Daunte Culpepper looks like crap and Trent Dilfer looks like Superman – so do you bench the Viking for the Brown or do you stick to your guns and start your stud?
Post all of your Week 3 roster questions here.
Daunte Culpepper looks like crap and Trent Dilfer looks like Superman – so do you bench the Viking for the Brown or do you stick to your guns and start your stud?
Post all of your Week 3 roster questions here.
QUARTERBACKS
Trent Dilfer, CLE – Dilfer tore up a weak Packer secondary for 336 yards and three touchdowns. Don’t expect numbers like this every week, but with a talented group of receivers, he could be a good backup this season.
RUNNING BACKS
Travis Henry, TEN – If Henry is somehow available in your league, now would be the time to pick him up. Chris Brown sat out the second half with a concussion and his status for Week 3 is uncertain.
Mewelde Moore, MIN – Another guy probably not on your waiver wire, but make sure. With Michael Bennett getting benched after two fumbles, this might be the opportunity Moore and his owners have been waiting for.
Derrick Blaylock, NYJ – It appears that Curtis Martin might miss next week’s game with a knee injury, so if you have room on your roster and need RB help, Blaylock would be a nice addition with good upside.
Ron Dayne, DEN – Dayne carried the ball eight times for 44 yards, backing up starter Mike Anderson. The bigger story is that Tatum Bell didn’t get any work. Is Dayne rising on the depth chart? Only HC Mike Shanahan knows for sure, but Dayne’s value would skyrocket if he were to get 15-20 carries a game.
WIDE RECEIVERS
Travis Taylor, MIN – Minnesota’s passing game has yet to get on track, but Taylor shined Sunday with seven catches for 75 yards. He might be available in 10-team leagues and is worth a roster spot.
Bobby Engram, SEA – In his second straight solid outing, Engram caught five balls for 77 yards and is especially valuable in leagues that reward one point per reception.
Samie Parker, KC – The Chiefs’ #2 WR has caught five passes for 109 yards in the first two games and is worth a look for owners in deeper leagues (12+ teams) looking for WR help.
TIGHT ENDS
Steve Heiden, CLE – QB Trent Dilfer seemed very comfortable with Heiden on Sunday as the duo hooked up six times for 104 yards and two touchdowns. Heiden would make a good backup for a fantasy squad looking for TE depth.
As part of the NFL Hurricane Relief Weekend, there are two overlapping games this evening. The Saints / Giants game is set to start at 7:30 pm ET on ABC, with the New York and New Orleans markets seeing that game in its entirety. For the rest of the country, this game will move over to ESPN at 9:00 pm ET when the Cowboys / Redskins kickoff on ABC. Both games will reportedly be broadcast in HDTV.
When the Vikings dealt Randy Moss to the Raiders, many thought Daunte Culpepper’s numbers would fall. Coming off a monster 39-TD performance last season, a repeat performance with Moss now in Oaklnad seemed unlikely. Still, nobody could’ve expected what’s happened to C-Pep and the Vikings through two games. After throwing three picks and fumbling twice in a week-one loss to the Bucs, Culpepper tossed five interceptions in an ugly 37-8 loss to the Bengals this week. Of course, Culpepper’s atrocious start hasn’t hurt as much in leagues that don’t count interceptions, but the Minnesota QB has yet to throw for a touchdown (he did run for one against the Bengals) and his complete inability to get new #1 receiver Nate Burleson involved in the offense (6 catches, 93 yards through two weeks) has Culpepper and Burleson owners sweating bullets. (And rightfully so, according to G, who says the Vikings suck.)
Not to be outdone, Detroit QB Joey Harrington matched Culpepper’s pick party by throwing five interceptions of his own while leading the Lions to an embarrassing 38-6 loss to the Bears Sunday. The Lions as a team looked pathetic in Chicago, with RB Kevin Jones managing just 22 yards on 8 carries. Roy Williams hauled in an early 51-yard touchdown pass but that was Detroit’s lone highlight. When Jeff Garcia went down with a broken leg during the preseason, many tabbed Harrington as a potential sleeper as the unchallenged starter in Detroit’s high-octane offense. Through two games, though, Harrington looks like waiver-wire fodder and the Lions look overrated.
HEADLINERS
Donovan McNabb: 342 yards, 5 TD, 0 INT
While Culpepper and Harrington were busy throwing five interceptions, McNabb, whose status was up in the air all week following last Sunday’s chest injury, hit paydirt five times en route to a 42-3 pasting of the 49ers. McNabb was extremely efficient, completing 23 of 29 passes while connecting with TE L.J. Smith nine times and Terrell Owens five more.
ALSO: Trent Dilfer (336 yards, 3 TD, 0 INT), Carson Palmer (337 yards, 3 TD, 1 INT)
Thomas Jones: 20 carries, 139 yards, 2 TD; 2 catches, 19 yards
Rookie Cedric Benson got 16 carries, but most of his work came after the Bears had opened up a big lead over the Lions. If Jones keeps running like this, Benson won’t be starting in Chicago anytime soon. As the situation currently stands, Jones looks like a solid #2 back, with his next three games coming against the Bengals, Browns and Vikings.
ALSO: Stephen Davis (25 carries, 77 yards, 3 TD), Cadillac Williams (24 carries, 128 yards, 1 TD), Willie Parker (25 carries, 111 yards, 1 TD)
Terrell Owens: 5 catches, 143 yards, 2 TD
McNabb’s favorite target was L.J. Smith but T.O. was electric Sunday, scoring first on a 68-yard play and later on a 42-yarder. Nobody’s talking about Owens’ holdout anymore and he looks ready to once again challenge Randy Moss as the top receiver in football. Still worried about McNabb and T.O.’s on-field chemistry?
ALSO: Steve Heiden (6 catches, 104 yards, 2 TD), Chad Johnson (7 catches, 139 yards, 1 TD)
FLATLINERS
Jake Delhomme: 154 yards, 0 TD, 1 INT
Of course, no quarterback looked worse than Culpepper or Harrington this week, but Delhomme didn’t look much better. The Panthers beat the Patriots 27-17 but Stephen Davis deserves the credit. Delhomme’s looked rather ineffective the last two weeks, making him a shaky play at this point.
ALSO: Peyton Manning (122 yards, 0 TD, 1 INT), Drew Brees (175 yards, 0 TD, 1 INT), Culpepper, Harrington
Michael Bennett: 3 carries, 36 yards
Bennett looked good early, ripping off a 23-yard run in the first quarter, but then he lost two fumbles and was benched for the second half. This could be the opportunity Mewelde Moore owners were waiting for. The Vikings were down early so they didn’t run the ball all that much but Moore still got eight carries on the day compared to Bennett’s three and one for Moe Williams. Stay tuned.
ALSO: Jamal Lewis (10 carries, 9 yards; 4 catches, 32 yards), Corey Dillon (14 carries, 36 yards), Ronnie Brown (12 carries, 35 yards), Kevin Jones
Lee Evans (2 catches, 12 yards) and Eric Moulds (1 catch, 8 yards)
The Bills faced a tough Tampa defense so the low numbers aren’t all that surprising, but Sunday’s performance by Evans and Moulds proves just how unreliable all Bills receivers will be this year as long as J.P. Losman is throwing them the ball. Losman completed just 12 of his 29 attempts for 113 yards and actually sat out a fourth-quarter series in favor of backup Kelly Holcomb. Losman returned to finish the game but unless (until?) Holcomb takes over full time, Buffalo’s receivers are all marginal plays.
ALSO: Joey Galloway (0 catches), Andre Johnson (4 catches, 20 yards), Michael Jenkins (1 catch, 22 yards)
As usual, the first couple of weeks of the NFL season are producing lots of surprises, but the collapse of the Minnesota Vikings has to rank near the top of the list. How pathetic. After losing Randy Moss, some “experts” thought they would be a better team. What a joke. Losing Moss has changed the whole offense, and not they see what it’s like trying to win NFL games without a difference maker.
Yet even with the loss of Moss, did anyone think that they would be THIS bad? Dante Culpepper now looks like a stiff.
Minnesota fans can’t be happy. They probably were looking forward to football season after the Twins collapsed, and now they have to deal with this.
UPDATE – ESPN’s John Clayton might be a good reporter because of his connections, but he often sounds like an idiot when trying to analyze the NFL. He demonstrated that again yesterday on ESPN Radio. First he acknowledged that he had picked the Vikings to go to the Super Bowl, so you can include him in the group of “experts” who discounted the value of Randy Moss. Next, he makes one of the dumbest statements I ever heard, saying that he has Dante Culpepper rated as the second best quarterback in football behind Peyton Manning. Now, he wasn’t referring to fantasy value. Culpepper has always been a turnover machine even when he had Randy Moss. How can Clayton think that Culpepper is better than three-time Super Bowl winner Tom Brady? How can he rate him over Donovan McNabb? Now it’s even more clear that Culpepper is overrated, but that still doesn’t absolve Clayton. He should stick to straight reporting.
© 2026 The Scores Report – The National Sports Blog
Theme by Anders Noren — Up ↑