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Rotoworld

  • FA Safety
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    Jaguars signed S Rudy Ford, formerly of the Eagles, to a two-year, $4.2 million contract.
    Ford was primarily a gunner on special teams with the Eagles, totaling 21 tackles across 351 snaps with that unit the past two seasons. It’s another addition to accommodate Jacksonville’s lackluster special teams, which coach Urban Meyer has clearly prioritized in improving this offseason.

  • MIN Quarterback #12
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    Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell said Max Brosmer will start Minnesota’s Week 17 game against the Lions.
    The Seahawks dud was understandable — they have arguably the best defense in the NFL this year. But Brosmer didn’t exactly light it up against the Giants in relief in Week 16, and the Lions play aggressive coverage. Brosmer is yet another governor on the fantasy prospects of players like Aaron Jones, Justin Jefferson, and Jordan Addison in Week 17. “Boy, we wish Carson Wentz was still healthy,” we unbelievably thought.
    Pursue Carter, Corum, Sampson, Wilson on waivers
    The FFHH crew breaks down why fantasy team managers should be keeping an eye on waiver wire running backs Michael Carter, Blake Corum, Emanuel Wilson, Dylan Sampson, Jawhar Jordan, Chris Rodriguez Jr. and Tyjae Spears.
  • MIN Quarterback #9
    Vikings QB J.J. McCarthy (hand) has a hairline fracture and will be out for Week 17.
    No surprise on a short week. McCarthy apparently has a chance to play in Week 18 based on Ian Rapoport’s reporting, but we can’t exactly circle that for a fact just yet. Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell said McCarthy will not need surgery for the “very small” fracture, perhaps the smallest we’ve ever heard of. It’s been an injury-plagued, disastrous year for the 2024 tenth overall pick. The Vikings almost have to bring in real competition for him in 2026 based on what we’ve seen so far. Max Brosmer should be in line for a Week 17 start and can be started in superflex leagues by sadomasochistic managers.
  • HOU Running Back #27
    Texans RB Woody Marks (ankle) is practicing on Tuesday.
    This should put him in line to reclaim a major role in the Texans backfield in Week 17 against the Chargers. Marks would be more of a low-end RB2 play against a good defense in what is projected to be a lower-scoring game, but volume should be on his side if he’s able to be active for the contest. Assuming he actually stays on the field, anyway.
  • NE Defensive Lineman #95
    Patriots DT Khyiris Tonga (foot) will miss 1-2 weeks.
    Ian Rapoport’s sourced timeline on Tonga’s recovery should have him ready for New England’s first playoff game. New England will be desperately trying to get him, Robert Spillane, and Milton Williams as ready as they can be for the playoffs after the run defense has sprung a leak over the last month.
  • NE Center #77
    Patriots signed OL Ben Brown to a two-year extension worth “up to” $6.6 million.
    The UDFA center will be a rotational cog along the middle of the Patriots line, probably mostly as a backup, for the two years to come. Brown has started just two games this year, but had a 10-game stretch as a starter in 2024. He qualifies as competent depth.
  • CHI Wide Receiver #15
    Bears coach Ben Johnson said Rome Odunze (foot) is “going to be able to help us this year” but didn’t offer a timeline for his return.
    Considering there are only two weeks left in the season, if we don’t see any kind of improvement from Odunze in practices this week, there’s a real chance that the Bears have nothing to play for in Week 18. Odunze may be mothballed until the playoffs. The fact that Johnson wouldn’t put a timetable on it arguably tells us Week 17 will be a stretch for an Odunze return, but the practice report on Wednesday will speak louder than his statement today.
  • KC Wide Receiver #4
    Rashee Rice (concussion) did not practice Tuesday.
    It’s not a great sign for Rice’s Christmas Day availability against the Broncos. Rice was sidelined last week against the Titans with the head injury, and the Chiefs have little reason to rush him back into game action with their season lost. Xavier Worthy will continue operating as the Chiefs’ de facto WR1 while Rice is out, though Worthy remains a deep league-online option for Week 17 against Denver.
  • PIT Wide Receiver #10
    Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin said WR Roman Wilson could see more opportunities if DK Metcalf misses the regular season’s final two games.
    It’s a strange thing to say about a wideout who has been a healthy scratch for three straight weeks as veteran journeyman Adam Thielen plays ahead of him. Tomlin said if Metcalf’s two-game suspension is upheld this week, Wilson — who has 166 yards and two touchdowns this season — will have a chance “to show his professionalism and his readiness and how he’s been sharpening his sword for battle.” Calvin Austin III and Thielen could also see an increase in routes and targets if Metcalf if out in Week 17 against the Browns. The Steelers are likely to revert to a run-heavy offense without their top receiver.
  • PIT Wide Receiver #4
    Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin said DK Metcalf will appeal his two-game suspension on Tuesday.
    Metcalf’s appeal comes one day after the NFL suspended him for two games following an altercation with a fan during the Steelers’ Week 16 win against the Lions. Metcalf said the fan, Ryan Kennedy, used a racial slur — an accusation Kennedy has denied through a lawyer. Metcalf had reported Kennedy to Seahawks team security in a previous trip to Detroit to play the Lions before he was traded to the Steelers. “He did explain to me why he did what he did,” Tomlin said of Metcalf. “I certainly don’t condone the behavior, but I support DK.” Metcalf would miss the team’s final two regular season games and return for the playoffs if the two-game punishment stands.
  • JAC Quarterback #16
    Jaguars head coach Liam Coen said the offense has not “changed a single thing” since the summer.
    “We haven’t changed a single thing from the moment we started coaching him,” Coen said when asked by reporters if the team’s offense had been tweaked ahead of Trevor Lawrence’s recent heater, which includes 12 total touchdowns over his past three games. “Sometimes, it just takes time to click.” Lawrence, according to Coen, showed more comfort with progressions and reads around Week 10 after a somewhat shaky start to the season. The Athletic’s Jeff Howe reports the acquisition of Jakobi Meyers has been a key to Lawrence’s emergence as an elite QB. Meyers’ “command over the middle of the field, coupled with tight end Brenton Strange’s return, has helped receivers like Brian Thomas Jr. and Parker Washington produce outside the numbers,” Howe said. “Beyond that, Lawrence’s footwork has also been cleaner, and he’s cut back on unnecessary off-platform throws. It’s all tied into confidence in his reads and progressions.” Lawrence will have a good shot to keep his hot streak going in Week 17 against a listless Colts defense that gave up 295 yards and five touchdowns to Brock Purdy on Monday night.