Incredible individual performances highlighted Week 2 of the NFL season and we'll cover them and much more in my Scouting Notebook.
You didn't want to be facing either Frank Gore or Chris Johnson, but I bet I'm not the only one who lined up against both of them like in the Yahoo! Friends and Family League.
So much for Gore having lost a step. His performance is even more devastating in distance scoring leagues (and all leagues should factor in length of touchdown). The Niners are a running-back friendly team with their defensive emphasis and conservative play calling. So I'd be holding with Gore. But I would trade Johnson for a more conventional No. 1 running back in leagues that don't factor in catches or length of touchdowns.
San Diego is clearly Philip Rivers' team, though that reality is not enough to keep Norv Turner from blowing games. As my colleague Scott Pianowski said this week in our Breakfast Table, no one takes 12-4 and turns it into 9-7 better than Norv Turner. Not taking a shot into the end zone near pay dirt on third down with 10 seconds left in the first half? Having your quarterback throw for 436 yards but then going goal-line on third and two with one timeout and 40 seconds left? Staying in it after an incompletion and getting your run stuffed on fourth down to end the game? Pure Norv.
If you can get Rivers, Vincent Jackson or Antonio Gates from any remaining doubters, move mountains to do so. Don't touch LaDainian Tomlinson with a 10-foot pole. But do not think that Darren Sproles is the handcuff, as he's clearly going to remain situational even when LT is out (which will be often).
It's the perfect setup in New Orleans, who made Kevin Kolb look like Norm Van Brocklin at times. Plus Drew Brees is always good for a pick, which helps ensure more passing.
Part of being a starting back is durability and Mike Bell, who's never held the job, sprained his MCL at the end of that game and is likely out at least a month. So, Pierre Thomas gets his job back next week for sure. Reggie Bush scored against a stacked front, but he continues to try to outrun the defense around the edge like he's still playing against Arizona State.
Don't worry about the Patriots offense for the same reason you shouldn't have been worried about the Texans. The Jets are monsters now and will destroy your fantasy dreams. Avoid them, but ignore what your stars do against them. Any No. 1 receiver is going to be forced to deal with CB Darrelle Revis, who only has completely shut down Andre Johnson and Randy Moss in consecutive weeks.
Clearly the Texans are fine, as Matt Schaub threw for 350-plus yards and four TDs on the bench in many leagues. Never allow that to happen again. Andre Johnson is unstoppable against corners other than Revis, who plays with a Superman cape.
It's so easy for Tony Gonzalez now, in the perfect tight-end environment. He scored or directly set up every Falcons touchdown against the Panthers.
Jake Delhomme passed his test, barely. He's good enough for Steve Smith, but he must start generating more points. Carolina can help by utilizing DeAngelo Williams more in the passing game, where he shines when given a chance.
Scoring points is Job No. 1 for quarterbacks. Job No. 2 is protecting the football. Jason Campbell of the Redskins keeps his QB rating healthy by doing the latter but rarely the former. After three field goals at home against the Rams, rotate out all your Redskins.
The Jaguars looked really bad -– 4-12 bad. But at least Maurice Jones-Drew will catch, too.
Mark Sanchez is going to keep getting better and he's about fantasy neutral now. So expect Jerricho Cotchery to register 80 catches for 1,100 yards and eight TDs. Don't play Sanchez, though, until you see the Jets take the training wheels off for a full game. He had his safety helmet and pads on, too, the entire first half.
I'd be selling short on Marshawn Lynch and buying Fred Jackson everywhere. Jackson is more versatile, faster, sets up blockers better, catches better –- am I missing anything?
Lance Moore not having any catches is shocking. I was wrong about him, but he shouldn't have cost more than a late six/early seventh pick -– hardly crippling. While it seems I'm also wrong about Marques Colston not being a top-tier receiver, trade him if anyone will pay you that price.
The Bengals defense is good and the team is a good setup for a back, in this case Cedric Benson. They held Greg Jennings without a catch, just stunning for Jennings owners. The Packers running game was a non-factor, with Aaron Rodgers nearly leading the team in rushing. Those with lots of reserve space should be speculating on Brandon Jackson (5-foot-10, 220 pounds, 5.5 yards per carry last year), who is recovering from a significant ankle sprain.
More deep league speculation: Bears speedy rookie WR Johnny Knox, who sees action even in some two-wideout sets.