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Rotoworld

  • LAC OFFENSIVE TACKLE (SUB) #76
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    Chargers acquired OT Austin Deculus from the Texans for a 2027 seventh-round pick.
    Deculus started one game in three years for the Texans after being selected in the sixth round of the 2022 draft. He’ll slide in as depth for the Chargers as they try to patch through losing Rashawn Slater for the season.
  • CIN Quarterback #9
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    The Bengals and Falcons will play in Madrid in Week 9 of the 2026 season.
    The NFL announced that the Bengals and Falcons will play in Madrid for Week 9 of the 2026 season. It is the NFL’s second time having a game in Madrid, reaching a deal earlier this year to play more games at Bernabeu Stadium, home of the Real Madrid soccer club. Burrow will play his first career international game, the Bengals’ first in seven years. Meanwhile, Bijan Robinson and the Falcons will return overseas after playing in Berlin last year. Both teams will hope to be contending in their division at this halfway-point in the season after both missed the playoffs last season.
    Jennings signing a 'good fit' with Vikings
    Kyle Dvorchak breaks down the Minnesota Vikings signing free agent wide receiver Jauan Jennings and how he fits into the offense with Kyler Murray, Justin Jefferson and others.
  • TB Wide Receiver
    When asked about rookie WR Ted Hurst, Buccaneers offensive coordinator Zac Robinson said, “having a true X is a weapon as an offense.”
    Hurst has gotten much attention out of Bucs rookie minicamp as a true X receiver in the offense. Robinson praised the versatility of Jalen McMillan, Emeka Egbuka, and Chris Godwin Jr., but said having a true X receiver is “an absolute threat.” Whether Hurst is a legitimate threat as a deep target or is simply running a go-route as a “sacrificial X”, Robinson seems to like having the option of a tall receiver to stretch the defense. Hurst is still outside the top-three on the pass-catching pecking order in Tampa Bay, but could certainly be worth a dart throw with boom-or-bust upside running outside deep routes as an X receiver.
  • TB Running Back #7
    Pewter Report reports Bucky Irving (shoulder) “has not been cleared to participate yet.”
    This probably isn’t overly concerning just yet. It was reported that Irving had offseason shoulder surgery after playing through the issue late last year. “Time will tell if he is able to get cleared to see the field during OTAs or if the team will hold off until training camp,” reports the venerable Bucs-focused website. If Irving’s absence continues to drag on, the Kenneth Gainwell train will begin to gain steam again in 2026.
  • PIT Quarterback
    The Athletic’s Mike DeFabo reports the Steelers are “rebuilding [Drew Allar]'s mechanics from the ground up.”
    “During rookie minicamp, the former Penn State quarterback worked his two- and three-step drops at an almost robotic-like pace. That was intentional,” DeFabo writes. Perhaps it all clicks later in the offseason, but we’d be surprised to see Allar as a real option in-game this year based on this observation.
  • ARI Quarterback #7
    ESPN’s Josh Weinfuss reports Jacoby Brissett has been informed by the Cardinals that he is their starting quarterback.
    He was told in the same tone that the children in The Simpsons episode “Team Homer” played tag whilst wearing the grey uniforms. Brissett remains absent from early offseason work while he seeks a new contract, but this at least should shift the comfort level on drafting Cardinals wideouts a bit in early best ball leagues. Brissett is set to earn $4.88 million in the final year of his contract, well below what a starting quarterback makes, so it’s not a surprise that he’s holding out for the time being.
  • HOU Wide Receiver
    Texans signed sixth-round WR Lewis Bond to a four-year rookie contract.
    Bond finds himself on a stacked depth chart and will most likely wind up on IR or the practice squad for his rookie season. The 22-year-old has a chance to develop into a real option with time, but any potential paths to playing time would probably depend on one of Jaylin Noel or Jayden Higgins falling out of favor or getting injured.
  • FA Running Back #42
    Broncos waived RB Deuce Vaughn.
    Vaughn has now washed out of Dallas and Denver over the past calendar year, and didn’t record a carry for the Broncos in 2025 while hanging on the practice squad. The 24-year-old will look to resurface elsewhere.
  • IND Quarterback #5
    ESPN’s Stephen Holder reports there’s been “no internal discussion” about the Colts releasing Anthony Richardson.
    Chris Ballard has emphasized lately that he “still thinks Richardson has something to offer.” We can certainly see the logic behind the Colts not doing another team a favor by letting Richardson become a free agent, but if there’s no market here, it seems likely that Richardson will likely just be the team’s third quarterback this season behind Daniel Jones and Riley Leonard.
  • TB Wide Receiver #2
    Buccaneers offensive coordinator Zac Robinson said Emeka Egbuka is “going to take huge, huge strides.”
    Egbuka floundered a bit down the stretch for fantasy managers after a strong first half of the season — some of that was Mike Evans coming back from injury, some of it was Baker Mayfield apparently playing through several injuries on his own. Still, based on what he did in the first half of the season, it’s plausible to believe he could challenge for a low-end WR1 fantasy ranking in his second season. Robinson certainly had no problem loading up his best receiver (Drake London) with targets last year.
  • LV Tight End #87
    The Athletic’s Sam Warren believes Michael Mayer “could be more of a pass-catching threat” under new head coach Klint Kubiak.
    Someone has to catch passes here, and the Raiders don’t have a single receiver who has cracked 700 yards in an NFL season. Both GM John Spytek and Kubiak have touted the idea of playing in bigger personnel. It’s certainly possible that Mayer gets more of a role in 2026, but with Brock Bowers ahead of him in the pecking order, Mayer probably belongs in the low-end TE2 pecking order until we see a firm role.