Here's a quick
rundown of the NFL's week 3 fantasy football stars.
These guys are the WagerOnFootball.com "ALL
Week 3 STUD Team". After you check out these
top performers surf over to our NFL
sportsbooks page and see what great sponsors
we have here at Wager On Football Sportsbook Review.
A quick look at
the big fantasy performers from the weekend.
More
Weeks 1 .
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9 .10 .
11 .
12 .
13 .
14 .
15 .
16 .
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Player |
Pos |
Passing |
Rushing |
Recieving |
Manning |
QB |
393\5td's |
|
|
Favre |
QB |
360\4td's |
|
|
Culpepper |
QB |
360\2td's |
13yds |
|
Brooks |
QB |
316\1td |
27 yds |
25 yds |
O. Smith |
RB |
|
94 yds |
104yds |
T. Jones |
RB |
|
110 yds 1td |
71 yds |
Alexander |
RB |
|
52 yds 2 td's |
22 yds 1td |
C. Brown |
RB |
|
101 yds 1td |
30 yds |
J. Lewis |
RB |
|
187 yds 1td |
46 yds |
Dunn |
RB |
|
117 yds 1td |
20 yds |
R. Moss |
WR |
|
|
119yds\2td's |
R. Williams |
WR |
|
|
135yds\2tds |
Bruce |
WR |
|
|
134 yds |
Wayne |
WR |
|
|
184 yds 1td |
Walker |
WR |
|
|
200 yds 3td |
Gonzales |
TE |
|
|
106 yds 1 td |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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Those who don't play
fantasy football may wonder why the 10th-best running
back is often drafted ahead of the first- or second-best
quarterback, especially given all the attention/money/press/hype
given to the signal callers. And after this weekend,
some of those doubters may wonder even more.
After a couple of weeks dominated by high-scoring
running backs, the quarterbacks captured the spotlight
in Week 3 thanks to eight 300-yard passing games,
including huge games from three of the top four
fantasy QBs heading into the season.
First, Donovan McNabb and Daunte Culpepper ripped
through the Lions and Bears, respectively. Then
Peyton Manning and Brett Favre had a shootout for
the ages. I'd love to see the scores from games
featuring matchups between any combination of McNabb,
Culpepper, Manning and Favre.
Along with the big QB days were some nice games
from wideouts, although not always connected to
the stud passers (such as with Detroit's Roy Williams).
Plus, other QBs stepped up after so-so starts like
Kurt Warner, Joey Harrington and Marc Bulger.
That is not to say running backs were grounded
Sunday. Jamal Lewis finally had a big game, and
Thomas Jones is continuing to blossom into a fantasy
stud in Chicago.
Top 10 Studs
1. Peyton Manning, QB, Colts (28-41, 395 yards,
5 TDs; 2 carries, -2 yards): With Edgerrin James
hurting, Indy decided to put the load on Manning,
and he responded in a gigantic way, putting up 320
yards and five TDs in just the first half against
the Packers. He didn't have to fire the ball as
much in the second half, or else he might've had
400 yards and six TDs.
2. Javon Walker, WR, Packers (11 catches, 198 yards,
3 TDs, 1 lost fumble): There's always a question
of which Green Bay receiver will come up big, and
it was intriguing that Walker wasn't in the starting
lineup announced during the MNF opener (Donald Driver
and Robert Ferguson got the nods). But Walker was
Favre's favorite target last year, and he proved
it again this week, catching the first three of
Favre's TD passes in the wild shootout in Indy.
3. Brett Favre, QB, Packers (30-44, 358 yards,
4 TDs): The second all-time meeting between Favre
and Manning was one for the ages. While Manning
raced out to the hot start, Favre was holding his
own and putting up big numbers. Considering there
may not be many more opportunities to see these
two face each other in their career, you may want
to keep this game for the time capsule.
4. Daunte Culpepper, QB, Vikings (19-30, 360 yards,
2 TDs; 6 carries, 13 yards, 1 TD): The Bears were
banged up on defense with Mike Brown and Brian Urlacher
among those out of the lineup. So it's not a surprise
Culpepper was a fantasy star Sunday, making up for
his turnovers against the Eagles on Monday.
5. Donovan McNabb, QB, Eagles (29-42, 356 yards,
2 TDs; 5 carries, -2 yards, 1 TD, 1 lost fumble):
McNabb has been unstoppable all season, thanks in
part to Terrell Owens. How long can this dominance
last? It's such a far cry from last year, when McNabb
started so miserably.
6. Jamal Lewis, RB, Ravens (18 carries, 186 yards,
1 TD; 1 catch, 46 yards): Last year, Lewis started
slow, then had a huge game that got his season really
going. Lewis only had 119 yards coming into Sunday,
then ripped through the Bengals for a huge game.
Maybe big things will come from him now.
7. Marc Bulger, QB, Rams (32-49, 358 yards, 1 TD;
1 carry, 19 yards, 1 TD; 1 fumble lost): Bulger
lost his first ever home game as a starter, but
it's hard to blame him for much of the loss, given
that he led a fourth-quarter comeback that the Saints
would eventually match and repeat in overtime. But
one reason Bulger has been able to pile up the stats
is that St. Louis didn't run the ball as much as
it probably should given it has both Marshall Faulk
and Steven Jackson.
8. Thomas Jones, RB, Bears (22 carries, 110 yards,
1 TD; 8 catches, 71 yards): Is he a new version
of LaDainian Tomlinson -- a player who piles up
big stats for a mediocre squad? I guess he could've
done it in Arizona as well, but decided to do it
for Chicago instead.
9. Shaun Alexander, RB, Seahawks (19 carries, 52
yards, 2 TDs; 4 catches, 22 yards, 1 TD): The yardage
was meager for his standards, but scoring three
touchdowns will make up for that in a big way. I
guess the knee isn't an issue anymore, although
he did suffer an ankle injury late.
10. Roy Williams, WR, Lions (9 catches, 135 yards,
2 TDs): He's had no problems stepping up as the
No. 1 guy with Charles Rogers out for the year.
At least he's fulfilling expectations in Detroit,
as opposed to fellow rookie Kevin Jones.
Other top performances: Reggie Wayne, WR, Colts
(11 catches, 184 yards, 1 TD); Randy Moss, WR, Vikings
(7 catches, 119 yards, 2 TDs); Brandon Stokley,
WR, Colts (8 catches, 110 yards, 2 TDs); Trent Green,
QB, Chiefs (21-30, 224 yards, 3 TDs, 1 INT); Onterrio
Smith, RB, Vikings (17 carries, 94 yards; 6 catches,
104 yards); Tony Gonzalez, TE, Chiefs (8 catches,
106 yards); Terrell Owens, WR, Eagles (6 catches,
107 yards, 1 TD); Chris Brown, RB, Titans (23 carries,
101 yards); Aaron Stecker, RB, Saints (18 carries,
106 yards, 1 TD; 4 catches, 20 yards); John Carney,
K, Saints (5-6 FGs, including two of 50-plus yards,
1-1 XPs); Kurt Warner, QB, Giants (19-27, 286 yards;
3 carries, -2 yards, 1 TD); Tiki Barber, RB, Giants
(23 carries, 106 yards, 1 TD; 3 catches, 48 yards);
Jake Plummer, QB, Broncos (25-36, 294 yards, 2 TDs;
2 carries, 1 yard); Matt Hasselbeck, QB, Seahawks
(21-30, 254 yards, 2 TDs); Brad Johnson, QB, Buccaneers
(22-36, 309 yards, 2 TDs, 1 INT; 3 carries, 13 yards).
DUDS
Michael Vick, QB, Falcons (10-20, 115 yards, 1 INT;
9 carries, 68 yards, 2 lost fumbles): Even with
his amazing 58-yard run in the fourth quarter to
seal the game, Vick was a major disappointment for
fantasy owners, given his big game the week before
and the matchup against Arizona. Sure, Atlanta won
the game, but most were expecting much, much loftier
stats. Those bad numbers rubbed off on his main
targets like Alge Crumpler (2 catches, 34 yards)
and Peerless Price (2 catches, 16 yards)
Quentin Griffin, RB, Broncos (12 carries, 7 yards,
1 lost fumble; 3 catches, 23 yards): So much for
a great matchup with the Chargers. At least Denver
won even though Garrison Hearst was the leading
rusher with 13 yards.
LaDainian Tomlinson, RB, Chargers (22 carries,
61 yards; 3 catches, 10 yards; 1-1, 38 yards): Priest
Holmes shredded the Broncos on opening night. Tomlinson
only had a below average day for him, although he
did complete a 38-yard, trick-play pass to Drew
Brees.
Domanick Davis, RB, Texans (10 carries, 12 yards;
1 catch, 15 yards): Against the porous Chiefs run
defense, Davis struggled before leaving with a sprained
ankle. Jonathan Wells filled in, with Tony Hollings
deactivated this week.
Kevan Barlow, RB, 49ers (10 carries, 22 yards;
2 catches, 14 yards): This could be a long season
in San Francisco. Barlow did little as the Niners
suffered a rare shutout.
Koren Robinson, WR, Seahawks (1 catch, 12 yards):
He was slowed by injury earlier this week, but it
looks again like Darrell Jackson is the main man.
Steve McNair, QB, Titans (16-26, 143 yards, 1 INT;
3 carries, 18 yards): Even before he left the game
with an injury, McNair hadn't done much against
a good Jacksonville defense. He hasn't started the
season on a high note, with just one TD in the first
three games.
Kevin Johnson, WR, Ravens (0 catches, 0 yards):
Unheralded Randy Hymes was Kyle Boller's top target.
T.J. Duckett, RB, Falcons (0 carries, 0 yards):
It's Warrick Dunn's world now in the Atlanta backfield.
Ken Dorsey, QB, 49ers (19-32, 153 yards, 2 INTs,
2 lost fumbles): Remember when he was a star at
Miami? Seems so long ago now, eh?A.J. Feeley, QB,
Dolphins (13-27, 137 yards, 2 INTs, 1 lost fumble):
When does Jay Fiedler get back the starting job?
Plus, Chris Chambers and Marty Booker combined for
three catches and 23 yards. Yuck.
Waiver wire wonders
T.J. Houshmandzadeh, WR, Bengals (7 catches, 116
yards): With Peter Warrick leaving early with a
bruised leg, Housh stepped up as Cincinnati played
catch-up against the Ravens. Kelley Washington (5
catches, 58 yards) could also see extra time if
Warrick is out for an extended period of time.
Randy Hymes, WR, Ravens (4 catches, 61 yards, 1
TD): He's become Baltimore's top receiver with players
like Todd Heap and Travis Taylor out of the lineup.
Karl Williams, WR, Cardinals (6 catches, 90 yards):
The ex-Bucs receiver had some nice numbers, although
it's hard to believe he'd do it consistently.
George Wrighster, TE, Jaguars (5 catches, 30 yards,
1 TD): He's stepped in for Kyle Brady and given
Byron Leftwich a nice big target.
Kerry Collins, QB, Raiders (16-27, 228 yards, 1
TD, 1 INT): It was a matter of time before he got
some considerable playing time in Oakland. He filled
in nicely for the injured Rich Gannon. Keep an eye
on that situation.
Bill Schroeder, WR, Buccaneers (4 catches, 126
yards, 1 TD): The veteran wideout became the starter
by default, thanks to a ton of injuries, but he
made the most of his opportunities. He came up big,
while rookie Michael Clayton got just two catches.
Fantasy Game of the Week
Colts 45, Packers 31: The classic battle between
Favre and Manning lived up to expectations in just
the first quarter alone, and continued into a shootout
to be remembered. It also served as a breakout game
for Javon Walker, Reggie Wayne and Brandon Stokley.
Unfortunately, the running backs lost out a bit
in the fireworks.
News, notes and observations
So much for Priest Holmes and Edgerrin James being
questionable for this week. Both had solid if unspectacular
numbers. Sorry to those who picked up Dominic Rhodes
or Derrick Blaylock hoping to steal some points
from the backup. But Aaron Stecker surprised many
with his nice game against the Rams.
And speaking of running backs, it's probably time
to cut ties with T.J. Duckett. Again he came up
empty this week.
It's nice to see a good outing from Kurt Warner,
and Tiki Barber is quietly putting up big fantasy
stats. It helped that Ron Dayne was inactive this
week, although Mike Cloud stole a TD at the goal
line.
Boo Williams and Billy Miller, it's nice to see
you again on the stat sheet.
Shaun King replaced Josh McCown late against the
Falcons. McCown was 20 for 26 with 198 yards but
lost three fumbles. Stay away from both.
Lee Suggs still hasn't played this season, but
William Green is trying to make a run at keeping
the starting job with a solid outing against the
Giants (15 carries, 91 yards).
Marshall Faulk still scores TDs, but he's only
gotten 12 carries each of the past two weeks --
both losses. Coincidence? And it's not like Steven
Jackson gets many carries, either (just 12 in three
weeks).
He's not always on the studs list because he's
not always scoring TDs, but Isaac Bruce has started
the season with three consecutive 100-yard games.
Oakland's offense took off against the reeling
Bucs. The running game even got going, with Tyrone
Wheatley having one of his best games in years.
Chris Brown ended the Jags' 17-game streak of not
allowing a 100-yard runner and became the second
back since 1970 to reach 100 yards in each of his
first three NFL starts. He's a keeper.
Jacksonville is 3-0 so far, but none of its main
players have lit it up from a fantasy perspective.
Fred Taylor finally made a little noise this week,
but nothing spectacular fantasy-wise.
It wasn't the most optimal of conditions, but Ben
Roethlisberger did just fine in his NFL starting
debut. It helps to have Hines Ward and Plaxico Burress
as targets, plus Duce Staley helped take some of
the pressure off.
Now get back to work!!!
Weeks
1 .
2 .
3 .
4 .
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6 .
7 .
8 .
9 .10 .
11 .
12 .
13 .
14 .
15 .
16 .
17
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