Who could ask for a better start to the season with games on Thursday,
Friday, Sunday and Monday? Answer: Next year if the season starts
on Labor Day weekend, as rumored, to give fans Monday off.
But as always happens in the NFL, injuries marred the start to
the year with Jordan Love, Puka Nacua and a surprise inactive
from most league’s No.1 draft choice Christian McCaffrey
an hour before game-time on Monday night.
Byes – None Until Week 5
Truths
“The truth may not lead you to where you thought you
were going, but it will always lead you somewhere better. –
Unknown
1) Rookie pass-catchers had a better day than rookie quarterbacks.
It wasn’t a particularly great day for either group, but
in general, I liked the workload of the first-year receivers over
the passing production of the rookie quarterbacks. No quarterback
threw for even 200 yards, including Bo Nix who threw the ball
42 times! Jayden Daniels’ fantasy production was saved by
two late touchdown runs, while Caleb Williams’ claim to
fame in his debut will be he didn’t lose the game for the
Bears and let his defense win it for him. For the pass-catchers,
six saw at least a handful of targets and three scored. Pay particular
attention to an otherwise ugly looking day for Adonai Mitchell
who could easily have scored on two long pass attempts, but Anthony Richardson overthrew a wide open receiver. Also, Brian Thomas Jr. and Ladd McConkey are the real deal. So is Malik Nabers, but
unfortunately his quarterback is Daniel Jones (for this year anyway).
2) NFL quarterbacks and receivers are not ready for the season
Why? Because the players association has continuously advocated
reduced amount of practice and preseason game work. Offenses are
usually behind defenses to begin the season, but it’s getting
worse. For evidence I give you the last four years of Week 1 passing
touchdowns.
Week 1 Passing TDs
Season
TDs
2021
61
2022
51
2023
37
2024
35
3) You can sit Deshaun Watson.
Dead cap hits of $200.7M in 2024, $172.8M in 2025 and $99M in
2026 make Deshaun Watson untradeable and “uncuttable,”
but it doesn’t mean you can’t sit him. It’s
time to give Jameis Winston another chance, because Watson’s
weak of character. Joe Flacco dominated with this same team (they
should have kept him on the roster). It reminds me of how Carson Wentz mentally couldn’t handle Nick Foles’ success
in Philadelphia with “his” team. He ended up destroying
his career because he was always trying to prove himself even
when the play should have been over.
4) After two “wasted” seasons, Jameson Williams
has come to play.
Injury and a self-inflicted suspension ruined his first two seasons
in Detroit (19 games and 30 total receptions), but if Week 1 is
any indication, the third-year wideout is going to be a big-time
help to fantasy owners. Game 1 saw a career high in targets (9),
receptions (5) and yards (121). Teams must continue to pay the
most attention to Amon-Ra St. Brown which will be a boon to Williams.
It also doesn’t hurt Williams’ prospects that Josh Reynolds (40-608-5) is in Denver this season.
5) The New York Giants “throwback” uniforms in Week
1 might have been the worst ever.
Sort of a combination of a Montreal Canadians sweater and San
Diego Padres tan pants. They certainly rival the Pittsburgh Steelers
gold/black prison stripe jerseys, the Chicago Bears striped jerseys
of 1925-27 and the Eagles blue and yellow jerseys of 1934.
Lies
The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie -- deliberate,
contrived, and dishonest -- but the myth -- persistent, persuasive,
and unrealistic. - President John F. Kennedy
1) Tyreek Hill is the Scottie Scheffler of the NFL.
False. There were a couple of big differences. Hill, a typical
NFL diva wide receiver for the Miami Dolphins, expected to be
treated like a superstar (which he is) and as a black man in the
South ended up on the ground in handcuffs and manhandled. Hill’s
attitude helped escalate a bad situation, but the officers’
attitude was worse. Scheffler, 2024 PGA Golfer of the Year and
a white man in Louisville, KY, was more civil while still arguing
and also ended up in handcuffs, but didn’t end up with a
knee in his back. Unlike Scheffler, who shot an over par 73 after
the arrest, the ordeal didn’t hurt Hill’s fantasy
production against the Jaguars as he put up 7-130-1 on a team-high
12 targets.
2) Jordan Mason earned more prime time play with his 147-yard,
one-touchdown rushing performance in Week 1.
Sorry, no. Christian McCaffrey is still the best running back
in the league and when healthy will get all but a few touches
in every game… at least until the game is out of reach.
The injury to CMC, however, if it lingers, will likely get him
a slightly earlier exit in those blowouts hurting his fantasy
value a little bit. McCaffrey led the league in fourth-quarter
rushing with his team up by 10 points or more (189 yards on 44
carries). That won’t happen this season.
3) The following starting quarterbacks are still useful despite
their 2024 season debut: Justin Fields, Will Levis, Jacoby Brissett,
Bryce Young and Daniel Jones.
False. I might be willing to give Young more time because he’s
never had much talent surrounding him, but the rest, I’m
sorry, no. If you tell me “but Fields has potential”
I’m going to answer no, not after three full seasons. In
41 games (39 starts) he’s managed one 300-yard passing game
and three games with at least three touchdown passes. Baker Mayfield,
who has finally matured into an NFL quarterback and fantasy-worthy
after six seasons, had six and seven, respectively, through 39
games. Will Levis’ panic-throw Pick-Six yesterday is a perfect
example of how not to be an NFL quarterback. Brissett is a solid
backup and bridge guy to Drake Maye. Here’s a statistic
on Jones… since signing his huge $160m contract, he has
thrown more Pick-Sixes to the other team than touchdown passes
to his own guys.
4) Preseason hype in Seattle – Jaxon Smith-Njigba is on the
rise and will take over for Tyler Lockett as No.2 behind DK Metcalf.
Nope. I was a believer in this theory and started “JSN”
in Week 1, because of this and Lockett dealing with an ankle issue.
Rumors of Lockett’s demise have apparently been greatly
exaggerated. Lockett led the Seahawks with seven targets, six
receptions and 77 yards. Not monster totals, but well ahead of
both Metcalf and Smith-Njigba. Beware of the future, however,
while Metcalf saw 59 of 67 offensive plays (88%) and JSN 53 (79%)
plays, Lockett did his work in just 36 plays (54%). That level
may preclude his continued production.
5) Gus Edwards is still the running back to have in the Chargers’
backfield after seeing one more rushing attempt than J.K. Dobbins.
False. When both were in Baltimore in 2020 (Dobbins last healthy
season) they produced similar results, but last season Edwards
was the very productive (198-810-13) and Dobbins was returning
from yet another injury. Now, a year later, Dobbins is showing
to be more explosive then “Gus the Bus” and should
get the better of things in Los Angeles. Both could still be viable
in Jim Harbaugh’s run-first offense which saw Justin Herbert
throw the ball just 26 times and the team rush the ball 27 times.
Note: In 68 career games, Herbert has only twice thrown fewer
passes in a game in which he didn’t get injured.