The Week 2 Fantasy Football Player Rankings Tiers are updated after last week. We had injuries, surprises, duds, and studs. San Francisco took the biggest hits with Brock Purdy and George Kittle banged up, while unexpected breakouts like Kayshon Boutte and Daniel Jones stole the spotlight. Meanwhile, Cincinnati flopped in Cleveland (Joe Burrow, JaโMarr Chase), reminding us even superstars stumble. But the true studs (Josh Allen, Derrick Henry, and Brock Bowers) delivered and anchored fantasy lineups.
Week 2 Fantasy Football Player Rankings Tiers
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Quarterbacks | Week 2 Rankings
Week 2 Quarterback Rankings Tiers (Condensed)
Below is a condensed table of the Quarterback Rankings Tiers for Week 2 of Fantasy Football:
| Tier | Projection Range | Player | Opponent | Proj Team Pts | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 | 25.64โ23.33 | Josh Allen | @ NYJ | 26 | LOW |
| Tier 1 | 25.64โ23.33 | Lamar Jackson | vs CLE | 28.5 | LOW |
| Tier 2 | 24.43โ18.81 | Joe Burrow | vs JAX | 27 | LOW |
| Tier 2 | 24.43โ18.81 | Jalen Hurts | @ KC | 24 | LOW |
| Tier 2 | 24.43โ18.81 | Justin Herbert | @ LV | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 2 | 24.43โ18.81 | Jayden Daniels | @ GB | 23 | AVG |
| Tier 3 | 21.07โ18.06 | Kyler Murray | vs CAR | 26 | LOW |
| Tier 3 | 21.07โ18.06 | Trevor Lawrence | @ CIN | 23.5 | AVG |
| Tier 3 | 21.07โ18.06 | Justin Fields | vs BUF | 19.5 | AVG |
| Tier 3 | 21.07โ18.06 | Dak Prescott | vs NYG | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 3 | 21.07โ18.06 | Jordan Love | vs WAS | 26 | LOW |
| Tier 3 | 21.07โ18.06 | Patrick Mahomes | vs PHI | 23.5 | AVG |
| Tier 4 | 20.98โ17.59 | Matthew Stafford | @ TEN | 24 | LOW |
| Tier 4 | 20.98โ17.59 | Jared Goff | vs CHI | 26.5 | LOW |
| Tier 4 | 20.98โ17.59 | Bo Nix | @ IND | 22.5 | LOW |
| Tier 4 | 20.98โ17.59 | J.J. McCarthy | vs ATL | 25 | AVG |
| Tier 4 | 20.98โ17.59 | Baker Mayfield | @ HOU | 20 | HIGH |
| Tier 4 | 20.98โ17.59 | Aaron Rodgers | vs SEA | 21.5 | AVG |
| Tier 4 | 20.98โ17.59 | Drake Maye | @ MIA | 21.5 | LOW |
| Tier 4 | 20.98โ17.59 | Caleb Williams | @ DET | 21 | AVG |
| Tier 5 | 19.21โ15.28 | Daniel Jones | vs DEN | 20 | HIGH |
| Tier 5 | 19.21โ15.28 | Michael Penix Jr. | @ MIN | 20.5 | HIGH |
| Tier 5 | 19.21โ15.28 | C.J. Stroud | vs TB | 23 | AVG |
| Tier 5 | 19.21โ15.28 | Tua Tagovailoa | vs NE | 24 | HIGH |
| Tier 5 | 19.21โ15.28 | Joe Flacco | @ BAL | 17 | HIGH |
| Tier 5 | 19.21โ15.28 | Geno Smith | vs LAC | 21.5 | HIGH |
| Tier 5 | 19.21โ15.28 | Mac Jones | @ NO | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 6 | 19.78โ14.74 | Sam Darnold | @ PIT | 19 | HIGH |
| Tier 6 | 19.78โ14.74 | Bryce Young | @ ARI | 19.5 | AVG |
| Tier 6 | 19.78โ14.74 | Russell Wilson | @ DAL | 19 | HIGH |
| Tier 6 | 19.78โ14.74 | Cam Ward | vs LAR | 18 | HIGH |
| Tier 6 | 19.78โ14.74 | Spencer Rattler | vs SF | 18.5 | HIGH |
Tier 1 | Elite QB1 Quarterbacks

Monday night lived up to the hype, with Josh Allen and Lamar Jackson delivering a showdown worthy of early โgame of the yearโ talk. Allen finished as the QB1 in Week 1, while Jackson checked in at QB4. With favorable matchups on deck, both should keep the scoring party going.
Tier 2 | QB1 Easy Start Decisions

Joe Burrow was a massive Week 1 letdown, smothered by Clevelandโs defense and held to just 113 yards and 1 TD. A quarterback of his caliber wonโt let that performance linger. I expect some wild numbers from Cincinnati this week in a shootout against Jacksonville.
With nearly a rushing TD per game over the last two years, Jalen Hurts doesnโt need gaudy passing numbers to stay elite. Against a tough KC defense, that ground-game edge keeps him locked into the top tier.
The Chargers offense looked sharp with Justin Herbert dropping back 41 times, completing 25 passes, and adding 7 rushes for 32 yards. Donโt be surprised if his athleticism becomes a bigger weapon as this offense evolves.
Tier 3 | Final Comfortable QB1

Start of the Week | Trevor Lawrence | Jacksonville Jaguars
Week 1 against a soft defense didnโt exactly spark confidence that Trevor Lawrence is ready to level up in Liam Coenโs scheme. But Vegas is telling us something; this matchup owns the weekโs highest projected total at 48.5 points. Lawrence has the weapons to light up the scoreboard, making him a prime fantasy start in what should be a shootout.
Behind a leaky offensive line, Kyler Murray was sacked 5 times despite being pressured on only 27% of his dropbacks. Thatโs half of his pressures turned into sacks (10 pressures, 5 sacks). The rushing floor always keeps him relevant, but questions about his reads and accuracy (20.7% off-target throws) remain.
One of Week 1โs biggest surprises came from Justin Fields, who looked sharp and composed throughout. He completed 72.7% of his passes (just 4.5% off target), ran 12 times for 48 yards and 2 TDs, and carried himself with rare poise. With Buffaloโs defense showing cracks, Fields is set up to keep it rolling.
Dak Prescott wasnโt nearly as bad as his fantasy box score suggested. A brutal 9% drop rate cost him 61 passing yards, making his line look worse than the tape. Positive regression is coming, and the Giants provide the perfect get-right matchup.
Patrick Mahomes fell short of his usual standard, with only 66.7% of his throws deemed catchable. Losing another wideout on the third play of the game didnโt help, leaving him without his top two WRs moving forward. Against a stacked Eagles defense, he is a riskier play this week.
Tier 4 | QB2 with QB1 upside

Sit of the Week | Baker Mayfield | Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Baker Mayfield is always fun to watch because he leaves it all on the fieldโbut that chaos comes with consequences. Without his cornerstone OT Tristan Wirfs, the Houston defensive front is going to live in the backfield. Mayfield is capable of the jaw-dropping play, but those โhero ballsโ turn into defensive highlights just as often. Against an angry Texans squad looking to take out frustration, heโs a bench for me this week.
Bo Nix looked nothing like the steady finisher from 2024. He posted a 25% off-target rate, tossed 2 interceptions, and managed just 18 rushing yards. Now we find out if the Coltsโ defense is truly elite or if Miamiโs unit was just that bad; and whether Nix can rebound from an ugly opener.
For three quarters on Monday Night Football, J.J. McCarthy had fans questioning if he was ready for the stage. Then came the fourth, where he showed off his touch and rushing upside in a breakout stretch. That late-game spark is the kind of momentum that carries forward.
Fueled by lingering resentment toward the Jets and their fan base, Aaron Rodgers came out swinging. Booed pregame, he turned it into fire, dropping 4 touchdowns in a statement performance that reminded everyone he still takes things personally.
Miamiโs defense made Daniel Jones look like Peyton Manning 2.0, which tells you all you need to know. Drake Maye has to put Week 1 behind him quickly and attack this divisional rival to help even New Englandโs record.
Tier 5 | QB2 Risky Options

Daniel Jones was arguably the biggest surprise of Week 1, torching Miami through the air and on the ground for 3 total TDs. Denverโs defense wonโt be nearly as forgiving, and Jones will have to raise his game even higher if the Colts want a shot at victory.
When you look up the word โclutchโ, Michael Penix Jr. is grinning back at you. His poise in critical moments is undeniable, but poise doesnโt always equal fantasy production. A trip to the dome in Minnesota is never easy, and the matchup doesnโt set up as a ceiling game.
C.J. Stroud was running for his life behind a patchwork offensive line that gave up pressure on 53% of his dropbacks. Losing his center midgame was brutal, forcing him to scramble far more than ideal. At this rate, his toughest opponent this season might be his own line.
Miamiโs offense looked flat, predictable, and out of answers. That left Tua Tagovailoa with just 114 passing yards on 60% completions, plus a TD gift-wrapped by DeโVon Achane. Without rushing upside, facing a ticked-off Mike Vrabel defense feels like a recipe for fantasy pain.
Tier 6 | QB3 Last Resort

This quintet of quarterbacks is firmly on my do-not-start list for Week 2. Together, they managed just 4.9 more fantasy points than Josh Allen scored on his own, averaging a miserable 8.7 points apiece. Thatโs not the kind of floor you can afford in your lineup.
Quarterback | Running Back | Wide Receiver | Tight End | FAQ
Running Backs | Week 2 Rankings
Week 2 Running Back Rankings Tiers (Condensed)
Below is a condensed table of the Running Back Rankings Tiers for Week 2 of Fantasy Football:
| Tier | Projection Range | Player | Opponent | Proj Team Pts | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 | 19.65โ17.80 | Christian McCaffrey | @ NO | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 1 | 19.65โ17.80 | Saquon Barkley | @ KC | 24 | LOW |
| Tier 1 | 19.65โ17.80 | Jahmyr Gibbs | vs CHI | 26.5 | LOW |
| Tier 1 | 19.65โ17.80 | Bijan Robinson | @ MIN | 20.5 | AVG |
| Tier 2 | 19.99โ16.94 | Derrick Henry | vs CLE | 28.5 | LOW |
| Tier 2 | 19.99โ16.94 | Chase Brown | vs JAX | 27 | LOW |
| Tier 2 | 19.99โ16.94 | Josh Jacobs | vs WAS | 26 | LOW |
| Tier 2 | 19.99โ16.94 | Kyren Williams | @ TEN | 24 | LOW |
| Tier 3 | 20.74โ13.17 | Bucky Irving | @ HOU | 20 | AVG |
| Tier 3 | 20.74โ13.17 | De’Von Achane | vs NE | 24 | LOW |
| Tier 3 | 20.74โ13.17 | James Cook | @ NYJ | 26 | LOW |
| Tier 3 | 20.74โ13.17 | Travis Etienne | @ CIN | 23.5 | LOW |
| Tier 4 | 19.35โ12.94 | James Conner | vs CAR | 26 | LOW |
| Tier 4 | 19.35โ12.94 | Omarion Hampton | @ LV | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 4 | 19.35โ12.94 | Jonathan Taylor | vs DEN | 20 | HIGH |
| Tier 4 | 19.35โ12.94 | Ashton Jeanty | vs LAC | 21.5 | AVG |
| Tier 4 | 19.35โ12.94 | Chuba Hubbard | @ ARI | 19.5 | LOW |
| Tier 4 | 19.35โ12.94 | Breece Hall | vs BUF | 19.5 | AVG |
| Tier 4 | 19.35โ12.94 | Alvin Kamara | vs SF | 18.5 | AVG |
| Tier 4 | 19.35โ12.94 | TreVeyon Henderson | @ MIA | 21.5 | LOW |
| Tier 4 | 19.35โ12.94 | Aaron Jones | vs ATL | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 5 | 14.84โ10.38 | Javonte Williams | vs NYG | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 5 | 14.84โ10.38 | D’Andre Swift | @ DET | 21 | HIGH |
| Tier 5 | 14.84โ10.38 | Jacory Croskey-Merritt | @ GB | 23 | AVG |
| Tier 5 | 14.84โ10.38 | David Montgomery | vs CHI | 26.5 | AVG |
| Tier 5 | 14.84โ10.38 | Tony Pollard | vs LAR | 18 | AVG |
| Tier 5 | 14.84โ10.38 | J.K. Dobbins | @ IND | 22.5 | LOW |
| Tier 5 | 14.84โ10.38 | Zach Charbonnet | @ PIT | 19 | HIGH |
| Tier 5 | 14.84โ10.38 | Ken Walker III | @ PIT | 19 | HIGH |
| Tier 5 | 14.84โ10.38 | Jordan Mason | vs ATL | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 5 | 14.84โ10.38 | RJ Harvey | @ IND | 22.5 | LOW |
| Tier 5 | 14.84โ10.38 | Tyrone Tracy Jr. | @ DAL | 19 | AVG |
| Tier 6 | 12.84โ7.38 | Isiah Pacheco | vs PHI | 23.5 | HIGH |
| Tier 6 | 12.84โ7.38 | Jaylen Warren | vs SEA | 21.5 | AVG |
| Tier 6 | 12.84โ7.38 | Trey Benson | vs CAR | 26 | LOW |
| Tier 6 | 12.84โ7.38 | Cam Skattebo | @ DAL | 19 | AVG |
| Tier 6 | 12.84โ7.38 | Dylan Sampson | @ BAL | 17 | AVG |
| Tier 6 | 12.84โ7.38 | Bhayshul Tuten | @ CIN | 23.5 | LOW |
| Tier 6 | 12.84โ7.38 | Rhamondre Stevenson | @ MIA | 21.5 | LOW |
| Tier 6 | 12.84โ7.38 | Austin Ekeler | @ GB | 23 | AVG |
| Tier 6 | 12.84โ7.38 | Nick Chubb | vs TB | 23 | HIGH |
| Tier 7 | 10.6โ4.78 | Quinshon Judkins | @ BAL | 17 | AVG |
| Tier 7 | 10.6โ4.78 | Tyler Allgeier | @ MIN | 20.5 | AVG |
| Tier 7 | 10.6โ4.78 | Kaleb Johnson | vs SEA | 21.5 | HIGH |
| Tier 7 | 10.6โ4.78 | Braelon Allen | vs BUF | 19.5 | AVG |
| Tier 7 | 10.6โ4.78 | Brian Robinson Jr. | @ NO | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 7 | 10.6โ4.78 | Kenneth Gainwell | vs SEA | 21.5 | AVG |
| Tier 7 | 10.6โ4.78 | Rachaad White | @ HOU | 20 | AVG |
| Tier 7 | 10.6โ4.78 | Tank Bigsby | @ KC | 24 | HIGH |
| Tier 7 | 10.6โ4.78 | Kareem Hunt | vs PHI | 23.5 | HIGH |
Tier 1 | Elite RB1

With Brock Purdy sidelined a few weeks with turf toe, a healthy Christian McCaffrey becomes the unquestioned engine of this offense. He handled 71% of the backfield carries and a ridiculous 29% target share in Week 1.
Saquon Barkley isnโt worried about competition, neither from Will Shipley nor Tank Bigsby. Expect him to keep dominating with 75%+ of the backfield carries while staying involved as a receiver.
Jahmyr Gibbs split handoffs with David Montgomery, but the game script fed right into his strengths. He dominated in the passing game, flashing his explosiveness. Expect a bump in carries this week, even as Montgomery gets his โrevenge gameโ touches.
The frustrating part in Atlanta is usage. Tyler Allgeier continues to siphon more work than fantasy managers would like from Bijan Robinson. Robinsonโs week 1 line was saved by the passing game, 6 catches on 7 targets with a beautiful score. Bijan Robinson is still being underutilized despite his elite talent.
Tier 2 | RB1 Auto Starts

Start of the Week | Chase Brown | Cincinnati Bengals
Chase Brown owned the Bengalsโ backfield in Week 1, handling 100% of the carries. The raw line wasnโt flashy, 43 rushing yards and a TD, but the context matters. He forced 7 missed tackles and piled up 53 yards after contact, meaning the offensive line gave him nothing, and he still produced. Brownโs snap share should stay in the 75% range, making him the clear feature back.
Derrick Henry still terrifies any defender within 10 yards, and somehow looks faster and stronger with age. One of the most entertaining players the league has offered over the last several years, he continues to churn out Hall of Fameโlevel dominance.
Kyren Williams is another every-down hammer, logging over 80% of backfield snaps. That sheer volume locks in an RB2 floor, while his goal-line usage gives him weekly top-5 upside.
Tier 3 | RB2 with RB1 Ceilings

Is RBBC becoming a concept of the past? Bucky Irving dominated with 14 of 18 carries and caught all 4 of his targets. This backfield looks like his, with Rachaad White fading fast as a rushing threat.
Miami only ran the ball ten times. Thatโs not the Mike McDaniel brand weโre used to. DeโVon Achane salvaged his fantasy day with an efficient 55 yards on 7 carries plus a dump-off TD. But if the run game keeps getting shoved to the back burner, defenses will tee off on this offense and drag everyoneโs production down.
James Cook got paid, then promptly got the Buffalo backfieldโ58% of snaps, 13 of 16 RB carries, and 5 targets. Buffaloโs negative game script may have inflated the passing work, but the trust is clearly his.
Jacksonville may sprinkle in multiple backs, but Travis Etienne proved why Liam Coen raved about him all offseason. He turned 19 touches into 156 total yards, including a 71-yard field-flipper. In what should be another high-scoring matchup, Etienne is firmly in RB1 territory.
Tier 4 | Solid RB2 with Upside

Omarion Hampton didnโt light up the box score in Week 1, but he absolutely looked the part. He caught passes, held up in pass protection, and churned out tough yards between the tackles. His 80% snap share may dip once Najee Harris gets healthier, but Hamptonโs talent is undeniable and heโs the clear featured back moving forward.
Fellow rookie Ashton Jeanty also commanded workhorse usage, logging an 85% snap share with 19 carries for 38 yards and a score, plus 2 catches. The efficiency wasnโt there, but 33 of those 38 yards came after contact. Translation: the rookie is creating on his own, and better days are coming.
So much for RBBC in New York. Breece Hall took 19 carries, added 4 targets, and ripped off 126 total yards on a 58% snap share. He reminded everyone, including his coaching staff, that heโs the most talented back on the roster. Expect more of the same.
Aaron Jones has never needed massive volume to be productive. He turned just 11 touches into 67 yards and a TD, showing his trademark efficiency. In a steadily improving offense, Jones belongs firmly in the RB2 conversation every week.
Tier 5 | Backend RB2/Flex Option

Sit of the Week | Kenneth Walker III | Seattle Seahawks
Whether it was injury management or simply the game plan, Kenneth Walker III was one of the most concerning players to roster in Week 1. He was outsnapped and outproduced by Zach Charbonnet, and while Walker saw 3 targets, that looks more like chance than role as Charbonnet is more than capable as a receiver. Walkerโs ceiling may look sky high, but for now, he hasnโt even left the runway.
Javonte Williams volume-piled his way to an RB1 finish, and itโs hard to see him giving much of that up unless Jaydon Blue carves out a true passing-game role. For the Javonte truthers out there like myself, enjoy the ride while it lasts.
Jacory Croskey-Merritt maximized his touches, racking up 82 yards on just 10 carries despite a 29% snap share. That number has to climb because efficiency like that demands more work.
J.K. Dobbins led Denverโs backfield in snaps (52%) over RJ Harvey (31%), but Harvey outgained him thanks to a highlight 50-yard burst. This backfield will stay messy, but thereโs fantasy value here. Good luck guessing who cashes it in each week tho.
Tyrone Tracy Jr. dominated snaps (73%) over Cam Skattebo, but the production was rough, just 35 yards on 13 touches. Skattebo didnโt help his case either with 4 touches for 9 yards. Tracy remains the lead, but this entire offense has to be better if anyone is going to matter.
Tier 6 | Volatile RB3

Isiah Pacheco was a red flag for me all offseason, and in Week 1, I saw some of those concerns play out. He split work with Kareem Hunt, no back topped a 50% snap share, and Patrick Mahomes led the team in rushing attempts. Maybe it was the game script, the Chargers forced them out of rhythm, but the usage is troubling to start the year.
Dylan Sampson flashed as a pass catcher, and with Joe Flacco under center, that role matters. Flacco has always preferred dumping it off over scrambling, which could quietly make Sampson a useful weapon while this team struggles and plays from behind often.
With Tank Bigsby shipped out, Bhayshul Tuten is the obvious winner. Expect him to see the biggest bump in opportunity as the backfield adjusts.
Rhamondre Stevenson logged a strong snap share but only managed 27 yards on 9 touches. The efficiency gap is glaring, and this backfield looks like it will keep tilting toward TreVeyon Henderson as the season wears on.
Nick Chubb is who he is, a volume-based, touchdown-dependent, stuck in a middling offense running back. That gives him a decent floor, but the ceiling is nearly nonexistent.
Tier 7 | RB4/2nd Flex

Quinshon Judkins got the contract, but donโt expect the workload just yet. Heโs being eased into the rotation and is a high-risk start this week.
A costly fumble may have buried Kaleb Johnson against the Jets. Until we see his role stabilize, he canโt be trusted in lineups. Kenneth Gainwell is the safer play, but โsafeโ here means floor-only, with little to no upside.
Quarterback | Running Back | Wide Receiver | Tight End | FAQ
Wide Receivers | Week 2 Rankings
Week 2 Wide Receiver Rankings Tiers (Condensed)
Below is a condensed table of the Wide Receiver Rankings Tiers for Week 2 of Fantasy Football:
| Tier | Projection Range | Player | Opponent | Proj Team Pts | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 | 20.86 | Ja’Marr Chase | vs JAX | 27 | LOW |
| Tier 2 | 19.02โ14.98 | CeeDee Lamb | vs NYG | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 2 | 19.02โ14.98 | Justin Jefferson | vs ATL | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 2 | 19.02โ14.98 | Nico Collins | @ TB | 23 | LOW |
| Tier 2 | 19.02โ14.98 | Amon Ra St. Brown | vs CHI | 26.5 | LOW |
| Tier 2 | 19.02โ14.98 | Puka Nacua | @ TEN | 24 | LOW |
| Tier 2 | 19.02โ14.98 | Drake London | @ MIN | 20.5 | HIGH |
| Tier 2 | 19.02โ14.98 | A.J. Brown | @ KC | 24 | AVG |
| Tier 2 | 19.02โ14.98 | Brian Thomas Jr. | @ CIN | 23.5 | LOW |
| Tier 2 | 19.02โ14.98 | Malik Nabers | @ DAL | 19 | AVG |
| Tier 3 | 15.68โ11.93 | Davante Adams | @ TEN | 24 | LOW |
| Tier 3 | 15.68โ11.93 | Jaxon Smith-Njigba | @ PIT | 19 | HIGH |
| Tier 3 | 15.68โ11.93 | Zay Flowers | vs CLE | 28.5 | LOW |
| Tier 3 | 15.68โ11.93 | Garrett Wilson | vs BUF | 19.5 | AVG |
| Tier 3 | 15.68โ11.93 | Tee Higgins | vs JAX | 27 | LOW |
| Tier 3 | 15.68โ11.93 | Ladd McConkey | @ LV | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 3 | 15.68โ11.93 | D.K. Metcalf | vs SEA | 21.5 | AVG |
| Tier 3 | 15.68โ11.93 | Mike Evans | @ HOU | 20 | AVG |
| Tier 3 | 15.68โ11.93 | Marvin Harrison Jr. | vs CAR | 26 | LOW |
| Tier 4 | 15.08โ10.55 | Ricky Pearsall | @ NO | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 4 | 15.08โ10.55 | Hollywood Brown | vs PHI | 23.5 | HIGH |
| Tier 4 | 15.08โ10.55 | D.J. Moore | @ DET | 21 | HIGH |
| Tier 4 | 15.08โ10.55 | Emeka Egbuka | @ HOU | 20 | AVG |
| Tier 4 | 15.08โ10.55 | Tyreek Hill | vs NE | 24 | AVG |
| Tier 4 | 15.08โ10.55 | DeVonta Smith | @ KC | 24 | AVG |
| Tier 4 | 15.08โ10.55 | Tetairoa McMillan | @ ARI | 19.5 | LOW |
| Tier 4 | 15.08โ10.55 | Courtland Sutton | @ IND | 22.5 | AVG |
| Tier 4 | 15.08โ10.55 | Jameson Williams | vs CHI | 26.5 | AVG |
| Tier 5 | 14.14โ10.97 | Deebo Samuel | @ GB | 23 | HIGH |
| Tier 5 | 14.14โ10.97 | Michael Pittman Jr. | vs DEN | 20 | HIGH |
| Tier 5 | 14.14โ10.97 | George Pickens | vs NYG | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 5 | 14.14โ10.97 | Rome Odunze | @ DET | 21 | HIGH |
| Tier 5 | 14.14โ10.97 | Terry McLaurin | @ GB | 23 | HIGH |
| Tier 5 | 14.14โ10.97 | Jerry Jeudy | @ BAL | 17 | AVG |
| Tier 5 | 14.14โ10.97 | Calvin Ridley | vs LAR | 18 | AVG |
| Tier 5 | 14.14โ10.97 | Jakobi Meyers | vs LAC | 21.5 | HIGH |
| Tier 6 | 13.01โ8.62 | Jaylen Waddle | vs NE | 24 | HIGH |
| Tier 6 | 13.01โ8.62 | Kayshon Boutte | @ MIA | 21.5 | LOW |
| Tier 6 | 13.01โ8.62 | Keenan Allen | @ LV | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 6 | 13.01โ8.62 | Chris Olave | vs SF | 18.5 | AVG |
| Tier 6 | 13.01โ8.62 | Travis Hunter | @ CIN | 23.5 | LOW |
| Tier 6 | 13.01โ8.62 | Jayden Reed | vs WAS | 26 | AVG |
| Tier 6 | 13.01โ8.62 | Matthew Golden | vs WAS | 26 | AVG |
| Tier 6 | 13.01โ8.62 | Keon Coleman | @ NYJ | 26 | AVG |
| Tier 6 | 13.01โ8.62 | Quinton Johnson | @ LV | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 6 | 13.01โ8.62 | Cedric Tillman | @ BAL | 17 | AVG |
| Tier 7 | 10.83โ9.22 | Josh Downs | vs DEN | 20 | HIGH |
| Tier 7 | 10.83โ9.22 | Stefon Diggs | @ MIA | 21.5 | LOW |
| Tier 7 | 10.83โ9.22 | Darnell Mooney | @ MIN | 20.5 | AVG |
| Tier 7 | 10.83โ9.22 | Khalil Shakir | @ NYJ | 26 | AVG |
Tier 1 | Still JaโMarr Chase

This was JaโMarr Chaseโs worst outing since his rookie year, Week 15, when he managed just 1 catch for 3 yards. How did he respond? By torching defenses with 7 catches for 125 yards the very next weekโand then exploding for 11 catches, 266 yards, and 3 TDs in Week 17. The Bengals wonโt be happy with their Week 1 showing.
Tier 2 | Elite WR1

CeeDee Lamb had a strong game, but left meat on the bone with 3 drops. He still delivered 7 catches for 110 yards on 13 targets, exactly the kind of volume we expect. With a divisional matchup at home, Lamb remains the featured weapon in an offense that needs a win to even its record.
A 4th-quarter TD saved Justin Jeffersonโs day, masking an otherwise quiet 4 for 44 line. Some of that came from J.J. McCarthyโs first career start, though Jefferson also had 2 drops. Expect a more productive outing in McCarthyโs second game versus visiting Atlanta.
Nico Collins was one of 10 receivers targeted by C.J. Stroud while he ran for his life against the Rams defensive line. Collins led the way with 5 looks, converting 3 for 25 yards, not what fantasy managers wanted. Against Tampa Bayโs stout run defense, Houston should lean pass-heavy, giving Collins a solid floor and strong rebound potential.
A quiet Week 1 is nothing new for Amon-Ra St. Brown, he did the same last year before finishing as the WR3 overall. The Lionsโ offensive priorities havenโt shifted; St. Brown is still the focal point heading into a home matchup with a Bears team fresh off a crushing MNF loss.
The Ramsโ passing attack is crystal clear: Puka Nacua and Davante Adams combined for over 65% of the targets. Puka stole the show with 10 catches for 130 yards, including 47 after the catch, and earned 11 first-read looks to Adamsโ 8. Heโs the alpha here, the only concern is whether the game script forces more late-game runs.
Drake London was limited in practice Wednesday but appears on track to play. Michael Penix Jr. funneled him 15 targets and over 100 air yards in Week 1, yet it only translated into 8 catches for 55 yards. The efficiency wasnโt there, but the volume absolutely wasโand that makes London a steady weekly start with top 3 upside.
Malik Nabers fought through poor QB play and still posted 71 yards, with 25 after the catch. His talent is undeniable, but back issues plus shaky quarterbacking could limit his ceiling this season.
Meanwhile, Brian Thomas Jr. had just 1 catch on 7 targets, but salvaged the day with a goal-line carry for a score, saving managers from a total dud. Expect more opportunities to be schemed for the talented WR this week.
Tier 3 | Back End WR1/Strong WR2

Start of the Week | Garrett Wilson | New York Jets
In their first professional game together, Justin Fields and Garrett Wilson brought that same Buckeye chemistry they displayed in college. Wilson commanded a massive 36% target share and delivered over 20 PPR points. Heโs got a QB who trusts him, the talent to win on every route, and now he gets a defense that couldnโt stop the run or the pass in Week 1. Fire him up with confidence.
Jaxon Smith-Njigba saw usage you rarely ever see, 57% of the targets and 91% of the air yards. Meanwhile, Cooper Kupp, who ran the same number of routes, saw just 3 targets. That kind of dominance isnโt sustainable (it would break records), but even with regression, JSN looks like a weekly push for WR1 status, even in a clunky offense.
Zay Flowers was my Start of the Week, and he absolutely delivered, finishing as the WR1 overall. Heโs cementing himself as Lamar Jacksonโs top option and is on track to set career highs across the board.
The Chargers offense was rolling, with all three wideouts producing. Ladd McConkey didnโt find the end zone, which dropped him to third among the group, but he still produced WR2 numbers. Expect him to lead this room in fantasy points more often than not as the season unfolds.
Mike Evans led Tampa in targets, but it was Emeka Egbuka who stole the spotlight with more yards and 2 scores. Evans has always been a touchdown machine, but Egbuka looks like heโs making the leap quickly and will push for more opportunities. Evans will become more volatile once Chris Godwin returns, but for now, he commands enough volume to sit comfortably in WR2 territory.
Tier 4 | WR2 with Upside

Sit of the Week | Tyreek Hill | Miami Dolphins
Iโve lost all confidence in this Dolphins offenseโhead coach, quarterback, all of it. Tua Tagovailoa canโt connect deep and looks completely out of sync. Hill still accounted for nearly 40% of the air yards, but that translated to a meager 40 yards. At this point, itโs hard to tell if Hill is slowing down or if the offense is dragging him under. Either way, expectations must come down, and hope for a change sooner rather than later.
Ricky Pearsall is earning lead receiver duties in San Francisco, and with George Kittle hitting IR, the runway is there for him to grow into the role. Mac Jones is serviceable enough to keep Pearsall fantasy relevant, or possibly excel (i.e., late season 2024 Brian Thomas Jr.)
Philadelphia will test Kansas City, but Patrick Mahomes has little choice other than feeding Hollywood Brown. He funneled him 14 targets last week, tho Tyquan Thornton actually led in air yards on just 4 looks. The targets will be there for Hollywood, it just may not turn into reliable production.
D.J. Moore took a nasty shot late but returned to finish the game. He led the team with 68 yards on just 3 catches, and a missed opportunity in the 4th didnโt help. Moore remains the top option in this passing offense, tho Rome Odunze is making a push.
Courtland Sutton turned in a steady WR12 finish despite poor QB play, posting 6 grabs for 61 yards and a score. That kind of line may become his signature, quiet but bankable production. Against the Colts this week, expect more of the same.
Tier 5 | Boom or Bust WR3

The resurgence of Daniel Jones is breathing life back into Michael Pittman Jr. after a rough 2024. The concern this week is Denver, especially if Patrick Surtain II shadows Pittman across formations.
Rome Odunze paced the Bears in both targets and receptions, but his shallow 7.4-yard aDOT kept him to just 37 yards. A touchdown saved his fantasy day. Until Caleb Williams finds more consistency, Odunze may struggle to live up to his top-10 draft pedigree.
Itโs hard to get excited about 4 catches for 27 yards, but thatโs what happens when a rookie QB debuts against Denver. The Rams just made C.J. Stroud look silly behind a broken O-line, and they could do the same to Cam Ward, limiting Calvin Ridleyโs ceiling this week.
Jerry Jeudy led Denver in first-read target share, air yards, and receiving yards. His 8 targets tied Charles Tillman and trailed only rookie Harold Fannin Jr. With this offense leaning pass-heavy, Jeudyโs volume should carry right into Week 2.
Keenan Allen looked like he never left, reconnecting with Justin Herbert as if no time had passed. If this offense truly plans to pass more, both Allen and Ladd McConkey will be huge fantasy winners all season long.
Tier 6 | WR Flex Options

The biggest surprise of Week 1 was Kayshon Boutte, finally flashing the talent that once made him a 5-star recruit. He led the team in nearly every meaningful receiving stat and looked comfortable doing it. If he can stack these performances, his rise up the rankings will come quickly.
Chris Olave saw 12 targets but turned them into just 54 yards. Heโs never been a big yards-after-catch threat, and without a QB capable of hitting him consistently, his ceiling stays capped despite the talent.
Primarily playing on offense, Travis Hunter led the team in targets (8), receptions (6), and first-read percentage. The usage is extremely encouraging, even if it only translated into 33 yards. Bigger fantasy days are coming.
Keon Coleman didnโt just score a highlight-reel touchdown during Buffaloโs comeback, he also received 11 targets, 112 yards, and earned a 35% first-read rate. If this was his breakout moment, Josh Allen may have just found a new go-to weapon.
Tier 7 | Desperation Flex Plays

The addition of Tyler Warren and a healthy Michael Pittman Jr. could make Josh Downs the odd man out, unless Daniel Jones has truly leveled up as a passer. In a middle-of-the-road offense, expecting three consistently relevant receivers feels like a stretch. Against Denver this week, Downs belongs on the bench.
Stefon Diggs ran fewer routes than Kayshon Boutte, Demario Douglas, and Hunter Henry, but still managed a serviceable 11.7 fantasy points. Miamiโs defense should give this unit a chance to rebound, and Diggs could capitalize.
Darnell Mooney is back in the lineup and ready to join the Michael Penix Jr. experience. His speed adds another layer to this passing attack, though consistency will hinge on Penix Jr. spreading the ball around.
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Tight Ends | Week 2 Rankings
Week 2 Tight End Rankings Tiers (Condensed)
Below is a condensed table of the Tight End Rankings Tiers for Week 2 of Fantasy Football:
| Tier | Projection Range | Player | Opponent | Proj Team Pts | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 | 15.75โ15.69 | Trey McBride | vs CAR | 26 | LOW |
| Tier 1 | 15.75โ15.69 | Brock Bowers | vs LAC | 21.5 | AVG |
| Tier 2 | 11.41โ5.64 | Tyler Warren | vs DEN | 20 | HIGH |
| Tier 2 | 11.41โ5.64 | T.J. Hockenson | vs ATL | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 2 | 11.41โ5.64 | Kyle Pitts | @ MIN | 20.5 | AVG |
| Tier 2 | 11.41โ5.64 | Sam LaPorta | vs CHI | 26.5 | AVG |
| Tier 2 | 11.41โ5.64 | Travis Kelce | vs PHI | 23.5 | HIGH |
| Tier 2 | 11.41โ5.64 | Juwan Johnson | vs SF | 18.5 | AVG |
| Tier 3 | 9.56โ7.36 | Tucker Kraft | vs WAS | 26 | AVG |
| Tier 3 | 9.56โ7.36 | Evan Engram | @ IND | 22.5 | HIGH |
| Tier 3 | 9.56โ7.36 | Dalton Kincaid | @ NYJ | 26 | AVG |
| Tier 3 | 9.56โ7.36 | Mark Andrews | vs CLE | 28.5 | LOW |
| Tier 3 | 9.56โ7.36 | David Njoku | @ BAL | 17 | AVG |
| Tier 3 | 9.56โ7.36 | Dallas Goedert | @ KC | 24 | HIGH |
| Tier 3 | 9.56โ7.36 | Hunter Henry | @ MIA | 21.5 | LOW |
| Tier 3 | 9.56โ7.36 | Harold Fannin Jr | @ BAL | 17 | AVG |
| Tier 3 | 9.56โ7.36 | Zach Ertz | @ GB | 23 | HIGH |
| Tier 4 | 9.2โ6.38 | Cade Otton | @ HOU | 20 | AVG |
| Tier 4 | 9.2โ6.38 | Jonnu Smith | vs SEA | 21.5 | AVG |
| Tier 4 | 9.2โ6.38 | Jake Ferguson | vs NYG | 25 | LOW |
| Tier 4 | 9.2โ6.38 | Brenton Strange | @ CIN | 23.5 | LOW |
| Tier 4 | 9.2โ6.38 | Dalton Schultz | vs TB | 23 | AVG |
| Tier 4 | 9.2โ6.38 | Tyler Higbee | @ TEN | 24 | LOW |
| Tier 4 | 9.2โ6.38 | Chig Okonkwo | vs LAR | 18 | AVG |
| Tier 4 | 9.2โ6.38 | Colston Loveland | @ DET | 21 | HIGH |
| Tier 4 | 9.2โ6.38 | Mason Taylor | vs BUF | 19.5 | AVG |
Tier 1 | Elite TE1

Trey McBride and Brock Bowers sit comfortably at the top of these rankings. Both saw 8 targets and led their offenses in first-read looks, cementing their weekly advantage at the position. Theyโre in a tier of their own, giving managers a consistent edge every time they hit the lineup. Godspeed on the recovery, George Kittle.
Tier 2 | Solid TE1

Start of the Week | Kyle Pitts | Atlanta Falcons
Iโm calling it, damn the torpedoes, Kyle Pitts is back, baby! With a competent QB under center, a clean bill of health, and usage that finally makes sense, he looked like the rookie version we all drooled over. Pitts ran 60% of his routes from the slot or outside, saw 2nd-option passing volume, broke 2 tackles, and racked up 40 YAC. If this continues, thatโs a blueprint for fantasy success.
Tyler Warren debuted like a seasoned pro, leading his team in targets, receptions, and first-read share. His versatility makes him a focal point of this offense, and thereโs no reason to expect that to change.
Not the Week 1 we wanted from T.J. Hockenson, but credit the Bearsโ defense; they were locked in (for most of the game). He still ranked second behind Justin Jefferson and drew a 24% first-read share, which is encouraging for long-term usage as J.J. McCarthy develops.
Sam LaPorta paced Detroitโs receiving room in targets, catches, yards, and first-read percentage. That probably wonโt hold as Amon-Ra St. Brown, Jameson Williams, and Jahmyr Gibbs (who led the whole team in targets and catches with 10) are more involved, but it shows how central LaPorta remains in the Lionsโ offense.
A wide-open TD gave Travis Kelce a respectable fantasy line, but 4 targets isnโt the volume you want to hang your hat on. With a depleted WR group, imagine how bare it could get once Xavier Worthy and Rashee Rice are back to full strength.
Juwan Johnson quietly has the makings of a breakout year. He saw 11 targets in Week 1, converting them into 8 catches for 76 yards. At 6โ4โ, lining up in the slot, out wide, and even from the backfield, Johnson is an underrated, highly versatile end-zone weapon on a team that will be forced to throw late and often.
Tier 3 | TE1 Streamer

Dalton Kincaid flashed some life in Week 1, catching all 4 of his targets, including a TD, while ranking third in the 1st read opportunities. The red flag? He only played about half the snaps. Until that usage ticks up, heโs more streamer than locked-in starter.
Mark Andrews was nearly invisible on Sunday Night Football (1 catch for 4 yards) on a 76% snap share. Last year also started slow for him, so donโt panic yet, but with Isaiah Likely looming, itโs fair to be concerned.
Harold Fannin Jr. sent shockwaves through fantasy circles, outproducing David Njoku across the board. A 30%+ target share to tight ends is great, but figuring out how it splits week-to-week could be a headache.
Dallas Goedert always pops for a few big fantasy weeks, but predicting when has been the challenge. He tied the entire WR corps with 7 targets in Week 1, something that may cause noise in the locker room.
Tier 4 | Desperate TE Options

We know Arthur Smith loves him some Jonnu Smith, and the usage proves itโ6 targets, 5 catchesโฆ but for only 15 yards and a negative 2.2 aDOT. Those touches are empty calories unless theyโre near the goal line, and fortunately, one was in Week 1. Just donโt mistake that for sustainable success.
Brenton Strange turned 4 targets into 59 yards, flashing his after-the-catch juice with 24 YAC. If that role continues to expand, he could become a sneaky weekly option.
Dalton Schultz remains C.J. Stroudโs security blanket, but his fantasy value is tied directly to touchdowns. Without finding the end zone, heโll struggle to crack relevance.
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Week 2 Start/Sit Preview for Every Matchup
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Start/Sit FAQ | Fantasy Football Week 2 Rankings
Q: Which sleepers could break out in Week 2 fantasy football?
A: Garrett Wilson, Bucky Irving, and Zay Flowers are strong breakout picks thanks to expanded roles, favorable matchups, and rising target shares.
Q: Who are the biggest start/sit decisions at quarterback for Week 2?
A: Joe Burrow, Jalen Hurts, and Justin Fields top the borderline QB1 tier and make tough lineup calls depending on your roster construction.
Q: Which running backs are likely to bust in Week 2?
A: Kenneth Walker III, Isiah Pacheco, and Rhamondre Stevenson carry major risk due to split backfields, injuries, and tough defensive matchups.
Q: Are there any high-floor flex plays I can trust in Week 2?
A: Players like Keon Coleman, Breece Hall, and Courtland Sutton bring stable usage, red-zone work, and consistent routes that make them safe flex options.
Q: How should I use weekly player tiers to set my fantasy lineup?
A: Use tiers to break ties: start higher-tier players in close decisions, then compare matchups, team totals, and injury news within each tier.