The Morning Call

Health of QBs already big concern

- By Brandon C. Williams

It’s Week 3 of fantasy football. Is your quarterbac­k healthy?

The landscape at the position drasticall­y changed with the loss of fantasy stalwarts Drew Brees (thumb, out at least six weeks) and Ben Roethlisbe­rger (elbow, out for remainder of the season).

Both the Saints’ and Steelers’ highscorin­g attacks are slowed down, leaving fantasy owners who were reliant on those offenses to seek production elsewhere.

Start: Dak Prescott, QB, Cowboys: The Dolphins were the league’s worst fantasy defense against opposing quarterbac­ks with the now-traded Minkah Fitzpatric­k. Even without WR Michael Gallup, Prescott — who put his running skills on display in Week 2 — continues his impressive start to the regular season.

Sit: Cam Newton, QB, Panthers: He was in a walking boot on Wednesday, lending belief he may not be available against the Cardinals. Even if he was, Newton has yet to generate a touchdown and his minus-2 rushing yards is a sign that something’s wrong. If Newton’s not mobile, the Panthers offense becomes running back Christian McCaffrey facing eight-man fronts.

Start: Austin Ekeler, RB, Chargers: Houston is 25th in receiving yards allowed to opposing running backs, a stat that sounds nice to fantasy owners of Ekeler, who averages 13.5 yards per reception and has two receiving scores. A third straight game of at least 130 yards from scrimmage is a strong possibilit­y.

Sit: Carlos Hyde, RB, Texans: With Duke Johnson already making him a nonfactor in the passing game, Hyde will have to find holes against a Chargers defense that bounced back from being dominated by Colts RB Marlon Mack in Week 1 by limiting the Lions to just 94 yards on 28 carries last week.

Start: Kenny Golladay, WR, Lions: Only the Redskins have a worse fantasy defense against opposing receivers than the Eagles, who have given up five touchdown passes and eight completion­s of at least 20 yards. Golladay has scored in each of his first two games and should exceed his 9.5 targets per game average.

Sit: Courtland Sutton, WR, Broncos: Emmanuel Sanders is clicking with Joe Flacco, having been targeted 20 times along with scoring in each of the first two games. Sutton will get a downfield shot or two, but the Denver passing game will find it hard to get on track against a surprising­ly good Packers defense.

Start: Vance McDonald, TE, Steelers: New Steelers starting QB Mason Rudolph found McDonald for a pair of scoring receptions in last week’s loss to the Seahawks and will be in the neighborho­od of 8 to 10 targets as Rudolph looks to him as a security blanket.

Sit: Trey Burton, TE, Bears: Prior to Chicago’s game-winning drive in Week 2, Burton had one target. He finished with just two catches for 5 yards on three targets. He’s still not at 100 percent, so Burton will be little more than a role player.

Start: Nelson Agholor, WR, Eagles: Philly may be without starting wideouts Alshon Jeffrey (calf ) and DeSean Jackson (groin), thrusting Agholor into the spotlight against a Lions pass defense that has seen 66 passes targeted at receivers the first two weeks.

Sit: Kirk Cousins, QB, Vikings: That’s not a typo: Cousins’ 8.2 QBR is real. He struggled in last week’s loss to the Packers, and his 52.4% completion rate is near the bottom of the league.

Start: Tom Brady, QB, Patriots: He’s thrown for at least two touchdown passes in each of the past six games against the Jets and eight of his past 10. WRs Antonio Brown and Josh Gordon are a big reason why he’s averaging 13.8 yards per completion, his best total since 2011.

Sit: Josh Gordon, WR, Patriots: Gordon has just nine targets in two games. The Patriots will continue to spread the ball around, leaving Gordon only a handful of opportunit­ies each game.

This column was provided to The Associated Press by SportsGrid Inc., www.sportsgrid.com

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