Ian Hartitz previews Week 8 of the fantasy football season by going team by team answering the most important fantasy questions.

Week 8 is here and there are zero teams on bye for some strange reason.
Officially halfway through most fantasy football regular season: There’s never been a more important time to ignore your family and friends in an effort to chase championship glory.
What follows are my 10 biggest questions ahead of this week’s action along with a bunch of other shit that I just so happened to find cool for one reason or another.
As always: It’s a great day to be great.
A lot will depend on Roschon Johnson’s (concussion) final status, but the rookie is at least progressing through the protocol and kicked off the week with a limited practice.
Still, it’s tough to believe Johnson will fully kick D’Onta Foreman to the curb considering just how good the 27-year-old veteran has played this season:
Foreman’s gaudy YAC numbers also aren’t the result of a few outlier runs: He’s gained at least two yards after contact on a whopping 72% of his carries this season — the eighth-highest mark in the NFL.
Yes, Johnson worked ahead of Foreman behind Khalil Herbert (knee, IR) in Weeks 1 to 4. Also yes, that role never produced more than 11 touches in a single game, and things were actually moving heavily in favor of Herbert before the injuries.
The Bears haven’t really featured their RBs in specific pass-or-run down roles this season. It’s tough to see either Foreman or Johnson demanding too heavy of a role with both active, while fantasy managers also can’t discount the potential for Darrynton Evans to stay involved.
Ultimately, I’m cool with giving Foreman the Week 8 nod as the expected touch leader even if Johnson manages to return, but that role certainly isn’t guaranteed to produce fireworks inside of a Bears offense implied to score just 19 points. None of these backs need to be in starting lineups, particularly in a likely trailing game-script if the Bears’ status as 8.5-point underdogs is any indication of how this Sunday night showdown with the Chargers will go.
Smith’s explanation of Bijan Robinson’s Week 7 absence provided more additional questions than answers, but the electric rookie RB is at least practicing and seemingly set to reassume his role as the backfield’s 1A option.
Maybe? Who knows. This offense is hilariously balanced at both RB and TE, while it’s still a struggle for Drake London to see eight-plus targets more weeks than not.
Annoying fantasy usage notes aside: This offense has shown plenty of ability, posting top-12 marks in explosive run- and pass-play alike. Sixteenth in successful play rate (34.2%), Atlanta has done some legit good things despite their lowly rankings in EPA per play (-0.112, No. 24) and points per game (16.4, No. 29).
The larger issue here: Desmond Ridder’s inability to take care of the football in recent weeks.
Tied for “first” with 15 turnover-worthy plays already this season (PFF), Ridder finds himself as one of just 10 players at the position who have thrown an interception, taken a sack and/or fumbled on 10% of their dropbacks this season:
Not exactly great company — especially when Ridder is only being asked to operate the league’s most run-heavy offense in pass rate over expectation.
As The Ringer’s Benjamin Solak pointed out: The Falcons are fifth in offensive EPA lost to turnovers. This group could truly be lethal if Ridder can find a way to be more careful with the football; just realize that’s hardly a given to happen.
Side note: Remember when the Falcons and the rest of the NFL seemed to have a real chance to acquire Lamar Jackson, and they all essentially declined? Good times.
Fantasy managers should continue to prepare to be underwhelmed by Robinson, London and Kyle Pitts (who is unironically being outscored by Jonnu Smith this season) … unless this upcoming soft schedule finally yields something resembling high-end efficiency out of Ridder.
Of course, we can’t guarantee that Arthur Smith will start directing the football to who we want, but it’d make sense if this group as a whole starts gelling a bit more thanks to this smashable schedule.
Well, they kind of have during the final 15 minutes of action this season.
Seriously: Pickett has gone from objectively one of the league’s worst QBs during the first 45 minutes of games, to honestly one of the best during the final quarter of action.
Among 34 qualified QBs…
Quarters | PFF Pass Grade | YPA | Adj Cmp % | Passer Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-3 | 53.0 (No. 31) | 6 (No. 29) | 65.4% (No. 34) | 75.9 (No. 29) |
| 4 | 76.5 (No. 5) | 10.1 (No. 1) | 77.8% (No. 10) | 102.8 (No. 5) |
Note that Pickett didn’t throw any fourth quarter TDs in the Steelers’ two blowout losses to the Texans (30-6) and 49ers (30-7), meaning his late-game success hasn’t simply been the result of meaningless garbage time production.
We’ve established the Steelers are capable of moving the ball efficiently through the air during the final 15 minutes of football, so why is everything so hard to start the game?
A few factors certainly haven’t helped:
Similar to Atlanta: Things are extra frustrating here because even something close to average QB play could open up bunches of reliable fantasy options. George Pickens and Diontae Johnson are both in the WR2 conversation anyway, but their respective roles and talent have WR1-level upside in a higher-efficiency passing game.
A similar sentiment is true for Najee Harris and Jaylen Warren: It’s not their fault that the Steelers have just two total RB rush attempts inside the five-yard line this season — tied for the second-lowest mark in the NFL.
Ultimately, only the Texans and Giants have scored fewer TDs than the Steelers since Matt Canada took over as offensive coordinator in 2021. Reasonable enough matchups ahead against the Jaguars, Titans and Packers might not be enough to take this offense from bad to decent, but it can’t hurt!
It certainly seems like a good idea. The rookie has now posted 6-64-1, 3-28-1 and 7-123-2 receiving lines since his Week 4 goose-egg, with the latter performance somehow being even more impressive than the numbers indicate considering he was close to scoring two ADDITIONAL times.
The 2023 NFL Draft’s 23rd overall pick is on pace to catch 70 passes for 971 yards and 15 (!) TDs – and those numbers could ultimately look small if he continues to be featured as the passing game’s No. 1 option in the absence of Justin Jefferson (hamstring, IR).

Oct 23, 2023; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Jordan Addison (3) celebrates his touchdown against the San Francisco 49ers in the first quarter at U.S. Bank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brad Rempel-USA TODAY Sports
Overall, Addison has earned a whopping 38% of the offense's air yards over the past two weeks — a mark not too far off from what Jefferson (41.4%, 10th) put forward during the first five weeks of the season.
Addison, for a lack of a better word, is good.
Addison actually has fewer targets than T.J. Hockenson (19 vs. 15) over the past two weeks, and K.J. Osborn (11) will stay involved as well; just realize you had better have a DAMN good reason to put this ascending talent anywhere near your fantasy bench as the No. 1 WR of an offense that ranks among the league’s top-three units in passing yards and TDs through seven weeks.
Overall, the rookie is my WR14 on the week and the WR18 in the Fantasy Life consensus rankings.
Some of the season’s biggest underperformers in terms of rank in PPR points per game compared to preseason ADP come from the WR position’s crop of second-year talents:
And this doesn’t even include guys like Christian Watson, Treylon Burks and Jameson Williams, who haven’t really had the opportunity to boom or bust due to injuries/suspension.
George Pickens and Romeo Doubs are pretty much the only second-year wide-outs who have balled out in a meaningful way for most of 2023 — what gives!
Well, none of the top-four receivers have exactly been blessed with anything resembling decent QB play, while the latter is stuck in a freewheeling rotation that regularly features as many as six different Chiefs WRs during the course of any given week.
Out of all these underperformers, I lean strongest toward Olave finding a meaningful way to break out down the stretch:
Let’s zoom out for a second and simply look at Ridley’s 2023 season as a whole without overly weighting last Thursday Night’s brutal 1-5-0 performance:
Not exactly the consistent WR1 goodness that some thought was on the table after watching the ex-Falcons talent go through that one ladder drill really fast back in August, but also not someone who exactly deserves to be hitting the waiver wire.
I get it: Ridley’s performance has been disappointing and he legitimately deserves to be ranked as the No. 2 WR inside his own offense at this point. That said, Ridley's average of 11 PPR points per game is right there with fellow good, not great, fantasy options like DeVonta Smith (11.8), Tyler Lockett (11.7), Amari Cooper (11.5) and DeAndre Hopkins (10.8).
It’s hardly a guarantee that all of those one-time baller WRs truly get back to posting big-time numbers anytime soon in 2023; just realize Ridley’s overall production hasn’t been as “holy SHIT” bad as social media during a primetime stinker would make you believe.
While betting heavily against T.J. Watt and company is never a great idea, Ridley and Kirk are set up well against a Steelers secondary that has allowed the third-most PPR points per game to opposing WRs this season. Fire up both Kirk (consensus rank: WR18.3) and Ridley (WR29.5) as recommended starts in leagues of most shapes and sizes ahead of this smashable spot.
Well, the utilization over the past two weeks with all three parties healthy seemingly points in the favor of Javonte Williams:
It'd be a lot cooler if Williams had a more dominant snap share, but things at least trended towards him being the TRUE bell-cow option in Week 7 after all three parties were fairly evenly involved in Week 6.
On the one hand, Williams has an NFL-high 77 touches without a TD this season — nobody else is over 50.
On the other, the third-year talent has played his best football over the past two weeks, passing the eye test on his way to posting elite marks in yards per carry (5.4 in Weeks 6-7 vs. 3.6 in Weeks 1-4), yards after contact per carry (4.5 vs. 2.3) and missed tackles forced per carry (0.36 vs. 0.13).
This Broncos offense isn't exactly a gold mine for fantasy goodness, but their standing as the league's 19th-ranked scoring offense is at least quite a bit better than last year's dead-last finish. Williams is a consensus top-32 RB in the Fantasy Life rankings and stands as a recommended FLEX option in standard and half-PPR formats especially.
Last thing: Shoutout to Jaleel McLaughlin for putting together some of the best per-carry numbers of any RB in the NFL this season. Literally only De’Von Achane has been more efficient when looking at yards after contact and missed tackles forced per carry:
Of course, McLaughlin doesn’t have the sort of requisite volume to necessitate starting treatment in fantasy land, but you could imagine what it’d be like if he did (side note: Add Tyjae Spears to your fantasy bench if at all possible. Cool? Cool).
Things certainly haven’t been going great, particularly in the first half: Green Bay has scored a total of *six* points during the first 30 minutes of action over their last four games.
Credit to Jordan Love and company for usually proving capable of staging a comeback and making things interesting late; just realize it'd be a lot cooler if this offense could sustain some level of consistency throughout four consecutive quarters of action.
Of course, it is hard to maintain offensive consistency when Love has functioned as arguably the single-most inaccurate passer in football:
The context of Love boasting the league’s second-highest average target depth (9.8 yards) matters, but still: This offense would suddenly look a helluva lot more lethal if their fourth-year QB could most consistently make the sort of layup throws that have been missing from this offense for most of the season.
Don’t get it twisted: Love has displayed some real highs this season (especially early on). His arm talent and athleticism force defenses to account for virtually every square inch of the field for better and (at this point mostly) worse.
In fantasy land, Love’s penchant for taking off and running has been very valuable and one of the main reasons why he’s work as the QB8 in fantasy point per game through seven weeks: His average of 4.2 fantasy points per game from purely rushing production is the 10th-highest mark among all QBs to play at least five games this season.
Up next is a Vikings defense that has blitzed on a league-high 63.3% of their opponent's dropbacks. While Love actually boasts top-12 marks in PFF pass grade and passer rating against the blitz this season, it wouldn’t be surprising if life in this offense continues to present more struggle than joy in the near term.
Maybe! He certainly dominated usage and made the sort of plays that should lead to even more playing time down the road.
Of course, there is the reality that Royce Freeman (12-66-0) made more out of his rush attempts than Henderson (18-61-1).
After the game head coach Sean McVay said that he was pleased with both Henderson and Freeman, noting “You can expect to see, I would imagine, a similar deal (this week), and then we'll see how Myles (Gaskin) and Zach (Evans) fit into that equation."
Ultimately, McVay is one of few coaches in the NFL who has been willing to feature *one* true workhorse RB over the years. Whether it be Todd Gurley, C.J. Anderson, Cam Akers, Kyren Williams or even Henderson himself: Identifying the Rams lead RB has been one of the more consistent paths to obtaining high-end fantasy production out there over the years.
While Micah Parsons and company are absolutely no joke, this Cowboys defense hasn’t been all that lethal against opposing rushing attacks this season:
Don’t expect Henderson to post Kyren-esque RB1 production; this passing attack is far too condensed around Cooper Kupp and Puka Nacua to expect that. Still, Henderson projects for 15-plus combined carries and targets in the near term — a role worthy of low-end RB2 treatment regardless of the matchup.
You can target Henderson on Underdog in Week 8 and get a 100% deposit match of up to $500 when you sign up below with promo code LIFE!
Every week I put together matchup-specific charts to help determine the week’s biggest advantages by combining offensive and defensive rates in explosive plays, pressure, yards before contact, passing yards per dropback and EPA. This provides singular metrics to help quantity advantages on both sides of the ball instead of always having to go, “Offense ranks x, defense ranks y.”
The following three players might have a red flag or two in their Week 8 projection — that’s why they aren’t ranked as sure-thing top-12 options at their position — but I believe there’s enough of an edge in the matchup to warrant enhanced optimism:
Not everything deserves multiple paragraphs of attention. We got lives to live and dogs to throw tennis balls to, ya know? That said: There are still TONS of other nuggets that I found interesting while reviewing Week 7 and researching Week 8. Here they are in no particular order.
