running back Bucky Irving is dealing with a hip pointer, and the Raiders are decent against the run (11th in the league, giving up 114.75 yards per game). — Jenna Laine

    Stat to know: The Buccaneers had their third overtime game in 2024 against the Panthers last week (26-23 win). One more OT matchup would set a franchise record for a single season.

    Bold prediction: Raiders defensive tackle Adam Butler will record at least four combined tackles, matching a season high. Butler currently has a 43% run stop win rate at defensive tackle, which ranks third highest at the position. — Walder

    What’s at stake: Tampa Bay and Atlanta are tied for the best record in the NFC South, though the Falcons have the head-to-head advantage. Per ESPN’s FPI, the Buccaneers are still the narrow favorite in the division with a 50% chance at the title. The Falcons are at 49%. Read more.

    Injuries: Raiders | Buccaneers

    Fantasy X factor: Irving. He had a huge game last week, with 28 touches, 152 rushing yards and 27.5 fantasy points (all season-highs for this rookie class). Against a Raiders defense that allows 22.7 fantasy points per game to running backs, he’s a strong start this week. See Week 14 rankings. — Moody

    Betting nugget: Raiders quarterback Aidan O’Connell is 11-2 ATS in his career, which is the best mark of any quarterback in the Super Bowl era with at least 10 starts. Read more.

    Kahler’s pick: Buccaneers 30, Raiders 24
    Moody’s pick: Buccaneers 30, Raiders 20
    Walder’s pick: Buccaneers 26, Raiders 22
    FPI prediction: TB, 57.4% (by an average of 2.8 points)

    Matchup must-reads: Could Deion Sanders be in the mix for the Raiders? … Rookie RB Irving explodes as Bucs rally for OT win vs. Panthers


    4:05 p.m. ET | CBS | ESPN BET: ARI -2.5 (44.5 O/U)

    Seahawks storyline to watch: Leonard Williams will look to continue his recent tear against the team it began against two weeks ago. The veteran defensive tackle recorded 2.5 sacks, three tackles for loss and a pass defensed in the Seahawks’ Week 12 win over Arizona, which he said should have earned him NFC Defensive Player of the Week honors. Williams got that after another dominant performance in Seattle’s win over the Jets, when he recorded two more sacks and three more tackles for loss, blocked a PAT and scored on a 92-yard pick-six, the longest by a defensive lineman in NFL history. Can the Cardinals block him in Sunday’s rematch? — Brady Henderson

    Cardinals storyline to watch: The Cardinals’ red zone struggles have been magnified by losing their past two games. If they can improve on their 16.7% rate from Sunday and 38.5% clip over the past three games, they could avenge the loss to Seattle from two weeks ago. All week, the Cardinals have talked about execution being the main factor in their red zone struggles and how small changes could make the difference against the Seahawks. — Josh Weinfuss

    Stat to know: Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray had a 15.0 QBR when pressured over the past two games after entering Week 12 with the best QBR (84.9) in the NFL when pressured.

    play

    0:32

    Why JSN is a top-15 receiver in Week 14

    Liz Loza explains why Jaxon Smith-Njigba is slotted as a top-15 receiver heading into his Week 14 matchup vs. the Cardinals.

    Bold prediction: Williams will stay scorching hot with at least 1.5 more sacks. Both Cardinals guards, Evan Brown and Trystan Colon, have below average pass block win rates. — Walder

    What’s at stake: According to ESPN Analytics, the winner of this game will become the favorite to win the NFC West, while the loser will have a 20% or less chance to win the division. Read more.

    Injuries: Seahawks | Cardinals

    Fantasy X factor: Seahawks wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba. He scored 19-plus fantasy points in three of his past four games and saw 10-plus targets in two of them. With the Cardinals’ secondary struggling against slot receivers, he’s in an excellent position to deliver. He’s on the WR1 radar this week, so get him in your lineup for Week 14. See Week 14 rankings. — Moody

    Betting nugget: The Cardinals have covered three straight home games, and the Seahawks have covered three straight road games. Read more.

    Kahler’s pick: Cardinals 28, Seahawks 26
    Moody’s pick: Seahawks 27, Cardinals 20
    Walder’s pick: Cardinals 27, Seahawks 24
    FPI prediction: ARI, 57.4% (by an average of 2.8 points)

    Matchup must-reads: Seattle looking to fix special teams quick amid NFC West race … Cardinals sign RB Conner to 2-year extension


    4:25 p.m. ET | FOX | ESPN BET: BUF -3.5 (49.5 O/U)

    Bills storyline to watch: The Bills are looking to extend a seven-game winning streak when they head out west. A win would tie the second-longest streak in franchise history. To do that, Buffalo’s run defense will be tested again facing Rams running back Kyren Williams, who has 24 straight games with at least 50 scrimmage yards, the second-longest active streak in the NFL. He also is coming off a 100-yard rushing performance. The Bills’ defense gave up the second-most yards post-contact per rush (3.00) last week in the snow. — Alaina Getzenberg

    Rams storyline to watch: Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford’s 77 Total QBR in his past three games is the second best in the NFL in that span, second only to Bills quarterback Josh Allen, according to ESPN Research. Stafford has eight passing touchdowns in his past three games, the second most in the NFL since Week 11. He hasn’t thrown an interception in those three games. — Sarah Barshop

    Stat to know: The Rams have back-to-back home losses (Dolphins in Week 10 and Eagles in Week 12). They’re looking to avoid matching their longest home losing streak since Sean McVay became coach in 2017.

    Bold prediction: Bills backup running back Ray Davis will score a touchdown. It’s mostly just a gut feeling, but I expect the Bills to get out to a bit of a lead, and the Rams’ run defense ranks 28th in EPA (3.31). — Walder

    What’s at stake: The Bills’ odds to be the No. 1 seed in the AFC improve to 53% with a win and fall to 26% with a loss (independent of other results), according to ESPN Analytics. The Rams’ chances at the NFC playoffs increase to 34% with a win and fall to 16% with a loss. Read more.

    Injuries: Bills | Rams

    Fantasy X factor: Bills running back James Cook. Cook is positioned for another big game against a Rams defense that allows the fifth-most rushing yards per game to running backs (144.2). He scored 19-plus fantasy points in three of his past five games and should be busy as both a runner and receiver. See Week 14 rankings. — Moody

    Betting nugget: The Rams are 3-9 ATS in the first quarter this season. Rams first-half unders are 9-3. Read more.

    Kahler’s pick: Bills 34, Rams 28
    Moody’s pick: Bills 34, Rams 24
    Walder’s pick: Bills 27, Rams 20
    FPI prediction: BUF, 63.1% (by an average of 5.1 points)

    Matchup must-reads: S Hyde re-signs with Bills, says he’ll retire after season … RB Williams sparks Rams’ offense against Saints


    4:25 p.m. ET | FOX | ESPN BET: SF -4 (43.5 O/U)

    Bears storyline to watch: Chicago looks to snap a six-game losing streak (tied for the Bears’ third longest in a season since 2000) in Thomas Brown’s first game as interim head coach after Matt Eberflus was fired on Nov. 29. Brown will move from the coaches booth to the sideline where he will continue to call offensive plays. Quarterback Caleb Williams has made significant strides with Brown as his playcaller, having thrown 232 consecutive passes without an interception, the longest streak by a rookie in NFL history. Williams is seeking his third straight game with multiple passing touchdowns and zero interceptions. — Courtney Cronin

    49ers storyline to watch: The banged-up 49ers will be counting on rookie running back Isaac Guerendo to pick up the slack for injured backs Christian McCaffrey (knee) and Jordan Mason (ankle). Guerendo has flashed in small doses, averaging 5.9 yards on 42 attempts, the fourth-best mark of any running back with at least 40 carries. The Bears are yielding 4.9 yards per carry (29th in the NFL) and have given up 57 rushes of 10-plus yards (tied for sixth most), which means there should be some big-play opportunities for Guerendo in his first NFL start. — Nick Wagoner

    Stat to know: The Bears are the first team since turnovers were first tracked in 1933 to lose six straight without committing multiple turnovers in any of those games.

    Bold prediction: 49ers wide receiver Jauan Jennings will record 100-plus receiving yards and a touchdown. After two meager-ish weeks for Jennings (one of which was in the snow), I expect him to have another big day. ESPN’s receiver scores have him at third best among all wide receivers and tight ends. — Walder

    What’s at stake: The 49ers enter with an 8% chance to make the playoffs, per ESPN Analytics. That increases to 12% with a win and drops to 2% with a loss. Read more.

    Injuries: Bears | 49ers

    Fantasy X factor: Guerendo. San Francisco is feeling the impact of losing McCaffrey and Mason to injured reserve. The 49ers will now turn to rookie Guerendo, who has been efficient with 0.78 fantasy points per touch. He’s stepping into a great matchup against a Bears defense allowing the fourth-most rushing yards per game and 5.0 yards per carry to running backs. See Week 14 rankings. — Moody

    Betting nugget: The Bears are 8-15 ATS in their past 23 games as road underdogs. Read more.

    Kahler’s pick: Bears 28, 49ers 21
    Moody’s pick: 49ers 28, Bears 21
    Walder’s pick: 49ers 23, Bears 20
    FPI prediction: SF, 61.5% (by an average of 4.4 points)

    Matchup must-reads: Inside the Bears’ firing of Matt Eberflus … 49ers RBs McCaffrey, Mason both headed to IR … Bears sticking with GM Ryan Poles; will lead search for coach

    play

    0:33

    Schefter: CMC, Jordan Mason headed to IR

    Adam Schefter details who will lead the 49ers’ backfield after injuries to Christian McCaffrey and Jordan Mason.


    8:20 p.m. ET | NBC/Peacock | ESPN BET: KC -4 (42.5 O/U)

    Chargers storyline to watch: The Chargers are 3-18 against the Chiefs since 2014, including six straight losses. Quarterback Justin Herbert is 2-7 against the Chiefs in his career. The games typically come down to how well the Chargers’ offensive line protects Herbert. In the two wins, the Chiefs pressured Herbert on 26% of his dropbacks, while in losses, he was pressured on 36% of his dropbacks. — Kris Rhim

    Chiefs storyline to watch: The Chiefs had one of their better games of the season defensively against the Chargers in Week 4, when they held Herbert and the Los Angeles offense to 10 points and 220 yards. But can they repeat that kind of performance? The Chiefs have been a soft touch on defense for many of their recent opponents. They had two-touchdown leads over the Panthers two weeks ago and the Raiders last week and still had to scramble at the end for the victory. — Adam Teicher

    Stat to know: The Chiefs have won 14 consecutive games by one score or less, which is the longest streak in NFL history.

    Bold prediction: Chargers defensive tackle Poona Ford will record at least half a sack against quarterback Patrick Mahomes. The buzz on Ford is deserved, as his 12% pass rush win rate at defensive tackle ranks seventh at the position. — Walder

    What’s at stake: The Chiefs can clinch their ninth straight AFC West title with a win. Per ESPN Analytics, their odds to earn the No. 1 seed increase to 61% with a win and drop to 33% with a loss. Read more.

    Injuries: Chargers | Chiefs

    Fantasy X factor: Herbert. Kansas City’s defense allows the fewest fantasy points per game to running backs, so the Chargers might lean more on the passing game. He has thrived against the Chiefs in the past, averaging 22.5 fantasy points per game in his career. See Week 14 rankings. — Moody

    Betting nugget: The Chiefs are 0-6 ATS in their past six games. No team has ever gone on to win the Super Bowl in the same season it had a six-game ATS losing streak. Read more.

    Kahler’s pick: Chargers 30, Chiefs 28
    Moody’s pick: Chargers 28, Chiefs 27
    Walder’s pick: Chargers 21, Chiefs 17
    FPI prediction: KC, 61.6% (by an average of 4.4 points)

    Matchup must-reads: Would a win over Chiefs seal Chargers’ contender status? … Do Chiefs finally have right guy to protect Mahomes’ blindside?


    Monday, 8:15 p.m. ET | ESPN/ABC/ESPN+ | ESPN BET: CIN -5 (49.5 O/U)

    Bengals storyline to watch: A ground attack could be the best approach for the Bengals against the Cowboys. Over the past four games, Dallas has been one of the worst teams in allowed yards per carry (5.4, 31st) while being great at defending the pass (tied for second with five interceptions and tied for first with 16 sacks). Leaning on running back Chase Brown could relieve the pressure on the passing game and help Cincinnati snap a three-game losing skid. — Ben Baby

    Cowboys storyline to watch: Dallas will be looking for its first three-game winning streak of the season with a victory Monday to keep its faint playoff hopes alive. The Cowboys are 7-1 at home against the Bengals, their best home record against any opponent in franchise history. They have won five straight overall against Cincinnati, including two seasons ago when quarterback Cooper Rush led a final-minute drive to beat Joe Burrow. But this time, Burrow is the NFL’s leading passer and directs the sixth-highest-scoring offense (26.6 points per game). — Todd Archer

    Stat to know: Although not as impressive as quarterbacks Dak Prescott and Roger Staubach, who won nine of their first 10 starts with the Cowboys, Rush’s 7-3 record is better than Troy Aikman (0-10) and Tony Romo (6-4).

    Bold prediction: Cowboys wide receiver CeeDee Lamb will record his second game 100-plus receiving yards this season. He is getting open as usual — he has a strong 75 open score in ESPN’s receiver scores — but his catch score is a whopping zero. Even with Rush throwing to him, I’d expect that second number to come back to normal going forward. — Walder

    What’s at stake: The Bengals hold a 2% chance to make the playoffs, while the Cowboys hold a 1% chance. Read more.

    Injuries: Bengals | Cowboys

    Fantasy X factor: Brown. He is on a roll with 20-plus touches and 19-plus fantasy points in three of his past four games. Now, he faces a Cowboys defense that has allowed the sixth-most fantasy points to running backs. He is set up for another big game because of his ability as a runner and receiver. See Week 14 rankings. — Moody

    Betting nugget: The Bengals are 5-1 ATS on the road this season. The Cowboys are 1-5 ATS at home. Read more.

    Kahler’s pick: Bengals 30, Cowboys 24
    Moody’s pick: Bengals 35, Cowboys 26
    Walder’s pick: Bengals 31, Cowboys 23
    FPI prediction: CIN, 66.1% (by an average of 6.7 points)

    Matchup must-reads: Burrow reveals he bought $2.9 million Batmobile … Cowboys’ defense revitalized since Parsons’s return … Zac Taylor, Lou Anarumo shoulder blame amid Bengals’ skid

  • Fantasy Football Week 14 Start 'Em, Sit 'Em

    Setează-ți formațiile de fotbal fantasy din Săptămâna 14 cu sfaturile cheie de start/ședință ale lui Dalton Del Don pentru fiecare joc de pe lista.

    Smith conduce Dolphins în cota-țintă (21,5%), cota de primă citire (26,3%) și ținte proiectate de la revedere din Săptămâna 6 din Miami. El conduce toți prindetorii de pase în primele coborâri pe traseu de-a lungul intervalului respectiv. El a fost TE1 al fantasy în ultimele trei săptămâni, iar Smith ar trebui să rămână ocupat duminică.

    Darnold a aruncat mai multe touchdown-uri în cinci din ultimele șase jocuri. El primește o apărare a lui Falcons, permițând al șaptelea cele mai multe puncte de fantezie quarterbacks cu un nivel scăzut de 15 saci din NFL în acest sezon. Minnesota are un total sănătos de 26,5 puncte implicite de echipă în această confruntare rapidă, iar Vikingii s-au luptat puternic în grabă la linia porții. Darnold este în top-10 QB în această săptămână.

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    Tracy Jr. a pierdut câteva atingeri săptămâna trecută, dar a revenit cu o cotă de snap de 71%, inclusiv un scor pe linia de poartă (la o săptămână după ce a pierdut snaps-uri după ce s-a bâjbâit). Începătorul primește 5.0 YPC și este RB16 al fanteziei din săptămâna 8. Scenariul jocului ar trebui să rămână ușor de gestionat împotriva unei echipe epuizate din New Orleans, iar Tracy Jr. ar putea vedea mai multă muncă cu Malik Nabers care se confruntă cu o accidentare inghinală. Oponenții lui Saints au a patra cea mai mică rată de trecere peste așteptări din ultima lună, așa că Tracy Jr. este în top-20 în această săptămână.

    Hubbard a văzut încă o cotă de 79% săptămâna trecută, dar a pierdut 9 din 21 de oportunități de RB. Cota de rush de 67% a lui Hubbard a fost cea mai scăzută din săptămâna 2, deoarece începătorul Jonathon Brooks a văzut mai multă muncă în timpul celui de-al doilea joc înapoi de la accidentare. Înfruntarea celei mai bune apărări a ligii este o preocupare și mai mare în această săptămână. Eagles au cedat doar 241 de metri pe joc în ultimele două luni, ceea ce este cu 65 de metri mai puțin decât cel mai bun următor.

    Philadelphia nu a permis unui alergător să se grăbească pentru 100 de metri în tot sezonul, iar Eagles tocmai l-a ținut pe Derrick Henry în afara zonei de final săptămâna trecută. Panthers au un total implicit de echipă de 16,5 puncte scăzut din ligă și sunt defavorizați de 13 puncte, așa că scenariul jocului va fi o provocare. Hubbard este RB22 în „rangurile de consens de experți” și, desigur, poate fi necesar în timpul unei săptămâni cu șase pași, dar căutați alternative dacă este posibil.

    Chubb a marcat trei touchdown-uri în ultimele două jocuri, dar a terminat cu nouă încercări de grabă săptămâna trecută, la fel ca Jerome Ford. Chubb a parcurs doar 20% din trasee de când Ford s-a întors acum patru jocuri și joacă într-o ofensivă de la Cleveland cu o rată de trecere mare peste așteptări, cu Jameis Winston titular. Chubb a avut o medie anemică de 3,0 YPC de când s-a întors de la o altă intervenție chirurgicală pe mai multe ligamente și primește o apărare solidă la Pittsburgh, permițând al doilea cel mai puține puncte de fantezie ajustate în program pentru RB în ultimele cinci săptămâni.

    Otton a fost mai tăcut în ultimele două jocuri, dar ar putea fi mai ocupat duminică. Mike Evans a ratat antrenamentul de joi cu răni la gambă și la gambe, așa că ar putea fi limitat dacă este capabil să se îmbrace săptămâna aceasta. Otton a fost TE25 (5,9 puncte de fantezie pe joc) în timpul jocurilor cu Evans din acest sezon, dar a fost TE1 cu o milă (16,1 fpg) fără el (h/t FTN).

    Runnerul star emergent Bucky Irving a ratat, de asemenea, antrenamentele joi și, deși a revenit vineri, rămâne de văzut dacă va fi limitat în săptămâna 14. Chris Godwin rămâne pe IR, așa că Otton ar trebui să vadă un volum bun împotriva unui Raiders. ' apărarea este distrusă de capetele strâmte; TE-urile adverse au înregistrat o medie de 8,6 capturi, 101,2 yarzi de primire și 1,2 TD-uri în ultimele cinci jocuri împotriva Las Vegas. Adversarii Raiders au de departe cel mai mare PROE din ultima lună. Încurajează-l pe Otton în formațiile fantasy săptămâna aceasta.

    Ridley conduce NFL în curțile aeriene (776) și a înregistrat o medie de 8,5 ținte și 82,7 yarzi de primire în șase jocuri de când DeAndre Hopkins a fost tranzacționat. Will Levis a obținut 8,3 YPA în timp ce a avut o medie de 240,0 yarzi de trecere și 1,8 TD-uri în patru jocuri de la întoarcerea din accidentare, astfel încât ofensiva de pasageri a lui Tennessee are viață.

    Ridley primește o confruntare extrem de favorabilă săptămâna aceasta într-un joc de răzbunare împotriva celei mai proaste apărări din ligă din Jacksonville, care a permis al treilea cel mai mare număr de puncte de fantezie pentru primitori. Rata țintă a lui Ridley crește de la 18,2% față de zonă la 27,9% față de acoperirea bărbaților, pe care Jaguarii au folosit-o la a doua cea mai mare rată a ligii. Ridley este la limita top-10 WR săptămâna aceasta.

    Sit Tank Bigsbycare a pierdut 16 din 24 de oportunități de RB în fața unui Travis Etienne Jr., acum mai sănătos, care a ieșit de la revederea lui Jacksonville săptămâna trecută. Jaguarii au al doilea cel mai mic total implicit al echipei (18,5 puncte) în această săptămână, Mac Jones fiind titular.

    Smith este pe locul al treilea în ligă la yarzi de trecere pe joc (270,1), dar are doar două jocuri de trecere multiple în tot sezonul. DK Metcalf a ratat antrenamentul joi cu o accidentare la umăr, așa că ar putea lipsi sau să fie limitat duminică. Mai mult, Cardinalii au plasat una dintre cele mai îmbunătățite apărări ale ligii în ultima vreme (împreună cu Seattle).

    Arizona a dat doar patru touchdown-uri totale la quarterbacks în ultimele șase jocuri și al doilea cel mai puține puncte de fantezie ajustate în funcție de program la QB-uri în ultimele cinci. Aceste echipe s-au combinat pentru doar 22 de puncte când s-au întâlnit în urmă cu doar două săptămâni, iar o altă confruntare cu scoruri mai mici, cu un ritm lent ar putea fi pregătită duminică.

    Shakir a văzut șapte ținte săptămâna trecută, dar asta a marcat de fapt o cotă mare de ținte, Josh Allen încercând doar 17 pase într-o furtună de zăpadă. Mai mult volum ar trebui să existe duminică într-un meci în interior cu cel mai mare total din acest weekend (49,5 puncte). Shakir ocupă locul opt în cota țintă (29,1%) și pe locul 10 la yarzi pe traseu (2,51) în acest sezon. Rata sa țintă crește de la 18,3% față de om la 29,5% față de acoperirea zonei, pe care Rams au folosit-o la a patra cea mai mare rată a ligii (77,1%) în acest sezon. El ocupă, de asemenea, primele 15 dintre cele 131 de WR-uri în puncte fantezie pe traseu (0,50) față de zonă. O ofensiva sănătoasă a lui Rams l-ar putea împinge pe Buffalo, așa că începeți cu Shakir în această săptămână.

    Guerendo a trecut brusc de la firele de renunțare la o fantezie de top 10 săptămâna aceasta, după ce Christian McCaffrey și Jordan Mason au căzut cu răni la sfârșitul sezonului. Guerendo a avut o medie pe locul patru ca YPC (5,9) în acest sezon și are picioare proaspete. Începătorul trebuie să lucreze la viziunea sa și este departe de a fi un spate complet, dar în timp ce Mason ar putea fi cel mai lent RB al ligii, Guerendo ar putea fi cel mai rapid (oferându-i mai multă fantezie).

    Bears au dat cel de-al doilea cel mai puține puncte de fantezie pentru quarterbacks în acest sezon, dar Chicago a cedat al cincilea cel mai mare program ajustat FP către RB în ultimele cinci jocuri. Atacul celor de la 49ers nu este același fără Trent Williams și Brock Purdy, dar San Francisco deține un total implicit de echipă sănătos (24,5 puncte) și ar trebui să aibă un scenariu de joc favorabil ca favoriți de patru puncte. Patrick Taylor va vedea și el de lucru, dar Guendo face parte din formațiile fantasy.

    Apărarea prin pasă a Chiefs a făcut un pas înapoi recent, dar Herbert ar putea fi încă într-un loc dificil duminică seară. Ladd McConkey arată nedumerit cu răni la umăr și la genunchi, iar absența lui ar fi resimțită mai greu împotriva unei apărări KC grele de oameni. Herbert a luat cinci sacouri la doar 23 de încercări de trecere împotriva unei apărări din Atlanta care a intrat cu 10 sacouri la nivel scăzut în ligă, în principal pentru că niciun alt receptor nu a putut deschide săptămâna trecută.

    Mai mult, Herbert a obținut 8,4 YPA cu un Evaluare de 106,9 Passer versus acoperire în zonă, dar a obținut doar 6,2 YPA cu un Evaluare de 76,9 Passer împotriva unui om, pe care Kansas City îl folosește la una dintre cele mai mari rate ale ligii. Chargers au unul dintre cele mai mici totaluri implicite de echipă (20,5 puncte) săptămâna aceasta, iar managerii fantastici care încep Herbert vor spera că McConkey poate merge.

    Dowdle a văzut 25 din 29 de oportunități de RB și a stabilit maxime în carieră în snap share (71%), porturi (22) și yard rush (112) săptămâna trecută. El are un scor de utilizare de 8,2 în ultimele două săptămâni, ceea ce este istoric limită teritoriul RB1. Bengalii au permis al patrulea cel mai mare nivel de EPA/rush și al cincilea cel mai mare touchdown RB în acest sezon, iar Dowdle ar trebui să vadă un volum mare de muncă cu CeeDee Lamb lovit. El este un top-15 RB săptămâna aceasta.

  • 2025 Fantasy Baseball Prospects: Top 25 in outfield includes Roman Anthony, Dylan Crews, and Charlie Condon

    The outfield, if you don’t already know, is actually three positions in one, so it only makes sense to go deeper there than at any singular infield spot.

    This year, I’ve chosen 25 as the arbitrary cutoff. In truth, 20 or even 15 would have made for a more natural one since the distinctions there are clearer, with the top 15 being musts on any overall top 100 list and the next five being at least on the border.

    Top Prospects: C | 1B | 2B | 3B | SS | OF | P

    So why have five more? Mainly because I want to highlight a few personal cheeseballs who might wind up rounding out my top 100 overall. You could argue that 2024 draft picks James Tibbs and Theo Gillen have more upside than my Nos. 21-25 or that Spencer Jones, Jacob Melton, or Drew Gilbert would make for more conventional choices. They and about about a dozen others were in contention for those final five spots, and I feel like any permutation thereof would have been just as viable.

    But ultimately, it’s my list, and so to add that personal touch, I’ve devoted Nos. 21-25 to the outfield prospects that I think the consensus has sold short, even if I could find an excuse to leave them out myself.

    Because once you break through that consensus layer of the prospect pool, at the bottom of everything, it’s all cheeseballs.

    Note: These rankings are intended mainly for Dynasty use, emphasizing long-term value over a quick payoff, but to say proximity holds no weight wouldn’t be entirely accurate either. Not all of these players will contribute in 2025 — most, in fact, will not — but among prospects, they’re the names Fantasy Baseballers most need to know.

    Age (on opening day): 20
    Where he played in 2024: Double-A, Triple-A
    Minor-league stats: .291 BA (454 AB), 18 HR, 21 SB, .894 OPS, 79 BB, 127 K

    Though he always earned high marks for his plate discipline and exit velocity readings, it was the first annual Futures Skills Showcase, which he won by way of a gaudy power display, that likely clinched Anthony’s spot as the No. 1 overall prospect. He caught fire thereafter, batting .353 with eight homers and a 1.022 OPS over his final 52 games, much of it coming after his promotion to Triple-A.

    Age (on opening day): 23
    Where he played in 2024: Double-A, Triple-A, majors
    Minor-league stats: .270 BA (397 AB), 13 HR, 25 SB, .792 OPS, 36 BB, 92 K
    Major-league stats: .219 BA (119 AB), 3 HR, 12 SB, .641 OPS, 11 BB, 26 K

    Crews’ top-line production was nothing to write home about, but the Nationals still saw fit to hurry him to the majors, trusting that his secondary characteristics had more to say about his readiness. Indeed, he hits the ball consistently and hard, so if he can simply improve the direction it takes off the bat, good days are ahead. And really, with as much as he runs, it won’t take much power production to make him a Fantasy standout.

    Age (on opening day): 22
    Where he played in 2024: Low-A, Double-A, Triple-A, majors
    Minor-league stats: .314 BA (226 AB), 11 HR, 16 SB, .880 OPS, 22 BB, 50 K
    Major-league stats: .179 BA (56 AB), 2 HR, 5 SB, .617 OPS, 11 BB, 19 K

    Dominguez followed up his eight-game barnstorming tour in 2023 with an injury-plagued 2024 that kept his rookie status intact for another year. While his second stint with the Yankees was a relative letdown, he still shined in every respect in the minors, with most of the remaining hurdles being finer things like route-running in the outfield and elevating with his swing. I suspect he’ll be shoring up those in the majors.

    Age (on opening day): 20
    Where he played in 2024: Rookie, Low-A, High-A, Double-A
    Minor-league stats: .282 BA (305 AB), 6 HR, 17 SB, .833 OPS, 56 BB, 47 K

    If you’re underwhelmed by Jenkins’ production relative to the hype, understand that projectability is a big part of the equation here. He’s still growing into his 6-foot-3 frame, but his picture-perfect swing and beyond-his-years approach were enough to propel him to Double-A at age 19. The way the scouting reports extol him, you’d think he’s Larry Walker or something, and at this stage of development, who’s to say he isn’t?

    Age (on opening day): 21
    Where he played in 2024: High-A
    Minor-league stats: .180 BA (100 AB), 1 HR, 4 SB, .518 OPS, 4 BB, 34 K

    It was an ugly debut for Condon, the No. 3 pick in the 2024 draft who put up historic power numbers at the University of Georgia, but I’m inclined to give him the benefit of the doubt given that he went straight to High-A and was dealing with a hand injury. Most of his-swing-and-miss comes on secondary stuff, with fastballs being tattooed beyond recognition, so you have to like that he’ll be making his home in the venue notorious for straightening out breaking balls.

    Age (on opening day): 22
    Where he played in 2024: Rookie, Low-A, Double-A, Triple-A
    Minor-league stats: .280 BA (157 AB), 9 HR, 9 SB, 1.026 OPS, 51 BB, 62 K

    Rodriguez has always struck out a lot, but the rate hasn’t gotten worse as he’s moved up the ladder, which makes it easier to qualify as a non-issue. And if it’s a non-issue, hoo boy, there are some preternatural talents here. The man simply doesn’t chase, which obviously leads to oodles of walks even if it sometimes puts him in bad counts, and his exit velocity readings are among the highest in all the minors as well.

    Age (on opening day): 19
    Where he played in 2024: Low-A, High-A
    Minor-league stats: 268 BA (385 AB), 10 HR, 27 SB, .809 OPS, 84 BB, 95 K

    The Dodgers once traded away Yordan Alvarez for relief pitcher Josh Fields and now have a chance for a mulligan with De Paula, another defensively challenged left-handed slugger whose most fundamental hitting traits are almost too good to be true. Though only a teenager, he already generates near-elite exit velocities and unreal plate discipline, which actually improved after his midseason move up to High-A with 50 walks vs. 38 strikeouts.

    Age (on opening day): 20
    Where he played in 2024: Low-A, High-A
    Minor-league stats: .288 BA (448 AB), 21 HR, .881 OPS, 78 BB, 128 K

    Montes used to be the one drawing Yordan Alvarez comparisons, seeing as he’s a Cubs expatriate with a similar build who trained with the same hitting instructor in the Dominican Republic, but just when it seemed like he was making strides with his strikeout rate at Low-A, it jumped back to 30 percent at High-A. I still think he’ll be a premier slugger in the majors, given how hard he hits the ball, but the downside case is also easy to make.

    Age (on opening day): 20
    Where he played in 2024: Low-A, High-A
    Minor-league stats: .279 BA (420 AB), 9 HR, 29 SB, .794 OPS, 61 BB, 94 K

    Clark is well known for his high school accolades, high-effort style of play, and social media presence, but so far, defense looks to be his carrying tool. That’ll keep him high on real-life lists, though still behind Wyatt Langford and Walker Jenkins, who were drafted behind him. The longer Clark goes without actualizing his power potential, the more fearful I’ll be of him becoming another Mark Kotsay or Nick Markakis type, but I’m not there yet.

    Age (on opening day): 23
    Where he played in 2024: Rookie, Double-A, Triple-A
    Minor-league stats: .261 BA (142 AB), 8 HR, .842 OPS, 19 BB, 22 K

    DeLauter basically checks every box as a hitter, making all the right swing decisions and manipulating the barrel for optimal contact. But he broke the same foot in 2024 that’s already been operated on twice, which is a little too reminiscent of Alex Kirilloff’s wrist for my liking. There’s no reason to believe DeLauter’s plight will go as that one did, but he’ll begin to lose value if he doesn’t force his way into the big-league picture this year.

    11. Zyhir Hope, Dodgers

    Age (on opening day): 20
    Where he played in 2024: Rookie, Low-A
    Minor-league stats: .290 BA (221 AB), 9 HR, 9 SB, .903 OPS, 41 BB, 62 K

    Stealing him away from the Cubs in the Michael Busch deal, the Dodgers unlocked Hope’s potential almost immediately, encouraging him to attack in a way that didn’t compromise his natural plate discipline. A fractured rib interrupted a hot start and cost him three months, but he returned even stronger, putting him in a neck-and-neck race with De Paula for most upside in the system.

    Age (on opening day): 19
    Where he played in 2024: Rookie, Low-A
    Minor-league stats: .344 BA (221 AB), 12 HR, 15 SB, 1.079 OPS, 37 BB, 63 K

    Calaz stands out from the other teenage hopefuls with upside for days in that he’s already realized his power potential, checking off the most important box at an early stage of development. He still has much to prove with regard to pitch identification and selection — which is true for any hitter in Rookie ball, really — but he slashed .327/.386/.571 in a 13-game trial at Low-A.

    Age (on opening day): 22
    Where he played in 2024: Triple-A
    Minor-league stats: .278 BA (472 AB), 19 HR, 11 SB, .848 OPS, 71 BB, 156 K

    The scouting reports all rave about Caissie’s power potential, which is plain to see from the exit velocity readings, but as he stands at the precipice of the majors, that potential still isn’t fully realized due to suboptimal launch and spray angles. That’s a fairly small hurdle to clear, though, and presuming he clears it, he projects as a classic three-true-outcomes type, with Kyle Schwarber being one possible outcome.

    Age (on opening day): 20
    Where he played in 2024: Low-A
    Minor-league stats: .264 BA (178 AB), 4 HR, 18 SB, .820 OPS, 36 BB, 52 K

    Farmelo has football-level athleticism that manifests mostly as speed and defense right now but is expected to burgeon into left-handed power, especially given the work the Mariners have already put into cleaning up his swing. It’s not raw athleticism either, with plate discipline and pitch recognition already being standout qualities for him, which is why his stock is on the rise even as he works his way back from ACL surgery.

    Age (on opening day): 21
    Where he played in 2024: did not play — fractured ankle

    The 12th pick in the 2024 draft has yet to debut because of a fractured ankle, and part of me wonders if the separation between him and the 13th pick, fellow outfielder James Tibbs, is mainly because the former hasn’t taken any lumps yet. Montgomery has a powerful swing and knows a ball from a strike, but his tendency to miss could be more disqualifying as a pro than it was in college. If any organization deserves the benefit of the doubt with hitters right now, though, it’s the Red Sox.

    Age (on opening day): 22
    Where he played in 2024: Rookie, High-A
    Minor-league stats: .283 BA (456 AB), 17 HR, 53 SB, .851 OPS, 51 BB, 100 K

    Between his 53-steal 2024, his switch-hitting, and the fact he split his debut season (2023) between catcher, shortstop, and center field, Carrigg exudes athleticism, and so far, his hitting has been on point as well. The scouting reports seem to be holding something back still, giving little explanation for why he doesn’t rank higher, but I’m beginning to think there’s a Shane Victorino-type player here.

    Age (on opening day): 22
    Where he played in 2024: Double-A, Triple-A, majors
    Minor-league stats: .278 BA (421 AB), 14 HR, 14 SB, .781 OPS, 47 BB, 123 K

    Alcantara still has the makings of a star player, but he’s beginning to run out of minor-league runaway,  having actually debuted in September, and still hasn’t quite taken flight. His numbers have always been decent, but after five minor-league seasons, he still doesn’t run much, still doesn’t elevate well, and still can’t hit a breaking ball. Maybe it all comes together for him one year, but I sense that his stock is nearing a make-or-break point.

    Age (on opening day): 19
    Where he played in 2024: Low-A
    Minor-league stats: .270 BA (334 AB), 5 HR, 44 SB, .813 OPS, 86 BB, 69 K

    Jaison gets outsized attention as the brother of Jackson, but this Chourio is more of a prototypical leadoff hitter, standing out most for his on-base and base-stealing abilities. The contrast is similar to the one between Ronald Acuna and Luisangel Acuna, though perhaps not as stark. Some evaluators think Chourio could grow into more power, which would be particularly exciting given his uncommon batting eye.

    Age (on opening day): 21
    Where he played in 2024: High-A, Double-A
    Minor-league stats: .313 BA (457 AB), 9 HR, 42 SB, .805 OPS, 32 BB, 93 K

    Former Rays outfielder Carl Crawford brought a unique skill set to the aughts, delivering an elite batting average and stolen base total without being a total liability in home runs, and you don’t have to squint too hard to see his son Justin doing something similar. He’s a bit too slash-and-dash right now with a ground-ball rate over 60 percent, but his exit velocities are good enough for modest power if the requisite adjustment doesn’t cost him too much in the way of batting average.

    Age (on opening day): 23
    Where he played in 2024: High-A, Double-A
    Minor-league stats: .272 BA (404 AB), 4 HR, 74 SB, .729 OPS, 50 BB, 72 K

    A true 80 grade for both speed and defense with exceptional contact skills to boot, Bradfield is almost certainly going to be a major-leaguer of some note. But that note may be too singular for Fantasy, particularly with stolen bases no longer being in such demand. It’ll come down to whether he plays every day and offers anything in the way of batting average, but the upside is limited, clearly.

    Age (on opening day): 20
    Where he played in 2024: Low-A
    Minor-league stats: .288 BA (368 AB), 11 HR, 41 SB, .874 OPS, 64 BB, 103 K

    The Rays liked Smith enough to trade Randy Arozarena for him, and while you could knock him for being a skinny Minnie right now, strength gains are maybe the easiest projection to make for a professional athlete in his early 20s. Meanwhile, Smith reached base at a .401 clip this past season and stole a boatload of bases. With a little muscle mass added, his swing is already built for power with high fly-ball and pull rates.

    22. Bo Davidson, Giants

    Age (on opening day): 22
    Where he played in 2024: Rookie, Low-A
    Minor-league stats: .327 BA (220 AB), 11 HR, 7 SB, 1.042 OPS, 38 BB, 65 K

    I’m sticking my neck out for this guy, who did some special things at the plate this year but remains mostly ignored by prospect hounds because he went undrafted in 2023. The overall numbers are impressive enough, but would you believe Davidson slashed .405/.522/.763 with nine homers in 38 games after returning from a hamstring injury in July? He earns high marks for athleticism, too, so while unsustainable in the strictest sense, the performance doesn’t strike me as some A-ball fakeout.

    Age (on opening day): 24
    Where he played in 2024: High-A, Double-A
    Minor-league stats: .355 BA (451 AB), 1 HR, 104 SB, .807 OPS, 44 BB, 43 K

    Could he be any more any more of a throwback? Players with Simpson’s skill set haven’t been en vogue since about the time the The Simpsons first aired and haven’t been even viable since Michael Bourn or Juan Pierre. You have to admire how committed Simpson is to not hitting homers, though, judging by his tiny fly-ball and pull rates. He knows who he is, and it’ll either work or it won’t. Xavier Edwards’ initial success offers some hope.

    Age (on opening day): 23
    Where he played in 2024: Rookie, High-A, Double-A, Triple-A
    Minor-league stats: .258 BA (233 AB), 11 HR, 21 SB, .805 OPS, 30 BB, 67 K

    While many have abandoned ship, I’m willing to see Veen through, believing that injuries have basically sabotaged his entire minor-league career. He finally had surgery last offseason to address a two-year battle with wrist issues and came out of gate slashing .326/.418/.568 in 28 games before back and thumb injuries derailed him once again. He doesn’t project as a middle-of-the-order slugger anymore, but there’s hope for stolen bases and batting average, particularly in Colorado.

    Age (on opening day): 25
    Where he played in 2024: Double-A, Triple-A
    Minor-league stats: .293 BA (451 AB), 16 HR, 14 SB, .865 OPS, 64 BB, 75 K

    Roden beats out other personal cheeseballs like the Athletics’ Colby Thomas and the Angels’ Matthew Lugo because I think the odds of him being an out-and-out failure are next to nothing. His contact, line-drive, and on-base skills are simply too good. Whether the power is enough to make him Fantasy viable is harder to say, but his max exit velocity (112.2 mph) and pull rate (50.5) at Triple-A this past year are high enough for me to believe so.

  • Cheat Sheet PPR Săptămâna 14 Fantasy Football: Evaluări actualizate ale jucătorilor pentru a vă ghida cele mai dificile convorbiri

    chubahubbardcbs.jpg
    USATSI

    Fișa Cheat Sheet a fost creată astfel încât să puteți obține răspunsuri rapide la întrebările dvs. de start/ședință Fantasy, cu analiza deja încorporată. Pentru o justificare detaliată, consultați cel mai recent conținut al meu, inclusiv coloana mea săptămânală privind Deciziile de acțiune.

    Ce înseamnă numerele?

    Toate analizele mele din săptămâna, de la punctele de date la perspectivele de confruntare până la previziunile fluxului de joc, sunt în principiu reprezentate de un număr pe o scară de încredere de la 1 la 10. Cu cât este mai mare numărul de lângă numele unui jucător, cu atât sunt mai încrezător că ar trebui să-l începi. Cifrele nu sunt o proiecție, ci doar un scor de încredere pentru a vă ajuta să alegeți pe cine să începeți. Fiecare jucător relevant pentru această săptămână este aici, așa că dacă un jucător nu este listat, nu-l începe.

    Pentru a găsi un anumit player, utilizați funcția de căutare — CTRL-F pe computere și Command-F pe Mac. Dacă niciuna dintre acestea nu este opțiune sau dacă sunteți pe un dispozitiv mobil, puteți derula după joc. Dacă ești încă nu sunt sigur, trimite doar o notă pe X.com (@daverichard), și îi voi arunca o privire, dacă timpul îmi permite. Nu uitați să utilizați hashtag-ul #AskFFT!

    Dacă citiți acest lucru duminică, vă rugăm să consultați clasamentele noastre săptămânale, care sunt actualizate în timp real.

    Ești gata să cobori cu piciorul drept? Iată cum să abordați fiecare joc pentru această săptămână în ligile PPR — puteți găsi foaia noastră de cheat-uri non-PPR Aici.

    Iordan Dragoste 7.9 Jared Goff 8.0
    Josh Jacobs 8.9 David Montgomery 8.6
    Jayden Reed 6.6 Jahmyr Gibbs 8.5
    Christian Watson 5.9 Amon-Ra St. Brown 9.5
    Dontayvion Wicks 4.6 Jameson Williams 7.0
    Tucker Kraft 6.6 Tim Patrick 2.8
    Ambalatori DST 4.5 Sam LaPorta 6.7
    Lions DST 5.9
    Aaron Rodgers 5.5 Tua Tagovailoa 9,0
    Sala Breece 8.1 De'Von Achane 9.3
    Davante Adams 7.4 Raheem Mostert 4.7
    Garrett Wilson 6.8 Dealul Tyreek 8.5
    Jets DST 5.5 Jaylen Waddle 5.7
    Jonnu Smith 7.7
    Delfinii DST 7.7
    Kirk Cousins 4.5 Sam Darnold 7.7
    Bijan Robinson 9.4 Aaron Jones 7.8
    Drake Londra 7.7 Cam Akers 3.7
    Darnell Mooney 6.4 Justin Jefferson 9.4
    Ray-Ray McCloud 3.7 Jordan Addison 6.5
    Kyle Pitts 5.8 Jalen Nailor 4.1
    Soimii DST 4.9 TJ Hockenson 6.4
    Vikings DST 7.9
    Derek Carr 5.3 Drew Lock 1.6
    Alvin Kamara 9.9 Tyrone Tracy Jr. 7.6
    Marquez Valdes-Scantling 5.4 Devin Singletary 3.8
    Juwan Johnson 6.0 Malik Nabers 7.3
    Foster Moreau 3.6 Darius Slayton 3.9
    Sfinții DST 7.6 Wan'Dale Robinson 3.1
    Giants DST 3.5
    Bryce Young 5.4 Jalen doare 8.4
    Chuba Hubbard 6.8 Saquon Barkley 9.8
    Jonathan Brooks 4.2 AJ Brown 9.3
    Adam Thielen 5.5 DeVonta Smith 6.0
    Xavier Legette 4.4 Grant Calcaterra 5.1
    David Moore 3.8 Eagles DST 8.2
    Tommy Tremură 3.8
    Panthers DST 2.8
    James Winston 7.6 Russell Wilson 6.2
    Nick Chubb 5.9 Najee Harris 7.9
    Jerome Ford 4.9 Jaylen Warren 6.0
    Jerry Jeudy 8.3 George Pickens 9,0
    Elijah Moore 6.2 Pat Freiermuth 5.9
    David Njoku 7.2 Steelers DST 6.9
    Browns DST 5.7
    Aidan O'Connell 6.0 Baker Mayfield 8.2
    Sincer McCormick 5.7 Bucky Irving 8.4
    Ameer Abdullah 4.8 Rachaad White 5.8
    Jakobi Meyers 8.6 Mike Evans 9.2
    Tre Tucker 4.7 Sterling Shepard 3.5
    Brock Bowers 9,0 Cade Otton 6.3
    Raiders DST 3.7 Buccaneers DST 6.3
    Mac Jones 3.3 Will Levis 6.7
    Travis Etienne 6.1 Tony Pollard 8.2
    Tanc Bigsby 5.4 Calvin Ridley 7.6
    Brian Thomas Jr. 8.0 Nick Westbrook-Ikhine 6.1
    Parker Washington 4,65 Chigoziem Okonkwo 3.7
    Evan Engram 6.8 Titans DST 6.1
    Jaguars DST 4.1
    Geno Smith 5.7 Kyler Murray 6.3
    Kenneth Walker III 7.5 James Conner 6.9
    Zach Charbonnet 4.5 Marvin Harrison Jr. 7.5
    Jaxon Smith-Njigba 7.9 Michael Wilson 4.0
    DK Metcalf 7.1 Trey McBride 7.8
    Tyler Lockett 3.3 Cardinals DST 7.2
    Noah Fant 4.4
    Seahawks DST 7.0
    Josh Allen 9.5 Matthew Stafford 6.8
    James Cook 8.7 Kyren Williams 8.8
    Ray Davis 4.1 Puka Nacua 9.6
    Khalil Shakir 6.9 Cooper Kupp 8.8
    Amari Cooper 4.3 Demarcus Robinson 4.5
    Dawson Knox 4.5 Rams DST 3.9
    Facturi DST 6.7
    Caleb Williams 7.3 Brock Purdy 7.4
    D'Andre Swift 7.1 Isaac Guerendo 8.3
    DJ Moore 8.7 Jauan Jennings 7.2
    Keenan Allen 7.8 Deebo Samuel 6.3
    Roma Odunze 4.9 George Kittle 8.7
    Cole Kmet 5.2 49ers DST 5.1
    Urșii DST 5.3
    Justin Herbert 6.6 Patrick Mahomes 7.1
    Gus Edwards 5.0 Isiah Pacheco 7.7
    Kimani Vidal 4.0 Kareem Hunt 4.4
    Ladd McConkey 8.4 DeAndre Hopkins 5.8
    Quentin Johnston 4.8 Xavier Worthy 5.0
    Josh Palmer 3.4 Travis Kelce 7.6
    Will Dissly 5.7 Noah Gray 4.7
    Încărcătoare DST 6.5 Șefii DST 7.8
    Joe Burrow 9.4 Cooper Rush 5.8
    Chase Brown 9.6 Rico Dowdle 7.4
    Ja'Marr Chase 9.7 CeeDee Miel 8.1
    Tee Higgins 9.1 Brandin Cooks 5.1
    Andrei Iosivas 2.9 Jalen Tolbert 4.2
    Mike Gesicki 4.6 KaVontae Turpin 3.0
    Bengals DST 4.7 Jake Ferguson 7.0
    Cowboys DST 4.3

  • Fantasy Football Săptămâna 14: Clasamente, traverse, sfaturi de start/ședere și multe altele

    Aici, am adunat toate analizele noastre de top și sfaturile de fotbal fantastic, într-un singur loc, pentru a vă crește șansele de a obține o victorie în Săptămâna 14.

    Indiferent cum îți place să consumi sfaturi de fantezie (articol, audio sau video), avem ceva pentru toată lumea: clasamente, traverse, fade, sfaturi poziționale și mai multe analize experte de care ai nevoie pentru a câștiga.

    🧐 Strategia Săptămânii 14

    Vineri vine 🔜

    • Masa rotundă Yahoo Fantasy: Alegeri de condamnare în săptămâna 14

    • Săptămâna 14 Start 'Em Sit 'Em

    • Binge, Stream, Skip: Săptămâna 14

    • Cheile pentru a câștiga meciul

    🎧 Ascultă

    Abonați-vă la Prognoza Yahoo Fantasy pe Podcasturi Apple, Spotify, YouTube sau oriunde ai asculta.

    ▶️ Urmăriți

  • Data Dump Miercuri: 10 statistici de știut pentru Săptămâna 14 + 4 jucători de păstrat pe banca ta | Prognoza Yahoo Fantasy

    Acest conținut încorporat nu este disponibil în regiunea dvs.

    Săptămâna 13 a venit și a plecat. Este timpul să ne punem obiectivul pentru Săptămâna 14. Matt Harmon și Sal Vetri s-au întors pentru o nouă „Data Dump Wednesday” prin împărtășirea a 10 puncte de date pe care trebuie să le cunoașteți pentru Săptămâna 14 pentru a vă maximiza formațiile de fantezie.

    Pentru a încheia spectacolul, Sal identifică două jucători RB pe care trebuie să le ascundeți pe banca dvs., care au un contingent invers care se îndreaptă spre sezonul regulat și playoff-uri de fotbal fantastic.

    (2:35) – Dump de date miercuri: cele 5 puncte de date ale lui Sal pe care trebuie să le cunoașteți pentru săptămâna 14

    (30:30) – Data Dump Miercuri: cele 5 puncte de date ale lui Matt pe care trebuie să le cunoașteți pentru Săptămâna 14

    (59:30) – Ascunzările lui Sal: 4 RB-uri pe care ar trebui să le ținți pe firul de renunțare și să le ascunzi pe banca ta

    Săptămâna 13 a venit și a plecat. Este timpul să ne punem obiectivul pentru Săptămâna 14. Matt Harmon și Sal Vetri s-au întors pentru o nouă „Data Dump Wednesday” prin împărtășirea a 10 puncte de date pe care trebuie să le cunoașteți pentru Săptămâna 14 pentru a vă maximiza formațiile de fantezie. Pentru a încheia spectacolul, Sal identifică două jucători RB pe care trebuie să le ascundeți pe banca dvs., care au un contingent invers care se îndreaptă spre sezonul regulat și playoff-uri de fotbal fantastic. (Credit: Jason Jung)Săptămâna 13 a venit și a plecat. Este timpul să ne punem obiectivul pentru Săptămâna 14. Matt Harmon și Sal Vetri s-au întors pentru o nouă „Data Dump Wednesday” prin împărtășirea a 10 puncte de date pe care trebuie să le cunoașteți pentru Săptămâna 14 pentru a vă maximiza formațiile de fantezie. Pentru a încheia spectacolul, Sal identifică două jucători RB pe care trebuie să le ascundeți pe banca dvs., care au un contingent invers care se îndreaptă spre sezonul regulat și playoff-uri de fotbal fantastic. (Credit: Jason Jung)

    🖥️ Urmărește acest episod complet pe YouTube

    Consultați restul familiei de podcasturi Yahoo Sports la https://apple.co/3zEuTQj sau la Podcasturi Yahoo Sports

  • Clasamentul Săptămânii 14 de Fantasy Football: WR (Jumătate PPR)

    Receptorul de la Chicago Bears, DJ Moore, alergă în mișcare în timpul primei reprize a unui meci de fotbal NFL împotriva Detroit Lions din Detroit, joi, 28 noiembrie 2024. Lions au câștigat cu 23-20. (AP Foto/David Dermer)

    Chicago Bears WR DJ Moore a condus NFL în ținte în săptămâna 13. (AP Photo/David Dermer)

    Nu a fost prea mult să-și placă meciul cu pasageri al lui Chicago Bears în sezonul 2024, în ciuda afluxului de talent cu adăugările lui Keenan Allen și începătoarea Rome Odunze, iar fostul OC Shane Waldron a fost o parte mică din asta. De la plecarea lui, lucrurile s-au îmbunătățit în general pentru Caleb Williams și jocul cu pasi, iar Săptămâna 13 a fost un mare pas înainte în acest sens. Plusul pentru managerii de fotbal fantastic? Urșii WR obțin în sfârșit puncte de fantezie.

    Odunze nu a văzut la fel de multă acțiune, dar se pare că DJ Moore și Allen încep să treacă și în sfârșit văd volumul țintă pentru a-i face să merite un potențial început săptămânal în meciul potrivit. Allen a plecat cu două touchdown-uri în săptămâna 13, în timp ce Moore a condus toți jucătorii din ligă cu 16 ținte, ajungând cu 8-97-1, cu mult spațiu pentru îmbunătățiri pe parcurs.

    Aflați unde a aterizat fiecare dintre Bears WR în clasamentul echipei noastre în săptămâna 14 semi-PPR WR:

    Ce receptor larg va domina săptămâna 14?

  • Săptămâna 14 ridicări de sârmă de renunțare + finalul contorului de panică și colțul final de adaptare | Prognoza Yahoo Fantasy

    Acest conținut încorporat nu este disponibil în regiunea dvs.

    Săptămâna 13 este în cărți și oh, e multă panică pe aceste străzi fanteziste. Dalton Del Don se alătură lui Matt Harmon pentru finalul de sezon al „People's Panic Meter” pentru a răspunde tuturor mesajelor dvs. de ascultător. Duo-ul examinează situațiile pentru Kirk Cousins, ofensiva lui 49ers, Malik Nabers și multe altele. Cei doi au pus o fundă și pe ultimul colț de coping al sezonului și ce lecții putem învăța de la jucătorii din colț.

    Pentru a începe spectacolul, Harmon recapitulează jocul MNF dintre Cleveland Browns și Denver Broncos. Pentru a încheia spectacolul, cei doi discută cele mai tare nume de pe firul de renunțare și vă ajută să prioritizați jucătorii pe care trebuie să-i vizați în această săptămână pentru a-i adăuga la lista dvs.:

    (1:15) – Monologul lui Matt MNF pe Browns-Broncos

    (14:10) – Adio contorului de panică, Bună ziua „Contorul de încredere al lui Fantasy Bro”

    (15:30) – Contorul de panică al oamenilor: Rams RB, Falcons ofensive, 49ers ofense, Justin Jefferson, Malik Nabers, Tryone Tracy, Breece Hall, Jonathan Taylor, Zay Flowers

    (50:55) – Final Coping Corner: Ce lecții putem învăța de la jucători în cornerul din 2024?

    (1:00:05) – Conexiuni Wire Wire: Cele mai bune ridicări pentru Săptămâna 14

    Săptămâna 13 este în cărți și oh, e multă panică pe aceste străzi fanteziste. Dalton Del Don se alătură lui Matt Harmon pentru finalul de sezon al „People's Panic Meter” pentru a răspunde tuturor mesajelor dvs. de ascultător. Duo-ul examinează situațiile pentru Kirk Cousins, ofensiva lui 49ers, Malik Nabers și multe altele. (Credit: Jason Jung)Săptămâna 13 este în cărți și oh, e multă panică pe aceste străzi fanteziste. Dalton Del Don se alătură lui Matt Harmon pentru finalul de sezon al „People's Panic Meter” pentru a răspunde tuturor mesajelor dvs. de ascultător. Duo-ul examinează situațiile pentru Kirk Cousins, ofensiva lui 49ers, Malik Nabers și multe altele. (Credit: Jason Jung)

    Săptămâna 13 este în cărți și oh, e multă panică pe aceste străzi fanteziste. Dalton Del Don se alătură lui Matt Harmon pentru finalul de sezon al „People's Panic Meter” pentru a răspunde tuturor mesajelor dvs. de ascultător. Duo-ul examinează situațiile pentru Kirk Cousins, ofensiva lui 49ers, Malik Nabers și multe altele. (Credit: Jason Jung)

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