Tag: dak prescott

DFS Week 5 Lineups: Gibbs Anchors Builds in Jets–Cowboys and Lions–Bengals Shootouts

DFS Week 5 Lineups: Gibbs Anchors Builds in Jets–Cowboys and Lions–Bengals Shootouts

Several games this week set up for fireworks, with matchups pointing to high fantasy scoring across the slate. Strap in — this could be a wild ride.


DraftKings Lineup

Play Breakdown:
Dak Prescott headlines the DraftKings lineup, paired with Jake Ferguson for the QB–TE stack against the Jets. Garrett Wilson runs it back on the other side, giving this lineup full game correlation in what should be a shootout.

For the first time this year, the lineup doesn’t feature a RB–DST stack — with the Cardinals’ RB situation in shambles, there’s no way to pair them up, though Arizona’s defense still provides salary relief.

Jahmyr Gibbs anchors the RBs, while Saquon Barkley takes the FLEX spot with his locked-in volume and touchdown potential. Woody Marks offers strong value with his growing role in Houston. Wan’Dale Robinson and Nick Westbrook-Ikhine round out the WR core as affordable paths to targets.


FanDuel Lineup

Play Breakdown:
Justin Fields headlines the FanDuel build, bringing rushing upside in the same Jets–Cowboys game we’re already targeting on DraftKings.

Jahmyr Gibbs repeats as the anchor RB, joined by Javonte Williams of Dallas in a high-usage role. Rome Odunze and Garrett Wilson may be absent here, but Marvin Harrison Jr. and Jaxon Smith-Njigba bring plenty of ceiling, while Tetairoa McMillan provides a salary-friendly WR breakout candidate.

Mason Taylor checks in as the budget TE play, Woody Marks repeats in FLEX as a value RB, and Detroit’s defense gets the nod against Cincinnati.


FanDuel vs DraftKings

  • DraftKings: Dak–Ferguson stack with Garrett Wilson as the bring-back, plus Barkley’s high-volume FLEX role.
  • FanDuel: Justin Fields’ rushing ceiling, Gibbs again as the anchor, and Javonte Williams for added RB stability.
  • Overlap: Gibbs, Marks, and game environments (Jets–Cowboys, Lions–Bengals) that point toward high-scoring outcomes.

DFS Angle of the Week

  • Jets–Cowboys looks like a featured shootout — exposure on both QBs and key pass catchers.
  • Lions–Bengals could be the juiciest matchup on the slate, with Gibbs set up for a big game.
  • Woody Marks is the sharp value play at RB, with expanding usage and the ability to unlock bigger spends.
  • No RB–DST stack on DraftKings this week, a first, thanks to Arizona’s chaos at running back.
  • Marvin Harrison Jr. and Jaxon Smith-Njigba headline the WRs with the highest big-play ceilings.

Profit Tracker

As always, results are tracked in units — each entry is worth $1, no matter the actual buy-in.

Weeks 1–3 Combined:

  • FanDuel: 6 units in → 16.4 units won (+10.4 units)
  • DraftKings: 6 units in → 5.6 units won (–0.4 units)
  • Total Weeks 1–3: +10 units

Week 4:

  • FanDuel: 2 units in → 0 units won (–2 units)
  • DraftKings: 2 units in → 0 units won (–2 units)
  • Week 4: –4 units

Season Total: +6 units

DFS Week 2 Lineups: Ricky Pearsall the Key Value Play Across Both Sites

DFS Week 2 Lineups: Ricky Pearsall the Key Value Play Across Both Sites

This week’s builds lean on shaky secondaries, reliable target-getters, and running backs with touchdown equity. Two platforms, two lineups, one goal: balanced floor with upside ceiling.


FanDuel Lineup

Play Breakdown:
Drake Maye gets the call in this build. Miami’s secondary made Daniel Jones look good last week, and Maye has the chance to follow that script — though I’m not fully “all in” until New England dials up designed runs for him. Pairing him with Hunter Henry creates a cheap QB–TE stack.

At RB, Jahmyr Gibbs brings efficiency and receiving juice, while Derrick Henry is Baltimore’s workhorse, the focal point of their offense with multi-touchdown upside every week.

At WR:

  • Hollywood Brown carries shootout potential.
  • Ricky Pearsall projects as San Francisco’s WR1 with George Kittle out. Don’t be scared off by Mac Jones — he’s shown he can feed his top receivers. Last year Brian Thomas Jr. averaged 16 PPG with Jones compared to 12.5 with Trevor Lawrence. That’s the template for Pearsall.
  • Zay Flowers complements Henry in Baltimore’s offense as their top underneath weapon.

A.J. Brown fills FLEX as Philly’s alpha WR, while the Lions defense is the home value play.


DraftKings Lineup

Play Breakdown:
Dak Prescott leads this lineup, stacked with CeeDee Lamb for the classic QB–WR pairing. Against the Giants, this combination carries both safety and explosive upside.

Chase Brown and Kyren Williams are the midrange RB plays priced for steady volume.

At WR:

  • CeeDee Lamb is the alpha.
  • Ricky Pearsall ties the lineup together as San Francisco’s WR1 with Kittle sidelined. Mac Jones is an upgrade in this context, given his history of feeding WR1s.
  • Tyquan Thornton is the cheap dart throw.

Hunter Henry repeats as TE, Amon-Ra St. Brown locks in FLEX as a target machine, and the Rams defense rounds out the roster as the budget DST.


FanDuel vs DraftKings

  • FanDuel: Takes a swing on Maye against Miami’s secondary, but limits exposure until his designed run usage ticks up. Spends big at RB with Gibbs and Henry.
  • DraftKings: Relies on the Dak–CeeDee stack, balances out with Brown and Williams at RB, and still finds room for Pearsall as the glue play.

The overlap: Ricky Pearsall as the WR1 value, Hunter Henry as the TE anchor, and Derrick Henry as the workhorse RB centerpiece.


DFS Angle of the Week

This slate is about exploiting weak secondaries and trusting target roles.

  • Miami can’t stop the pass, which set up Jones last week and now gives Maye opportunity.
  • Derrick Henry is the engine of Baltimore’s offense and always in play for a heavy workload and multiple scores.
  • Dak Prescott to CeeDee Lamb is the clean DraftKings stack with volume and touchdown equity.
  • Ricky Pearsall is the breakout candidate — Kittle is out, Mac Jones is under center, and Pearsall is lined up to be the top option.

If Maye delivers through the air and Dak–Lamb connect, both builds have the stability of Henry and the upside of Pearsall to swing tournaments.


Profit Tracker

I’m tracking results in units — each entry is worth $1, no matter what the actual buy-in is. It doesn’t matter if you’re playing in a $0.10 tournament, $1, $10, $100, or more — you scale to your comfort level. I spread my play around, but for this tracker, every tournament counts the same. This way, you’ll see a clear picture of success (or lack thereof) without dollar signs getting in the way.

Week 1 Results:

  • FanDuel: 2 units in → 11 units won (+9 units)
  • DraftKings: 2 units in → 3.6 units won (+1.6 units)
  • Total Week 1: +10.6 units

Season Total: +10.6 units

Only Jerry: Cowboys Ship Off Parsons, Keep the Circus Alive

Only Jerry: Cowboys Ship Off Parsons, Keep the Circus Alive

I was born in the mid-80s, but it was the early ’90s that stamped my sports fandom. Like most kids, I latched onto a team—though these days, after nearly 15 years covering sports, my rooting interest has morphed. Now it’s less about colors on a jersey and more about the people I’ve met, the players I respect, and, of course, my fantasy squads. (Yes, I still sneak in a guy or two from my childhood team. No, I won’t draft their rivals. Some habits die hard.)

That childhood team? The Dallas Cowboys. Blame—or credit—Drew Pearson. When I was five or six, my uncle took me to a sports bar plastered wall-to-wall with Cowboys memorabilia. Pearson, the legend himself, handed me a hat and signed it “Drew Pearson 88.” Next thing I knew, I was watching Dallas lift Lombardi Trophies in ’92, ’93, and ’95. Hook, line, sinker.

Thankfully, adulthood and a press pass pried me out of that fan-cage. I’ve been spared the heartbreak of watching Jerry Jones sabotage his own empire for three decades.

But Thursday? That old Cowboys sting flared again. Jerry traded away Micah Parsons—yes, the perennial DPOY candidate—for two first-rounders and Kenny Clark. On any other team this would be shocking. In Dallas? It was a classic “Only Jerry” moment.

The move echoes the Khalil Mack trade from 2018, when the Raiders shipped their star to Chicago. Difference is, the Raiders at least waited for the offseason. Jerry pulled the trigger a week before a primetime opener against the defending champs and division rival. Brilliant timing.

And the return? Let’s do the math. Mack netted the Raiders two 1s, a 3rd, and a 6th. Those became Josh Jacobs (a hit) and a cast of forgettable names like Damon Arnett and Bryan Edwards. Not exactly franchise-saving. Now Dallas is banking on Green Bay’s late-20s first-rounders. Look at their own recent picks in that range: Tyler Smith, Mazi Smith, Tyler Guyton. Two solid linemen, sure. But Mazi was supposed to fix the run defense already—and now Kenny Clark is here to cover that same hole.

The draft record is decent, but even that success often feels like it happened in spite of Jerry. Flash back to 2014 when the room had to drag him away from Johnny Manziel so they could take Zack Martin. One’s a bust. The other’s a future Hall of Famer. Guess which side Jerry was on.

Even if Dallas nails these two new first-rounders, what are the odds they stick around? Parsons bolted because contract talks went nuclear. Jerry openly admitted negotiating with Parsons himself instead of his agent—a move that might’ve crossed the CBA. Dak Prescott’s extension dragged to the last minute. CeeDee Lamb’s wasn’t any cleaner. This isn’t team-building, it’s soap opera scripting.

The truth is, Jerry doesn’t just want to win. He wants the spotlight. He’s the only owner who doubles as GM, makes weekly media rounds, and hires coaches who never actually get to steer the ship. Despite being 82, there’s zero sign he’ll loosen his grip.

So Cowboys fans, buckle in. That 30-year Super Bowl drought isn’t ending soon. Parsons gone, dysfunction steady, and the Jones Show still center stage. Only Jerry.