NFL Snap Counts Report Week 7

Snap counts tell us who is playing but they don’t always paint a clear picture of who is producing for our fantasy football lineups. By digging deep into the snap counts from Week 2, we are able to pull some
NFL Snap Counts Report Week 6

Snap counts tell us who is playing but they don’t always paint a clear picture of who is producing for our fantasy football lineups. By digging deep into the snap counts from Week 2, we are able to pull some
NFL Snap Counts Report Week 5

Snap counts tell us who is playing but they don’t always paint a clear picture of who is producing for our fantasy football lineups. By digging deep into the snap counts from Week 2, we are able to pull some
NFL Snap Counts Report Week 4

This is a premium feature for Fulltime Members but is free to all this week. We’ll be adding analysis throughout the week. Snap counts tell us who is playing but they don’t always paint a clear picture of who is producing for our fantasy football lineups. By digging deep into the snap counts from Week 2, we are able to pull some interesting takeaways that can help us win moving forward. NFL snap data courtesy: SportsData – Previous Weeks: Week 1 | Week 2 | Week 3 (minimum 10 snaps in Week 3) SNAPS Total offensive snaps played by player. SNAP % Percentage of offensive snaps played. RUSH % Percentage of snaps played where player had a rushing attempt. TGT % Percentage of snaps played where player was targeted by a pass attempt. TOUCH % Percentage of snaps played where player touched the football (includes pass attempts, rush attempts and receptions). FPTS Fantasy points scored by player. PTS/100 SNAPS Average fantasy points scored by player per 100 snaps Chase Edmonds continued to receive more touches, but as long as James Conner gets those valuable goal-line opportunities and a handful of targets, both backs are quite relevant. It’s clear that Zack Moss is the Buffalo back to play. Both had a big role last week in a 40-0 blowout, but facing a high-scoring Kansas City attack in Week 5, Devin Singletary doesn’t look like an appealing start. Melvin Gordon is still being utilized at a higher rate, but it’s only a matter of time before Javonte Williams takes over as Denver’s main back. Williams leads the NFL with a 37% forced tackles missed rate. With another 48 (80%) snaps, Najee Harris leads all running backs this season with an average of 59.5 snaps per game, a whopping 92.6% snap rate. He also leads the position in targets (34) and receptions (26). Keep an eye on the status of Giovani Bernard. Bernard sat out last week and that resulted in Leonard Fournette being used as a workhorse. Fournette out-snapped Ronald Jones 64-13 and racked up 25 opportunities compared to just 6 for Jones. If Bernard is sidelined once again, fire up Fournette as a quality RB2 against Miami. Alex Collins worked his way into a near-even split with Chris Carson last week. Carson is dealing with a neck injury and is very questionable for Thursday. Collins should be a priority waiver wire add, even in a poor spot. Houston’s Brandin Cooks leads the entire NFL with a 37.1% target share but proceed with caution in Week 5. Cooks is about the only thing that has gone decently in the Texans’ moribund offense and Bill Belichick is widely known for his ability to remove what an opposing team does best. Volume assures Cooks should be in lineups, but he’s more of a WR3/4 this week than locked-in WR2. Terry McLaurin leads all NFL wideouts with a 98.4% snap rate and is the No. 6 fantasy wide receiver in PPR scoring. That breakout we predicted is happening, though it’s not because of QB Ryan Fitzpatrick. Josh Reynolds saw his first action of 2021 and was on the field for 78% of Tennessee’s snaps. Reynolds led the Titans’ receiving corps with an 18% target share and should be the club’s main No. 3 receiver once A.J. Brown and Julio Jones return to the lineup. Outstanding debut for Jamison Crowder, who played just 15% of the Jets’ snaps but was awfully busy when in. Crowder was targeted on 9 of those snaps and scored 19.1 PPR points. GET THIS SNAP REPORT ALL SEASON LONG! TONIGHT IS YOUR LAST CHANCE TO SAVE 30%! Are you seriously still on the sidelines? Proven track record to help you win. Join the fun and Become a FULLTIME MEMBER! We’re chatting 24/7 in our Discord and when you join, you get access to exclusive Member Only perks such as: Access to our customized rankings and projections, deep dive downloads, waiver wire suggestions, private Who Do I Start Advice, our WR/CB Matchups report, a Survivor Contest, Member area chat in our Discord and to top it all off, 5 free monthly drafts into our Weekly Draft Contests! That’s just the tip of the iceberg! JOIN the Fun, and Get Yourself to the Championship. The TD30 coupon code to save 30% expires tonight! It’s your last chance to save 30%! Do it now!
NFL Snap Counts Report Week 3

This is a premium feature for Fulltime Members but is free to all this week. We’ll be adding analysis throughout the week. Snap counts tell us who is playing but they don’t always paint a clear picture of who is producing for our fantasy football lineups. By digging deep into the snap counts from Week 2, we are able to pull some interesting takeaways that can help us win moving forward. NFL snap data courtesy: SportsData – Previous Weeks: Week 1 | Week 2 (minimum 10 snaps in Week 2) SNAPS Total offensive snaps played by player. SNAP % Percentage of offensive snaps played. RUSH % Percentage of snaps played where player had a rushing attempt. TGT % Percentage of snaps played where player was targeted by a pass attempt. TOUCH % Percentage of snaps played where player touched the football (includes pass attempts, rush attempts and receptions). FPTS Fantasy points scored by player. PTS/100 SNAPS Average fantasy points scored by player per 100 snaps James Conner made the most of his opportunities and rushed or was targeted on 48% of his snaps (touch/snaps). Cordarrelle Patterson continues to do something with his limited opportunities (26 snaps) and rushes or is targeted on 50% of his snaps. Zach Moss finally led the Bills backfield in snaps but both Bills RBs continue to lag other RB starters around the league in usage 36 & 35% respectively. (touch/snaps) D’Andre Swift was the Lions’ offense with a whopping 63% usage on his limited snaps 35 @ 56%. Nyheim Hines led Jonathan Taylor in snaps and production. Kareem Hunt actually led all running backs last week with 4.87 fantasy points per snap. Very encouraging usage for Saquon Barkley, who just played a season-high 85.7% of New York’s snaps. Barkley should be viewed as a locked-in RB1 moving forward. Najee Harris now leads all running backs with 190 snaps on the season. A whopping 96.4% snap rate. Also, extremely reassuring to see Andy Reid stick with Clyde Edwards-Helaire after an early fumble. CEH went on to play in 62% of Kansas City’s snaps and top 100 rushing yards. Seattle’s usage was one of the more puzzling from the slate. Normally, Chris Carson is the only rusher to target, but Pete Carroll mixed in Travis Homer and Alex Collins liberally. We’ll keep an eye on this, but it was probably a one-week anomaly. Washington was close to an even split with their two backs, but it’s clear that Anotonio Gibson is the main back and is more than capable of taking passing down usage away from J.D. McKissic. We’re starting to get concerned about Robby Anderson. Anderson has been in on 72.8% of Carolina’s snaps this season but has a target share number below that of Terrace Marshall Jr. Avoid all Bears at this point. Until Matt Nagy is relieved of his duties, his lack of creativity is torpedoing Chicago’s offense. Only if Andy Dalton returns under center can Allen Robinson be viewed as a usable option. As expected, Cedrick Wilson is taking on the Michael Gallup role, but what was interesting was Noah Brown played almost as many snaps. The Broncos lost K.J. Hamler for the season, so go out and grab Tim Patrick off of waivers. Patrick played a team-high 51 snaps, along with Courtland Sutton. Adam Thielen‘s 211 snaps lead all wideouts on the season and his 96.3% snap rate trails only Terry McLaurin. Chris Conley continues to see plenty of playing time but isn’t making much impact in Houston. Conley has been in on over 74% of the Texans’ snaps but has a measly 5.9% target share. The Patriots went almost exclusively with three-wide sets in Week 3, resulting in an increased role for Kendrick Bourne. This is probably a one-week strategy, so no need to add Bourne quite yet. DeSean Jackson was awfully productive with his 21 snaps. Even at an advanced age, D-Jax still offers a huge ceiling but that limited snap count makes him nothing more than a TD-dependant weekly flier. Injuries were a big factor, but Chase Claypool led all NFL wide receivers with 76 snaps against Cincinnati. Claypool played 91.6% of Pittsburgh’s snaps but even with that kind of usage still can’t be considered more than a WR2/3 with how bad Ben Roethlisberger has looked. A.J. Brown (hamstring) will be out for a week or two, so Nick Westbrook-Ikhine came off the bench to lead the Titans with 53 snaps and a 15.4% target share. Brandon Aiyuk is trending in the right direction. Fantasy managers that were patient with Aiyuk after Week 1 are about to be rewarded. Very surprising to see Braxton Berrios logging a 78% snap share but he’s well off the fantasy radar at this point, as are all members of the Jets. Dalton Schultz stole the show in Dallas with 69% of the snaps and 28% of the target share. Remarkable considering all the talent around him. Mike Gesicki’s 12 targets represented 22% target/snap %. Brissett likes to throw him the ball. GET THIS SNAP REPORT ALL SEASON LONG! TONIGHT IS YOUR LAST CHANCE TO SAVE 30%! Are you seriously still on the sidelines? Proven track record to help you win. Join the fun and Become a FULLTIME MEMBER! We’re chatting 24/7 in our Discord and when you join, you get access to exclusive Member Only perks such as: Access to our customized rankings and projections, deep dive downloads, waiver wire suggestions, private Who Do I Start Advice, our WR/CB Matchups report, a Survivor Contest, Member area chat in our Discord and to top it all off, 5 free monthly drafts into our Weekly Draft Contests! That’s just the tip of the iceberg! JOIN the Fun, and Get Yourself to the Championship. The TD30 coupon code to save 30% expires tonight! It’s your last chance to save 30%! Do it now!
NFL Snap Counts Report Week 2

This is a premium feature for Fulltime Members but is free to all this week. We’ll be adding analysis throughout the week. Snap counts tell us who is playing but they don’t always paint a clear picture of who is producing for our fantasy football lineups. By digging deep into the snap counts from Week 2, we are able to pull some interesting takeaways that can help us win moving forward. NFL snap data courtesy: SportsData – Previous Weeks: Week 1 (minimum 10 snaps in Week 2) SNAPS Total offensive snaps played by player. SNAP % Percentage of offensive snaps played. RUSH % Percentage of snaps played where player had a rushing attempt. TGT % Percentage of snaps played where player was targeted by a pass attempt. TOUCH % Percentage of snaps played where player touched the football (includes pass attempts, rush attempts and receptions). FPTS Fantasy points scored by player. PTS/100 SNAPS Average fantasy points scored by player per 100 snaps. Dallas 1-2 punch – Tony Pollard continues his ascension towards fantasy reliability. While Zeke continues to lead Pollard 2 to 1 in snaps, Pollard’s Rush share is over 40% and 76% of his snaps he sees the ball and was Week 2’s most effective running back per snap. Chiefs RB Clyde Edwards-Helaire continues to disappoint. While it’s early, he did at least command 65% of the snaps Sunday night against a tough Ravens run defense. New England looks like a true split backfield. Shocker. While we may have hoped for Damien Harris to be a full time back, Belichick continue to split the time between he and James White who proved to be effective against the Jets. McKissic dominated his opportunity in Washington. Arizona Rookie Rondale Moore is electric. When Kyler gets the ball in his hands he’s one of the most effective WRs in the game. Darnell Mooney led all Bears WRs in snaps in Week 2. Rams WR Cooper Kupp never left the field. He played every snap and dominated. He looks like and played like a Top 5 WR this season. I offered him as a draft target so if you listened to me this draft season (hey, I got one right!) and you drafted him, congrats. No reason to sell, but the trade offers are coming. Just sit back and enjoy the ride! Vikings WR K.J. Osborn is making the most of his second season and is proving to be a clutch performer in big time moments for the Vikings this season. He will soon command a spot in your starting lineup in deeper formats. If you were playing DFS, Mike Evans was a no-brainer to lock in your daily lineups. Brady had to make it up to his big target after a disappointing week one. All eyes on Cleveland Tight Ends this week with the injuries to the wide receivers. All three are somewhat fantasy relevant with Austin Hooper the current star of the bunch. If you’re hurting at the TE position, Arizona TE Maxx Williams has finally ascended to fantasy relevance in Arizona. Playing only 45% of the snaps, he was targeted on 16% of those snaps, which is top 5 for tight ends this week. He’ll be a popular waiver wire target this week. Rams TE Tyler Higbee played 100% of the snaps and was targeted a league low 2% of the time turning it into 1 catch for 8 yards. GET THIS SNAP REPORT ALL SEASON LONG! TONIGHT IS YOUR LAST CHANCE TO SAVE 30%! Are you seriously still on the sidelines? Proven track record to help you win. Join the fun and Become a FULLTIME MEMBER! We’re chatting 24/7 in our Discord and when you join, you get access to exclusive Member Only perks such as: Access to our customized rankings and projections, deep dive downloads, waiver wire suggestions, private Who Do I Start Advice, our WR/CB Matchups report, a Survivor Contest, Member area chat in our Discord and to top it all off, 5 free monthly drafts into our Weekly Draft Contests! That’s just the tip of the iceberg! JOIN the Fun, and Get Yourself to the Championship. The TD30 coupon code to save 30% expires tonight! It’s your last chance to save 30%! Do it now!
NFL Snaps Report Week 1
This is a premium feature for Fulltime Members but is free to all this week. We’ll be adding analysis throughout the week. Snap counts tell us who is playing but they don’t always paint a clear picture of who is producing for our fantasy football lineups. By digging deep into the snap counts from Week 1, we are able to pull some interesting takeaways that can help us win moving forward. NFL snap data courtesy: FantasyData Detroit’s 1-2 punch – After getting blown out through three quarters, the Lion came roaring back to post impressive fantasy numbers. QB Jared Goff played a whopping 92 snaps and attempted 57 passes. T.J. Hockenson snagged 8-of-10 targets and led all tight ends with 97 yards. But perhaps the biggest takeaway was Detroit’s backfield duo of Jamaal Williams and D’Andre Swift. Williams got the start and led all skill-position players with a 28.1% target share. Williams actually touches the ball on 53% of his 32 snaps. Swift actually played twice as many snaps (63) as Williams and also accumulated a 35% utilized rate. Moving forward, Swift looks like the back to have due mostly to that impressive 68.5% snap rate, but Williams is going to see extensive action as well and offers RB3 value on a week-to-week basis. Mark Ingram touched the ball on 72% of his snaps – Coming into this season, Houston media kept telling us that Ingram, not incumbent starter David Johnson or free-agent signee Phillip Lindsay would open the season as Houston’s lead back. And that’s exactly how Week 1 played out. Ingram was in on only 36 (46.2%) of the Texans’ snaps but carried the ball 26 times and was targeted once. Ingram was second only to Joe Mixon in rushing attempts on Sunday but averaged just 3.3 yards per carry. The rebuilding Texans won’t have too many games that warrant that kind of game script, and each of Houston’s other two backs also found the end zone. Ingram is still a worthwhile waiver wire addition, but don’t count on that kind of extensive usage again. Najee Harris’s usage – When looking at the stats, Najee Harris didn’t have an impressive first game running behind a porous Pittsburgh offensive line. Harris turned 16 carries into a pedestrian 45 yards (2.8 YPC) and caught 1-of-3 targets for just four yards. However, Harris was the only Steelers’ running back to see the field, playing all 58 of Pittsburgh’s snaps. Harris was the only running back in the NFL to play every snap of his team’s game and should continue to be heavily featured as long as Anthony McFarland (IR) remains sidelined. That kind of workload bodes very well for Harris’s potential this season. He should still be considered an RB1 with upside and the Steelers have the league’s seventh-easiest strength of schedule for running backs. The other position players to play all of their team’s snaps: Terry McLaurin, Logan Thomas, Darnell Mooney, and Tyler Higbee. Perhaps the most impressive outing was by Christian Kirk, who averaged the third-most fantasy points per snap but did so on just a 56.5% snap rate. All over wideouts listed exceeded 65%. Bengals rookie Ja’Marr Chase silenced the doubters week one and played 11 more snaps than both Tee Higgins or Tyler Boyd and led all significant statistics. Broncos WR Tim Patrick looks like the player who will slide into the spot vacated by Jerry Jeudy. Atlanta Struggles – Fantasy fans are used to QB Matt Ryan struggling without Julio Jones but the Falcons looked atrocious against a Philadelphia defense that surrendered the 13th-most fantasy points to quarterback in 2020. Ryan completed 21-of-35 passes for a lowly 164 scoreless yards. Under duress the entire game, Ryan averaged just 4.68 yards per attempt and had no success targeting his wideouts. WR Russell Gage was the least-efficient wideout in football on Sunday, generating zero fantasy points on 49 snaps and two targets. Things won’t get much easier for the Falcons in Week 2 as they travel to Tampa to take on the defending Super Bowl champs. Deebo Samuel dominates – While Amari Cooper and Tyreek Hill had more PPR points than Deebo Samuel on Sunday, Samuel was the league’s most efficient fantasy scorer on a per-snap basis. Samuel scored 0.69 PPR points for each of his 46 snaps, which was the highest fantasy points per snap total of any player who played more than 20 snaps. Those figures were even higher before the 49ers called off the dogs with a huge third-quarter lead. In all, Samuel was undoubtedly San Francisco’s No. 1 wideout, as much-heralded teammate Brandon Aiyuk did absolutely nothing against a vulnerable Detroit secondary. View Samuel as a high-upside weekly WR2. Big WR performances – After Samuel’s league-leading points per snap average, several other wide receivers had huge performances. Tyreek Hill produced over 37 fantasy points on 57 snaps and Tyler Lockett, Antonio Brown, Deonte Harris, my boy Rondale Moore, and Amari Cooper all averaged over half a PPR point per snap. GET THIS SNAP REPORT ALL SEASON LONG! THIS IS YOUR LAST CHANCE TO SAVE 30%! Are you seriously still on the sidelines? Proven track record to help you win. Join the fun and Become a FULLTIME MEMBER! We’re chatting 24/7 in our Discord and when you join, you get access to exclusive Member Only perks such as: Access to our customized rankings and projections, deep dive downloads, waiver wire suggestions, private Who Do I Start Advice, our WR/CB Matchups report, a Survivor Contest, Member area chat in our Discord and to top it all off, 5 free monthly drafts into our Weekly Draft Contests! That’s just the tip of the iceberg! JOIN the Fun, and Get Yourself to the Championship. The TD30 coupon code to save 30% expires this Sunday. It’s your last chance to save 30%! Do it now!
Week 1 Target / Snap Recap

Dr. Roto analyzes the Fantasy impact of Week 1’s snaps and targets!

