NFL DFS – Main Slate Optimizer Groups (initial) & Stack Rankings (updated) + Full Game Notes (wip) – Week 7

This article focuses on building lineups with a quality foundation by utilizing the powerful Groups and Rules/Limits tools within the industry’s optimization tools. All of the concepts and pairings included below can also apply to hand-building. The goal is to create lineups with strong correlations among likely point-scorers to maximize the gains from infrequent scoring events within stacks while limiting the likelihood of building inefficient or negatively correlated entries for a full slate of NFL DFS lineups.

This video was made in a former life and features a detailed demonstration of how to apply these concepts in one leading optimizer tool: Fantasy Cruncher – How-To Video

All references to Sims were done via friends of the site: acemind.io

Don’t miss the Above/Below feature article for a few of our top picks, coming Sunday morning

Game notes are updated during the week and initially posted as “work in progress” as they take a long time to create, if teams are missing notes simply check back later in the day/week and they should be updated.


2025 Week 7 DraftKings & FanDuel NFL DFS Stack Rankings

The following stack rankings were created by pairing each team quarterback with his top three scoring options, whether they are three wide receivers, two wide receivers and a tight end, a wide receiver, tight end, and running back, or any viable combination. In some cases, an expensive running back can push the overall price point of his team stack in the value rankings.

TEAMOPPFD$FDpRankFDvalRankDK$DkpRankDKvalRankVegas
DALWAS$32,40012$28,000183
WASDAL$27,50021$23,000212
INDLAC$30,300310$25,100399
PHIMIN$30,800511$25,90041310
KCLV$28,50067$23,400551
GBARI$29,60048$23,700675
CHINO$28,50079$23,300764
LACIND$27,30085$23,4008106
DENNYG$26,80096$20,600928
NOCHI$25,000133$20,60010313
MINPHI$28,6001015$23,900111512
MIACLE$27,4001213$23,700121618
NETEN$25,300114$22,20013117
CARNYJ$28,0001417$24,300142011
LVKC$25,8001514$22,500151720
CLEMIA$25,1001612$18,70016415
ARIGB$26,4001820$20,800171816
NYJCAR$24,5001716$19,600181413
NYGDEN$25,3001919$20,800191919
TENNE$22,4002018$17,500201217

Week 7 DraftKings & FanDuel NFL DFS Stacks & Optimizer Groups

Overview

Rules and limits are powerful tools for lineup creation for NFL DFS where our primary focus is creating highly correlated lineups via stacking players from the same game. Lineups will typically be coordinated around the quarterback selection, which informs at least one pass-catcher choice, establishes a budget, eliminates a defense, and sets the tone for the lineup. We will typically look to correlate a quarterback and at least one of his pass-catchers in every lineup, with many of those including a skill player from the opposing team. This player is included to support the stack in a high-scoring game that drives offense on both sides, creating additional correlated scoring potential. Stacking multiple pass-catchers in the same lineup is a sound approach, though there are typically overall ceilings on how much volume is available at any given position. While pass-catching running backs can be prioritized in stacks and group tools, including running backs who are not involved in the passing game is less important at this stage, they will fall naturally into shares as needed. High-volume backs and pass catchers out of the backfield can be included in the groups utilized below, but it is frequently not necessary to do so with the very best players, they arrive in lineups without help.

Rules and limits are typically applied in an optimizer’s Advanced Options menu. Notes are included to illustrate the reasons behind each rule and explain what it does during the lineup creation process. These settings can typically be saved for re-use, which is highly recommended. Saving the groups created below is also a good idea that will save time with updates instead of recreation each week. These groups are created manually, but most optimizers include automated group creators that can help accelerate the curation process.

DraftKings + FanDuel Settings & Advanced Options

Note – Terminology may vary from site to site but these are common functions across most industry tools.

Unique Players Per Lineup– This setting forces the optimizer to utilize at least X new players who were not in Lineup 1 when it creates Lineup 2, and so on. We recommend a setting of at least two unique players, more can be applied depending on the degree of differentiation desired within lineups.

Team Salary– a minimum or maximum salary spend can be applied here as needed, although leaving salary on the table is an easy path toward creating unique lineups while not necessarily making a negative expected value play.

FLEX position– allows restrictions on what positions can be rostered at the FLEX spot. The primary position to restrict is the tight end so that lineups do not include two players from the position. In many industry tools this is a separate option via a checkbox, it can also be handled specifically within groups.

Global Exposure Settingallows caps on the maximum percentage of lineups a player can appear in within a given pool of lineup construction. This is a powerful tool for shaping lineups but if settings are too low, attempts to build a full set will fall short due to a lack of available players, one of the most common errors in optimizer building. Most optimizers include the ability to calculate ownership caps continuously or at the end of the pool creation process. If caps are calculated continuously, a player with a 25% cap who is utilized in Lineup 1 will not be available for use again until Lineup 5, we recommend turning OFF continuous calculation.

Randomness – provides a random multiplier to each player’s projected point total based on the set values. This valuable tool helps differentiate lineups instead of simply creating them in order of the highest median projected scores. Using some randomness for lineup generation is strongly recommended but the degree to which it is applied is down to personal preference, 15-25% is fine to get started. We suggest heavier randomness to more event-based players like wide receivers while tracking volume-based positions like running backs more toward their median or ceiling projections.

DraftKings + FanDuel Team Stack Rules

This set of rules will force optimizers to build lineups with certain combinations. We are looking to stack at least one skill player, almost always a pass-catcher, with his quarterback while frequently playing a skill player from the opposing team in the lineup. The theory behind this build is that a high-scoring stack will require some response from the opposing team to deliver a ceiling score in most situations. Most optimizers utilize a “complete the sentence” approach for rule creation with selections from drop-down menus following a very straightforward logic. Exceptions to these rules can be added for specific teams and players on most optimizer products.

  • QB with at least one WR/TE from Same Team (note: It is fine to set this to two or to utilize two versions of this rule, one with WR/TE and one with RB/WR/TE, but we can also refine this via Groups)
  • optional – QB with at least one RB/WR/TE from the Opposing Team (we typically prefer the pass-catchers but high-volume running backs can be effective here)
  • QB with at most zero DST from the Same Team (this is a personal preference; high-scoring teams and quarterbacks tend to leave their defenses on the field, exposing them to simple point-scoring negatives)

Limits & Custom Rules and Requirements

Limit rules can be applied to restrict certain combinations from coming together. This is powerful for limiting multiple running backs from the same team or getting overweight to a certain stack within a lineup.

  • Limit QB/RB/WR/TE from Same Team to three
  • Limit RB/WR/TE from the Same Team to one unless paired with QB from the Same Team OR the Opposing Team (this prevents multiple players from a team that is not a primary quarterback-based stack)
  • optional – Limit RB from Same Team to one (we can also do this with WR in a separate rule that adds an “unless paired with QB or opposing QB” but it’s a personal preference for NFL DFS, we typically do not want two pass-catchers from the same team without their quarterback)

We will maintain the list of rules and limits throughout the season, with occasional tweaks. Each week sees another fresh crop of value plays as situations change and injuries create opportunities around the league. These changing roles and emergent value plays are accounted for in creating these groups from week to week. After a large pool of lineups is created utilizing these groups, it is still critical to filter them for factors including ceiling projections and leverage potential. These groups should help ensure that a highly correlated premium set of options that rotates through various combinations is utilized to create the full lineup pool.

Sunday Updates

Any changes and recommended boosts to specific players will be provided in an early morning update each Sunday.


NFL DFS Week 7 Features & Projections

  • Week 7 Projections
  • Week 7 Above/Below
  • Week 7 Quarterback Scoring & Value Rankings
  • Week 7 Running Back Scoring & Value Rankings
  • Week 7 Pass-Catcher Scoring & Value Rankings
  • Week 7 Defense Scoring & Value Rankings

 


Construction Concept

Team groups are built by utilizing the quarterback as the KEY player in group settings. The quarterback decision is the driving factor in determining which stack the lineup utilizes and which corresponding plays are made to work within the structured requirements. In Fantasy Cruncher, built to specification, each team will have two groups, a team group, and an opponent group, both of which utilize the same quarterback as the key player. Each game will have a total of four groups. This is the best approach to truly capture the requirement of playing individual “run-back” plays from the opposing team. A more basic approach would be to include all of the skill players from a game in each quarterback’s group and rely on rules and limits to restrict any potential overflow. It is highly recommended to save the early season groups as a foundation that will be updated for the rest of the season. The recommended groups will include skill players who have an active role in their offense and provide significant correlation with their quarterback’s scoring, often bell-cow running backs who do not specialize in the passing game will not be included in groups as they are projected highly and appear on their own in basically correct distributions, while also not always providing the strongest positive correlation plays. Stacking quarterbacks with pass-catchers and allowing running backs to fall into the lanes created by settings, available salary, and randomness should create a well-distributed set of quality lineups. These groups are updated weekly to account for changes in utilization, schemes, injuries, target shares, and more.

Team Groups for DraftKings & FanDuel – Week 7

The goal is to create a large pool of well-built lineups that can be utilized in any large-field GPP contest. Our approach is to build far more lineups than needed and utilize a sorting table or sim process to filter to the best set of entries. The lineups created in these crunches should provide a broad distribution that includes some of the lower-owned high-upside skill players from each stack. Applying boosts is critical in pushing and pulling ownership to individual players within their team’s stacked lineups if they appear too much or too little.

The groups below are designed so that each quarterback will have two groups to create, one with his skill players and another with the opposing team. A more basic approach would be to add them all to one large group with an “at least three” and let rules and limits set things, but there is a more granular level of control in creating them separately.

Utilizing two groups also allows us to place running backs into the “run-back” position in certain teams while not including them in the primary stack for their team. This is useful when a situation has an extremely highly projected running back that does not necessarily fit into his team’s passing game. These players are threaded throughout the following construction recommendations.

Note for all optimizers the rules can be utilized to force bring-back plays in some sets of crunches and turned off for others as a global function instead of changing each group to “exactly one” bring-back play, wherever applicable, but it will apply to all teams.

 


Arizona Cardinals

Game Total: 44.5 / ARI +6.5 (19.0)

Offense: 39.62% rush / 60.38% pass / 21.7 ppg / 4.6 ypa rush / 6.2 ypa pass

oppDEF: 3.6 ypa rush / 5.5 ypa pass / 20.4 ppg / 5.61% sack / 0.99% int

Key Player: Jacoby Brissett (Kyler Murray remains questionable/less-likely)

Setting: at least one / exactly two (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Team Group: Trey McBride, Marvin Harrison Jr. (Q), Michael Wilson, Zay Jones (Q), Zonovan “Bam” Knight (on/off), Michael Carter (on/off), Greg Dortch (large field)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Josh Jacobs (Q), Romeo Doubs, Matthew Golden, Tucker Kraft, Dontayvion Wicks (Q), Malik Heath

Game Notes:

Quarterback

Typically competent veteran backup Jacoby Brissett was competent once again in Week 6, filling in for starter Kyler Murray who is likely to be out again this week. Brissett completed 27 of 44 pass attempts for 320 yards with a pair of touchdowns and an interception. The completions total tied Murray’s season-high mark over five starts, while the attempts mark landed three beyond Murray’s season-high for attempts. Brissett has clear volume on his side, the running game in Arizona remains a job share between backups, but the matchup against the Packers is a bit of a challenge this week. Green Bay ranks fourth against the run at 3.6 yards allowed per rush and first against the pass at just 5.5 yards allowed per pass attempt. Brissett will have the team’s primary weapons intact with Marvin Harrison Jr. clearing the injury report on Friday but he ranks as just QB20/20 on both DraftKings and FanDuel atop a low-ranked stack on both sites.

Running Backs

After some back-and-forth ahead of the game on Sunday, the Cardinals ended up essentially splitting running back duties evenly between Zonovan “Bam” Knight and Michael Carter. Knight was announced as the nominal lead prior to the game but barely out-touched Carter while the two posted equally limited production. Knight gained 34 yards and scored on 11 carries with another 20 on one big catch, Carter gained 34 yards on nine carries and caught two of five targets for another 30 yards but failed to score. Carter’s potential touch mark of 14 was one more than Knight’s opportunity over more snaps. Carter ran 20 routes to Knight’s 14 for the game, and it was Carter who saw the team’s lone red zone carry and the running back target in the red zone. As things currently stand, both running backs rank just outside of the top-20 in both categories on both sites. Either option is capable of finding a score and a productive value day but there is no stability or predictability to the situation.

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

Trey McBride leads the Cardinals by fantasy point projections and positional ranking as TE1 by points on both sites this week. McBride has a bit more value on the blue site, ranking as TE4 by value on the FanDuel slate but TE9 by value on DraftKings. The tight end had a strong day in Brissett’s season debut, catching eight of a fantastic 11 targets for 72 yards and a touchdown. McBride picked up a bit of volume with Marvin Harrison Jr. out of action after sustaining a concussion during the game, even with Harrison Jr. expected back this week, this is a very strong option for raw scoring potential. The Arizona tight end draws 8.8 targets per game and has already seen 10 red zone targets this season, posting two touchdowns over six games. McBride gains a sturdy 1.54 yards per route run and sees a 28.39% air yards share while working at moderate depth. There is plenty of volume and scoring potential for all formats, even against a good defense in Week 7.

Marvin Harrison Jr. left the team’s Week 6 game early with a concussion that held him out of practices earlier this week, he returned on Friday and is now off of the injury report entirely and expected to play. Harrison the Younger has a pair of touchdowns on the season while gaining a team-leading 1.71 yards per route run on 33.0 routes per game. McBride’s 37.5 routes run per game lead the group but Harrison Jr.’s number was cut down by the partial performance in Week 6. Assuming full health, Harrison Jr. is a fair mid-board option among pass-catchers, he can break a big play even in a lousy game with a 12.0-yard ADOT and 31.32% air yards share on the season. Harrison Jr. is WR18/18 on DraftKings and WR20/29 on FanDuel, where  his $6,700 price tag plays a bit rough.

Michael Wilson slots in as the number three option in the passing game, drawing an 11.7% target share on routes run over his 33.3 routes per game. Wilson has seen just a 52.17% catchable target rate and incredibly thin volume, so the 0.48 yards per route run that he has provided are hardly his fault. The receiver still works at an appealing 11.0-yard average depth of target for 17.52% of the air yards and he has a touchdown and two red zone targets on the season, he is viable but not as much more than a dart throw against a good defense. Wilson is WR41/44 and WR44/47 in Week 7.

Zay Jones is questionable for Sunday’s game, he caught a season-high five passes for 79 yards on eight targets over 41 routes, nearly doubling his average route total with Harrison Jr. out of action last week. Jones dips back to nothing more than an afterthought competing for chances with Greg Dortch at the bottom of the depth chart unless things change, but he is the preferred option between those two.

 

The Cardinals are a very limited-looking Stack 17/18 on DraftKings and Stack 18/20 on FanDuel. The issue is less the presence of their backup quarterback and more the sturdy opposing defense and limiting 19.0-point implied team total. While the team does not play as a great stack, there are individual skill players who provide upside as standalone options in other lineups.

 


Carolina Panthers

Game Total: 42.0 / CAR -1.0 (21.5)

Offense: 44.44% rush / 55.56% pass / 22.0 ppg / 5.0 ypa rush / 5.9 ypa pass

oppDEF: 4.3 ypa rush / 7.3 ypa pass / 28.3 ppg / 4.49% sack / 0.0% int

Key Player: Bryce Young

Setting: at least one / exactly two (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Team Group: Tetairoa McMillan, Chuba Hubbard (on/off), Rico Dowdle (on/off), Xavier Legette, Hunter Renfrow, Ja’Tavion Sanders, Tommy Tremble (on/off, large field)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Breece Hall, Mason Taylor, Josh Reynolds, Allen Lazard, Arian Smith

Game Notes:

Quarterback

Bryce Young managed to make the most of good spots for fantasy production over the past two games and he draws a potentially compliant Jets defense in Week 7. While Young has been far from outstanding this season, he has had some encouraging outings, including last week’s three-touchdown day against the inept Cowboys defense. Young threw for a limited 199 yards on 17-25 passing, good for 8.0 yards per attempt despite the low total. Between that game and a Week 5 matchup against Miami, Young has five touchdowns against two interceptions while throwing for 397 yards over the last two games. Young’s best game of the year was an elite 35-55 for 328 yards and three scores against the Cardinals in Week 2, he could post similar numbers against a Jets defense allowing 7.3 yards per pass attempt and 28.3 points-per-game while getting to the quarterback for just a 4.49% sack rate on a weak 13.5% pressure rate. New York is yet to intercept a pass on the season, Young, meanwhile, has thrown five interceptions in six games. Young’s 33.17 pass attempts per game rank him in the top-half of the slate for opportunity, though he completes fewer passes than he should at 1.5 points below expectation by CPOE. Bryce Young is QB12/13 on DraftKings and QB12/14 on FanDuel atop a stack that rates similarly.

 

Running Backs

Running back Rico Dowdle exploded for value as a clear go-to option with Chuba Hubbard out of action over the last two weeks. The running back has been terrific overall in 2025, posting 5.8 yards per rush attempt, but with Hubbard rejoining the mix in Week 7 it will be interesting to see where the ball goes. Hubbard was dominating touches prior to his injury, carrying the ball 13.3 times per game while drawing 4.3 targets with Dowdle in the shadows. The team is reportedly set on a plan for distribution of touches, but they are being coy as to what that plan involves as of Friday night, odds are this will be an almost even split. Hubbard is a player the team values at the position and he was not out for long enough to truly lose this job. Dowdle was under-utilized until he was needed, he is unlikely to return to as extreme a backup role as he was in early in the year. With the uncertainty involved, Hubbard just working his way back and producing only an average 4.1 yards per rush attempt prior to his injury, this situation is murky at best. We have nearly identical projections for the two running backs, though they combine for one Voltron of an elite player if that were an option. Hubbard slightly outpaces Dowdle unless news pushes the other way, he is RB16/17 and RB17/17 to Dowdle’s RB18/24 on both sites.

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

Tetairoa McMillan gains 1.86 yards per route run over 34.0 routes per game to easily lead this group of pass-catchers. McMillan found the end zone twice in Week 7 for his first two scores of the season, though his overall performance was the lowest-end in terms of catches and yardage. The wideout was held to three catches for 29 yards on five targets over his 25 routes run against Dallas, still a high-value DFS scoring day with the touchdowns. McMillan has a 100-yard game (Week 2) and has been a productive favored target of Young’s early in 2025. The receiver’s 43.17% air yards share on an 11.3-yard ADOT over eight targets per game puts him among special options for big play and volume-based upside. McMillan is a strong alternative to the Carolina running backs and the top pairing with shares of Young as WR8 by points but WR22 by value on DraftKings, he rates far better by points-per-dollar at $6,600 on FanDuel, where he is WR8 by points and WR7 by value.

Jalen Coker was hopeful but ultimately failed to return in Week 6, the team has directly said that he will be active for Week 7. Coker should slot in as the clear number two in the passing attack, he had a productive 2024 with 478 yards and a pair of touchdowns on 32-46 receiving over 11 games as an undrafted rookie. Coker worked at an 11.0-yard average depth of target that should at least give Young another option down the field, the receiver and Young established a solid connection in their limited work together last season with six explosive gains on passing plays. Coker is WR37/36 and WR40/37 and quite a bit offset from McMillan by both points and value.

Xavier Legette is WR44/43 and WR48/48 across sites, he should slip down the board for opportunities and value with Coker’s return. Legette plays 78.0% of the team’s snaps on average, running 32.8 routes per game but sees just a 10.5% target share on routes run, returning a thin 0.38 yards per route run. Legette has a touchdown on the board despite the light volume and he was targeted five times in the red zone in early season action, though those chances may move around over the next few games. Legette is at best a dart throw in Week 7.

Ja’Tavion Sanders missed the last three games and has been limited in practices once again in the run-up to Week 7. Sanders is projected as just TE20/20 and TE20/21 with limited appeal across sites, Tommy Tremble would fill the role similarly and adequately if Sanders does not play. If both tight ends are active they will limit one another somewhat with Sanders as the likely lead option for target share in a low-end role.

 

The Panthers are Stack 14 by points on both sites but they rank as just Stack 20 and Stack 17 by value on DraftKings and FanDuel respectively. Thin stacks of Young and McMillan are an interesting option against a gettable defense that will not pressure the quarterback. Both running backs are also viable, the Jets are allowing 4.3 yards per rush attempt for the season but the split situation is not appealing.

 


Chicago Bears

Game Total: 46.5 / CHI -5.5 (26.0)

Offense: 43.97% rush / 56.03% pass / 25.2 ppg / 4.1 ypa rush / 7.4 ypa pass

oppDEF: 3.8  ypa rush / 7.6 ypa pass / 26.7 ppg / 6.84% sack / 1.69% int

Key Player: Caleb Williams

Setting: at least one / exactly two (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Team Group: Rome Odunze, DJ Moore, D’Andre Swift (Q; on/off), Cole Kmet, Olamide Zaccheaus, Luther Burden III, Colston Loveland (on/off; large field)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Alvin Kamara, Chris Olave, Juwan Johnson, Rashid Shaheed, Brandin Cooks, Taysom Hill (on/0ff), Kendre Miller (on/off)

Game Notes:

Quarterback

The Bears check in as a sound option on both sites with the fourth-highest implied team total of the week at 26.0. Chicago and quarterback Caleb Williams draw an interesting matchup against a Saints defense that yields just 3.8 yards per attempt on the ground, ranking sixth-best in the league, but leaks against the pass with 7.6 yards allowed per attempt to sit 25th. New Orleans has put steady pressure on the quarterback with a 22.3% pressure rate and a 6.84% sack rate but Williams has plenty of potential to overcome or even exploit the pass rush. The Bears quarterback is a roller coaster with a completion percentage that sits 9.9 points below expectation by CPOE, ranking him dead last on the slate, while also accounting for 11 total touchdowns against just two interceptions. Williams has provided a steady stream of fantasy points this season, padding his decent 31.8 pass attempts per game and 7.4 yards per pass with 3.9  yards per rush attempt over 5.6 carries per game. Williams has a pair of rushing touchdowns and has thrown nine touchdowns to a solid group of pass-catchers. Williams has a clear favorite in standout second-year receiver Rome Odunze, but the Bears offer both depth and reasonable alternatives when stacking, with at least four playable receivers at a variety of prices and a strong tight end option. Caleb Williams checks in as QB3 by points on both sites, he is QB1 by value in a premium position on our board on the DraftKings slate, though he dips slightly as QB4 by value on the FanDuel board.

Running Backs

Between individual performance that rates as more “fine” than “standout” and facing a sturdy rush defense that has bottled-up running backs both before and after contact on the season while rating mostly in the middle of the league overall, D’Andre Swift seems like a playable option at a lower priority than some of the team’s pass-catchers. Swift does see a bit of upside in the passing game, he belongs in shares of Williams +2 stacks, but on a more limited basis. The running back gains 4.2 yards per rush attempt over 14.0 carries per game and has a strong 11.43% explosive play rate for the season, though he has reached the end zone only twice on the ground with an additional score in the passing game. Swift gains 7.2 yards per target, typically catching the ball behind the line and making things happen, he is a playable RB12 by points and RB7 by value on DraftKings and rates similarly as RB11/7 on the FanDuel slate.

Kyle Monangai rates outside of the top-30 running backs and has very little appeal across sites with Swift expected to play after dealing with a groin injury all week. Monangai gained 19 yards on five carries and another 25 on a catch from his lone target over 10 routes run last week, his 21 snaps were the most he received since Week 2. The rookie could see similar involvement this week if Swift comes up lame for a series, or worse, but otherwise is only a dart throw at a cheap unowned touchdown from an appealing offense.

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

Caleb Williams has thrown nine touchdown passes that have been fairly distributed among the team’s pass catchers, assuming you ignore that five of them have gone to Rome Odunze that is. No other Bears pass-catcher has more than one touchdown on the season, while Odunze scored at least once in each of the team’s first four game ahead of their Week 5 bye. Odunze had a lousy 32 yards on two catches over five targets in Week 6 against Washington, his weakest performance of the season by a wide margin, he should bounce back in a big way against a gettable defense in Week 7. In addition the the touchdown scoring, Odunze has been Williams’ top overall target with a 25.0% target rate on routes run over 34.8 routes per game. The receiver draws eight chances per game, while others see steady targets as well, no other Bears pass-catcher sees more than 5.6 targets per game. Odunze’s 13.3-yard ADOT and 43.37% air yards share put him in big play and big volume territory, he is a major weapon both in and out of Bears stacks as WR5 by points on both sites. Odunze is WR14 by value on DraftKings and WR11 for points-per-dollar on the blue site.

DJ Moore ranks as a strong play from the second shelf. Moore has a touchdown on the board while drawing 5.2 targets per game for a 16.3% target share on routes run. The veteran gains 1.28 yards per route run and works in between at an 8.7-yard average depth of target. Moore gains 4.4 yards after the catch per reception, slightly above expectation, he is capable of winning a route for a deep chance or breaking a play after the ball is in his hands. DJ Moore is WR24/23 and WR28/36 across DraftKings and FanDuel this week.

Veteran Olamide Zaccheaus has seen steady looks in the passing game as well this season, technically outpacing DJ Moore with 5.6 targets per game and a 17.5% target share on routes run over 23.2 routes per game, about 10 fewer than Moore runs each week. Zaccheaus gains just 1.23 yards per target and has yet to score this season, drawing a 13.88% air yards share on limited depth. The idea with Zaccheaus is to get the ball in his hands, though he has managed just 3.8 yards after the catch per reception this season, -0.1 yards below expectation per reception. Zaccheaus could also lose volume to rookie Luther Burden III as the season progresses, though Burden has been up and down over the first five games. Zaccheaus is WR40/39 and WR38/39 across sites this week, he is at worst a mixer in stacks of Caleb Williams +2 and a dart throw in other lineups.

Luther Burden III slots in as WR33/33 and WR35/31, slightly outpacing Zaccheaus’ rankings on a bit of big game potential. Burden was selected 39th overall in the 2nd round of this year’s draft to make an impact, he has two decent games in five NFL contests, with only limited opportunities in the other three. Burden blew up somewhat in Week 3 against a Dallas defense that will let you do that to them, and we do mean YOU, the reader, they are that bad. Burden caught three passes for 101 yards and a touchdown on three targets over his nine routes run on 17 snaps in that game but dipped to just two catches for -4.0 yards the following week. The receiver’s second-best performance came in Week 6 after the bye, he caught four of four targets for 51 yards over 13 routes run but that came on just 14 snaps with the offense. Burden will continue to dip in and out of relevance until more steady targeting emerges but he should see chances in a soft spot in Week 7, making him an interesting differentiation piece.

Both Cole Kmet and Colston Loveland were limited participants in the passing attack last week. Loveland played 27 snaps with the offense and caught two passes on three targets over 13 routes, Kmet played 32 snaps but ran only 12 routes and caught one of the two targets he saw for zero yards. Kmet has been slightly more involved than the rookie, he has a touchdown on the board in early action but has not been over 50 yards or three catches in a game this season. The tight ends in the Bears offense are limited shots at lower-owned touchdowns from an appealing stack, making either a potential differentiator for a Williams +2 build.

 

The Bears are a good option against a targetable pass defense this week, the explosive collection of players rates as Stack 7 by points and Stack 6 by value on DraftKings, they are Stack 7/9 on the FanDuel slate. Among the team’s skill players, any of Rome Odunze, D’Andre Swift, or DJ Moore are also easily playable outside of Bears stacks.

 


Cleveland Browns

Game Total: 37.5 / CLE -3.0 (20.25)

Offense: 34.64% rush / 65.36% pass / 13.7 ppg / 3.9 ypa rush / 5.0 ypa pass

oppDEF: 5.6 ypa rush / 8.0 ypa pass / 29.0 ppg / 6.42% sack / 0.57% int

Key Player: Dillon Gabriel

Setting: exactly one

Team Group: Jerry Jeudy, Isaiah Bond, Quinshon Judkins (on/off), Harold Fannin Jr., Jamari Thrash (large field)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: De’Von Achane, Jaylen Waddle, Darren Waller, Malik Washington, Nick Westbrook-Ikhine

Game Notes:

Quarterback

Dillon Gabriel’s primary attribute is a dirt cheap $4,400 price on the DraftKings slate against what has been one of the NFL’s worst defenses to open the 2025 season. Gabriel has three touchdown passes on the season, though only two of them came from his two recent starts and he was held off the board against Pittsburgh in an otherwise capable game last week. Gabriel threw the ball 52 times in Week 6 and 33 times in Week 5, though his 221 yards in Week 6 were the best he has managed to date. Overall, the quarterback’s lowly 4.8 yard per pass attempt on 6.1 intended air yards per attempt leaves much to be desired. Gabriel’s completion percentage sits 8.7 percentage points below expectation by CPOE, but Miami has allowed 8.0 yards per pass attempt to rank 29th in football while giving up the second-highest passer rating in the league. Gabriel has a chance to find a bit of success, or at least provide cheap quarterback scoring as an access point to interesting builds on DraftKings. The Browns signal-caller is a limited QB19 by points on both sites but he ascends to QB6 by value on DraftKings while staying low-end as QB15 by value on FanDuel.

Running Backs

Quinshon Judkins leads the Browns by fantasy scoring projections for Week 7 against a defense that has given up a 30th-ranked 5.6 yards per rush attempt on the season. Miami allows 1.5 rushing touchdowns per game, there is plenty of potential for scoring from the running back spot in this contest, though who carries the ball into the end zone is still a bit of a discussion for Cleveland. Judkins had a rushing touchdown in back-to-back games over Weeks 3 and 4, seemingly taking control of the backfield with 18 then 21 carries before leaping to 23 carries for 110 yards in Week 5 against a tough Minnesota defense. The running back stumbled to just 12 carries for 36 yards while playing six fewer snaps in the Week 6 game, losing a bit of ground to Jerome Ford who ran 21 routes on 33 snaps while drawing six targets and catching five of them, though that went for just 13 yards. Judkins should return to better volume this week, he is in a terrific matchup for fantasy scoring, and he could slip through a bit under-appreciated after the lousy Week 6 game. The Browns running back is RB10 by points and RB6 by value on DraftKings, he is RB9 by points and RB12 by value on FanDuel and will be popular on both sites.

While Jerome Ford did see six targets and a handful of catches last week, he has clearly lost any stake in this job and is, in fact, rumored to be on the trade market. There are dueling schools of thought in that the Browns could look to either showcase or protect a potential trade piece, though Ford would only yield limited return on the open market. The running back gains just 3.7 yards per rush attempt and ranks outside of the top-25 positionally across the board this week.

Dylan Sampson played just 15 snaps with the offense last week, drawing three carries for a dozen yards, he has little-to-no value in Week 7 outside of a cheap broken-play touchdown.

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

Jerry Jeudy is WR20 by points but, like his cheap quarterback, leaps to WR5 by value on DraftKings at just $4,400. The $8,800 pairing makes at least a reasonable argument for shares on the pure savings and purchasing power provided at very low popularity. While Jeudy will be owned in the mid-single-digit range, Gabriel is unlikely to crest more than 1.5-2.0 percent popularity at most, and should land below those marks in large public contests. There is no reliability involved, Jeudy has not been good this year with zero touchdowns despite 8.0 targets per game and a team-leading 24.6% first-read share with Gabriel. The receiver manages a mere 0.98 yards per route run over a terrific 40.8 routes per game, drawing a 20.6% target share on routes run but just a 60.42% catchable target rate on his 39.2% air yards share and 13.1-yard ADOT. Jeudy is far more appealing as a value play than for raw scoring but he can be utilized both in and out of stacks across DraftKings in Week 7, he is a less valuable but still playable WR24/14 on FanDuel.

Harold Fannin Jr. should stand tall at the tight end spot with David Njoku ruled out for Week 7. Fannin Jr. has a touchdown on the board despite a limited 16.3% target share on routes run over his 28.5 routes per game to start his career. The tight end sees a 6.4-yard average depth of target for a 14.64% air yards share, ranking third among primary pass catchers for the Browns this week. The tight end is coming off a good Week 6 game that saw him post season-high marks of 66 snaps, seven catches, 81 yards, and 44 routes run, drawing 10 targets that also ranked as a season-high. Overall, Fannin Jr. sees 6.3 targets per game, ranking second to only Jeudy, his 1.49 yards per route run easily leads this low-end bunch. Fannin Jr. is TE8 by points and TE4 by value on DraftKings, he is TE6 by points and TE2 by value on FanDuel and is interesting on both sites. Gabriel-Jeudy-Fannin stacks cost a total of $12,700 on DraftKings this week, though they remain a low-end raw scoring option.

Isaiah Bond is WR45/42 and WR41/41 across sites on 0.76 yards per route run for the season. Bond does draw a 10.9-yard ADOT that puts him in big play range but he has not found the end zone on the season. The receiver’s 18.18% explosive plays on receptions falls flat against his 1.8 yards below expectation after the catch per reception on the year. Jamari Thrash is an even longer-shot of a dart throw, the two receivers are limited depth options for light stack padding at best in Week 7.

 

Given the extreme bargain bin pricing on DraftKings, the Browns are at least worthy of a few shares in lineups that pay up for production and chalk in essentially every other spot. Gabriel + Jeudy + Fannin is a cheap angle into that slate, though there are no promises for production. The path of least resistance is clearly standalone Quinshon Judkins shares from the top of the heap. The Browns are Stack 16 by points but Stack 4 by value on DraftKings, they are Stack 16/12 where there is less value in play on the FanDuel slate.

 


Dallas Cowboys

Game Total: 54,5 / DAL +1.0 (26.75)

Offense: 37.4% rush / 62.6% pass / 29.7 ppg / 4.9 ypa rush / 7.1 ypa pass

oppDEF: 4.2 ypa rush / 8.2 ypa pass / 21.0 ppg / 8.87% sack / 1.08% int

Key Player: Dak Prescott

Setting: at least one / exactly two (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Team Group: CeeDee Lamb (Q), George Pickens, Jake Ferguson, Ryan Flournoy, Javonte Williams (on/off), Jalen Tolbert (on/off; large field), KaVontae Turpin (Q; on/off; large field)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Deebo Samuel (Q), Jacory “Bill” Croskey-Merritt, Zach Ertz, Luke McCaffrey, Jaylin Lane, Jeremy McNichols

Game Notes:

Quarterback

The DFS game of the week stands out from the crowd with a season-high 54.5-point game total and both teams among the best stacks of the day. The high-powered Cowboys offense lands in the top overall spot for fantasy scoring, though they rank differently by points-per-dollar across sites. Dak Prescott is no small part of that equation, the Cowboys quarterback slots in as QB5 by points on both sites this week and is among the best in the business for scoring potential given 38.17 pass attempts per game. Prescott is tops on the slate with 269.5 passing yards per game, good for 7.1 yards per pass attempt on 7.1 intended air yards per attempt with 13 touchdowns against just three interceptions. With this game expected to shootout in all corners of the industry and in Vegas, Prescott and his talented group of skill players will be in high demand across DFS lineups, still, they are easily embraced chalk with compounded ownership across +2 stacks and capable bring-back plays creating natural differentiation. Dak Prescott is QB5 by points and QB10 by value on DraftKings, he is QB5/7 on the FanDuel slate at the head of the site’s most appealing overall stack.

 

Running Backs

Javonte Williams somehow feels underdiscussed despite plenty of talk of his breakout campaign. The running back gains an excellent 5.2 yards per rush attempt on 15.3 carries per game, posting a strong 2.9 yards after contact per attempt, though his 6.52% explosive rush rate is somewhat limited. Williams has five rushing touchdowns on the board in six games and has drawn regular chances in the passing game as well. The running back has at least 18 potential touches in each of the last three games, with more than 20 in two of those contests. Williams posted just 29 yards on 13 carries and gained only five more on five catches against Carolina in a disappointing effort the last time out, he is likely to do better against a middling Washington defense that will have to cover for being even worse against the pass. Prior to last week’s dud, Williams had back-to-back solid DFS weeks with 85 yards and a touchdown on 20 carries and another 15 yards on three catches in Week 4 followed by a season-high 135 yards on just 16 carries with a touchdown in Week 5 against the lousy Jets. Williams is also carried somewhat by a rising tide effect in this game, he rates as RB4 by points and RB1 by value on DraftKings and lands as RB4 by points and RB2 by value on FanDuel. Given the regular looks in the passing attack – Williams has seen at least three targets in all but one of the team’s games and 4.7 per game overall – the running back operates well both in and out of stacks in Week 7.

Jaydon Blue is a distant second on the depth chart, he played just five snaps with the offense last week with Williams dominating touches and very little is expected to change this week.

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

Star receiver CeeDee Lamb is due to return to the Cowboys after three straight missed contests due to an ankle injury. Lamb is a premium option in any matchup and looks special with the team highly-projected in Week 7. Given the expected pace and scoring potential of this game, Lamb shines as WR1 by points on both sites, he should have no issues picking up with the 2.52 yards per pass attempt we saw from him earlier in the season. Lamb is a no-brainer play in any stack of Cowboys or as a standalone star receiver, he is a true top option who has four straight seasons of better than 1,100 yards and six touchdowns on his resume. The receiver will see competition for touches from George Pickens, who truly found his footing in this passing game with Lamb out over the last few weeks, but there should be plenty of looks to go around and still have room for the productive tight end and running back to get theirs. Lamb is WR1 by points and WR6 by value on DraftKings, he is WR1 by points and WR3 by value on the FanDuel slate.

George Pickens is not far behind his star teammate as WR7 by points on DraftKings and WR6 in the category on FanDuel. Pickens slips somewhat when rated for value but one big play or a touchdown erases that margin in a hurry, he is no worse than 1A to Lamb’s lead in this offense. Pickens has a tremendous six touchdowns on the board while drawing a 32.26% air yards share on a 12.1-yard ADOT, numbers that should hold for opportunity and shape even with Lamb back in the fold, giving Dak Prescott two major downfield weapons. Pickens gained 302 yards on 19 catches with four touchdowns in the three games that Lamb missed, he had five catches for exactly 68 yards and a touchdown in each of Weeks 2 and 3 prior to Lamb’s exit and has now scored in five straight contests.

Jake Ferguson is another premium scorer at his position. The tight end has four touchdowns hwile drawing a 22.3% target share on routes run and eight red zone looks overall this season. Ferguson sees a short 4.3-yard average depth of target and just a 13.46% air yards share but his touchdown-scoring upside makes him an easy second-click in Prescott +2 stacks alongside either of the wide receivers or even as an alternative approach to “skinny” stacks of Cowboys. The most differentiated approach to a Prescott build that is not grasping at straws down the depth chart could be utilizing Ferguson and Javonte Williams at running back while fading the two premium wide receivers, at least in a build or two across 150 entries. This approach is far less appealing in small fields, single entry, or other more limited formats.

Ryan Flournoy stepped forward somewhat in Lamb’s absence and he could continue to see chances in the revamped passing attack. Flournoy gains an excellent 2.36 yards per route run on limited chances this season but has yet to score a touchdown. KaVontae Turpin and Jalen Tolbert are similarly low-ranked darts in the Dallas and Dak quiver in Week 7, they lack true appeal but could hit the wildcard scoring board as cheap stack filler. Turpin has a touchdown catch on the board already this season and both receivers see 3.3 targets per game with Tolbert drawing more snap share.

 

The Cowboys are a go-to stacking option this week, they have excellent plays in +2 builds with four or five options that clear every position on the board. Dallas lands as Stack 1 by points on both sites, they are Stack 8 by value on DraftKings and an excellent Stack 2 by value on the FanDuel slate where they have the most appeal

 

 

 


Denver Broncos

Game Total: 40.5 / DEN -7.5 (24.0)

Offense: 44.21% rush / 55.79% pass / 21.7 ppg / 4.6 ypa rush / 6.2 ypa pass

oppDEF: 5.1 ypa rush / 6.9 ypa pass / 24.0 ppg / 5.46% sack / 1.78% int

Key Player: Bo Nix

Setting: at least one / exactly two (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Team Group: Courtland Sutton, JK Dobbins (on/off), Evan Engram, Marvin Mims Jr., RJ Harvey (on/off), Troy Franklin, Pat Bryant (large field), Trent Sherfield Sr. (large field)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Wan’Dale Robinson, Cam Skaettbo, Theo Johnson, Tyrone Tracy Jr. (on/off), Lil’Jordan Humphrey, Jalin Hyatt (on/off), Beauc Collins (on/off)

Game Notes:

Quarterback

Denver quarterback Bo Nix ranks near the bottom of the league’s pool of qualified passers in most advanced metrics, including catchable targets and yards per pass attempt. Nix gains just 6.2 yards per attempt on 34.33 tries per game, completing 65.0% of his passes for a CPOE mark 1.5 points below expectation. The quarterback does have nine touchdown passes this season but that comes with four interceptions and just one rushing touchdown on his 5.5 rush attempts per game. Nix padded fantasy scoring with four rushing touchdowns to his 29 passing touchdowns last season, he should run a few additional scores in throughout the season and stands a fair chance against a Giants defense that allows 5.1 yards per rush attempt overall to sit 29th in the league. Otherwise, the Giants pass defense has been steadily improving, their season long marks rank mostly in the middle of the league, like a 6.9 yards allowed per pass attempt that sits 13th, but they have picked up the pace in recent weeks, limiting passers to bottom-10 rankings and steadily pressuring the quarterback. Nix will be challenged for quality but his defense should keep the Giants very much in check and seems likely to deliver additional chances as-needed. Nix rates as another interesting slate value as QB8 by points but QB2 by value on both sites at the head of a stack that rates similarly.

Running Backs

JK Dobbins gains a strong 4.9 yards per rush attempt over 15.2 carries per game this season, posting a 10.99% explosive rush rate and 6.59% broken tackle rate while finding the end zone four times on the ground. Dobbins is hardly involved in the passing game, that work has gone to RJ Harvey but it amounts to just three targets per game for the backup. Dobbins is the lead option on the ground, Harvey carries the ball a mere 5.5 times per game and has not seen the end zone this season despite a few elusive runs. Dobbins rates as RB9 by points but RB2 by value on DraftKings, he is RB10 by points and RB5 by value on FanDuel against the leaky Giants rush defense.

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

Courtland Sutton is a strong mid-board option at the wide receiver position, he ranks as WR12 for raw scoring and WR16 by value on DraftKings but loses position as just WR30 for value at a pricey $7,700 on FanDuel. Like much of their recent output, the ongoing viability of the Giants pass defense remains very much in doubt, the team is likely to allow more big games against than not in the coming weeks and it would be best to be early to the situation. Sutton is the go-to option for Nix, he had a lousy game in Week 6 but that was on the heels of three strong performances in a row. Sutton had his best game in Week 3 with 118 yards and a touchdown on six catches, he added 81 yards and another score on five grabs in Week 4, and another 99 yards on a season-high eight catches in Week 5 against the Eagles. The receiver’s dip to just one catch for 17 yards can primarily be blamed on seeing just three targets over 26 routes on 48 snaps, all season-low marks by a fair margin. Sutton is pulling a 12.2-yard average depth of target and more than 35% of the team’s air yards, he has the ability to quickly improve upon the three touchdown catches he posted over six games thus far.

Troy Franklin has been only moderately productive on a fair 18.6% target share on routes run over his 30.0 routes per game, returning just 1.39 yards per route run. Franklin has one touchdown on the season, drawing an 8.8-yard average depth of target for a 24.27% air yards share. Franklin has played more snaps and run more routes than Marvin Mims Jr. in every game this season, he is the number two wide receiver in the offense despite being the less flashy play.

Marvin Mims Jr. sees 22.03% of the air yards in Bo Nix’s passing attack. Mims Jr. gains 1.27 yards per route run but has been running only 19.5 routes per game early in 2025. The receiver has a touchdown on the board and works at game-breaking potential depth with a 12.8-yard average depth of target and an excellent 1.1 yard over expectation after the catch per reception for 6.8 yards after the catch per reception. Mims is capable of making one big slate-bending play and he will be one of the lower-owned options in this offense. The receiver is a lottery ticket as WR28 by points, for just $3,500 he flies to up the board by value on the DraftKings slate. Mims Jr. is  far less valuable at $5,100 on FanDuel.

Pat Bryant saw more snaps but fewer targets than Mims in recent games, he is no more the a dart throw option this week.

Evan Engram has 13 catches in the team’s three most recent games, following a missed contest in Week 3 against the Chargers. Engram posted a season-high 42 yards on five catches over six targets and 15 routes last week, though his lone touchdown came in his four-catch 33-yard performance last week. The tight end has 19 targets over the same three-game stretch, he sees regular chances in the offense and gains 1.32 yards per route run. Engram is TE9 by points but TE8 by value on DraftKings, he is TE11/9 on the FanDuel slate.

 

The Broncos are a mid-board stack with value potential as Stack 9 by points but Stack 2 by value at cheap pricing on DraftKings, they are Stack 9 by points and Stack 6 by value on FanDuel with the best case scenario being a Nix rushing touchdown bolstering a bit of scoring in the passing attack. Any combination of Nix and his pass-catchers should be relatively low-owned on both sites.

 


Green Bay Packers

Game Total: 44.5 / GB -6.5 (25.5)

Offense: 49.68% rush / 50.32% pass / 26.2 ppg / 4.0 ypa rush / 8.6 ypa pass

oppDEF: 4.2 ypa rush / 6.5 ypa pass / 21.2 ppg / 4.44% sack / 1.69% int

Key Player: Jordan Love

Setting: at least one / exactly two (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Team Group: Romeo Doubs, Josh Jacobs (Q; on/off), Matthew Golden, Tucker Kraft, Dontayvion Wicks (Q), Malik Heath (large field), Savion Williams (large field)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Trey McBride, Marvin Harrison Jr. (Q), Michael Wilson, Zay Jones (Q), Zonovan “Bam” Knight (on/off), Michael Carter (on/off)

Game Notes:

Quarterback

 

Running Backs

 

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

 


Indianapolis Colts

Game Total: 48.0 / IND +1.5 (23.25)

Offense: 47.92% rush / 52.08% pass / 32.3 ppg / 4.6 ypa rush / 8.3 ypa pass

oppDEF: 5.0 ypa rush / 6.2 ypa pass / 20.8 ppg / 7.88% sack / 3.21% int

Key Player: Daniel Jones

Setting: at least one / exactly two (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Team Group: Jonathan Taylor, Tyler Warren, Michael Pittman Jr., Alec Pierce, Adonai Mitchell, Anthony Gould (large field), Mo-Allie Cox (on/off; large field)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Quentin Johnston, Ladd McConkey, Keenan Allen, Kimani Vidal (on/off), Hassan Haskins (on/off), Oronde Gadsden (on/off), Will Dissly (on/off)

Game Notes:

Quarterback

 

Running Backs

 

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

 


Kansas City Chiefs

Game Total: 45.5 / KC -13.0 (29.25)

Offense: 40.85% rush / 59.15% pass / 25.8 ppg / 4.6 ypa rush / 7.1 ypa pass

oppDEF: 4.0 ypa rush / 6.9  ypa pass / 24.8 ppg / 6.51% sack / 1.49% int

Key Player: Patrick Mahomes

Setting: at least one / exactly two (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Team Group: Rashee Rice, Xavier Worthy, Travis Kelce, Hollywood Brown, Isiah Pacheco (on/off), Kareem Hunt (on/off), Noah Gray (large field; on/off), JuJu Smith-Schuster (large field; on/off)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Ashton Jeanty, Jakobi Meyers (Q), Brock Bowers (Q), Tre Tucker, Jack Bech

Game Notes:

Quarterback

 

Running Backs

 

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

 


Las Vegas Raiders

Game Total: 45.5 / LV +13.0 (16.25)

Offense: 43.80% rush / 56.20% pass / 17.2 ppg / 4.0  ypa rush / 7.3 ypa pass

oppDEF: 4.7 ypa rush / 6.9 ypa pass / 20.7 ppg / 7.41% sack / 2.29% int

Key Player: Geno Smith

Setting: at least one / exactly two (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Team Group: Ashton Jeanty, Jakobi Meyers (Q), Brock Bowers (Q), Tre Tucker, Jack Bech

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Rashee Rice, Xavier Worthy, Travis Kelce, Hollywood Brown, Isiah Pacheco (on/off), Kareem Hunt (on/off)

Game Notes:

Quarterback

 

Running Backs

 

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

 


Los Angeles Chargers

Game Total: 48.0 / LAC -1.5 (24.75)

Offense: 37.70% rush / 62.30% pass / 21.2 ppg / 5.0 ypa rush / 7.0 ypa pass

oppDEF: 4.3 ypa rush / 6.8 ypa pass / 19.3 ppg / 6.78% sack / 3.18% int

Key Player: Justin Herbert

Setting: at least one / exactly two (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Team Group: Quentin Johnston, Ladd McConkey, Keenan Allen, Oronde Gadsden II, Kimani Vidal (on/off), Hassan Haskins (on/off), Will Dissly (on/off)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Jonathan Taylor, Michael Pittman Jr., Tyler Warren, Alec Pierce, Adonai Mitchell

Game Notes:

Quarterback

 

Running Backs

 

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

 


Miami Dolphins

Game Total: 37.5 / MIA +3.0 (17.25)

Offense: 36.65% rush / 63.35% pass / 22.3 ppg / 4.6 ypa rush / 6.6 ypa pass

oppDEF: 3.1 ypa rush / 7.1 ypa pass / 24.3 ppg / 7.65% sack / 1.18% int

Key Player: Tua Tagovailoa

Setting: at least one / exactly two (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Team Group: De’Von Achane, Jaylen Waddle, Darren Waller, Malik Washington, Nick Westbrook-Ikhine (large field)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Quinshon Judkins, Jerry Jeudy, Isaiah Bond, Jamari Thrash, Harold Fannin Jr.

Game Notes:

Quarterback

 

Running Backs

 

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

 


Minnesota Vikings

Game Total: 43.5 / MIN +1.5 (21.0)

Offense: 41.61% rush / 58.39% pass / 24.6 ppg / 4.5 ypa rush / 7.7 ypa pass

oppDEF: 4.7 ypa rush / 6.4 ypa pass / 23.8 ppg / 4.27% sack / 1.49% int

Key Player: Carson Wentz

Setting: at least one / exactly two (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Team Group: Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, TJ Hockenson, Jordan Mason (on/off), Jalen Nailor (large field), Adam Thielen (large field)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Saquon Barkley, AJ Brown, DeVonta Smith, Dallas Goedert, Jahan Dotson

Game Notes:

Quarterback

 

Running Backs

 

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

 


New England Patriots

Game Total: 42.0 / NE -7.0 (24.5)

Offense: 44.38% rush / 55.62% pass / 25.0 ppg / 3.5 ypa rush / 8.5 ypa pass

oppDEF: 4.5 ypa rush / 7.3  ypa pass / 26.8 ppg / 4.74% sack / 2.21% int

Key Player: Drake Maye

Setting: at least one / exactly two (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Team Group: Stefon Diggs (Q), Hunter Henry, Kayshon Boutte, Mack Hollins, Rhamondre Stevenson (on/off), TreVeyon Henderson (on/off), DeMario Douglas (large field)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Tony Pollard (on/off), Tyjae Spears (on/off), Elic Ayomanor, Van Jefferson (Q), Chig Okonkwo

Game Notes:

Quarterback

 

Running Backs

 

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

 


New Orleans Saints

Game Total: 46.5 / NO +5.5 (20.5)

Offense: 43.23% rush / 56.77% pass / 18.5 ppg / 4.0 ypa rush / 6.0 ypa pass

oppDEF: 5.7 ypa rush / 7.8 ypa pass / 28.2 ppg / 5.41% sack / 5.71% int

Key Player: Spencer Rattler

Setting: at least one / exactly two (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Team Group: Chris Olave, ALvin Kamara, Rashid Shaheed, Juwan Johnson, Kendre Miller (on/off), Brandin Cooks, Taysom Hill (on/off)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Rome Odunze, DJ Moore, D’Andre Swift (Q), Cole Kmet, Olamide Zaccheaus, Luther Burden III

Game Notes:

Quarterback

 

Running Backs

 

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

 


New York Giants

Game Total: 40.5 / NYG +7.5 (16.5)

Offense: 45.94% rush / 54.06% pass / 20.2 ppg / 4.2 ypa rush / 6.6 ypa pass

oppDEF: 3.9 ypa rush / 6.2 ypa pass / 15.8 ppg / 13.70% sack / 0.53% int

Key Player: Jaxson Dart

Setting: at most two (this allows for “naked” Dart lineups)

Team Group: Cam Skattebo (on/off), Wan’Dale Robinson, Theo Johnson, Tyrone Tracy Jr. (on/off), Lil’Jordan Humphrey, Jalin Hyatt (large field), Beaux Collins (large field)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Courtland Sutton, JK Dobbins, Troy Franklin, Evan Engram, Marvin Mims Jr.

Game Notes:

Quarterback

 

Running Backs

 

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

 


New York Jets

Game Total: 42.0 / NYJ +1.0 (20.5)

Offense: 45.68% rush / 54.32% pass / 20.5 ppg / 5.0 ypa rush / 6.2 ypa pass

oppDEF: 4.1 ypa rush / 7.1 ypa pass / 24.3 ppg / 2.60% sack / 2.14% int

Key Player: Justin Fields

Setting: at most one (this allows for “naked” Fields lineups)

Team Group: Breece Hall, Mason Taylor, Josh Reynolds, Allen Lazard, Arian Smith, Tyler Johnson

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Chuba Hubbard (on/off), Rico Dowdle (on/off), Teairoa McMillan, Xavier Legette, Ja’Tavion Sanders, Tommy Tremble (on/off)

Game Notes:

Quarterback

 

Running Backs

 

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

 


Philadelphia Eagles

Game Total: 43.5 / PHI -1.5 (22.5)

Offense: 46.02% rush / 53.98% pass / 23.7 ppg / 3.5 ypa rush / 6.8 ypa pass

oppDEF: 4.5 ypa rush / 6.3 ypa pass / 19.4 ppg / 8.61% sack / 1.45% int

Key Player: Jalen Hurts

Setting: at least one / exactly two (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Team Group: Saquon Barkley, AJ Brown, DeVonta Smith, Dallas Goedert, Jahan Dotson

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, TJ Hockenson, Jordan Mason, Jalen Nailor, Adam Thielen

Game Notes:

Quarterback

 

Running Backs

 

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

 


Tennessee Titans

Game Total:  42.0 / TEN +7.0 (17.5)

Offense: 35.88% rush / 64.12% pass / 13.8 ppg / 3.9 ypa rush / 5.5 ypa pass

oppDEF: 3.5 ypa rush / 8.3 ypa pass / 20.0 ppg / 6.67% sack / 2.20% int

Key Player: Cam Ward

Setting: exactly one

Team Group: Elic Ayomanor, Chig Okonkwo, Tony Pollard (on/off), Tyjae Spears (on/off), Tyler Lockett (large field), Van Jefferson (Q)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: Stefon Diggs (Q), Kayshon Boutte, Hunter Henry, Rhamondre Stevenson (on/off), TreVeyon Henderson (on/off), Mack Hollins

Game Notes:

Quarterback

 

Running Backs

 

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

 


Washington Commanders

Game Total: 54.5 / WAS -1.0 (27.75)

Offense: 46.86% rush / 53.14% pass / 26.3 ppg / 5.5 ypa rush / 7.2 ypa pass

oppDEF: 4.7 ypa rush / 8.3 ypa pass / 30.7 ppg / 5.07% sack / 0.97% int

Key Player: Jayden Daniels

Setting: at most two (this allows for “naked” Jayden Daniels lineups)

Team Group: Deebo Samuel Sr., Zach Ertz, Luke McCaffrey, Jacory “Bill” Croskey-Merritt (on/off), Jeremy McNichols (on/off), Jaylin Lane (large field), Robbie Chosen (very large field)

Opposing Setting: at most one / exactly one (these can be alternated in a variety of lineup builds)

Opposing Group: CeeDee Lamb, George Pickens, Javonte Williams (on/off), Jake Ferguson, Ryan Flournoy, Jalen Tolbert, KaVontae Turpin (large field)

Game Notes:

Quarterback

 

Running Backs

 

 

Receivers & Tight Ends

 


 

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