Month: September 2008 (Page 29 of 61)

Cowboys’ S Roy Williams out four weeks

Dallas Cowboys’ safety Roy Williams will miss roughly four weeks after fracturing his forearm during Monday night’s 42-37 victory over the Philadelphia Eagles.

Jerry Jones said Roy Williams suffered a spiral fracture in his forearm and will miss about four weeks. That means Pat Watkins, who was playing in the nickel and dime packages, will start at strong safety for the next month.

While he’ll be missed in run defense, Williams has never been a factor against the pass. In fact, the Cowboys usually take Williams off the field in obvious passing downs and use three cornerbacks. Still, Dallas will certainly miss him in run defense seeing as how he was basically an extra linebacker.

Chase Daniel takes lead in Heisman race?

Gene Menez of SI.com breaks down the Heisman race as college football enters Week 4 of the season.

Chase Daniel1. Chase Daniel, Missouri, QB, Sr.
Last week: 23-of-28 passing, 405 yards, 4 TDs; 1 rush, 12 yards in a 69-17 victory over Nevada.
Season: 65-of-90 passing, 973 yards, 10 TDs, 1 INT; 10 rushes, 58 yards.
Heisman-o-meter: Daniel has been a regular on this list for three years, but he has never been No. 1 — until now. The Tigers’ triggerman has been mind-boggingly productive in his first three games as the Missouri offense has rolled. (In the last two he has played just four quarters total and has seven touchdowns against six incompletions.) How he plays in the Tigers’ tough October stretch (at Nebraska, Oklahoma State, at Texas, Colorado) will go a long way in determining if he stays at No. 1.
Up next: Saturday vs. Buffalo.

2. Sam Bradford, Oklahoma, QB, Soph.
Last week: 18-of-21 passing, 304 yards, 5 TDs; 1 rush, 1 yard, 1 TD in a 55-14 victory at Washington.
Season: 64-of-81 passing, 882 yards, 12 TDs, 2 INTs; 4 rushes, 4 yards, 1 TD.
Heisman-o-meter: In other Big 12 news, the Sooners have the conference’s — and country’s — No. 2 candidate for the stiff-armed statuette. Bradford plays so smoothly when he’s rolling out of the pocket and hitting receivers on the run, and he has Oklahoma’s offense humming. The task of separating Daniel and Bradford (Does Daniel benefit from having better receivers? Does Bradford have a better offensive line, running game and defense to get him the ball?) could go into early December when the Big 12 title game is played.
Up next: Sept. 27 vs. TCU.

3. Tim Tebow, Florida, QB, Jr.
Last week: Idle.
Season: 30-of-49 passing, 393 yards, 3 TDs; 22 rushes, 92 yards.
Heisman-o-meter: As Daniel, Bradford and others have made early-season cases for the Heisman, the incumbent has yet to be the Tebow we know. For Saturday’s game at Tennessee, it will be interesting to see if the Gators’ rushing attack has improved since the Miami contest and who’s doing the heavy lifting. None of Florida’s tailbacks were effective against the Hurricanes, forcing the running load onto Tebow’s legs, which could prove great for a Heisman repeat but not so good for the Gators’ long term goals.
Up next: Saturday at Tennessee.

Daniel has been the best quarterback of this young season and his play at the end of the opener against Illinois was fantastic. But even though the Illini proved to be a tougher opponent than many thought, Daniel’s first true test comes next week when the Tigers travel to Nebraska and take on an improved Huskers program.

Unfortunately college football fans have to wait two more weeks before Bradford faces his first real test. After TCU this week and at Baylor next Saturday, Oklahoma hosts Texas and Kansas in back-to-back weeks. Bradford might have the chance to win or lose the Heisman in those weeks.

Waiver Wire Watch: Week 3

Every week, I highlight a few players that you should target in waivers. I’ll use the ESPN league data when filtering players, so the only players eligible for discussion here are those that are available on the waiver wire of at least 50% of ESPN’s leagues. I’ll list each player’s percentage-owned after their name so you have an idea of how available they are in leagues around the country. I’ll always try to mention a few players that are available in 90% of leagues for those of you in 12-team leagues or leagues with big rosters. I’ll rank them in the order I’d pick them up in a league with a high-performance, PPR scoring system.

QUARTERBACKS

1. Trent Edwards (34.9)
He’s averaging 227 yards and a TD through two games.
2. J.T. O’Sullivan (18.8)
He’s going to have his ups and downs, but O’Sully took a big step forward against the Seahawks.
3. Kerry Collins (10.4)
Collins represents an upgrade for the Titans’ passing game and it looks like he’ll continue to start as long as Tennessee is winning.
4. Chad Pennington (44.8)
5. Tarvaris Jackson (29.4)
6. Matt Ryan (43.5)
7. Brian Griese (2.7)
Looked solid in his ’08 debut, and nobody knows what’s going on between Gruden and Garcia.
8. Joe Flacco (14.8)
9. JaMarcus Russell (46.7)
10. Tyler Thigpen (0.2)
11. Kyle Orton (11.3)

RUNNING BACKS

1. Steve Slaton (50.4)
Will start if Ahman Green continues to miss time.
2. Darren Sproles (12.7)
Electrifying against the Broncos. A must-handcuff for LT2 owners.
3. Tim Hightower (26.5)
Two TDs in two games looks like a pattern.
4. Michael Pittman (19.4)
Pittman is the Broncos goal-line back. Worth rostering, especially in non-PPR leagues.
5. Warrick Dunn (17.4)
He’s splitting touches with Earnest Graham.
6. Andre Hall (29.4)
7. Derrick Ward (25.2)
Main ballcarrier behind Brandon Jacobs despite Ahmad Bradshaw’s big day.
8. Maurice Morris (36.7)
9. LaMont Jordan (16.9)
10. Michael Bush (6.1)
With both Justin Fargas and Darren McFadden nicked up, he’s the next option the Raiders have at RB.
11. Brandon Jackson (17.9)
12. Fred Jackson (6.5)

WIDE RECEIVERS

1. Justin Gage (26.0)
I mentioned Gage as a sleeper on Friday, and he didn’t disappoint. He gets a big boost with Kerry Collins under center.
2. Muhsin Muhammad (43.1)
How will he fare when Steve Smith returns this week?
3. Bryant Johnson (42.6)
Seems to be taking over role of WR1 in San Francisco.
4. Chansi Stuckey (0.7)
The rookie’s line – six catches for 80 yards and two TD over the past two weeks – speaks for itself.
5. Antwaan Randle El (45.7)
6. Amani Toomer (39.6)
Just keeps on truckin’.
7. David Patten (38.5)
Decent start in PPR leagues while Marques Colston is out.
8. Ike Hilliard (6.5)
Steady and consistent part in Bucs’ offense. With Galloway hobbled by a sprained foot, Hilliard’s value is enhanced.
9. Matt Jones (16.2)
Two straight weeks of decent numbers in the PPR format. Is he coming into his own or will he disappear once Jerry Porter returns?
10. Ronald Curry (47.7)
JaMarcus Russell’s inability to throw the ball is really dragging down Curry’s value.
11. James Jones (9.8)
Value will skyrocket if Greg Jennings or Donald Driver were to go down.
12. Bobby Engram (41.6)
13. Deion Branch (17.1)
Branch and Engram are due back Week 5.
14. Kevin Walter (38.1)
15. James Hardy (21.7)
16. Hank Baskett (29.6)
17. Billy McMullen (0.1)
McMullen has some value in deep PPR leagues because he’s one of the few receivers the Seahawks have that is still standing.

TIGHT ENDS

1. John Carlson (8.0)
Six catches for 78 yards as Seattle’s most sure-handed receiver.
2. David Martin (1.6)
Eleven targets through two games is good for 7th best amongst tight ends.
3. Dante Rosario (32.3)
After eight targets in Week 1, Jake Delhomme targeted him just one time against the Bears in Week 2.
4. Anthony Fasano (49.8)
Nine targets in Week 1, zero in Week 2.
5. Randy McMichael (34.0)
6. Zach Miller (27.7)
JaMarcus Russell has been dreadful and it’s weighing on Miller’s stock.
7. Desmond Clark (10.2)

Bad McNabb-Westbrook exchange costs Eagles in wild MNF shootout

Tony RomoWhen Brian Westbrook and Donovan McNabb combine for four touchdowns in one game, usually the Eagles come away with a win. But that wasn’t the case Monday night as Dallas defeated Philadelphia 41-37 in the wildest NFL game of the season.

Westbrook gave the Eagles a 37-31 lead early in the fourth quarter on a 1-yard touchdown run (his third TD of the game). But after a Cowboys’ field goal cut the lead to 37-34, a botched exchange between Westbrook and McNabb gave Dallas the ball back with just under eight minutes to play. The Cowboys turned the miscue into a Marion Barber 1-yard score, which proved to be the game-winning touchdown.

Outside of an interception and a fumble that the Eagles recovered for a touchdown, Dallas QB Tony Romo was outstanding again. Romo threw for 312 yards and three touchdowns, including a 72-yard bomb to Terrell Owens (3 catches, 89 yards, 2 TDs) in the first quarter. On top of scoring the game-winning TD, Barber also finished with 69 yards on 18 carries.

Both defenses played like garbage, but this was the most exciting game of the young season. I hate to use a tired sports analogy, but this was like two heavyweight boxers going at it for 60 minutes. Neither team backed down and the game was littered with big plays. (And boneheaded ones, too.) Some of the throws that McNabb and Romo made were absolutely incredible.

McNabb, Romo, Barber, Westbrook, T.O. and Witten had to help folks win some fantasy games tonight.

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