| 10/5/07
 
 One of the best tools that FF Today provides is the fantasy 
              football points vs. feature and, more specifically, the remaining 
              Strength of Schedule. 
              Using this feature, it is my hope to augment these features and 
              refine them even further. Over time, it should be proven in this 
              column that different styles of players score differently against 
              different opponents. For example, perhaps a possession receiver 
              makes for a better play against a certain defense as opposed to 
              a burner despite the fact that the defensive back guarding him is 
              considered slow. Given the high number of committee running backs 
              and teams without a clear-cut #1 receiver in the NFL, I feel this 
              analysis will help owners with roster decisions throughout this 
              season.
 QBs: (1 pt per 25 yds passing; 
                6 pts for all TDs, -2 pts/INT or fumble)RBs/WRs/TEs: (1 point per 10 
                yards rushing/receiving, 6 points per TD)
 Note: Teams that have a fantasy 
                relevant TE will be included. Also, for the first weeks, projected 
                fantasy points allowed will be used as teams have yet to establish 
                any trends. After the first month of the season, this column will 
                take on the look it had last season as there will be enough information 
                to start analyzing trends.
 
 Bye Weeks: Bengals, Vikings, 
                Raiders, Eagles
  STL @ ARI | ATL 
                @ TEN | CAR @ NO | CLE @ NE 
                | DET @ WAS | JAX @ KC | MIA 
                @ HOUNYJ @ NYG | SEA @ PIT | TB 
                @ IND | BAL @ SF | SD @ DEN 
                | CHI @ GB | DAL @ BUF
  Gus Frerotte/Torry Holt/Drew Bennett/Randy 
                McMichael
 Brian Leonard (vs. ARI)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Cardinals this season: 
                49ers
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Cardinals this season: 
                N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: 6.6
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: 9.6
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 14.9/22.7/2.8
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 14.5
 Passing Game Thoughts: It’s a damn shame this potentially 
                high-flying act has been reduced to this. It’s quite possible 
                the Rams offense has seen the quickest collapse from an elite 
                unit into one resembling the 2006 Raiders. And one has to look 
                no further than the offensive line, but in all reality, one would 
                be hard-pressed to find a regular starter on the Rams offense 
                that is not currently playing with an injury that should be sidelining 
                him. Holt is, in all honesty, the only fantasy play on this team 
                right now and he is likely going to produce only at a #3 WR level, 
                at least until Steven Jackson gets back, if not for the rest of 
                the season. If you do have the misfortune of owning a Rams player 
                right now, see if their reputation can bring back some kind of 
                startable talent in return in a trade, because most of the injuries 
                don’t figure to heal as soon as the Rams need them to and 
                St. Louis’ schedule doesn’t get easier anytime in 
                the near future. Running Game Thoughts: Read above…it really boils down 
                to injuries. Leonard did well vs. the Cowboys in Week 4 to put 
                up 59 total yards. To put that into perspective, Miami’s 
                Ronnie Brown – fantasy’s best RB through four games 
                – totaled just 69 yards against Dallas. In the Cardinals, 
                the Rams face a defense that held Willie Parker to less than two 
                yards/carry. Now, of the RBs that Arizona has already faced, Leonard 
                profiles most like Willis McGahee, who had a fair amount of success 
                against them. However, McGahee had the benefit of 25 touches and 
                a good defense to keep him in the game, Leonard does not. As hard 
                as it is to say, the rookie is probably not even worth a flex 
                play until further notice. Projections:Gus Frerotte: 190 pass/1 TD/1 INT
 Torry Holt: 50 rec
 Drew Bennett: 60 rec
 Randy McMichael: 40 rec/1 TD
 Brian Leonard: 60 rush/25 rec
 Matt Leinart & Kurt Warner/Larry Fitzgerald/Bryant 
                JohnsonEdgerrin James (vs. STL)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Rams this season: 
                N/A
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Rams this season: 
                Bucs
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: 37.5
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 18.6/20.3
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 25.3
 Passing Game Thoughts: It’s 
                a good thing fantasy owners can usually count on Anquan Boldin 
                and Fitzgerald (of course, Boldin is likely to miss his second 
                straight game), because HC Ken Whisenhunt had no problems following 
                through on his plans to rotate Leinart and Warner. Predictably, 
                it makes inserting either QB nearly impossible into fantasy lineups. 
                They face a Rams defense that will gladly welcome back arguably 
                their best CB – Fahkir Brown – from suspension but 
                a defense that offers very little resistance against the run or 
                the pass overall. In two games, they have allowed a combined six 
                TD passes against one RB score while in the other two contests, 
                they have surrendered five rushing scores to the RB position and 
                no TDs to the opposing QB. Even though they will involve Fitzgerald 
                (and Boldin, if he plays), this game should be all about Edge. 
                Expect small numbers from the passing game, as Whisenhunt will 
                discover early on that Arizona will have very little reason to 
                throw much more than 20-25 times. Running Game Thoughts: After a rough two-game stretch against 
                some of the best run defenses in the NFL – against which 
                he did very well – James will get to visit the other side 
                of the spectrum when the Cardinals head to St. Louis. The Rams 
                have permitted 712 total yards and six TDs to opposing RBs through 
                four games – an average of 178 total yards and 1.5 scores. 
                That total probably doesn’t miss the mark too much as far 
                as what James should get in this game. Projections:Matt Leinart: 80 pass/0 TD/0 INT
 Kurt Warner: 120 pass/1 TD/0 INT
 Larry Fitzgerald: 100 rec/1 TD
 Bryant Johnson: 50 rec
 Edgerrin James: 115 rush/2 TD/20 rec
 
 Joey Harrington/RoddyWhite/Michael Jenkins/Alge 
                Crumpler
 Warrick Dunn/Jerious Norwood (vs. TEN)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Titans this season: 
                Jags
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Titans this season: 
                Jags
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: 16.6
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: 19.2
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: 3.8
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: 5.6
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 10.9/18.7/7.4
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 13
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: The Titans are allowing 10.9 pts/game to 
                the QB position. Indianapolis was able to get some yards in the 
                passing game against Tennessee (312 yards), but outside of that, 
                the Titans have been pretty stingy. Bear in mind that the Falcons 
                aerial attack – considering the struggles of the Saints 
                – may be the second-best passing game the defense has faced. 
                That said, Harrington is not a good play this week, although Tennessee 
                has been beaten deep from time to time, making the upstart White 
                a very viable #3 WR option this week. Crumpler will be the best 
                TE the team has faced outside of Dallas Clark and the Titans are 
                giving up some yards each week to the position, so play Crump 
                like you normally would.
 Running Game Thoughts: Given 
                the high number of walking wounded RBs out there, an owner could 
                do worse than Dunn and/or Norwood on their bench. However, it 
                doesn’t say much when Dunn cracks 60 rushing yards for the 
                first time this season and that is considered reason to celebrate. 
                In Week 5, they face a Titans defense that is yielding a miniscule 
                13 points/game to the RB position (and 3.2 yds/carry). I don’t 
                see Dunn/Norwood being able to break through against a defense 
                that stifled the Jaguars and Saints RBs duos while doing a very 
                respectable job against Joseph Addai. Projections:Joey Harrington: 215 yds pass/1 TD/2 INT
 Roddy White: 70 yds rec/1 TD
 Michael Jenkins: 60 yds rec
 Alge Crumpler: 50 yds rec
 Warrick Dunn: 40 yds rush/15 yds rec
 Jerious Norwood: 35 yds rush/15 yds rec
 Vince Young/Brandon Jones/Eric Moulds/Bo 
                ScaifeLenDale White/Chris Brown (vs. ATL)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Falcons this season: 
                Jags
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Falcons this season: 
                Vikings
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: 18.9
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: 24.5
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: 5.7
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: 12.3
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 16.9/16.4/6.9
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 19.6
 Passing Game Thoughts: Much like their defense, the Titans lack 
                much star-power on offense, but they are awfully efficient. The 
                closest thing the Falcons have seen to Young this season athletically 
                is Tavaris Jackson, but the best run-pass combination was David 
                Garrard. As will be the gameplan for 90% of the season, the Titans 
                will pound away with White, relieve him from time to time with 
                Brown and let Young bail them out of any third-and-long conversion 
                attempt. This formula lends to a fair amount of success on the 
                real playing field, but is not all that great for fantasy owners 
                scouring the waiver wire for WRs and TEs looking to fill out their 
                boxscores. A different WR has led Tennessee in fantasy points 
                each week, and given the success of the running game, even Young’s 
                favorite target (and college teammate) Scaife has been a minimal 
                contributor.  Running Game Thoughts: It appeared to me early on, the Titans 
                were a RBBC team that an owner could look to the matchup to find 
                out which RB would be more successful. After taking in Week 3’s 
                MNF game, it looks to me Tennessee will ensure White will get 
                his carries first and then Brown will relieve him in spots, regardless 
                of the matchup. Going forward, the one to own – by a wide 
                margin – is White. However, Brown will steal enough carries 
                from White to make the former Trojan a low-end #3 RB for now. 
                For this game, the Titans will get White his usual 18-20 carries 
                while Brown should finish with 12-15 as the Falcons will likely 
                struggle to score against Tennessee, making White a good play 
                and Brown a passable option to cover for a bye week. Projections:Vince Young: 175 pass/1 TD/1 INT/30 rush/1 TD
 Brandon Jones: 35 rec
 Eric Moulds: 40 rec/1 TD
 Bo Scaife: 30 rec
 LenDale White: 70 rush/1 TD
 Chris Brown: 55 rush/15 rec
 
 David Carr/Steve Smith/Keary Colbert/Jeff 
                King
 DeShaun Foster/DeAngelo Williams (vs. NO)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Saints this season: 
                Bucs
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Saints this season: 
                N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: 22.3
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: 30.6
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: 4.5
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 23.8/28.5/6.7
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 20.7
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: A lot of people’s vogue pick to recapture 
                their glory from seasons’ past, the Panthers have fallen 
                off the map quickly, especially in the passing game. As much criticism 
                as Jake Delhomme seems to draw from game-to-game and year-to-year, 
                he knows Smith is the one that butters his bread and both thrive 
                when they are healthy. Bucs CB Ronde Barber, who guarded Smith 
                most of Week 4, said that Tampa Bay never had to follow through 
                on their “tricks” to bottle up Smith because Carr 
                wasn’t giving him his opportunities. Keep tabs on Delhomme’s 
                health because after last year, it appears Smith’s elite 
                numbers are very much tied in to his long relationship with Delhomme. 
                Either way, don’t be afraid to sell high after Week 5 after 
                Smith puts up a good game against a woeful New Orleans pass defense, 
                because without Delhomme, this passing attack is going to get 
                worse before it gets better.
 Running Game Thoughts: Foster has seemingly widened the lead 
                on the depth chart over Williams, as Foster has 35 carries over 
                the past two weeks – nearly triple of the rushes Williams 
                has in that time (13). That bodes well for the six-year vet, who 
                faces a fairly cushy matchup against fantasy’s eighth-most 
                friendly defense against RBs, giving up 20.7 points/game to the 
                position. Foster enjoyed a good amount of success last season 
                against them (202 total yards, two TDs in two meetings) and it 
                is fair to say things haven’t changed much on New Orleans’ 
                defense. What makes it even more tempting to use Foster is that 
                the Saints have allowed at least one RB score in every game so 
                far. With Carr under center, expect a heavy dose of the running 
                game, meaning Foster will likely perform a #1 RB this week. Projections:David Carr: 210 pass/2 TD/2 INT
 Steve Smith: 70 rec/1 TD
 Keary Colbert: 40 rec/1 TD
 DeShaun Foster: 100 rush/1 TD/20 rec
 DeAngelo Williams: 25 rush/20 rec
 Drew Brees/Marques Colston/Lance Moore/Eric 
                Johnson Reggie Bush (vs. CAR)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Panthers this season: 
                Texans
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Panthers this season: 
                N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: 21.4
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: 24.7
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: 4.4
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 19.2/21/5.4
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 15.9
 Passing Game Thoughts: You heard it here first…okay, you’ve 
                heard it here before. This is the game that Brees gets it going. 
                However, I attribute many of the Saints struggles to an inexplicable 
                collapse of the offensive line, which was nearly impenetrable 
                a season ago but has seemingly fallen on their laurels since. 
                Unlike the Rams, the Saints don’t have injuries to blame 
                for their woeful front-line play. However, they face a defense 
                that – considering its reputation – has only registered 
                two sacks and no interceptions through four games. In fact, their 
                only saving grace is that they have recovered six fumbles. With 
                that in mind, Brees should have ample time to find Colston down 
                the field – every opponent’s lead WR has put up 100 
                yards, a TD or both against the Panthers this season. And Week 
                3 revealed Brees trusts Moore a lot, so look for his role in the 
                offense to continue to increase. Running Game Thoughts: Losing MLB Dan Morgan early in Week 4 
                – and as it turns out, indefinitely – further sets 
                back a run defense that was just run over against the Bucs. As 
                mentioned here earlier in the season, without Morgan, the Panthers 
                defense drops off dramatically. On the other side, Deuce McAllister’s 
                season-ending knee injury changes the dynamic of the Saints’ 
                offense but, in all honesty, it should open it up. New Orleans 
                figures to have an anemic rushing attack – yardage-wise 
                – going forward, or at least until Bush learns how to run 
                inside, as Aaron Stecker is more Bush than McAllister. A possible 
                wild-card for the second half of the season is Pierre Thomas, 
                an undrafted free agent rookie who beat out fourth-round pick 
                Antonio Pittman in camp. He is faster than McAllister and may 
                be able to fill his role in this offense – albeit not as 
                well – when he gets more acclimated to the pro game. For 
                now, however, this ground game will only as effective as Bush 
                makes it. Projections:Drew Brees: 290 pass/3 TD/0 INT
 Marques Colston: 110 rec/1 TD
 Lance Moore: 55 rec/1 TD
 Eric Johnson: 40 rec
 Reggie Bush: 45 rush/50 rec/1 TD
 
 Derek Anderson/Braylon Edwards/Joe Jurevicius/Kellen 
                Winslow
 Jamal Lewis (vs. NE)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Patriots this season: 
                Chargers
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Patriots this season: 
                Bills
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: 13.8
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: 7.2
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: 13.7
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: 17.6
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 11.4/16.1/5.5
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 11.9
 Passing Game Thoughts: Color 
                me impressed that the Browns outscored the Bengals and outdefended 
                the Ravens…even though that is kind of a lie. Getting the 
                number increased on the left side of the column instead of the 
                right side is all that matters – reality or fantasy. To 
                help you in the latter, I will continue to recommend the same 
                guy I have before – Anderson. He faces a tough defense this 
                week, doesn’t have the greatest job security in the world 
                and his accuracy comes and goes, but the Oregon St. product has 
                something not many QBs have – weapons. As a result, he has 
                accounted for at least two TDs each of his three starts, a trend 
                I expect to continue against the big, bad Patriots. I would expect 
                down games from Jurevicius and Edwards though, but the Pats have 
                shown a little vulnerability against the TE, surrendering 5.5 
                points/game to the position through four games. As such, he should 
                have the best day of any receiving option for the Browns. Running Game Thoughts: Lewis stuck it to me and his former team 
                last week, finding the end zone despite the Ravens tough run defense 
                that had not allowed a RB score through three contests. Now, he 
                looks to pull the two-fer on me and post a similar effort against 
                New England. The Pats are allowing just 3.5 yds/carry through 
                four games, including shutting down LT and Marshawn Lynch, so 
                while Lewis is showing some renewed life, he will struggle to 
                get it going anymore than he did last week when he carried 23 
                times for 64 yards. Don’t expect a repeat – of the 
                score or the yardage – this week. Projections:Derek Anderson: 235 pass/2 TD/3 INT/10 rush
 Braylon Edwards: 70 rec/1 TD
 Joe Jurevicius: 40 rec
 Kellen Winslow: 65 rec/1 TD
 Jamal Lewis: 55 rush/15 rec
 Tom Brady/Randy Moss/Wes Welker/Donte 
                Stallworth/Ben WatsonLaurence Maroney/Sammy Morris (vs. CLE)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Browns this season: 
                Steelers, Bengals
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Browns this season: 
                N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: 40
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: 44.1
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: 8.4
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 27.7/29.8/9.4
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 19.5
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: You don’t need my input to tell you 
                this passing game is for real. Three TDs or more in each of the 
                first four games will do that for a person. Even though Brady 
                was an every-week start to begin with, his owners can either bask 
                in his 25+ fantasy point glory or trade him for a king’s 
                ransom. Cleveland has allowed at least one passing score in every 
                game so far – and nine overall – so don’t expect 
                this passing game to slow down just yet. There is little reason 
                why Moss cannot continue his run of 100-yard, two-TD performances 
                against Cleveland and I expect Stallworth to earn his keep as 
                well, starting this week. TEs have also enjoyed a great deal of 
                success vs. the Browns, meaning Watson should also do well.
 Running Game Thoughts: If Maroney owners want their guy to score, 
                he’s going to have to do it from five or more yards out. 
                Even better, it appears this job share trickles down to third-stringer 
                Heath Evans, meaning when Maroney plays, Morris is the goal line 
                back while when Morris is the starter, Evans is short yardage 
                guy. (Whatever happened to the idea that vision being the key 
                factor as to whether or not a RB could score? There must be some 
                really nasty things that happen to RBs down by the goal line that 
                we don’t see.) All kidding aside, every Browns opponent 
                has had their feature back top 100 rushing yards, a trend I see 
                continuing in Week 5. Maroney is a different type of runner than 
                Cleveland has faced to this point and is not a player that former 
                Pats DC (and current Browns HC) Romeo Crennel would know intimately 
                from his days in New England. In short, there is no reason not 
                to expect #1 RB numbers from Maroney this week if he plays. And 
                if he doesn’t, the same goes for Morris. Projections:Tom Brady: 300 pass/3 TD/0 INT
 Randy Moss: 105 rec/1 TD
 Donte Stallworth: 50 rec/1 TD
 Wes Welker: 65 rec
 Ben Watson: 20 rec/1 TD
 Laurence Maroney: 90 rush/1 TD20 rec
 Sammy Morris: 55 rush/1 TD/20 rec
 
 Jon Kitna/Roy Williams/Calvin Johnson/Mike 
                Furrey/Shaun McDonald
 Tatum Bell/Kevin Jones (vs. WAS)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Redskins this season: 
                N/A
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Redskins this season: 
                N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 11.7/14.2/6.1
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 18.2
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Football can sometimes be very interesting 
                from the standpoint of how two completely different approaches 
                can both achieve the same W-L result. It makes it even better 
                when we get to see those approaches paired up against each other. 
                Such is the case in this tilt, one that would have been considered 
                unspectacular just one month ago. As it will be for every opponent 
                of the Lions, the biggest question that will face the Redskins 
                is: do they have enough good CBs to cover Detroit’s four-wide 
                alignment? My guess is no. Williams and McDonald will be consistent 
                plays throughout the majority of the season as will Johnson, health 
                permitting. Furrey is the wild card and stands to benefit the 
                most when one of the first three do not play. Chris Chambers, 
                Jason Avant and Plaxico Burress all had 80+ yards receiving against 
                Washington, with Burress scoring the lone WR touchdown allowed 
                by the Redskins defense. Both Williams and Johnson enjoy a significant 
                size advantage over most CBs, so they are the best bets to score 
                in this contest.
 Running Game Thoughts: Jones is slowly being worked into his 
                old job and may become a fine #2 fantasy RB in a couple weeks. 
                However, the Redskins are stingy enough against the run right 
                now that he doesn’t make all that great of a play this week 
                yet, especially since Detroit will look to pass all day. Projections:Jon Kitna: 260 pass/2 TD/1 INT
 Roy Williams: 85 rec/1 TD
 Calvin Johnson: 60 rec/1 TD
 Mike Furrey: 40 rec
 Shaun McDonald: 50 rec
 Kevin Jones: 50 rush/1 TD/20 rec
 Tatum Bell: 20 rush
 Jason Campbell/Santana Moss/Antwaan Randle 
                El/Chris CooleyClinton Portis/Ladell Betts (vs. DET)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Lions this season: 
                N/A
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Lions this season: 
                N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 20/25/3.6
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 30.6
 Passing Game Thoughts: How well this group boils down to how 
                well the Washington defense holds up against the fast and furious 
                Lions passing attack. If they fall behind early, Campbell may 
                push for his first 300-yard passing day. If the Redskins defense 
                is stout and is able to make Kitna hold on to the ball for any 
                length of time, then Campbell’s yardage output will be minimal. 
                I expect the latter more than the former, therefore, Moss makes 
                a nice play as a #3 WR (if he can go) while Cooley should see 
                more action in pass patterns than he has lately. The Redskins 
                TE has been kept in to pass-protect more than usual due to the 
                season-ending injuries to the right side of the offensive line. 
                Desmond Clark put up a pretty nice game – and was targeted 
                10 times – in Week 4, something Cooley could push as Washington 
                tries to kill the clock. They will take a shot or two, but for 
                the most part, expect a conservative game plan that attempts to 
                keep the Lions offense off the field. Running Game Thoughts: If the Redskins have their way, they will 
                run 40+ times in this game. That would mean that they are sustaining 
                drives, keeping their defense rested and, most importantly, keeping 
                the score in the teens. As such, Portis and Betts both make outstanding 
                plays (and Betts makes an outstanding play if Portis’ knee 
                troubles him any more). The Lions defense has kept opposing RBs 
                somewhat in check, but have been pummeled by them on the road, 
                especially in the passing game. Look for a repeat in this game. Projections:Jason Campbell: 235 pass/2 TD/1 INT/20 rush
 Santana Moss: 90 rec/1 TD
 Antwaan Randle El: 50 rec (expect Moss’ totals if he can’t 
                go)
 Chris Cooley: 25 rec/1 TD
 Clinton Portis: 50 rush/15 rec
 Ladell Betts: 100 rush/1 TD/30 rec
 
 David Garrard/Dennis Northcutt/Ernest Wilford
 Fred Taylor/Maurice Jones-Drew/Greg Jones (vs. KC)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Chiefs this season: 
                N/A
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Chiefs this season: 
                N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 7.5/11/4.5
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 17.7
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Every week, there is at least one matchup 
                or a trend I am interested to see play out. One of this week’s 
                trends would be the development of the Jaguars’ offense 
                after their bye week. Does OC Dirk Koetter go away from his beloved 
                passing game to focus on his stud RBs? If he does, do Taylor and 
                MJD get equal time? I ask these questions primarily because outside 
                of Northcutt, I don’t expect much from the WRs again – 
                and even Northcutt’s numbers will likely be minimal. Kansas 
                City has been the toughest defense for fantasy QBs to score against, 
                but they have yet to face a running threat like Garrard either. 
                That said, the Chiefs defense has limited opposing QBs to two 
                total TDs, something I don’t see changing all that much 
                here. This will be a low-scoring battle that will be decided on 
                the good old-fashioned values of who can run, who can stop the 
                run and who wins the turnover battle – the first two of 
                which KC has had trouble doing for most of the season.
 Running Game Thoughts: Of all the 32 teams in the league, I must 
                admit I have less idea what is happening with the Jacksonville 
                offense than any other team. Koetter’s background says “pass”, 
                but the Jags’ personnel says “run”. Truth be 
                told, I believe this team starts running the ball more often (and 
                more effectively) going forward, but not to the point they did 
                last season. Taylor has been more effective than MJD in two straight 
                games, something that bodes well for Taylor if he gets enough 
                opportunities to exploit a Chiefs defense that is allowing 4.4 
                yds/carry. Three straight opponents have seen their main RB top 
                100 yards rushing, a mark that could very well be extended this 
                week if Taylor gets enough carries. Projections:David Garrard: 185 pass/1 TD/1 INT/25 rush
 Dennis Northcutt: 50 rec
 Ernest Wilford: 55 rec
 Fred Taylor: 90 rush/15 rec
 Maurice Jones-Drew: 40 rush/1 TD/20 rec
 Greg Jones: 10 rush
  Damon Huard/Dwayne Bowe/Eddie Kennison/Tony 
                GonzalezLarry Johnson (vs. JAX)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Jags this season: 
                N/A
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Jags this season: 
                Titans
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: 25.7
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 10.1/11.1/4.4
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 18.2
 Passing Game Thoughts: Every week, fans – real and fantasy 
                – hope to find a good seat and watch an entertaining, nailbiting 
                game. While this one figures to be close, it doesn’t figure 
                to be all that thrilling. Despite rolling up 30 points on the 
                Chargers, the Chiefs offense has a long way to go yet in my mind 
                to reach average. However, thanks to the rookie Bowe, this offense 
                is not longer dreadful. Bowe is likely to be limited by a good 
                CB tandem in Rashean Mathis and Brian Williams, so don’t 
                expect the kind of numbers you have been getting from him recently, 
                but that also does not mean he can’t fit in nicely as a 
                #3 WR for the remainder of the season either. Bowe’s emergence 
                can mean only good things for Gonzo and will only open up things 
                in the running game, two things the Chiefs have to be happy about. Running Game Thoughts: We are nearing the end of the clearance 
                sale on LJ’s stock. (If you have fared well with Johnson 
                starting off slow because of his wretched schedule, then you are 
                in luck. If you didn’t, you were forewarned.) Mind you, 
                he had been held scoreless this whole time, so don’t buy 
                with the idea he will repeat last year’s numbers just because 
                the schedule lightens up a bit after this week. In the Jags, he 
                faces a defense that may extend that scoreless streak while also 
                keeping his total yardage numbers down. After being humbled by 
                Chris Brown in Week 1, Jacksonville has recovered nicely to allow 
                Atlanta and Denver RBs just 3.4 yds/carry. Because they will be 
                able to defend Bowe and Gonzalez without much change in their 
                gameplan, they can focus on LJ, meaning the Penn St. alum will 
                post #2 RB numbers yet again. Projections:Damon Huard: 200 pass/1 TD/1 INT
 Dwayne Bowe: 60 rec
 Eddie Kennison: 25 rec
 Tony Gonzalez: 60 rec/1 TD
 Larry Johnson: 70 rush/40 rec
 
 Trent Green/Chris Chambers/Marty Booker/David 
                Martin
 Ronnie Brown (vs. HOU)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Texans this season: 
                Falcons
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Texans this season: 
                Chiefs
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: 20.8
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: 28.4
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: 3.4
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: 12.1
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 17.6/23.5/5.4
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 13.3
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: If you have been on the wrong end of Brown’s 
                two-week domination of the fantasy world, then hopefully you can 
                enjoy the relative comfort you should feel after the Texans bring 
                his two-week fantasy point rampage to a halt. He may score, but 
                if the Dolphins want to win, they would be best served doing so 
                via the passing game. Outside of Week 3 when Houston focused more 
                on taking away the passing game from Indy, the Texans have surrendered 
                539 yards and five passing TDs in two games against fantasy “stalwarts” 
                Jake Delhomme and Joey Harrington Because the Texans have little 
                reason to focus on anyone besides Brown in Miami’s offense, 
                expect Green to recapture his early-season connection with Chambers 
                again, although it has been the #2 WR that has scored the most 
                fantasy points against the Texans lately, making Booker a worthy 
                gamble.
 Running Game Thoughts: This game will be the true test of Brown’s 
                new brilliance. The Texans have not allowed an opposing RB to 
                cross the stripe besides Joseph Addai – twice in Week 3 
                – and have not allowed a single RB to compile more than 
                91 total yards against them. My advice: sell high on Brown…real 
                high. I had Brown rated quite high in the preseason, but I did 
                a double take when I saw their fantasy playoff schedule (Week 
                15 and 16) against the Ravens and Patriots. If you are deep at 
                RB behind Brown, enjoy the ride with him until the playoffs. Otherwise, 
                see if you can’t land a top-tier RB and another player in 
                return after two monster weeks against below-average run defenses. 
                I expect a return to normalcy for Brown this week, but since he 
                is apparently seeing the bulk of the carries, he will remain a 
                solid #2 RB (if not a low-end #1) until HC Cam Cameron decides 
                to follow through on his next whim, be it reinserting Chatman 
                into a time-share or giving rookie Lorenzo Booker a look when 
                Cameron decides he offers a “change of pace”.  Projections:Trent Green: 265 pass/2 TD/1 INT
 Chris Chambers: 80 rec/1 TD
 Marty Booker: 65 rec/1 TD
 David Martin: 20 rec
 Ronnie Brown: 60 rush/40 rec
 Jesse Chatman: 20 rush/15 rec
 Matt Schaub/ Andre Davis/Kevin Walter/Owen 
                DanielsAhman Green/Ron Dayne (vs. MIA)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Dolphins this season: 
                Jets
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Dolphins this season: 
                Jets
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: 22.9
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: 17.9
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: 6.4
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: 12.9
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 22.4/23.5/4.4
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 23.2
 Passing Game Thoughts: I’m sure that Daniels’ owners 
                love the newfound attention their man is receiving, but this offense 
                – and the team in general – need their playmaker(s) 
                back. We have discovered that Schaub was worth the investment 
                that Houston made in him, but with out Green and Johnson, the 
                big-play element drops off dramatically – the very thing 
                that helped them jump out to a 2-0 start. That said, for as long 
                as Johnson remains out, Davis remains a solid play. In fact, you 
                could do much worse than using Davis to fill Johnson’s void 
                while he recovers. Davis has tallied 187 receiving yards and a 
                score in the two games Johnson has missed, numbers close to what 
                we would have expected from a healthy AJ anyway. In fact, the 
                Dolphins have struggled defending the opposition’s deep 
                threat all season long. Either way, the Texans will look to exploit 
                a shoddy run defense lacking its leader – MLB Zach Thomas 
                – if he is unable to play again this week, but don’t 
                let that stop you from using Schaub as a bye-week fill-in for 
                a QB like Donovan McNabb. Daniels’ stock remains slightly 
                up as long as Johnson sits, but he is more of a yardage threat 
                than a scoring threat until AJ returns. Running Game Thoughts: As mentioned above, look for Houston to 
                pound away all day at the Dolphins’ run defense, ala the 
                Raiders from last week, especially if Thomas misses another game. 
                And as that gets going, figure it will be only a matter of time 
                before Schaub opens up the play-action game. All in all, if this 
                defense doesn’t get fixed quickly, it could be the defense 
                you hope your RBs face come playoff time. DC Dom Capers is one 
                of the best in the game, but age and injury appears to have caught 
                up to his unit quicker than expected. Ahman Green figures to be 
                a game-time decision, but whichever RB goes should be in for a 
                very good day if the ‘Fins are minus Thomas once again. 
                Stay tuned.  Projections:Matt Schaub: 275 pass/2 TD/0 INT
 Andre Davis: 90 rec/1 TD
 Kevin Walter: 40 rec
 Owen Daniels: 60 rec
 Ron Dayne: 120 rush/2 TD/20 rec
 
 Chad Pennington/Laveranues Coles/Jerricho 
                Cotchery
 Thomas Jones (vs. NYG)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Giants this season: 
                N/A
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Giants this season: 
                N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 21.7/18.5/11.8
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 20.5
 Passing Game Thoughts: Where did that effort come from? DC Steve 
                Spagnulo no doubt had an idea of what to expect from his old team, 
                but 12 sacks in Week 4? Over the last six quarters, this defense 
                has looked awesome – a far cry from the first 10. Now, as 
                these two teams each play a home game at the same time, the Giants 
                will be hard-pressed to sack Pennington even half that many times. 
                For one, a rookie LT making his first start won’t be asked 
                to defend DE Osi Umenyiora one-on-one all game long. Also, Pennington’s 
                game is one of quick drop and quick release. Lastly, unlike Philly’s 
                WRs, the Jets wideouts can beat press coverage, something that 
                the Redskins and Eagles WRs struggle to do consistently. The bigger 
                WRs – Terrell Owens and Donald Driver – have fared 
                well vs. the G-Men, meaning Cotchery stands to record the finest 
                numbers of all Jets WRs at the end of this contest. Running Game Thoughts: Jones owners – myself included – 
                had to be quite disappointed in his Week 4 output. We need to 
                see more from him in the coming week or else he will risk the 
                label of “sell him now while you can get something for him” 
                as his schedule turns tough again after the Jets’ Week 10 
                bye. That time (selling him) could be now. Doug has yet to find 
                the end zone – Leon Washington spoiled his fun last week. 
                Perhaps his drought ends this week against the Giants, who allowed 
                at least one RB score in each of the first three weeks and then 
                watched Correll Buckhalter run for 100+ yards last week while 
                they were pounding Donovan McNabb into submission. All told, the 
                Giants’ run defense struggles don’t figure to go away 
                anytime soon, so it may be worth your time to find out what Doug’s 
                value on the marketplace is…after this game. Projections:Chad Pennington: 220 pass/2 TD/0 INT
 Laveranues Coles: 80 rec
 Jerricho Cotchery: 90 rec/1 TD
 Thomas Jones: 90 rush/1 TD/20 rec
 Eli Manning/Plaxico Burress/Amani Toomer/Jeremy 
                ShockeyBrandon Jacobs/Derrick Ward (vs. NYJ)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Jets this season: 
                Patriots
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Jets this season: 
                Patriots
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: 30.3
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: 38.8
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: 6.9
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: 21.1
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 20.1/20.6/8.7
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 23.5
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: As long as Burress continues to play on 
                his injured ankle, look for meager yardage totals from the lanky 
                ex-Spartan. However, Manning appears to only have eyes for Burress 
                whenever the G-Men can sniff the end zone – much to the 
                chagrin of Shockey owners, who were probably counting on their 
                guy to have at least one TD by now. Toomer has been close a time 
                or two – his defender in Week 4 was called for a penalty 
                on what was likely to be a 50+ yard TD catch – but Ward’s 
                Week 1 receiving score is the only TD that has landed in the hands 
                of a receiver besides Burress. Thus, for a passing game that has 
                been better than advertised, only one WR is worth an every-week 
                play and he is probably playing at about 60%. The Jets are right 
                in the middle of the pack in terms of allowing fantasy points 
                to WRs and in the top 10 versus QBs, but given their recent struggles 
                against the run, look for the Giants to try to bully their co-tenants 
                around with Ward and/or Jacobs.
 Running Game Thoughts: I’m not one that is easily impressed 
                by “upstart” RBs that seemingly appear out of nowhere. 
                The preseason may not count for much, but for those that took 
                in a Giants game or two, they will recall that Ward stood out, 
                much like he did all throughout the summer. Did I speculate about 
                him in Week 1? No, but it’s questionable at that time the 
                Giants knew what they had either. Long story short, Ward’s 
                all-around game strikes a bit of resemblance to a poor man’s 
                Tiki Barber – minus the breakaway speed, hence the poor 
                man description – and he has forced his way into at least 
                a 50-50 split of the workload behind a very good run-blocking 
                line. Against the Jets, the Giants face a team that has been dissected 
                by opposing rushers the past two weeks, giving up four total TDs 
                and 290 total yards. On the season, they are allowing 23.5 fantasy 
                points to opposing RBs, more than enough for Ward to go well over 
                100 total yards and Jacobs – if he suits up – or Reuben 
                Droughns to grab a short yardage score. Projections:Eli Manning: 255 pass/2 TD/1 INT
 Plaxico Burress: 60 rec/1 TD
 Amani Toomer: 50 rec
 Jeremy Shockey: 50 rec/1 TD
 Brandon Jacobs: 25 rush/1 TD/20 rec
 Derrick Ward: 80 rush/30 rec
 
 Matt Hasselbeck/Deion Branch/Bobby Engram/Nate 
                Burleson/Marcus Pollard
 Shaun Alexander (vs. PIT)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Steelers this season: 
                N/A
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Steelers this season: 
                Cardinals
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: 14.9
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 12/15.7/4.9
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 9.9
 
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: The Steelers are far from the easiest team 
                to pass against, but it offers less resistance than their perennially 
                stellar run defense. After getting blanked in the season opener, 
                Branch has scored more than 12 fantasy points in each of the next 
                three contests. And in terms of the matchup, Branch is not like 
                any WR the Steelers have faced. Given the Seahawks willingness 
                to make sure he gets his touches, his owners have to play him. 
                Meanwhile, Engram appears to be healthy for the first time in 
                a long time and is the second-best option in this passing game. 
                It is likely Hasselbeck will find one of them for a score, but 
                nearly impossible to tell who that may be given Pittsburgh’s 
                early-season track record. That said, expect a down day from every 
                Seattle player across the board.
 Running Game Thoughts: Edgerrin James’ 77-yard rushing 
                performance in Week 4 was the best total allowed by the Steelers 
                defense since then-Ravens RB Lewis matched that number in Week 
                16 last season. James also scored the first RB TD surrendered 
                by the defense in that same amount of time. In other words, don’t 
                expect Alexander to blow up. He is the focal point of this offense, 
                but the Seahawks run blocking isn’t so good that it will 
                make him the first back to eclipse the century mark since Edge 
                did it in Week 5 of the 2005 season.  Projections:Matt Hasselbeck: 220 pass/1 TD/1 INT
 Deion Branch: 65 rec
 Bobby Engram: 55 rec
 Nate Burleson: 40 rec/1 TD
 Marcus Pollard: 25 rec
 Shaun Alexander: 70 rush
 Ben Roethlisberger/Hines Ward/Santonio 
                Holmes/Heath MillerWillie Parker (vs. SEA)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Seahawks this season: 
                Cardinals
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Seahawks this season: 
                N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: 15.6
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: 21.6
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: 9
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 10.5/18.3/3.1
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 16.2
 Passing Game Thoughts: The Steelers passing game, which has enjoyed 
                a great deal of success this season, gets their toughest test 
                in Week 5. Only Jacksonville and Kansas City have been more stout 
                against fantasy QBs, meaning the Steelers will have to hope Ward 
                returns this week so the weight of the world isn’t placed 
                on Holmes again as it was last week. Outside of Leonard Pope’s 
                1-catch, 30-yard, 1-TD performance in Week 2, opposing TEs have 
                only caught four balls for 34 yards in the other three contests, 
                so don’t look for Miller to have a big game. This should 
                be a grinding, physical game that is won on the ground, so the 
                best plays are probably the defenses for both squads. Running Game Thoughts: Frank Gore performed pretty well in light 
                of the Niners losing their starting QB on the first series of 
                the game, compiling 121 total yards in their Week 4 setback against 
                Seattle. That bodes well for Parker, who is the closest thing 
                that the Seahawks have seen to Fast Willie. In the absence of 
                a rushing attack last week vs. the Cardinals, Parker posted 29 
                yards receiving, something I look to see more of moving forward. 
                FWP owners weren’t going to bench him anyway, but his totals 
                may be slightly depressed this week – nothing like last 
                week though – considering that Seattle is in the bottom 
                half of the league in terms of the number of fantasy points they 
                allow to opposing rushers. Projections:Ben Roethlisberger: 220 rush/1 TD/1 INT
 Hines Ward: 70 rec/1 TD
 Santonio Holmes: 55 rec
 Heath Miller: 25 rec
 Willie Parker: 85 rush/25 rec
 
 Jeff Garcia/Joey Galloway/Ike Hilliard
 Earnest Graham/Michael Pittman (vs. IND)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Colts this season: 
                Broncos
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Colts this season: 
                N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: 14.3
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: 10.3
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 11.8/13.6
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 17.9
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: It’s no surprise Garcia has stabilized 
                the Bucs offense, what is surprising me is the lack of passing 
                numbers he has needed to compile to do it. Rare is the time that 
                a QB can throw two TDs in the first four games – both in 
                the same game – of the season and lead his team to a 3-1 
                record. What it has done is make Galloway an inconsistent fantasy 
                play – a #3 WR for the time being. Now understanding that 
                the Colts will score 20+ points on just about any defense, the 
                Bucs will need to throw the ball late, so a fourth-quarter score 
                could make Garcia a fair play and decent bye-week option. Either 
                way, with the defense playing so well and the chance that Marvin 
                Harrison may be far from 100%, Garcia figures to hand the ball 
                off and scramble a few more times once again than drop back and 
                pass.
 Running Game Thoughts: While many teams would feel obligated 
                to focus on the passing game when their lead RB goes down, the 
                Bucs would seem to be an exception. In the Colts, they face a 
                team that has held up well against the run so far, until last 
                week, that is. I look for that trend to continue this week. It’s 
                a given that Denver’s running game is better than the Bucs’ 
                and Graham/Pittman does not equal Travis Henry, but bear in mind 
                that LB Rob Morris has likely been lost for the season, S Bob 
                Sanders is hurt and that the Broncos were having great success 
                running to the perimeter all game long. These are all things I 
                look for the Bucs to do and/or take advantage of in Week 5. As 
                a result, don’t look for HC Jon Gruden to deviate much from 
                the physical gameplan his team executed to near perfection in 
                their last game, finding a way to pound away at the Panthers 42 
                times. 
 Projections:
 Jeff Garcia: 210 pass/1 TD/1 INT/20 rush
 Joey Galloway: 80 rec
 Ike Hilliard: 50 rec/1 TD
 Earnest Graham: 80 rush/1 TD/20 rec
 Michael Pittman: 50 rush/50 rec
 Peyton Manning/Reggie Wayne/Aaron Moorehead/Anthony 
                Gonzalez/Dallas ClarkJoseph Addai/Kenton Keith (vs. TB)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Bucs this season: 
                N/A
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Bucs this season: 
                N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 10.7/12.2/2.3
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 20.9
 Passing Game Thoughts: Owners know what to expect out of this 
                passing game…Manning’s worst fantasy point total is 
                16.3 while the Bucs have yet to allow a QB to hit that mark. And 
                about the only things we know are that Manning, Wayne and Clark 
                will play. Possibly without Marvin Harrison and Addai, I would 
                expect much more of the short passing game than a reliance on 
                Keith, who is a capable fill-in – real or fantasy. Perhaps 
                the most surprising development this far into the season is how 
                often Manning is hooking up with his roommate, Clark. That doesn’t 
                figure to change in this game either, with Clark likely to be 
                the best receiving option this week. In fact, if Harrison does 
                not suit up, look for Clark to line up in his spot from time to 
                time. Running Game Thoughts: Tampa Bay is allowing right at four yds/carry, 
                a fair expectation for whichever Colts RB gets the start. Keith 
                is built similar and shares a similar running style to Addai – 
                he even appears to be even a little faster than Addai on the film 
                I’ve watched – but does not have the all-around game, 
                footwork or vision of Addai, all of which make the former Bayou 
                Bengal a true standout. Whichever back goes, expect a modest performance 
                against a Tampa Bay defense that gave up a garbage TD late last 
                week to DeAngelo Williams and kept Steven Jackson out of the end 
                zone the week before. In short, a RB score will be hard to come 
                by in this game for the Colts, but not impossible. Projections:Peyton Manning: 245 rec/2 TD/0 INT
 Reggie Wayne: 90 rec/1 TD
 Aaron Moorehead: 30 rec
 Anthony Gonzalez: 30 rec
 Dallas Clark: 65 rec/1 TD
 Joseph Addai/Kenton Keith: 85 rush/1 TD/25 rec
 
 Steve McNair/Mark Clayton/Derrick Mason/Todd 
                Heap
 Willis McGahee (vs. SF)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Niners this season: 
                N/A
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Niners this season: 
                Cardinals
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: 19.2
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 15.3/17.5/7.6
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 17.9
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Outside of Week 1 in which they made Matt 
                Leinart look like the 2007 version of Matt Leinart, a defense 
                that I had my eye on as an undervalued commodity has underperformed. 
                Granted, losing a star pass rusher like Manny Lawson will reduce 
                a team’s effectiveness, but Marc Bulger, Ben Roethlisberger 
                and Matt Hasselbeck have all had pretty fair games against the 
                Niners. Whatever happens though, there is 0% chance McNair repeats 
                his 53-pass attempt day from last Sunday. Mason has been a pleasant 
                surprise for his owners so far, but bear in mind that the moment 
                Clayton is able to recover from his nagging calf injury, he will 
                likely steal the numbers Mason has been posting - in other words, 
                a second-half stud alert. That said, don’t go crazy with 
                expectations with Clayton either, as Mason and Heap are good enough 
                to keep the ex-Sooner a high-end #3 WR at best – just like 
                Mason is right now.
 Running Game Thoughts: I believe I promised consistency with 
                McGahee in July. A quarter of the way, that prediction looks solid. 
                He registered his first 100-yard rushing performance in Week 4’s 
                surprising loss to the Browns and had been good for over 100 total 
                yards every week - just the type of consistency that 90% of the 
                owners in your league are not getting from their #2 RB. Given 
                the woeful Niners offense, every San Fran opponent has had enough 
                opportunities to see their main RB touch the ball at least 24 
                times, a number McGahee should hit with ease. And since the Niners 
                will struggle to score 10 points, I like McGahee to have his best 
                day in a Baltimore uniform. Projections:Steve McNair: 190 pass/1 TD/1 INT/10 rush
 Mark Clayton: 40 rec
 Derrick Mason: 65 rec
 Todd Heap: 40 rec/1 TD
 Willis McGahee: 90 rush/1 TD/20 rec
 Trent Dilfer/Darrell Jackson/Arnaz BattleFrank Gore (vs. BAL)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Ravens this season: 
                N/A
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Ravens this season: 
                N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 18.8/27.4
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 9.6
 Passing Game Thoughts: I’m not sure at this point that 
                I wouldn’t rather have the Vikings passing game. This thing 
                has gotten bad quick, with TE Vernon Davis going down first and 
                QB Alex Smith being lost for a few games last week. Quite simply, 
                I wouldn’t use anyone associated in this passing game – 
                especially against Baltimore. Running Game Thoughts: The fallout from the passing game is keeping 
                the yardage beast that is Gore down. Considering the sad state 
                of the passing game, Gore has been a passable low-end #1 RB so 
                far, even if he hasn’t scored in two weeks. Although the 
                Ravens were torched in the first half in Week 4, their run defense 
                was once again very solid. That’s not going to change anytime 
                soon, so expect another slow week from “The Inconvenient 
                Truth”. Projections:Trent Dilfer: 160 pass/1 TD/2 INT
 Darrell Jackson: 60 rec
 Arnaz Battle: 40 rec
 Frank Gore: 55 rush/30 rec
 
 Philip Rivers/Vincent Jackson/Buster Davis/Antonio 
                Gates
 LaDainian Tomlinson (vs. DEN)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Broncos this season: 
                N/A
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Broncos this season: 
                N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 13.9/10.8/7.9
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 20.5
 Passing Game Thoughts: I saw 
                something in one of my money leagues this week I would have never 
                expected a month ago: someone dropped Rivers after one month. 
                (Not only that, I had the second-to-last spot in the waiver order 
                in that league and I was able to grab him!) That’s really 
                too bad because the struggles of this offense are due more to 
                problems up front (the offensive line) and his schedule – 
                Bears, Pats, Packers and Chiefs…see where those teams rank 
                in the most important defensive categories. Only the most elite 
                of offenses overcome those kind of defenses and rarely does a 
                team look good against more than half of them. Don’t forget 
                just one week ago, Rivers tossed three TDs in vs. Green Bay. In 
                short, this unit feels like it is struggling when in reality, 
                they need to face a weak defense to re-establish some confidence. 
                While Denver’s defense doesn’t qualify as weak per 
                se, their run defense has been abysmal. Of course, that means 
                a lot of LT. And once LT gets on track, don’t be surprised 
                if Rivers magically finds Gates and Jackson for a couple short 
                scores.  Running 
                Game Thoughts: I love the idea that after four weeks, LT 
                is said to be struggling. Sure, he was a consensus #1 overall 
                pick, but can the guy get a break? He’s coming off a career 
                year, folks! How many players follow a career year with another 
                one? And how many owners picking in the first round would rather 
                LJ, Gore, Steven Jackson, Shaun Alexander and so on? Off my soapbox 
                now, most LT owners had a vision of him finishing with 25 TD and 
                2,200 total yards, unfair numbers to expect for any owner that 
                looked at his schedule. He has faced four pretty fair defenses, 
                averaging 15 fantasy points a game. Through four games last season, 
                LT had 59 fantasy points. This year, he has 60. In short, RELAX!!! 
                It’s very likely it is not Tomlinson’s fault that 
                his owners are struggling. Chances are, LT owners are stuck with 
                an underachieving QB or WR corps. If you have any other RB – 
                short of maybe Joseph Addai – and LT’s owner is putting 
                him on the block, make the move. Beware of future meetings against 
                the Ravens and Vikings but all you have to do is look at Weeks 
                15 and 16 to see why you should make the move – Detroit 
                and Denver, #1 and #10 overall in fantasy points allowed to opposing 
                RBs. Now that I’ve stated the case to make the move for 
                fantasy’s best player, let’s get to the Week 5 game. 
                Every Bronco opponent has had a rusher run for at least 84 yards 
                and Addai and Kenton Keith just got done running for 216 yards 
                against Denver. I do expect this run defense to get fixed at some 
                point – DC Jim Bates is one of the best in the game – 
                but I’ll have to see it to believe it at this point.
 Projections:Philip Rivers: 220 pass/2 TD/1 INT
 Vincent Jackson: 35 rec
 Buster Davis: 30 rec
 Antonio Gates: 65 rec/1 TD
 LaDainian Tomlinson: 130 rush/2 TD/30 rec/1 TD
 Jay Cutler/Javon Walker/Brandon MarshallTravis Henry/Selvin Young (vs. SD)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Chargers this season: 
                N/A
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Chargers this season: 
                N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 20.8/26.6/10.3
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 13.8
 Passing Game Thoughts: After giving his owners five straight 
                two-passing TD games to start his career, how funny is it that 
                Cutler has followed that with five consecutive one-passing TD 
                games. In the Bolts, the Vandy alum faces possibly his easiest 
                matchup – secondary-wise – since Week 1. For where 
                he was drafted, he is probably performing to the level his owners 
                were expecting, although both his owners and HC Mike Shanahan 
                would like to see cut down on his 4:5 TD/INT ratio. Getting Walker 
                back will help open things up, but Marshall has definitely stepped 
                up with or without him and is probably an every-week start in 
                just about every 12-team, three-WR leagues. Given the struggles 
                of the Chargers secondary, if you have a regular contributor associated 
                with the Denver passing game, play them. Running Game Thoughts: It took all of a month for Shanahan to 
                claim that “Selvin Young is a starter in this league.” 
                Obviously, that doesn’t help Henry owners from a game-by-game 
                perspective, but it might allow Henry to make it through a full 
                season. (Update: maybe not, if reports out of Colorado are true 
                about Henry’s positive drug test. Obviously, a possible 
                year-long suspension would rock the fantasy world.) Although Young 
                did look good, Shanahan – unlike previous years – 
                does not figure to go to the dreaded RBBC as long as Henry is 
                in good enough shape to play (or able to play). What this means 
                to Henry owners is that had better find a way to secure Young 
                because, as we all know, the Bronco backfield is a yardage machine. 
                And it looks like Cutler trusts Young’s hands in the passing 
                game as he was already racking up a few receiving yards before 
                Week 4’s eight-carry, 81-yard outburst. Larry Johnson was, 
                by far, the most successful RB against the San Diego defense, 
                but he also is the only ball-carrier so far to go over the 20-carry 
                mark against this defense. I look for a similar approach, say 
                35 carries, from the Denver backfield in this game if they are 
                able to stay within a score or two. Projections:Jay Cutler: 235 pass/2 TD/1 INT
 Javon Walker: 90 rec/1 TD
 Brandon Marshall: 75 rec/1 TD
 Travis Henry/Selvin Young: 85 rush/1 TD/15 rec
 
 Brian Griese/Bernard Berrian/Muhsin Muhammad/Desmond 
                Clark/Greg Olsen
 Cedric Benson (vs. GB)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Packers this season: 
                N/A
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Packers this season: 
                N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 17.1/21.6/5.6
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 15.4
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: On the subject of things I love hearing, 
                is there anything funnier than the weekly question HC Lovie Smith 
                gets from the media every week? Is Rex/Brian your starting QB? 
                (Look, if the team just needed a caretaker QB, they would have 
                already turned to Kyle Orton.) For a lead receiver, Berrian drops 
                too many balls. Muhammad is a shell of his Carolina Panther days. 
                And the next time I see a Bears WR going out of their way to break 
                up a sure interception will be the first time I have seen it this 
                season. However, the one thing that Griese did against Detroit 
                last week was make everybody in the passing game relevant and 
                he was certainly more accurate than Grossman had been thus far. 
                We’ll see if that can continue against the Packers, who 
                have surrendered at least one passing TD in each game thus far. 
                Big WRs have done well so far against Green Bay this season, meaning 
                Muhammad may be in for another decent week. At TE, you could do 
                worse than Clark until rookie Greg Olsen shows some regular contributions 
                to the passing game and the Packers are just middle of the pack 
                in terms of stuffing the TE. Clark makes a fine option this week 
                for owners who are looking for a spot starter at the position.
 Running Game Thoughts: It’s unfair to say Benson has been 
                a huge letdown so far, but he has disappointing. In fact, for 
                those risktaking owners, they may want to scoop up Adrian Peterson 
                – his backup – who has been a bit more successful, 
                in my opinion, than Benson has been with fewer opportunities. 
                And before you point out that the Packers have allowed 10+ points 
                to each RB they have faced so far, I would ask you to look at 
                the level of talent – Brian Westbrook, Derrick Ward, LT, 
                Adrian Peterson (MIN). Benson will struggle and may start drawing 
                the ire of Bears fans even more after this week. Projections:Brian Griese: 220 pass/1 TD/2 INT
 Bernard Berrian: 70 rec
 Muhsin Muhammad: 55 rec/1 TD
 Desmond Clark: 40 rec
 Greg Olsen: 25 rec
 Cedric Benson: 65 rush/10 rec
 Brett Favre/Donald Driver/Greg Jennings/James 
                JonesBrandon Jackson/Vernand Morency (vs. CHI)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Bears this season: 
                N/A
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Bears this season: 
                N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: N/A
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 14.9/18.3/10.6
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 18
 Passing Game Thoughts: If it ain’t broke, don’t fix 
                it…I guess. Hey, the Pack is 4-0 without a running game. 
                Who thought Favre would be outproducing Jon Kitna at this point? 
                Even with the rash of Bears’ defensive injuries, I’m 
                just not a big fan of the ageless one this week against Chicago. 
                While Kitna was very efficient last week, it wasn’t until 
                the second half (and specifically the fourth quarter – much 
                like the Cowboy game in Week 3 – that the opposition could 
                get into the end zone against the Bears. That speaks to the Chicago 
                offense not holding up their end, something I don’t see 
                continuing. However, if the Packers are going to score in this 
                game, it will be because of K Mason Crosby’s leg or Favre’s 
                arm. And assuming the Bears can get out to a similar 13-3 lead 
                they had over Detroit after three quarters, don’t look for 
                another 34-point fourth-quarter collapse. The Bears have allowed 
                just one WR – Terrell Owens – to put up 10 fantasy 
                points on them, so if the Packers are to win, they will need to 
                get a lot of bodies involved. Don’t expect much from any 
                WR outside of maybe Driver – and I’d be moderately 
                surprised to see him do all that much. Running Game Thoughts: My goal with each of these “thoughts” 
                is to give you one man’s idea of what is going on with each 
                team and a synopsis of the approach I think that team will take 
                into next week. Green Bay, unfortunately, is giving me little 
                to work with. They are running the ball roughly 31% of the time, 
                meaning if you have the misfortune of having a Packer back in 
                a starting spot in your lineup, your chances of fantasy success 
                dwindle.  Projections:Brett Favre: 245 pass/1 TD/2 INT
 Donald Driver: 75 rec
 Greg Jennings: 65 rec
 James Jones: 50 rec
 Brandon Jackson: 35 rush/20 rec
 
 Tony Romo/Terrell Owens/Patrick Crayton/Jason 
                Witten
 Julius Jones/Marion Barber (vs. BUF)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Bills this season: 
                Patriots
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Bills this season: 
                Patriots
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: 34.6
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: 40.7
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: 10.6
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: 27.3
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 20.2/28.8/6.5
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 22.5
  Passing 
                Game Thoughts: Over the past two games, the Bills defense 
                has seen all but 13 of 68 pass attempts completed by their opponents. 
                If that kind of completion % continues on MNF, Buffalo may as 
                well check out after three quarters. The Bills defense has also 
                allowed five double-digit performance to the WR position, including 
                four combined against the Broncos in Week 1 and Week 4. All this 
                has to make one believe that despite their strong defensive performances 
                at home, Buffalo could get torched by the Cowboys passing game. 
                It’s fair to say that Romo-to-Owens have a similar connection 
                to Tom Brady and Randy Moss, so the 115-yard, two-TD performance 
                that Moss enjoyed two weeks ago against the Bills is a fair expectation 
                for TO. Crayton – now healthy – and Witten also make 
                top-notch plays, as every regular member of the Cowboys passing 
                game has a shot at finding the end zone.
 Running Game Thoughts: Last week, the Jets were the first team 
                not to rush for well over 100 yards vs. the Bills. So while Barber 
                and Jones may steal enough carries away from one another to keep 
                the other RB’s numbers down, expect the Cowboys to enjoy 
                a great deal of success on the ground. Last year, this would have 
                been a game that Barber would have posted huge numbers, but this 
                season’s braintrust would just as soon alternate Jones and 
                Barber series to series as opposed to by situation. It makes both 
                of them good #2 RB weekly plays, but brings down Barber’s 
                value a bit from last season. While I expect much of the damage 
                to be done through the air, this is a favorable matchup for both 
                Jones and Barber, so play them with a fair amount of confidence. Projections:Tony Romo: 285 pass/3 TD/0 INT/30 rush
 Terrell Owens: 90 rec/2 TD
 Patrick Crayton: 75 rec
 Jason Witten: 55 rec/1 TD
 Julius Jones: 55 rush/20 rec
 Marion Barber: 50 rush/1 TD/25 rec
 Trent Edwards/Lee Evans/Roscoe ParrishMarshawn Lynch (vs. DAL)
 Similar passing attacks that have faced the Cowboys this season: 
                Dolphins, Bears
 Similar rushing attacks that have faced the Cowboys this season: 
                Dolphins
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar QBs: 9.7
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar WRs: 21.8
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar TEs: 5.1
 FF Points Allowed vs. similar RBs: 11.1
 FF Points Allowed vs. QBs/WRs/TEs over the last 3 weeks: 14.5/24.3/4.2
 FF Points Allowed vs. RBs over the last 3 weeks: 12.9
 Passing Game Thoughts: Edwards not only did well in his first 
                start, he was quite exceptional. Completing 22-of-28 passes for 
                234 yards with a score and an INT, the rookie did just about all 
                that any Evans’ owner would have expected JP Losman to do. 
                Every #1 WR opposing Dallas so far has been targeted at least 
                10 times and Buffalo will need to pass to keep up in this game, 
                meaning Evans could be in line for his best fantasy day of the 
                year. The Cowboys pass defense has improved since the Giants absolutely 
                torched them in Week 1, but the quality of passing games they 
                have faced have been lacking. In fact, Buffalo’s aerial 
                attack is at least as good right now as the Dolphins, Bears and 
                Rams. It also would not be that much of a surprise to see Parrish 
                flourish as well. Running Game Thoughts: The ‘Boys have yet to allow a 100-yard 
                rusher, but no RB has carried more than 16 times either. Lynch, 
                on the other hand, has yet to see less than 18 rushes in a single 
                game. If the Bills have any shot of pulling off this upset, they 
                will need to lean on Lynch, who I have been quite impressed with. 
                Buffalo’s game plan will have to be getting Lynch as many 
                carries as he can handle while taking selected shots down the 
                field to Evans. I expect Buffalo to be relatively successful doing 
                this, but in the end, they will be forced to abandon this approach 
                once the Cowboys gain a little bit of separation. Projections:Trent Edwards: 220 pass/2 TD/2 INT
 Lee Evans: 85 rec/1 TD
 Roscoe Parrish: 55 rec/1 TD
 Marshawn Lynch: 80 rush/1 TD/30 rec
 
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