Swinging for the Fences
If you play Daily Fantasy NFL and consume any of the industrial sludge passed off as “expert analysis,” you’ve probably noticed something: they’ve been abysmal this year. Picking chalk that busts, overhyping overpriced guys, and generally torching your bankroll with the confidence of a toddler playing with matches.
Meanwhile, credit where credit’s due — my Stain co-conspirator Shaun has been handing out sharper calls than most of the blue-check DFS cartel. The receipts are there. Compare his takes to the big names, and you’d swear one group had access to actual game film while the other was drafting based on vibes and horoscopes.
Me? Guilty as charged — I haven’t been giving DFS readers much meat so far. Time to fix that.
How I Roll
My usual DFS weekend looks like this:
- One 50/50 for the main slate.
- One cash entry for each of the early and late windows.
- A Captain Showdown dart throw.
- And one absolute “swing for the fences” lineup — the scratcher ticket you buy knowing full well it’s going to flame out, but dreaming it might hit the jackpot.
The swing lineup is what we’re focuing on this week. It isn’t about safety. It’s about finding the high-scoring chaos game, stacking it properly, and praying to the variance gods. Sometimes you belly-flop into a 9-6 defensive slog. Sometimes you swim in gold. And every now and again, the stars align where you’re more likely to be Scrooge McDuck than you are Mortimer and Randolph in Coming to America. There’s one for the kids, right?
The Chaos Game: Bears vs. Raiders
This week, that chaos game is Bears vs. Raiders.
- Two atrocious defenses.
- Affordable playmakers across the board.
- The kind of matchup that could plausibly finish 38-35 with both fanbases still demanding their coaches be fired.
Neither of these teams is sniffing the playoffs, but DFS doesn’t care about banners. It cares about box scores. Somebody has to score those touchdowns.
Quarterbacks
- Caleb Williams ($5800 DK): Scattershot accuracy? Sure. But with time to throw against a limp Vegas pass rush, his rushing floor plus upside makes him a strong play.
- Geno Smith ($5400 DK): Loves the deep ball, and the Bears’ secondary is basically a MASH unit. He’s a coin flip with Caleb, but I lean Williams for the legs.
Pass Catchers
- Jakobi Meyers ($5400 DK): Perpetually underrated. Free square.
- Rome Odunze ($6300 DK): Target magnet and worth the spend.
- DJ Moore ($5600 DK): Affordable, volatile, and capable of a slate-breaking day.
- Brock Bowers ($5800 DK): Great ceiling, but I’m squeamish about the knee.
Flier zone: Cole Kmet or Colston Loveland if you want to galaxy-brain tight end exposure, but it’s dicey.
Running Backs
- Ashton Jeanty ($6200 DK): Finally priced like a rookie instead of a clone of peak Bijan. Dynamic pass-catcher, worth the tag.
- D’Andre Swift ($5400 DK): Hip issue clouds things, but if active, he’s a viable PPR play.
If you’ve got the extra $800, I’m siding with Jeanty.
The Bonus
Because you’re not hemorrhaging salary here, you can jam a couple premium studs into the same build:
- Derrick Henry: Angry bounce-back game incoming after two costly fumbles.
- Puka Nacua: WR1 upside every week if his hammies stay intact. Against Indy’s pressure-less defense? Yes, please.
The Asterisk
This could either detonate the slate or turn into Bears 6, Raiders 3, with everyone involved carted off by the third quarter. That’s the deal when you swing big. Know the risk, accept the variance, and lean into the chaos.
Closing Thought
DFS is gambling dressed up in spreadsheets. Stack your Bears and Raiders, sprinkle in a king like Henry, and don’t cry if it flames out. It’s called a swing for the fences, not a bunt down the line. If it connects, we’re all drinking on your dime.

