Laughing Hyena
  • Home
  • Hyena Games
  • Esports
  • NFT Gaming
  • Crypto Trends
  • Game Reviews
  • Game Updates
  • GameFi Guides
  • Shop
Tag:

week

Stellar Blade teases something is coming "in one week" and it looks like a horror-themed DLC or crossover event
Game Reviews

Stellar Blade teases something is coming “in one week” and it looks like a horror-themed DLC or crossover event

by admin September 20, 2025


Stellar Blade developer Shift Up has dropped a mysterious image onto social media, leading some fans to speculate it could be teasing a horror event or even crossover promotion with the upcoming release of Konami’s horror, Silent Hill f.

While there’s no cheeky copyright notices or any obvious indication that Stellar Blade is taking us to Silent Hill, Shift Up did share an image of a very Silent Hill Otherworld-esque world onto Stellar Blade’s X/Twitter page, complete with crumbling walls, a dilapidated ceiling, and a very familiar rust-red hue. Hmm.

Here’s the launch trailer for Stellar Blade.Watch on YouTube

The text – which reads “in one week…” alongside a stars emoji and the hashtag Stellar Blade – similarly doesn’t give much away, but coincidentally enough, Silent Hill f – the first mainline Silent Hill game since 2012 – is due to launch next week on 25th September.

Image credit: Shift Up / X

As both franchises have partnered with other games for promotional purposes, it’s certainly possible, but it could, of course, just be a spooky-themed time-limited event or another horror game or movie with Halloween just a few short weeks away. Whatever it is, hopefully we’ll find out soon.

Earlier this month, Shift Up announced it intends to expand the Stellar Blade franchise with “various derivative works”. A new financial report explored the success of its different products, including Stellar Blade, highlighting the game’s impressive performance both at launch and with its port to PC.

The report added (via machine translation): “Through this, [Stellar Blade] was able to effectively secure a new user base and further strengthen its position as a global AAA franchise IP. We plan to develop various derivative works to expand the [Stellar Blade] IP so that [Stellar Blade] can establish itself as a well-made IP.”



Source link

September 20, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Fantasy playbook: NFL Week 3 scores, projections, matchups
Esports

Fantasy playbook: NFL Week 3 scores, projections, matchups

by admin September 20, 2025


  • Mike ClaySep 19, 2025, 06:56 AM ET

    Close

      Mike Clay is a senior writer for fantasy football and the NFL at ESPN. Mike is a member of the FSWA Hall of Fame. His projections power the ESPN Fantasy Football game, and he also appears on “Fantasy Football Now” and the Fantasy Focus Football podcast.

Welcome to The Playbook for Week 3, which kicked off Thursday with the Dolphins at the Bills.

This column features score projections, over/unders, win probabilities, and, of course, easily digestible fantasy advice for seasonlong leagues and DFS. This guide should help you with all sorts of decision-making, including sit/start decisions, last-minute waiver adds and lineup choices.

Additionally, we have folded the Shadow Reports, previously a separate column, into the game-by-game breakdowns here. Using our play-by-play data, we’re able to identify defensive schemes and where each wide receiver and cornerback lines up on each play. By tracking these WR/CB matchups, including potential shadow situations, we can offer the best projections, rankings, sit/start advice and waiver wire suggestions each week.

All of this advice is centered on 12-team PPR leagues with relatively standard scoring and lineup settings (1 QB, 2 RB, 3 WR, 1 flex, 1 K, 1 D/ST), although I’ll often mention “shallow” or “deep” leagues for some starters. The charts show all players who have been projected for at least 6.0 fantasy points this week, as well as all D/STs. “Matchup” is automatically determined using a proprietary metric that factors in raw and volume-adjusted fantasy points allowed to each position by the opposing defense this season.

(Editor’s note: Projections and rankings will align almost perfectly, but sometimes when a projection is close, a player might be ranked slightly higher or lower because of other factors, including upside or risk. This column is subject to updates during the weekend, although at the very minimum, rankings will be updated on the site and projections will always be updated inside the game leading up to kickoff.)

ATL-CAR | GB-CLE | HOU-JAX | CIN-MIN | PIT-NE | LAR-PHI | NYJ-TB
IND-TEN | LV-WAS | DEN-LAC | NO-SEA | DAL-CHI | ARI-SF | KC-NYG | DET-BAL

Projected score: Packers 24, Browns 15

RANK

PLAYER

PROJ

MATCHUP

QB1616.0

Good

QB3210.6

Shaky

RB916.9

Poor

RB369.0

Poor

WR3812.0

Average

WR5010.4

Good

WR549.7

Average

WR578.8

Good

WR638.4

Good

TE511.1

Poor

TE139.4

Good

TE198.2

Good

DST18.1

Great

DST224.5

Shaky

Lineup locks: Josh Jacobs, Tucker Kraft

Fantasy scoop: Quinshon Judkins made his pro debut in Week 2 and played more than expected. The second-round rookie soaked up 10 carries and three targets on 19 snaps. Game script allowed Jerome Ford to lead the Cleveland backfield in snaps (35) for the second week in a row, but he was limited to six carries to go along with his six targets. Dylan Sampson crashed back to earth after a strong Week 1, totaling four carries and three targets on 17 snaps. Judkins played well (71 yards), and his role only figures to increase, although Ford appears to be a real threat for passing down work, with Sampson also likely to chip in here or there. Judkins might work his way into the RB2 mix at some point soon, but he’s safest as a fringe flex this week against a Packers defense that has held opposing backs to 2.4 yards per carry (second lowest) so far this season.

Over/under: 38.7 (Lowest)
Win probability: Packers 81% (2nd highest)

Projected score: Colts 24, Titans 19

RANK

PLAYER

PROJ

MATCHUP

QB1118.2

Shaky

QB2914.1

Shaky

RB418.7

Average

RB2014.7

Average

WR2313.0

Average

WR4810.5

Great

WR539.8

Average

WR608.7

Great

TE411.6

Good

TE169.4

Average

DST76.9

Great

DST195.3

Poor

Lineup locks: Jonathan Taylor, Tony Pollard, Calvin Ridley, Tyler Warren

Shadow Report: Michael Pittman Jr. is a candidate to draw shadow coverage from L’Jarius Sneed. Sneed shadowed Courtland Sutton when he was on the field in Week 1, then full-time shadowed Davante Adams on his perimeter routes in Week 2. Both Sutton (granted, Sneed was limited in that game) and Adams put together strong stat lines, but a healthy Sneed is one of the game’s top cover corners, so this matchup is not to be completely disregarded. Pittman doesn’t draw shadows as often as some No. 1 receivers, although Pat Surtain II did travel with him at times in Week 2, which helps explain his 4-40-0 receiving line. Pittman is already a fringe flex option, so he’s safest left on your bench in Week 3.

Over/under: 42.6 (12th highest)
Win probability: Colts 69% (6th highest)

Projected Score: Vikings 21, Bengals 20

Lineup locks: Chase Brown, Jordan Mason, Justin Jefferson, Ja’Marr Chase, T.J. Hockenson

Fantasy scoop: Joe Burrow is out for three-plus months, which means Jake Browning will take over as Bengals quarterback. Browning played a majority of the snaps in seven games in place of Burrow in 2023. Browning averaged 19.1 fantasy PPG those weeks, which was fourth best among QBs during the span. The Bengals were very pass-heavy with Burrow under center in 2023 (12% pass rate over expected) and, while still pass-first, they were more balanced with Browning (+4%). He totaled 14 TDs and 7 INTs in those seven games and adds just enough with his legs to place him in the QB2 mix going forward. Chase was limited to a 29-383-1 receiving line in six games with Browning (12.2 FF PPG) in 2023, but that was prior to his big 2024 breakout and he was very productive with Browning under center last week (14-165-1). Tee Higgins produced 15-328-3 in five games (13.2 PPG) with Browning in 2023 and is now more of a WR3/flex. Browning is obviously a downgrade from Burrow, but he averaged 267 passing yards per game in 2023 and threw at least one TD pass in all seven of those games. Brown and Chase remain lineup locks.

Fantasy scoop: Minnesota will be without J.J. McCarthy and Aaron Jones this week. McCarthy’s absence shouldn’t affect the passing game much, as, at this point his young career, he might not be much better than replacement Carson Wentz (McCarthy totaled 301 yards, two TDs and three INTs during Weeks 1-2). Jefferson and Hockenson can remain in lineups. Jones’ injury means Mason should be in lineups. The 26-year-old has minimal competition for snaps (Zavier Scott is next up on the depth chart), is a terrific rusher (career 5.2 YPC ranks third and 2.5 YAC ranks first among RBs with 200-plus carries since he entered the league) and was actually used a bit as a receiver last week (career-high 14% target share). Mason will be very busy against a Bengals defense that has allowed the second-most fantasy points and a league-high three TDs to opposing RBs.

Over/under: 41.3 (13th highest)
Win probability: Vikings 54% (14th highest)

Projected score: Steelers 22, Patriots 22

RANK

PLAYER

PROJ

MATCHUP

QB1218.0

Good

QB2415.3

Good

RB1316.1

Average

RB2911.9

Good

RB3310.6

Average

RB398.8

Good

WR1814.5

Good

WR4910.5

Good

WR588.7

Good

WR648.4

Good

TE119.6

Shaky

TE159.1

Average

TE237.3

Shaky

DST145.7

Good

DST175.6

Good

Lineup locks: Jaylen Warren, DK Metcalf

Fantasy scoop: It was expected that second-round rookie TreVeyon Henderson was going to take lead back duties from Rhamondre Stevenson in New England this season. That hasn’t happened … at least not yet. After out-snapping Henderson 45-23 in Week 1, Stevenson held a 36-16 edge last week. In addition to dominating the snaps, Stevenson holds an 18-8 edge in carries, 9-8 edge in targets and 33-26 edge in routes. Henderson has played well when called on (4.6 YPC, and he caught all eight of his targets for 54 yards) and his role only figures to grow, but at least for now, he should be relegated to the fantasy bench. Stevenson (169 yards on 25 touches this season) is seeing just enough work to place him in the flex discussion against a Steelers defense that allowed 16-plus fantasy points to both Breece Hall and Kenneth Walker III.

Over/under: 44.2 (11th highest)
Win probability: Steelers 51% (Lowest)

Projected score: Eagles 27, Rams 23

Lineup locks: Jalen Hurts, Saquon Barkley, Kyren Williams, Puka Nacua, Davante Adams, A.J. Brown

Fantasy scoop: Eagles wide receivers are off to a very slow start, but don’t panic just yet. As noted last week, Brown and DeVonta Smith were slowed by Dallas’ extremely zone-heavy scheme in the opener. The team made an effort to get them going in Week 2, and while Brown was held to an ugly 27 yards, he was peppered with nine targets (41% share). Smith was slightly better, totaling 53 yards on six targets. Pass volume has been down (45 total pass attempts) and all five of the offensive TDs have come on the ground (compared to 58% in 2024). Both receivers remain featured pieces of a good Eagles offense. Brown is still a lineup lock and Smith is best viewed as a fringe WR3.

Shadow Report: Adams can expect to see shadow coverage from Quinyon Mitchell. Philly’s top corner traveled with George Pickens in Week 1 and, though it wasn’t the entire game, he shadowed Hollywood Brown on six of his first seven perimeter routes last week. Why Adams and not Nacua? Similar to CeeDee Lamb, Nacua spends a lot of time in the slot, whereas Pickens and Adams primarily align out wide. Mitchell, one of the game’s top young corners, will see a ton of Adams, whereas Nacua will work often against Cooper DeJean in the slot. The Rams’ top two receivers will still be extremely busy (they both have a 33% target share this season), so even in what might be a harder matchup than usual, they remain top fantasy options.

Over/under: 49.3 (4th highest)
Win probability: Eagles 63% (8th highest)

Projected score: Buccaneers 27, Jets 19

RANK

PLAYER

PROJ

MATCHUP

QB718.6

Average

QB2515.7

Average

RB717.9

Good

RB1715.9

Average

RB407.2

Good

WR1415.5

Poor

WR1714.6

Average

WR3112.7

Average

WR628.4

Average

TE227.2

Good

DST37.1

Average

DST264.3

Average

Lineup locks: Baker Mayfield, Bucky Irving, Breece Hall, Mike Evans, Garrett Wilson, Emeka Egbuka

Shadow Report: Evans is a candidate for shadow coverage courtesy of Sauce Gardner. Gardner did not shadow against Buffalo’s wide receiver rotation last week, but did the last time he faced a clear No. 1 perimeter target: DK Metcalf in Week 1. Gardner was on Metcalf on all 29 of his perimeter routes, holding Pittsburgh’s top receiver to 12.3 fantasy points. Shadowed in both Week 1 (A.J. Terrell Jr.) and Week 2 (Derek Stingley Jr.), Evans is off to a slow start, totaling a 10-107-0 receiving line on 19 targets. Gardner presents a tough matchup, though Evans’ 29% target share is enough to keep him squarely in the WR2 mix.

Over/under: 46.1 (7th highest)
Win probability: Buccaneers 76% (3rd highest)

Projected score: Commanders 27, Raiders 19

RANK

PLAYER

PROJ

MATCHUP

QB1617.0

Average

QB2215.2

Average

RB1415.4

Shaky

RB2811.2

Poor

WR1614.7

Shaky

WR2312.9

Good

WR3012.6

Good

WR627.8

Shaky

TE214.9

Great

TE109.6

Poor

DST86.8

Good

DST165.6

Average

Lineup locks: Ashton Jeanty, Jakobi Meyers, Terry McLaurin, Deebo Samuel, Brock Bowers

Fantasy scoop: Austin Ekeler is out for the season, which opens the door for Jacory Croskey-Merritt, Jeremy McNichols and Chris Rodriguez to handle the Washington backfield. Croskey-Merritt (34 snaps, 14 carries, 15 routes, 2 targets this season) is the top bet to lead the unit in snaps and carries moving forward. However, McNichols (26 snaps, four carries, 10 routes, zero targets) is likely to take on a sizable chunk of Ekeler’s passing down role, and Rodriguez (inactive in Weeks 1-2) is a capable short-yardage/goal line option. The Raiders have locked down RBs pretty well (fifth-fewest fantasy points allowed), so while Croskey-Merritt is the top fantasy option of the unit, he’s best left on benches in Week 3.

Shadow Report: The Raiders have surrendered the fourth-most fantasy points to wide receivers, which is hardly a surprise considering their shaky cornerbacks room. That’s good news for McLaurin, Samuel and rookie Jaylin Lane, who will face off with Eric Stokes, Kyu Blu Kelly and Darnay Holmes this week. Upgrade the Washington WR room.

Over/under: 46.4 (6th highest)
Win probability: Commanders 75% (4th highest)

Projected score: Falcons 24, Panthers 21

RANK

PLAYER

PROJ

MATCHUP

QB1816.2

Shaky

QB2714.6

Poor

RB121.0

Average

RB1914.7

Poor

WR915.6

Poor

WR2113.3

Shaky

WR4510.6

Poor

WR687.6

Shaky

WR697.4

Shaky

TE129.5

Great

DST67.0

Great

DST303.2

Shaky

Lineup locks: Bijan Robinson, Chuba Hubbard, Drake London, Tetairoa McMillan

Fantasy scoop: Is Year 5 the charm for Kyle Pitts? The fantasy results haven’t been spectacular (7-59-0 and 4-37-0 receiving lines), but the 24-year-old has a career-high 21% target share through two games. He’s been on the field for 78% of Atlanta’s snaps and has run a route on 82% of the team’s pass plays, both of which are also career-high marks. Pitts’ usage is enough to put him in the fringe TE1 mix, especially against a Carolina defense that has allowed a league-high 188 yards to tight ends through two games.

Shadow Report: McMillan is a good bet to draw shadow coverage from Terrell this week, assuming of course that he is able to play. Terrell, who left Sunday’s game with a hamstring injury, shadowed Mike Evans in Week 1 and has a history of traveling with most clear No. 1 perimeter receivers. That’s the case for McMillan, who has aligned out wide on 84% of his routes and leads Carolina with 19 targets (22% share). Terrell did a nice job on Evans in Week 1, but especially considering his injury, there’s minimal reason for concern here. McMillan is a fringe WR2.

Over/under: 44.6 (10th highest)
Win probability: Falcons 62% (9th highest)

Projected score: Jaguars 22, Texans 20

RANK

PLAYER

PROJ

MATCHUP

QB1516.2

Average

QB2115.8

Good

RB2412.7

Good

RB2711.9

Shaky

WR716.9

Great

WR1315.3

Average

WR4211.5

Average

WR569.2

Great

WR598.7

Average

TE188.2

Average

TE207.7

Poor

DST126.1

Good

DST185.2

Shaky

Lineup locks: Brian Thomas Jr., Nico Collins

Fantasy scoop: Nick Chubb has settled in as Houston’s clear lead back, and that was further confirmed by Dameon Pierce being a healthy scratch on Monday night. Chubb handled 12 carries and a pair of targets on 24 snaps, which allowed him to gain 72 yards and one TD. Chubb was, however, limited to 52% of the snaps (he played 49% in Week 1), deferring the other 48% to Woody Marks and Dare Ogunbowale. Chubb is running the ball fairly well, but he remains in a timeshare and without much of a role as a receiver. He’s a flex option against the Jaguars. Marks (three carries and one target in Week 2) should see an expanded role as the season progresses, especially as a receiver, so he’s not the worst end-of-bench stash.

Shadow Report: Thomas is a good bet to see Derek Stingley Jr. shadow coverage this week. Houston’s top corner traveled with Davante Adams in Week 1 and Mike Evans in Week 2, aligning against them on a combined 44 of their 49 perimeter routes. Adams managed 7.2 fantasy points and Evans was limited to 10.6. Thomas and Stingley faced off in Week 13 last season, and though Thomas had a decent fantasy day (87 scrimmage yards and one TD on five touches), he caught just two of seven targets when covered by Stingley. Thomas posted a 5-76-1 receiving line in the Week 4 meeting, though he wasn’t shadowed in that game. Thomas is off to a very slow start to 2025 (69 yards and a rushing TD on six touches), but his target share remains strong (27%). Even in a tough matchup, he should be in lineups as a fringe WR1.

Over/under: 41.1 (14th highest)
Win probability: Jaguars 57% (13th highest)

Projected score: Chargers 23, Broncos 22

Lineup locks: Ladd McConkey, Courtland Sutton, Keenan Allen

Fantasy scoop: Troy Franklin was quiet as a situational player throughout his rookie season and even in Week 1, but perhaps we saw the start of a breakout season on Sunday. The 2024 fourth-round pick played 85% of the snaps, was targeted nine times (30% share) and totaled 100 yards and one TD on nine touches. Franklin’s big game and Denver’s wide-open No. 2 WR slot are enough to make Franklin worthy of a waiver add, though it’s worth noting that he played only 58% of the snaps in Week 1. A return to irrelevance is possible, especially with Sutton, Marvin Mims, Pat Bryant and, perhaps someday, Evan Engram in the mix, but it’s also possible the second-year receiver goes down as one of the surprise breakouts of 2025. He’s a deep league flex against the Chargers.

Shadow Report: I wouldn’t call it a lock, but Quentin Johnston could draw Pat Surtain II shadow coverage this week. Surtain tends to shadow clear No. 1 perimeter targets, as he did full time against Calvin Ridley in Week 1 and part time against Michael Pittman Jr. in Week 2. Johnston might not be Los Angeles’ top target, but with McConkey and Allen in the slot so often, Johnston (81% perimeter), who has three TDs in two games, might get the Surtain treatment. We’ve seen that in the past, with Surtain shadowing Mike Williams over Allen (2022) and Joshua Palmer over McConkey (2024). Granted, Allen, Williams and Palmer were sidelined, but Surtain did shadow Johnston full time in Week 17 back in 2023, and Johnston totaled 29 yards on five targets in the game. Johnston’s strong play and Los Angeles’ pass-heavy offense are enough to keep him in the WR3 discussion, but the bust risk is higher than usual this week.

Over/under: 45 (9th highest)
Win probability: Chargers 57% (12th highest)

Projected score: Seahawks 23, Saints 17

RANK

PLAYER

PROJ

MATCHUP

QB3014.0

Good

QB3113.2

Poor

RB1815.3

Good

RB2512.5

Good

RB3011.3

Good

WR1115.5

Average

WR3412.6

Poor

WR4610.5

Average

WR5110.1

Poor

TE810.6

Great

DST47.0

Average

DST165.8

Good

Lineup locks: Alvin Kamara, Jaxon Smith-Njigba

Fantasy scoop: Week 2 gave us little additional clarity on the Seattle backfield. Zach Charbonnet remained the “1A” back and now holds an edge over Ken Walker III in snaps (64 to 43), carries (27 to 23) and routes (22 to 16), with Walker leading in targets (four to zero). Charbonnet’s lead back role hasn’t led to production, as he has totaled 57 yards and one TD on 27 carries (2.1 YPC) and has yet to see a target. Walker struggled in Week 1 but exploded for 118 yards and one TD on 14 touches in Week 2. The production very well could lead to a larger role moving forward, but keep in mind that his share of the snaps, routes and targets were all lower in Week 2 than they were in Week 1. For now, this remains a situation best avoided, but Walker’s strong showing is enough to make him the preferred RB2/flex of the two.

Shadow Report: With two weeks in the books, the Seahawks have allowed the fewest fantasy points to receivers, including the second fewest to the perimeter. Chris Olave, Rashid Shaheed and the rest of the New Orleans wide receiver room should be downgraded against Riq Woolen, Devon Witherspoon (if he returns from injury) and Josh Jobe.

Over/under: 39.3 (15th highest)
Win probability: Seahawks 70% (5th highest)

Projected score: Cowboys 26, Bears 26

RANK

PLAYER

PROJ

MATCHUP

QB619.1

Great

QB918.4

Great

RB1216.2

Average

RB1616.1

Great

WR120.0

Great

WR1215.3

Great

WR2713.0

Great

WR2512.9

Great

WR658.1

Great

TE611.4

Good

DST274.1

Average

DST283.6

Poor

Lineup locks: Caleb Williams, D’Andre Swift, Javonte Williams, CeeDee Lamb, Rome Odunze, George Pickens, DJ Moore, Jake Ferguson

Fantasy scoop: Both quarterbacks in this game should be considered strong starting options, if not full-on lineup locks. Both defenses are off to horrific starts, with Dallas allowing 30.3 fantasy points to Russell Wilson and 24.3 points to Jalen Hurts, and Chicago surrendering 22.2 points to J.J. McCarthy and 34.0 points to Jared Goff. Williams sits 10th among QBs in fantasy points and fourth in rushing yards. The good matchup vaults him up the Week 3 rankings. Dak Prescott is fresh off a 361-yard effort against the Giants and is a back-end QB1 this week.

Shadow Report: Upgrade Chicago’s receivers against a Dallas defense that has allowed the third-most fantasy points to wide receivers, as well as the most to the perimeter. Odunze and Moore will see plenty of Trevon Diggs and Kaiir Elam on the boundary, with Olamide Zaccheaus facing off with DaRon Bland or, if Bland remains out, Reddy Steward in the slot. With Bland out last week, Giants slot man Wan’Dale Robinson went for 142 yards and a score on 10 targets, so Zaccheaus will be a deep sleeper if Bland remains sidelined.

Shadow Report: Chicago’s top corner, Jaylon Johnson, is out for the season and slot man Kyler Gordon missed both Weeks 1-2 with a hamstring injury. Chicago’s man-heavy defense has, in turn, allowed the sixth-most fantasy points to wide receivers. This week, Lamb and Pickens stand to benefit against Tyrique Stevenson, Nahshon Wright (Johnson’s replacement) and either Gordon or Nick McCloud. Upgrade the Dallas receivers.

Over/under: 52 (2nd highest)
Win probability: Cowboys 51% (15th highest)

Projected score: 49ers 25, Cardinals 22

RANK

PLAYER

PROJ

MATCHUP

QB1017.8

Shaky

QB2614.6

Good

RB220.8

Average

RB2213.4

Average

RB388.9

Average

WR3012.7

Average

WR3911.9

Good

WR4710.5

Good

WR727.1

Average

TE116.1

Average

DST106.3

Average

DST135.8

Good

Lineup locks: Christian McCaffrey, James Conner, Marvin Harrison Jr., Trey McBride

Fantasy scoop: Harrison is coming off a rough Week 2 outing in which he was limited to 27 yards on five targets. This, of course, comes after he posted a 5-71-1 receiving line on six targets in Week 1. Harrison’s 21% target share isn’t going to cut it for a player expected to be an elite offensive player, but the good news is that he’s been on the field for 90% of Arizona’s pass plays and overall pass volume will increase. The Cardinals haven’t had to throw much, as they’ve led on 70% of their offensive snaps (third highest), but, once adjusted for game script, they have the league’s fourth-pass-heaviest offense. Harrison needs to be better to justify “lineup lock” status, but he is worthy of WR3 status against the 49ers.

Over/under: 47 (5th highest)
Win probability: 49ers 62% (10th highest)

Projected score: Chiefs 25, Giants 21

RANK

PLAYER

PROJ

MATCHUP

QB519.9

Great

QB1716.3

Average

RB3211.0

Great

RB3410.3

Shaky

RB359.9

Shaky

RB379.3

Great

WR219.8

Average

WR4012.5

Great

WR4111.6

Average

WR5210.1

Great

TE711.2

Good

DST96.7

Shaky

DST254.2

Average

Lineup locks: Patrick Mahomes, Malik Nabers, Travis Kelce

Fantasy scoop: After Tyrone Tracy Jr. dominated the Giants’ backfield in Week 1, it was Cam Skattebo who took control last week. The rookie soaked up 11 carries and three targets on 33 snaps (18 routes), compared to five carries and five targets on 27 snaps (17 routes) for Tracy and one carry and one target on four snaps (one route) for Devin Singletary. A hot-hand approach seems to be the game plan for New York, which means neither back can be trusted this week against the Chiefs.

Over/under: 45.2 (8th highest)
Win probability: Chiefs 64% (7th highest)

Projected score: Ravens 29, Lions 26

RANK

PLAYER

PROJ

MATCHUP

QB223.6

Average

QB1316.4

Great

RB617.9

Great

RB1116.5

Average

RB2312.8

Great

RB417.0

Average

WR419.5

Average

WR1015.8

Good

WR2812.9

Average

WR559.5

Good

TE311.8

Great

TE217.5

Shaky

TE247.2

Shaky

DST293.5

Poor

DST312.7

Poor

Lineup locks: Lamar Jackson, Jahmyr Gibbs, Derrick Henry, Amon-Ra St. Brown, Zay Flowers, Jameson Williams, Sam LaPorta

Fantasy scoop: Mark Andrews has fallen off the fantasy radar. Once a superstar, Andrews has managed just 7 yards on four targets through two games. And that’s despite having played 78% of the snaps and with Isaiah Likely out of the lineup. Andrews figures to hit for the occasional touchdown (he had 11 in 2024), but his dwindling target share has made him unusable in fantasy. He should be buried on your bench for the time being.

Over/under: 54.6 (Highest)
Win probability: Ravens 59% (11th highest)



Source link

September 20, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Dogecoin
GameFi Guides

Here’s How Much Dogecoin Whales Bought In Only One Week

by admin September 20, 2025


Trusted Editorial content, reviewed by leading industry experts and seasoned editors. Ad Disclosure

Dogecoin has witnessed a strong uptick in whale accumulation this week, with large investors aggressively increasing their holdings. On-chain analytics platform Santiment reveals that wallets holding between 100 million and 1 billion DOGE have ramped up their balances this week, which is one of the most notable buying sprees in recent weeks. 

This accumulation coincided with Dogecoin’s push from $0.26 on September 15 to briefly crossing above the $0.28 level on September 18, suggesting that whale activity has been an important factor in the token’s latest rally.

Whales Add About 1 Billion DOGE To Holdings

According to Santiment’s data, whales in the balance category of 100 million to 1 billion DOGE boosted their combined holdings from 26.48 billion DOGE on September 15 to 27.39 billion DOGE by September 19. This means about 910 million DOGE were accumulated by these addresses in just four days, equivalent to over $250 million at the current price of Dogecoin. 

This increase in whale-controlled supply typically signals growing confidence in the asset while also reducing the liquidity available in open markets. The timing of these purchases points to a deliberate accumulation strategy as Dogecoin tested a local price support at $0.26.

Source: Chart from Santiment

Whales purchasing hundreds of millions of tokens not only reduce available supply but also tend to encourage retail traders to follow suit. The scale of this accumulation appears to have had a direct impact on Dogecoin’s price action. Between September 15 and 18, Dogecoin rose from $0.26 to above $0.28, a rally of nearly 8% within three days. 

This rally was all on the action of whales alone, as Santiment data shows a corresponding holding decrease in the cohort of addresses holding between 10 million DOGE and 100 million DOGE tokens. 

Dogecoin Technical Analysis

As it stands, Dogecoin’s ability to extend its rally will depend on how it holds above the $0.28 price level in the coming days. However, a bullish technical analysis that aligns with this whale accumulation trend suggests that Dogecoin is now on track to new all-time highs.

Crypto analyst Trader Tardigrade confirmed that Dogecoin’s weekly chart has broken out of a long-standing symmetrical triangle pattern. According to him, last week’s candle close validates the breakout and establishes a 1:29 risk-to-reward trading opportunity. 

The symmetrical triangle setup points to a strong trend continuation after a series of higher lows and lower highs since September 2025 that has now resolved upward. Interestingly, Trader Tardigrade predicted a rally that would see Dogecoin break above its current all-time high. Particularly, the analyst predicted that Dogecoin could rally as high as $1.7 if the breakout follows through. 

DOGE trading at $0.27 on the 1D chart | Source: DOGEUSDT on Tradingview.com

Featured image from iStock, chart from Tradingview.com

Editorial Process for bitcoinist is centered on delivering thoroughly researched, accurate, and unbiased content. We uphold strict sourcing standards, and each page undergoes diligent review by our team of top technology experts and seasoned editors. This process ensures the integrity, relevance, and value of our content for our readers.



Source link

September 20, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
'Andor' Writer Dan Gilroy Knows Why You're Thinking About the Show This Week (and It's Not the Emmys)
Product Reviews

‘Andor’ Writer Dan Gilroy Knows Why You’re Thinking About the Show This Week (and It’s Not the Emmys)

by admin September 19, 2025


Though we here at io9 would have preferred Andor win all the Emmys, the Disney+ Star Wars show did pick up a few notable trophies, including Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series. Dan Gilroy, brother of Andor creator Tony Gilroy, won the honor for season two’s ninth episode, “Welcome to the Rebellion.” You know, the one where Mon Mothma makes her ferocious speech condemning genocide and monstrous leaders from the senate floor.

While remarking on how unfortunately relevant the story of Andor ended up being isn’t new—Tony Gilroy has certainly spoken about it—the themes of the show have become even more potent in the wake of ABC’s suspension of Jimmy Kimmel Live! after the talk show host’s comments on the death of Charlie Kirk.

Yesterday, creatives and subscribers called for a boycott of Disney, ABC’s parent company and also the corporate parent of Star Wars. Today, Dan Gilroy published an op-ed in Deadline with a “Welcome to the Rebellion”-style wake-up call.

“As one of the writers on the Disney+ drama Andor, we spent six years thinking about a fascist takeover of a galaxy far, far away,” it begins.

“Six years thinking about ordinary beings as an authoritarian regime comes in for the kill. Many people saw parallels between Andor and the real world. I see them as well, particularly in the events of the last week.”

The essay goes on to condemn Disney’s decision to suspend Kimmel, noting, “I deeply disagree but acknowledge it was a difficult decision.”

Gilroy goes on to address others in the entertainment industry, warning Hollywood it cannot accept this turn of events in our “brave new Trumpian world,” as he puts it, because it’s poised to get worse: “The first thing Putin did after taking power was silence shows that criticized him. Artists are censored first because they fear us most.”

Gilroy finishes by encouraging action. “Their goal is to instill fear, to make you feel helpless, hopeless, to break you down,” he writes. “Don’t let them. Educate yourself. Organize. Speak truth to authority. Because the story’s not written—the pen is in your hand.”

Read the full essay at Deadline; if you haven’t cancelled Disney+, you can still watch Andor there.

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.



Source link

September 19, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
NFL Week 3 picks, predictions, schedule, odds, fantasy tips
Esports

NFL Week 3 picks, predictions, schedule, odds, fantasy tips

by admin September 19, 2025



Sep 19, 2025, 06:35 AM ET

The Week 3 NFL schedule for the 2025 season brings some intriguing matchups.

There are two battles between undefeated teams, with the Rams visiting the Eagles and the Cardinals facing the 49ers. Injuries have affected a few top QBs. The Bengals’ Joe Burrow (toe), the Vikings’ J.J. McCarthy (ankle) and the Jets’ Justin Fields (concussion) are ruled out, and the 49ers’ Brock Purdy (toe, shoulder) and the Commanders’ Jayden Daniels (knee) are listed as questionable. With that, their notable backups are looking to make their mark. On Sunday night, the Chiefs look to dig themselves out of their first 0-2 start with Patrick Mahomes against the Giants.

We have you covered with everything you need to know. Our NFL Nation reporters take you inside the locker room with the best thing they heard this week, and ESPN Research provides a key stat to know and a betting nugget for each contest. Plus, analytics writer Seth Walder makes a bold prediction for each matchup, and fantasy analyst Eric Moody shares fantasy football intel. We also have Football Power Index (FPI) matchup quality ratings (out of 100) and game projections, and three analysts — Pamela Maldonado, Moody and Walder — give us final score picks for every game.

Let’s get into the full Week 3 slate, which culminates with a “Monday Night Football” matchup between the Lions and Ravens on ESPN. (Game times are Sunday unless otherwise noted.)

Jump to a matchup:
LAR-PHI | GB-CLE | LV-WSH
CIN-MIN | HOU-JAX | PIT-NE
NYJ-TB | IND-TEN | ATL-CAR
DEN-LAC | NO-SEA | ARI-SF
DAL-CHI | KC-NYG | DET-BAL

Thursday: BUF 31, MIA 21

1 p.m. ET | Fox | Matchup rating: 77.7/100
ESPN BET: PHI -3.5 (44.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Rams: The Eagles are the first team since 2010 to start a season 2-0 without a passing touchdown. Through two games, the Rams’ defense has allowed only one total touchdown. But despite the lack of passing touchdowns for QB Jalen Hurts and the Eagles, Rams coach Sean McVay called Hurts “a winner.” “He can beat you with his arm, legs or his mind,” McVay said. — Sarah Barshop

Editor’s Picks

2 Related

What we’re hearing on the Eagles: The Rams had a very difficult time against RB Saquon Barkley in their two matchups last season, as he racked up a whopping 460 yards on the ground against them in the regular season and in the playoffs. Even on the eight occasions they went with an eight-plus man box in the divisional matchup, Barkley had 92 yards and a touchdown, per NFL Next Gen Stats. “We do see opportunity when they load the box like that,” left tackle Jordan Mailata said. “It’s not a cockiness thing, it’s just based on the scheme that we have and also the guys up front, knowing that if we can get to these calls and execute them, huge gains.” — Tim McManus

Stat to know: Hurts has rushed for a touchdown in five straight games, including playoffs, which is tied for the longest streak of his career (five straight games from 2024 Weeks 7-11). — ESPN Research

Bold prediction: Barkley will record at least 25 rushing attempts. Not only are the Eagles a run-heavy team with a minus-9% pass rate over expectation (per NFL Next Gen Stats), but the Rams encourage runs against their defense. Teams facing the Rams have recorded a minus-11% pass rate over expectation, the third lowest of any defense. — Walder

Injuries: Rams | Eagles

Fantasy nugget: Rams QB Matthew Stafford has shown excellent rapport with WRs Puka Nacua and Davante Adams so far this season. And he has completed 15 passes that traveled 15 or more yards downfield. Facing an Eagles defensive front that’s ranked sixth with a 33.6% run stop win rate, the Rams would be wise to attack Philadelphia through the air. See Week 3 rankings. — Moody

Betting nugget: The Rams are 6-0 ATS (against the spread) in their past six road games. Read more. — ESPN Research

Maldonado’s pick: Rams 24, Eagles 20
Moody’s pick: Eagles 23, Rams 20
Walder’s pick: Eagles 28, Rams 24
FPI prediction: PHI, 57.1% (by an average of 3 points)

Matchup must-reads: How Nacua and Adams fit together in McVay’s offense … The Eagles offense is still figuring things out

1 p.m. ET | Fox | Matchup rating: 54.9/100
ESPN BET: GB -7.5 (41.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Packers: Green Bay hasn’t gotten its running game going yet, and now it faces the No. 1 rushing defense in the league. The Browns have allowed only 92 rushing yards in their first two games. While RB Josh Jacobs has rushing touchdowns in each of the first two games (and has scored in a franchise record 10 straight dating to 2024), he averages only 3.6 yards per carry. “Obviously we all know what Josh did last year, so I think [for] teams, that’s kind of the game plan coming into it,” QB Jordan Love said. — Rob Demovsky

What we’re hearing on the Browns: This week, the Browns have said that they are “hyperaware” of Packers edge rusher Micah Parsons, who can rush from all over the defensive front. But limiting Parsons’ impact also means finding an effective run game that keeps Cleveland out of obvious passing situations. After playing 20 snaps and recording a game-high 61 rushing yards in his debut, rookie RB Quinshon Judkins is expected to get a greater workload in his second game. “He has the ability to kind of be a game breaker,” QB Joe Flacco said. — Daniel Oyefusi

Stat to know: On snaps that Parsons has played this season, the average opponent QBR is 14. When he’s off the field, the QBR jumps to 60. — ESPN Research

Bold prediction: Packers DT Karl Brooks will record a sack. Brooks typically lines up opposite the offense’s right side, and Browns G Wyatt Teller has the worst pass block win rate among guards (81.1%) in the league. Plus, having Parsons rushing the passer tends to generate sack opportunities for those around him. — Walder

play

0:50

Yates: Josh Jacobs a fantasy asset for the rest of the season

Field Yates breaks down the upside to Josh Jacobs and the Packers in fantasy this season.

Injuries: Packers | Browns

Fantasy nugget: Running back Jerome Ford led the Browns in snaps and targets in Week 2, but Judkins handled 10 rushing attempts despite missing all of camp and preseason. As mentioned, his early usage suggests he could lead the Browns’ backfield in touches in Week 3. See Week 3 rankings. — Moody

Betting nugget: The Browns are 7-15 ATS as underdogs over the past three seasons. Read more. — ESPN Research

Maldonado’s pick: Packers 35, Browns 10
Moody’s pick: Packers 27, Browns 13
Walder’s pick: Packers 26, Browns 6
FPI prediction: GB, 71% (by an average of 8.4 points)

Matchup must-reads: What Packers’ Watson extension means for ACL return … Packers rookie WR Golden not fazed by slow start … Browns not mulling QB change despite Flacco’s struggles … Why Judkins could be a ‘game breaker’ for struggling Browns’ offense

1 p.m. ET | CBS | Matchup rating: 49.8/100
ESPN BET: MIN -2.5 (41.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Bengals: This could be the week the Bengals finally get their run game rolling, as they have the league’s worst rushing attack through two games. The Vikings are 26th in the league with 5.2 yards allowed per carry. If Cincinnati can be effective on the ground, that could help QB Jake Browning in his first start of the season. “[It] needs to be better,” offensive coordinator Dan Pitcher said. “No question. There are certainly things that we will investigate that we think can help that.” — Ben Baby

What we’re hearing on the Vikings: The Vikings have run a league-low 95 offensive plays this season, a fact coach Kevin O’Connell has repeatedly bemoaned as he has tried to find ways to use an array of talented skill players. One of the key reasons has been a 30.4% conversion rate on third down, the fourth lowest in the NFL. They might find more daylight against a Bengals defense that has been on the field for 151 plays this season, fourth most in the league. Cincinnati has also allowed the NFL’s third-highest third-down conversion rate (51.7%). — Kevin Seifert

Stat to know: Browning has a 71.5% career completion rate as a starter, which is the third-highest mark by any signal-caller in his first seven starts since QB starts were first tracked in 1950 (minimum 200 attempts), behind Jayden Daniels (75.6%) and Chad Pennington (73.7%). — ESPN Research

Bold prediction: Browning and Carson Wentz will each record a 60 QBR or higher. In both cases, the drop-off might not be as steep as expected. For Browning, it’s because of his track record (career 62 QBR and plus-3% completion percentage over expectation). For Wentz, it’s because of O’Connell, who gets the most out of his quarterbacks. (Remember Joshua Dobbs’ run in Minnesota in 2023?) — Walder

play

0:43

Why Stephen A. is worried for Jake Browning, Bengals

Stephen A. Smith says the Bengals’ offensive line is a major cause of concern.

Injuries: Bengals | Vikings

Fantasy nugget: Vikings RB Jordan Mason is set to handle most of the backfield work since Aaron Jones Sr. is sidelined by a hamstring injury. Mason is averaging 4.1 yards per carry behind an offensive line that ranks ninth in run block win rate (73.6%). The matchup is favorable, too, as the Bengals have given up the second-most fantasy points to running backs this season. See Week 3 rankings. — Moody

Betting nugget: Wentz is 27-38 ATS as a starter since 2018 (his third season). He is 3-6 ATS since 2022. Read more. — ESPN Research

Maldonado’s pick: Vikings 21, Bengals 17
Moody’s pick: Bengals 31, Vikings 27
Walder’s pick: Bengals 27, Vikings 20
FPI prediction: MIN, 55.6% (by an average of 2.2 points)

Matchup must-reads: Bengals sign QBs Clifford, White to practice squad … What does McCarthy’s injury mean for Vikings and his growth? … Bengals don’t blame OL for latest Burrow injury … Source: Vikings place Jones on injured reserve

1 p.m. ET | Fox | Matchup rating: 49.7/100
ESPN BET: WSH -3.5 (44.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Raiders: Defensive tackle Jonah Laulu has been a pleasant surprise. Laulu, a 2024 seventh-rounder, has already totaled three sacks and four pressures through two games. Last season, he had only one sack in 17 games (seven starts). “He’s just blossomed,” coach Pete Carroll said. “He had enough plays on film coming off of last year that caught my eye. … He’s done a nice job. He’s been very active, been really consistent with his play.” — Ryan McFadden

What we’re hearing on the Commanders: Washington allowed Green Bay TE Tucker Kraft to catch six passes for 124 yards in Week 2 — and now it must face arguably the top player at that position in Brock Bowers. Defensive coordinator Joe Whitt Jr. said eye discipline was a key issue versus the Packers; too often, the Commanders lost sight of Kraft because of late motion or play-actions that fooled them. Washington will have to handle that much better versus Bowers, who lines up all over the field. “He’s a dynamic young tight end,” Whitt said. “You have to treat him like a receiver.” — John Keim

All of ESPN. All in one place.

Watch your favorite events in the newly enhanced ESPN App. Learn more about what plan is right for you. Sign Up Now

Stat to know: The Raiders’ defense has allowed 3.2 yards per rush this season — fourth fewest in the NFL. Meanwhile, the Commanders are averaging 5.3 yards per rush — third most. — ESPN Research

Bold prediction: Raiders QB Geno Smith will connect on multiple 30-plus air yard passes. Through two weeks, the Raiders have fun vertical routes 35% of the time — the second-highest rate in the league. And Smith has never been shy about taking some chances with his arm. — Walder

Injuries: Raiders | Commanders

Fantasy nugget: Commanders RB Jacory Croskey-Merritt appears to be the front-runner for the most touches in Washington’s backfield after Austin Ekeler tore his right Achilles in Week 2. The preseason standout has averaged 7.1 yards per carry on 14 attempts, and he’s firmly on the flex radar. The Commanders could lean on the run heavily since QB Jayden Daniels is dealing with a knee injury. See Week 3 rankings. — Moody

Betting nugget: The Raiders have covered six straight games on short rest. The Commanders are 11-29-1 ATS on short rest since 2013. Read more. — ESPN Research

Maldonado’s pick: Commanders 28, Raiders 20
Moody’s pick: Commanders 37, Raiders 31
Walder’s pick: Raiders 34, Commanders 31
FPI prediction: WSH, 60.6% (by an average of 4.7 points)

Matchup must-reads: Tom Brady did not violate rules in MNF game, NFL says … Commanders’ Daniels has knee injury, status iffy

1 p.m. ET | CBS | Matchup rating: 48.1/100
ESPN BET: JAX -1.5 (44.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Texans: Texans QB C.J. Stroud said “we’re really close” to turning the season around after starting 0-2, pinpointing that Houston was “one or two plays away” from being 2-0. While that’s true, the offense has to score more than the 14 points per game it’s averaging. Watch to see how effective the offense is this week, because falling to 0-3 for the first time since 2020 could create a hole the Texans can’t get out of. — DJ Bien-Aime

What we’re hearing on the Jaguars: There isn’t a high level of concern about WR Brian Thomas Jr.’s slow start (five catches for 60 yards), but the Jaguars admit they have to get him going. Coach Liam Coen said he had a productive conversation with Thomas this week, and he has support from QB Trevor Lawrence, too. “Obviously we would’ve loved to start off hot these first two games and have our connection be ripping and me finding him everywhere and him having a great year and all those things,” Lawrence said. “But we’re in Week [3] everybody, so I think we can all just take a deep breath, give B.T. a little space. He’s going to be just fine.” — Michael DiRocco

Stat to know: Among 51 instances of a QB making at least five starts against a division opponent since 2021, Lawrence’s 39 Total QBR against the Texans (in eight starts) is the second lowest by any signal-caller versus a single division opponent (behind Zach Wilson’s 20 vs. the Patriots). — ESPN Research

Bold prediction: Jaguars WR/CB Travis Hunter will run more routes than WR Dyami Brown. This hasn’t been true in a game yet, but it would be a pretty awful sign for Hunter if he can’t surpass Brown on the depth chart quickly, considering the latter’s very unremarkable career to date. Brown has probably been a little better than expected (1.9 yards per route run, though his two drops sting), but Hunter should become the No. 2 guy in Jacksonville very soon. — Walder

Injuries: Texans | Jaguars

Fantasy nugget: The Texans’ defensive front might lead the league with a 56.8% pass rush win rate, but Houston ranks 24th with a 27.5% run stop win rate. That could push the Jaguars to lean on RBs Travis Etienne Jr. and Bhayshul Tuten. Jacksonville leads the league with 169.5 rushing yards per game behind an offensive line that ranks fifth with a 75.7% run block win rate. See Week 3 rankings. — Moody

Betting nugget: Unders are 13-6 in Texans games since the start of last season, the highest under rate in the NFL. Read more. — ESPN Research

Maldonado’s pick: Jaguars 27, Texans 20
Moody’s pick: Texans 20, Jaguars 14
Walder’s pick: Jaguars 24, Texans 20
FPI prediction: JAX, 52.9% (by an average of 1.5 points)

Matchup must-reads: Texans WR Kirk (hamstring) to play against Jaguars … Jaguars WR Thomas Jr. hopes to shake rough start … Jaguars release veteran safety Savage

1 p.m. ET | Fox | Matchup rating: 43.1/100
ESPN BET: TB -6.5 (43.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Jets: The Jets have an enormous amount of confidence in veteran QB Tyrod Taylor, whom guard John Simpson described as “super swaggy.” Taylor, who replaces Justin Fields (concussion), has four touchdown passes and zero interceptions in three Jets appearances since 2024 — all mop-up duty. This will be his first start in 624 days (2023, Week 18). Taylor can be more effective from the pocket than Fields, but New York loses a lot without the threat of Fields’ running abilities. — Rich Cimini

What we’re hearing on the Buccaneers: The Bucs have now lost DT Calijah Kancey (pectoral) and G Cody Mauch (knee) for the season, while LT Tristan Wirfs is recovering from knee surgery and RT Luke Goedeke is expected to miss time with a foot injury. They’ve had to take the phrase “next man up” to a whole new level. G/C Ben Bredeson said of QB Baker Mayfield keeping the Bucs in games: “I think his leadership is incredible. There’s no one I’d rather follow in a two-minute drill. He goes in there with the utmost confidence and on fourth-and-10 is able to get out of something like that, scramble, get us a first down, pop up, lead the troops right down the field.” — Jenna Laine

Stat to know: WR Garrett Wilson has a 37% target share on the Jets offense this season. Only two players have had a target share that high in a full season: Brandon Marshall (Bears) in 2012 and Steve Smith Sr. (Panthers) in 2005. — ESPN Research

Bold prediction: Bucs LB SirVocea Dennis will lead the NFL in tackles this week. Among linebackers with at least 80 snaps played this season, Dennis ranks second in run stop win rate (53%) and is tied for eighth in tackle rate versus the run. There should be plenty of tackle opportunities against the run-heavy Jets. — Walder

play

2:05

Why Mark Schlereth loves Baker Mayfield’s journey in the NFL

Mark Schlereth joins the “The Rich Eisen Show” to express how impressed he is with Baker Mayfield’s career progression.

Injuries: Jets | Buccaneers

Fantasy nugget: Bucs WR Emeka Egbuka has had at least six targets and 13 fantasy points in both games this season. He reached 23.6 points in Week 1, but there’s a development in Week 2 that should excite fantasy managers. Egbuka played more snaps than Mike Evans and ran a similar number of routes. The Bucs are making an effort to use Egbuka both out wide and in the slot during two- or three-receiver sets. So the rookie is effectively a 1B to Evans’ 1A. See Week 3 rankings. — Moody

Betting nugget: The Jets are 19-39-1 ATS as road underdogs over the past decade (since 2016). Read more. — ESPN Research

Maldonado’s pick: Buccaneers 24, Jets 20
Moody’s pick: Buccaneers 34, Jets 19
Walder’s pick: Jets 20, Buccaneers 17
FPI prediction: TB, 70.1% (by an average of 8.4 points)

Matchup must-reads: Jets ‘have confidence’ in Taylor as starter vs. Bucs … Source: Buccaneers starting RG Mauch (knee) out for season … Sources: Bucs’ Kancey tore pec, to miss rest of season

1 p.m. ET | CBS | Matchup rating: 41.4/100
ESPN BET: PIT -1.5 (44.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Steelers: Improving in the run game is an emphasis for the Steelers — on both sides of the ball. Through two games, the offense ranks 30th in yards per game (62.5) and yards per carry (3.0), while the defense is 28th in rushing yards per game allowed (149.5) and 22nd in yards per carry allowed (4.4). “We were getting knocked around a little bit last year,” said defensive coordinator Teryl Austin when asked if the run defense’s issues are similar to last year’s. “This year, we are not getting knocked around.” — Brooke Pryor

What we’re hearing on the Patriots: Starting CB Christian Gonzalez, who missed the first two games with a hamstring injury, was a limited participant in the first two practices of the week and thus has a chance to make his 2025 debut. If he does, a matchup against WR DK Metcalf (who experienced success against him in 2024) would loom large. “He’s a great receiver. He can change the game in a lot of ways — stretch the field, doing screens, doing a lot of things with him,” Gonzalez said. “I learned a lot from him last year and 1758290990 we’re focused on this year.” — Mike Reiss

Stat to know: The Steelers have allowed 31.5 points per game through the first two games of 2025, tied with 2018 for the most allowed through the opening two games under coach Mike Tomlin. — ESPN Research

Bold prediction: Patriots CB Carlton Davis III will record an interception. He has a strong 0.6 yards per coverage snap so far this season (average for an outside corner is 1.1). And if Gonzalez returns to action, he would push even more targets Davis’ way. — Walder

Breaking News from Adam Schefter

Download the ESPN app and enable Adam Schefter’s news alerts to receive push notifications for the latest updates first. Opt in by tapping the alerts bell in the top right corner. For more information, click here.

Injuries: Steelers | Patriots

Fantasy nugget: Patriots QB Drake Maye finished with 26.3 fantasy points in Week 2, showcasing his dual-threat ability and spreading the ball efficiently. He is well-positioned for success against a Steelers defense that has already allowed strong games to the Jets’ Justin Fields (29.5) and the Seahawks’ Sam Darnold (15.8). Like Fields, Maye should be able to exploit Pittsburgh on the ground. See Week 3 rankings. — Moody

Betting nugget: The Steelers are 0-2 ATS for the first time since 2019. They have not started 0-3 ATS since 2013. Read more. — ESPN Research

Maldonado’s pick: Steelers 27, Patriots 24
Moody’s pick: Patriots 23, Steelers 17
Walder’s pick: Steelers 22, Patriots 19
FPI prediction: PIT, 49.8% (by an average of 0.1 points)

Matchup must-reads: What we’re hearing entering Week 3: Latest on Rodgers … Steelers searching for the key to unlock their run game: ‘You’re looking to be efficient, explosive’ … Patriots’ Maye showed clear improvement at Miami … Steelers sign ex-Patriots LB Bentley to practice squad

1 p.m. ET | CBS | Matchup rating: 30.9/100
ESPN BET: IND -4.5 (43.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Colts: The Colts might be 2-0, but they ranked 30th in defensive pressures (12) and 25th in sacks (3.0). This game might provide an opportunity to get the pass rush going. Tennessee has allowed a league-high 11 sacks and yielded 29 pressures (tied for sixth). The Colts are hoping to get defensive end Laiatu Latu, their 2024 first-round pick, back after he missed last Sunday’s game with a hamstring injury. — Stephen Holder

What we’re hearing on the Titans: RB Jonathan Taylor rushed for 218 yards the last time he saw the Titans, so they will need to be better this time around. A huge part of that will depend on DT T’Vondre Sweat’s status, as he is dealing with an ankle injury that kept him out last week. With Sweat in the lineup, the Titans’ run defense held opponents to 4.2 yards per carry (which would have been eighth fewest), but without him, those numbers bumped to 5.3 yards per carry (worst in the NFL). — Turron Davenport

Stat to know: Indianapolis is the first team in the Super Bowl era (since 1966) with zero punts through the first two games of the season. No team has gone three straight games without a punt since at least 1940. — ESPN Research

Bold prediction: Titans RB Tony Pollard will score his first touchdown of the season. Through two weeks, no running back is playing a higher percentage of their team’s offensive snaps than Pollard (89%). If the Titans have a scoring opportunity, there’s a good chance it will be with Pollard getting the ball. — Walder

play

0:51

Jonathan Taylor impressed with Daniel Jones as Colts QB

Jonathan Taylor joins “The Rich Eisen Show” to discuss what it is like having Daniel Jones as his quarterback.

Injuries: Colts | Titans

Fantasy nugget: Colts QB Daniel Jones scored 29.4 fantasy points in Week 1, then followed it up with 22.8 against a tough Broncos defense. His career renaissance could continue with a favorable matchup against a Titans defense that allowed Rams QB Matthew Stafford to finish with 298 passing yards and two touchdowns last week. Tennessee’s defensive front ranks 23rd in pass rush win rate (32.7%), so Jones should have plenty of time to throw. He’s a high-end QB2 this week. See Week 3 rankings. — Moody

Betting nugget: The Titans are 0-3 ATS as road favorites since the start of last season. Read more. — ESPN Research

Maldonado’s pick: Colts 33, Titans 13
Moody’s pick: Colts 24, Titans 13
Walder’s pick: Titans 20, Colts 16
FPI prediction: IND, 66% (by an average of 6.1 points)

Matchup must-reads: Jones-led offense spearheads Colts’ 2-0 start … Titans won’t cut Ward loose until run game improves … QB Ward, WR Ayomanor forming special bond for Titans

1 p.m. ET | Fox | Matchup rating: 29.9/100
ESPN BET: ATL -5.5 (44.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Falcons: The Falcons had a goal to be the top offense in the league this season, but their defense has actually carried them thus far (outside of the terrific play of RB Bijan Robinson). Atlanta is 29th in the league in success rate in the red zone (26.1%), and offensive coordinator Zac Robinson acknowledged that “it’s definitely something we’ve gotta get fixed.” QB Michael Penix Jr. said he’s looking forward to the pass and run game clicking at the same time to “see how electric we can be.” — Marc Raimondi

What we’re hearing on the Panthers: QB Bryce Young had arguably the best performance of his career in the 2024 season finale against the Falcons, throwing for 252 yards and three touchdowns while rushing for two more. The key was that Atlanta never seriously pressured him, but things are different this week. Young is facing an Atlanta defense that found its groove last week with six sacks in a win over Minnesota. — David Newton

Stat to know: Young threw for career highs in completions (35), attempts (55) and passing yards (328) in Week 2. Young has never passed for 300-plus yards in consecutive games. — ESPN Research

Bold prediction: Robinson will record at least 50 rushing yards after contact. Not only is Robinson elusive, but the Panthers are allowing 2.5 yards after contact per carry, third most in the NFL. — Walder

Weekly NFL game expert picks

• Game picks from our NFL experts »
• Betting notes » | More NFL coverage »

Injuries: Falcons | Panthers

Fantasy nugget: The Falcons’ defense could be a smart pickup since it just put on a master class, forcing four turnovers and allowing just six points to Minnesota. Atlanta ranks eighth in run stop win rate (33.3%), which could force Young to throw more. Young has already been sacked four times and thrown three interceptions this season. See Week 3 rankings. — Moody

Betting nugget: The Panthers have covered five straight games as home underdogs. They are 8-2 ATS. Read more. — ESPN Research

Maldonado’s pick: Falcons 21, Panthers 14
Moody’s pick: Falcons 24, Panthers 17
Walder’s pick: Falcons 23, Panthers 21
FPI prediction: ATL, 56.4% (by an average of 2.6 points)

Matchup must-reads: Falcons’ Morris: Robinson definitely NFL’s best player … Hunt, Corbett injuries make Panthers’ failed comeback sting more … Falcons rookie defenders deliver big impact … Panthers to place Hunt, Corbett on IR

4:05 p.m. ET | CBS | Matchup rating: 70.6/100
ESPN BET: LAC -2.5 (45.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Broncos: It will bear watching how effective the Broncos are in their attempts to make Chargers QB Justin Herbert uncomfortable in the pocket. After a six-sack performance against Titans rookie Cam Ward, the Broncos sent five or more rushers on 58% of Daniel Jones’ dropbacks last Sunday in Indianapolis. Denver sacked him only once and Jones finished with 316 passing yards. Herbert has faced the fifth-highest blitz rate in the league so far (37%), but he has a 72% completion rate with five touchdowns and zero interceptions behind plenty of heavy formations. The Broncos have to find a way to unsettle him. — Jeff Legwold

What we’re hearing on the Chargers: The Chargers swept Denver in two matchups last season, but this time they will have to be without edge rusher Khalil Mack, their team leader in QB pressures (five, tied with Tuli Tuipulotu). He was placed on injured reserve with an elbow injury after the win on Monday night but is not expected to be out for the season. “He’s like the Wolverine,” coach Jim Harbaugh said. “Toughest thing I’ve ever seen.” — Kris Rhim

Stat to know: According to ESPN Analytics/NFL Next Gen Stats, Broncos QB Bo Nix’s three interceptions this season have been versus zone coverage, tied with the Dolphins’ Tua Tagovailoa for the most. The Chargers have played zone coverage on 66% of opponent dropbacks, the sixth-highest mark this season. — ESPN Research

Bold prediction: Herbert will throw at least 37 pass attempts — yes, even against Pat Surtain II and the Broncos. The Chargers have the highest pass rate over expectation (plus-12%) so far this season, per NFL Next Gen Stats. — Walder

play

0:27

Justin Herbert: “All I gotta do is get him the ball”

Justin Herbert’s impressed with Keenan Allen’s offensive performance.

Injuries: Broncos | Chargers

Fantasy nugget: Herbert is spreading targets among Ladd McConkey (14), Quentin Johnston (14) and Keenan Allen (16) — all three are running a similar number of routes. Though that spread of wealth is not ideal for fantasy, each receiver remains a good start in most leagues. See Week 3 rankings. — Moody

Betting nugget: The Broncos are 5-1 ATS in their past six games following a loss. Read more. — ESPN Research

Maldonado’s pick: Chargers 16, Broncos 10
Moody’s pick: Chargers 27, Broncos 23
Walder’s pick: Chargers 30, Broncos 20
FPI prediction: LAC, 56% (by an average of 2.5 points)

Matchup must-reads: Broncos need more defensive stability, better run stopping … How Chargers’ WR corps went from Achilles heel to a strength

4:05 p.m. ET | CBS | Matchup rating: 31.7/100
ESPN BET: SEA -7.5 (41.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Saints: Saints QB Spencer Rattler is coming off the best game of his career, in which he threw three touchdown passes. However, Rattler is still searching for his first win and is 0-8 as a starter. This will be his fourth career road start, and he said the theme this week is “be poised in the noise,” with the team acknowledging that playing in Seattle will be a challenge. To prepare, coach Kellen Moore had officials at practice again and said he planned to have speakers simulate the noise from the stadium. The Saints will also travel to Seattle early to practice there Friday. — Katherine Terrell

What we’re hearing on the Seahawks: The Seahawks are home favorites, but they don’t need any reminders about the dangers of a letdown game. Last October, they lost 29-20 to a Giants team that also came to Lumen Field as 7.5-point underdogs. “I think that ‘Any given Sunday’ quote is something that’s just so real and believable in this league,” veteran DT Leonard Williams said. “Literally any week, any team can win. So you never want to overlook a team.” — Brady Henderson

Stat to know: Seahawks WR Jaxon Smith-Njigba is seeking to become the first player in franchise history with three straight games of 100-plus receiving yards to begin a season. — ESPN Research

Bold prediction: The Seahawks will sack Rattler six or more times in a win. Through two games, Seattle’s pass rush has been a bright spot, ranking third in pass rush win rate (49.1%). — Walder

play

1:04

Could the Seahawks win the NFC West?

Dan Orlovsky joins “Get Up” to break down why the Seattle Seahawks have a legitimate shot at winning the NFC West this season.

Injuries: Saints | Seahawks

Fantasy nugget: Saints TE Juwan Johnson has stockpiled 20 targets this season, scoring at least 15 fantasy points in both games. He has played 97.8% of the Saints’ offensive snaps and run 74 routes, the most of any tight end in the league. This season, no defense has given up more fantasy points to tight ends than the Seahawks. See Week 3 rankings. — Moody

Betting nugget: The Saints are 1-5 ATS in their past six road games. Read more. — ESPN Research

Maldonado’s pick: Seahawks 34, Saints 10
Moody’s pick: Seahawks 31, Saints 20
Walder’s pick: Seahawks 27, Saints 13
FPI prediction: SEA, 65.5% (by an average of 5.9 points)

Matchup must-reads: Where does Saints QB Shough land in our backup QB rankings? … QB Darnold showed what Seahawks offense can do … Saints look for positives despite first 0-2 start since 2017

4:25 p.m. ET | Fox | Matchup rating: 60.6/100
ESPN BET: SF -2.5 (44.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Cardinals: Though the Cardinals are off to a 2-0 start for the third time in the past six seasons, second-year WR Marvin Harrison Jr. isn’t off to the start he was hoping for. Through two games, he has seven catches on 11 targets for 98 yards and a touchdown. Harrison isn’t happy he’s not having more of an impact on the offense — and he’s not the only one. Coach Jonathan Gannon said Arizona needs more production from Harrison. “It’s always frustrating when you may not get the impact that you kind of want in the game, especially when you put in so much work,” Harrison said. — Josh Weinfuss

What we’re hearing on the 49ers: Corralling Cardinals QB Kyler Murray has always been a battle for the 49ers. Murray is 4-4 in his eight starts against San Francisco, and his ability to make plays with his legs has been an issue in most of those games. “The ability to make the off-schedule plays, that’s always kind of given us fits,” LB Fred Warner said. “We’re going to try to do our best to try to contain him, but at the end of the day, he’s going to make his plays. We’ve got to just limit the damage.” Murray has averaged 52.8 rushing yards per game against the Niners in his career, his second-highest mark against any team he has played more than twice. — Nick Wagoner

Stat to know: The Cardinals are 2-0 this season despite being outgained by at least 25 yards in each game. The 2020 Seahawks are the only team this century to start a season 3-0 while being outgained by at least 25 yards in each game. — ESPN Research

Best of NFL Nation

• Eberflus not looking for revenge
• Why Jenkins could be a ‘game-breaker’
• Steelers can’t unlock run game
• Injury impact on J.J. McCarthy, Vikings
• Packers’ Golden unfazed by slow start
• Eagles offense still figuring it out

Bold prediction: 49ers WR Kendrick Bourne will record six or more receptions. Bourne played 49% of San Francisco’s offensive snaps in his first game back with the team last week. I have to imagine that number will steadily rise. — Walder

Injuries: Cardinals | 49ers

Fantasy nugget: Niners QB Mac Jones is in a good spot this week, especially for managers in desperate need of a streamer because of injuries. Arizona has allowed the seventh-most passing yards per game (255.5) this season. See Week 3 rankings. — Moody

Betting nugget: The Cardinals have covered five straight games as underdogs. Read more. — ESPN Research

Maldonado’s pick: 49ers 27, Cardinals 22
Moody’s pick: 49ers 24, Cardinals 21
Walder’s pick: Cardinals 27, 49ers 19
FPI prediction: ARI, 51.5% (by an average of 0.7 points)

Matchup must-reads: Cardinals place CB Williams on IR with knee injury … Saleh’s 49ers defense instrumental in 2-0 start … 2-0 Cards know they must clean up ‘sloppy’ ball

4:25 p.m. ET | Fox | Matchup rating: 46.9/100
ESPN BET: DAL -1.5 (50.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Cowboys: QB Dak Prescott’s start to the season has been impressive. It’s not just the raw numbers — 549 yards, which would be more without five drops — either. He is also completing 75% of his passes on third down and 64% of his passes when pressured. “I think he’s playing how we would expect him to play. We have a high standard for Dak and the way he’s supposed to perform,” coach Brian Schottenheimer said. “I think there’s a confidence about him right now, which is great.” — Todd Archer

What we’re hearing on the Bears: Former Bears coach Matt Eberflus is returning to Soldier Field as the Cowboys’ defensive coordinator. There’s probably no other coach who knows as much about QB Caleb Williams’ tendencies and ways to attack them than Eberflus, but Williams views this chess match the way he would with any other defensive coordinator. Coach Ben Johnson, on the other hand, picked the brains of people inside Halas Hall to get information on Eberflus’ schematic tendencies and how he approached Johnson’s offenses in Detroit. “I feel like we know what he knows, and we’ll be just fine there,” Johnson said. — Courtney Cronin

Stat to know: Prescott is seeking his 18th game (and second straight) with 350 passing yards and two touchdown throws. If he achieves this feat, Prescott would pass Tom Brady for second most in the NFL since 2016 (behind Patrick Mahomes’ 21). — ESPN Research

Bold prediction: The Bears will score 30-plus points. Here’s a number that stands out to me: Chicago ranks fifth in expected completed air yards per attempt (5.9). That’s a mouthful, I know. But that number indicates the play designs are working. Against Dallas, I could see it coming together for some offensive fireworks. — Walder

play

1:32

Stephen A. confused by Ben Johnson’s comments on Bears’ habits

Stephen A. Smith reacts to Bears coach Ben Johnson’s comments about their practice habits not being good enough.

Injuries: Cowboys | Bears

Fantasy nugget: Williams finished with just 17 fantasy points against Detroit, but he connected with seven different receivers throughout the afternoon. He showed excellent chemistry with WR Rome Odunze, who finished with 31.8 fantasy points on seven receptions. Now, Williams faces a Cowboys defense that gave up 30.2 fantasy points to the Giants’ Russell Wilson last week. See Week 3 rankings. — Moody

Betting nugget: The Cowboys are 4-1 ATS in their past five games as underdogs. Read more. — ESPN Research

Maldonado’s pick: Bears 27, Cowboys 24
Moody’s pick: Cowboys 38, Bears 28
Walder’s pick: Bears 34, Cowboys 24
FPI prediction: DAL, 53.3% (by an average of 1.5 points)

Matchup must-reads: Cowboys think Smith can be ‘one of the greats’ … Defense not producing as Bears search for first win … Johnson: Bears’ practice habits not ‘championship-caliber’ … Cowboys DC Eberflus not seeking revenge against Bears

8:20 p.m. ET | NBC | Matchup rating: 54.2/100
ESPN BET: KC -6.5 (45.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Chiefs: One key factor for the Chiefs’ defense will be taking the ball away, as they haven’t done that all season. “Turnovers affect the game,” DT Chris Jones said. “It can completely change the game. As a defense, we have to find ways to create more turnovers and give the ball back to [QB Patrick Mahomes] and coach [Andy] Reid. If we give the ball back to them, points will be generated.” Since the Chiefs’ offense has struggled, a pivotal highlight from the defense could be what sparks Mahomes and the offense to score enough points for the first victory of the season. — Nate Taylor

What we’re hearing on the Giants: Just because the Chiefs are 0-2 doesn’t mean the Giants look at them any differently than a Super Bowl contender. DL Dexter Lawrence II chuckled at the idea that they have slipped, noting Kansas City still has most of its core players and the “best of the best” in Mahomes. The Chiefs are still among the league’s best teams despite their record, according to Lawrence. “That just don’t disappear,” he said. — Jordan Raanan

Stat to know: With a passing and rushing touchdown in both games, Mahomes is looking to become the third quarterback in NFL history to record a TD run and pass in the first three games of a season. He’d join Jack Kemp (1965) and Kyler Murray (2020). — ESPN Research

Bold prediction: The Chiefs will record positive EPA (expected points added) per designed carry. That would be a huge step for them, considering they are averaging minus-0.1 EPA per carry. But the Giants’ defense ranks second worst in EPA allowed per designed carry (0.17), so that could quell the ills of the Kansas City ground attack. — Walder

play

1:24

How concerning are the Chiefs’ early offensive struggles?

Dan Orlovsky breaks down why he is “not confident” the Chiefs can get their offense back on track this season.

Injuries: Chiefs | Giants

Fantasy nugget: In Week 2, the Giants’ Russell Wilson became just the sixth QB to throw for 400 yards with three different teams. Wide receiver Malik Nabers’ 238 receiving yards through two games were the most by a Giants player since 1984. Nabers is a must-start this week, while Wilson is a viable streamer. But don’t sleep on WR Wan’Dale Robinson, who finished with 10 targets and 28.2 points in Week 2. See Week 3 rankings. — Moody

Betting nugget: Wilson is 18-8 ATS in his career as an underdog of at least four points. Read more. — ESPN Research

Maldonado’s pick: Chiefs 20, Giants 10
Moody’s pick: Chiefs 27, Giants 20
Walder’s pick: Chiefs 23, Giants 20
FPI prediction: KC, 65.2% (by an average of 6.3 points)

Matchup must-reads: Worthy practices in full, hopes to play vs. Giants … Giants QB2 Dart following in Mahomes’ rookie footsteps

Monday, 8:15 p.m. ET | ESPN | Matchup rating: 90.1/100
ESPN BET: BAL -4.5 (53.5 O/U)

What we’re hearing on the Lions: Although it was two seasons ago, the Lions haven’t forgotten about their last meeting in Baltimore — an embarrassing 38-6 loss in 2023. “You don’t forget those because we didn’t even give ourselves a chance,” coach Dan Campbell said. Coming off a dominant win, Detroit is preparing to match that physical nature against the Ravens, but feels more prepared this time around. “The physicality of this game is gonna be high. We know that,” said receivers coach Scottie Montgomery. “And that’s what we have to accept, and we have to do a lot better than we did last time.” — Eric Woodyard

What we’re hearing on the Ravens: Ravens QB Lamar Jackson doesn’t like to talk about his remarkable record against the NFC because it could jinx it. Jackson is 24-2 against the conference, which is the best mark by any starting quarterback in interconference games since the AFC and NFC were created in 1970. He is 2-0 against the Lions, totaling five touchdowns and one interception. His dominance over the NFC shows that it’s difficult to beat Jackson and his unpredictable playing style when you don’t face him regularly. — Jamison Hensley

Stat to know: Over the first two games of the season, Jackson and Lions QB Jared Goff are tied for the most passing TDs in the NFL, at six each. — ESPN Research

Bold prediction: Lions CB Terrion Arnold will allow at least 80 yards and a touchdown to WRs Zay Flowers and Rashod Bateman, combined. Arnold has allowed 3.2 yards per coverage snap as the nearest defender — highest in the league among outside corners with at least 50 coverage snaps — per NFL Next Gen Stats. — Walder

Play the No. 1 fantasy game

The season has kicked off but there’s still time to start fresh with a 0-0 record. Create a league with friends and family, or join a public league. Your championship run starts today! Sign Up Now >>

Injuries: Lions | Ravens

Fantasy nugget: Flowers has a 42.6% team target share this season. The only other receiver with a share over 40% is the Seahawks’ Jaxon Smith-Njigba. Flowers recorded nine or more targets and 15-plus fantasy points in both games this season. He’ll be busy again, as this matchup has one of the highest totals on the slate. See Week 3 rankings. — Moody

Betting nugget: This is the third game this season with an over/under that’s higher than 50 points (Ravens-Bills: 51.5, Jaguars-Bengals: 50.5). The previous two both went over the total. Read more. — ESPN Research

Maldonado’s pick: Ravens 30, Lions 23
Moody’s pick: Ravens 31, Lions 28
Walder’s pick: Ravens 34, Lions 20
FPI prediction: BAL, 57.3% (by an average of 2.7 points)

Matchup must-reads: Lions extend win streak after losses to 11, turn eyes toward Baltimore … Is it too early to consider Jackson on an MVP arc?



Source link

September 19, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
College football Week 4 preview: Auburn-Oklahoma, quarterbacks who haven't lived up to the hype yet and more
Esports

College football Week 4 preview: Auburn-Oklahoma, quarterbacks who haven’t lived up to the hype yet and more

by admin September 18, 2025



Sep 18, 2025, 08:00 AM ET

If there’s an overriding storyline through three weeks, it has been about the winners and losers of some big bets on quarterbacks.

Miami bet on Carson Beck reviving his NFL prospects after a down year at Georgia. So far, he has delivered, averaging nearly 10 yards per pass with eight total touchdowns, and the Canes are ranked in the top five.

Oklahoma wagered Brent Venables’ future on John Mateer, and the Washington State transfer has been electric, leading the Sooners past Michigan in a Week 2 showdown and earning Heisman front-runner status.

Auburn felt sure former five-star recruit Jackson Arnold still had plenty of untapped potential, and through three weeks, he has looked like the superstar he once was, getting the Tigers to 3-0.

Ohio State, Georgia and Oregon all bet on in-house QBs rather than dipping into the transfer portal, and all have been rewarded.

Florida State, Indiana and Tulane hit pay dirt in the portal.

That’s the good news.

On the flip side, so many quarterbacks who were expected to provide massive dividends — Arch Manning, Cade Klubnik, DJ Lagway, Nico Iamaleava, LaNorris Sellers — have wavered between average or awful.

Week 4 offers some chances for redemption, with Lagway getting another big test against Miami, Klubnik hoping to right the ship against Syracuse and UNC’s Gio Lopez going on the road against UCF in the Tar Heels’ first real test since a blowout loss to TCU.

Some of the nation’s most talented young players have a chance to break through, too. CJ Carr can earn win No. 1 against woeful Purdue. Michigan’s Bryce Underwood, coming off a strong performance against Central Michigan, has a much bigger test against Nebraska. Ole Miss’ Austin Simmons hopes to return from injury in time to make his mark in a showdown with Tulane.

The story is just beginning to be written, so there’s plenty of time for Manning, Klubnik and other preseason darlings to find their footing. But it has been a cold September for some of the nation’s most renowned passers, and Week 4 could be another opportunity for others to grab their share of the spotlight. — David Hale

Jump to:
Auburn-Oklahoma | Utah-Texas Tech
Quarterbacks who are falling short
Breakout players | Quotes of the week

What do each of these teams need to do to win?

Stew Milne/Getty Images

Auburn: The Tigers have to disrupt Oklahoma quarterback John Mateer and make him pay for running the ball, and they have the ingredients to do so. Auburn is tied for sixth nationally in sacks per game (3.67) and tied for 12th in tackles for loss per game (8.7). Although Keldric Faulk is the headliner, Arkansas State transfer Keyron Crawford has been the team’s most disruptive pass rusher so far with three sacks and a forced fumble. The defense and run game, which ranks 16th nationally at 240 yards per game, ideally must reduce the pressure on quarterback Jackson Arnold in his highly anticipated return to Oklahoma. Arnold is completing nearly 70% of his passes, running the ball effectively and limiting mistakes, but the more Auburn’s other playmakers can take off his plate, the better the chances for a key road win. — Adam Rittenberg

Oklahoma: Arnold started nine games for the Sooners last fall. If anyone knows his weak spots, it’s Oklahoma coach Brent Venables. As Adam points out, Arnold (eight turnovers in 2024) has played efficient, mistake-free football in his first three games at Auburn. A Sooners defense that’s creating pressures on 44.6% of its snaps this season — 10th nationally, per ESPN Research — is built to change that and make Arnold uncomfortable, although Oklahoma will be without 2024 sack leader R Mason Thomas for the first half Saturday following a Week 3 targeting ejection. Mateer will have his own work cut out for him against the Tigers’ defensive front, but he should be able to find holes in a secondary that ranks 85th in yards allowed per game (220.0). The difference, ultimately, could come on the ground where a still-figuring-out Oklahoma rushing attack meets Auburn’s 10th-ranked run defense (67.0 yards per game) on Saturday. Freshman Tory Blaylock (5.4 yards per carry) has been the Sooners’ most effective running back through three games. — Eli Lederman

How do each of these quarterbacks need to perform?

Utah: Through three games a year ago, Utah had gone without a first down on nearly a quarter of its drives. This season, it has happened only three times in three games. The difference is Devon Dampier, who has looked as at ease running his brand of dual-threat football in a Power 4 backfield as he did a year ago at New Mexico. Dampier has racked up more than 800 yards of offense and accounted for eight touchdowns, and he has yet to turn the ball over. His skill set has made him particularly effective. He has already accumulated 80 yards on scramble plays, and three of his seven TD passes have come from outside the pocket. This will be his biggest test to date, but he’ll also be, by far, the biggest challenge for Texas Tech’s defense. — Hale

Editor’s Picks

2 Related

Texas Tech: Behren Morton hasn’t taken a snap after the third quarter across three straight 30-plus point victories to open the season. Still, Texas Tech’s senior quarterback enters Week 4 tied for No. 1 nationally in passing touchdowns (11) and ranks ninth in passing yards (923), leading the nation’s highest-scoring offense (58.0 PPG). Utah, with the nation’s 20th-ranked pass defense (134.0 yards per game), should present Morton with his toughest test yet in 2025. He’ll have to be accurate against an experienced Utes secondary, and Morton’s decision-making will be key, too, in the face of a Utah front seven that features the nation’s joint sack leader in John Henry Daley — five in three games — and blitzes on 42.6% of its snaps, the 10th-highest rate among FBS defenses, per ESPN Research. Most of all, Texas Tech will hope Morton’s experience (27 career starts) can keep its offense steady in the Red Raiders’ first visit to a notoriously hostile Rice-Eccles Stadium. — Eli Lederman

Three quarterbacks who aren’t meeting their preseason hype

With the most preseason hype out of any college football player this season, Texas QB Arch Manning is completing only 55% of his passes through three weeks. David Buono/Icon Sportswire

1. Arch Manning

Anyone can have a rough outing in a Week 1 matchup against the defending champs, and Manning looked fine a week later against San José State. So, nothing to worry about, right? Ah, not so fast. A dismal first half against UTEP ignited a full-on inferno of criticism of the preseason Heisman favorite, and for good reason. Manning is completing just 55% of his throws and has turned the ball over three times, and Texas has gone without a first down on nearly a quarter of its drives so far. Add the sideline grimace that coach Steve Sarkisian chalked up to — well, we’re not quite sure — and it would be enough reason for concern even if Manning didn’t carry a legendary name and a ton of hype. That this all comes on the heels of such high expectations means Manning will be fighting critics for the foreseeable future.

2. Cade Klubnik

What’s wrong with Clemson’s offense? The answers are everywhere, but none appear bigger than Klubnik, who has at times looked lost, frustrated or intimidated in the pocket. His 37.5 QBR through three games ranks 121st out of 136 FBS passers, and his miserable first-half performances — no passing touchdowns, two turnovers — have put Clemson in some early holes. Klubnik is completing less than 60% of his throws on the year, but the bigger issue is the number of open receivers he hasn’t even targeted in key moments. He has been sacked just three times this year, but he has gotten moved off his position too often, and abandoned ship even more frequently. So, what’s wrong with the Tigers? The better question is what’s wrong with the Tigers’ QB?

3. DJ Lagway

After last year’s hot finish, the assumption was that Lagway would take the next step in 2025 to becoming one of the best quarterbacks in the country. Through three weeks, he’s nowhere close. Not only is Florida off to a 1-2 start, Lagway has been the primary culprit. He’s completing 71% of his throws, but nearly one-third of his throws are behind the line of scrimmage. He has done nothing to extend the field, attempting just seven throws of 20 yards or more. On those throws, he has one completion and two picks. Lagway’s six interceptions overall are tied for the second most nationally through three games. If Florida wants to turn things around amid a brutal schedule, it has to start with Lagway looking more like the player he appeared to be down the stretch in 2024. — Hale

Five early breakout players

Rueben Bain Jr., DL, Miami: The 6-foot-3, 275-pound pass rusher is performing at an All-America level so far this season with 15 stops, 11 pressures, 2.5 TFLs, 1.5 sacks, an interception and a forced fumble through three games. Bain was a top-100 recruit and a Freshman All-American in 2023, so there’s nothing shocking about his rise, but he’s making the leap as a junior and proving he’s a no-doubt NFL draft first-round pick. As ESPN draft expert Jordan Reid put it, no other draft-eligible player in the sport is having a greater down-to-down impact than Bain.

Taylen Green, QB, Arkansas: Green is off to an incredible start to his second season under OC Bobby Petrino, leading the country in total offense with 866 passing yards, 307 rushing yards (most among all FBS QBs) and 13 total touchdowns. Last week against Ole Miss, he became the first QB in program history to surpass 300 passing yards and 100 rushing yards in a single game. The Razorbacks came up short in their SEC opener but have seven more top-25 opponents on the schedule, which should give Green every opportunity to play his way into Heisman contention.

The enhanced ESPN App

Watch your favorite events in the newly upgraded ESPN App. Learn more about what plan is right for you. Sign Up Now

Mario Craver, WR, Texas A&M: The Aggies faced Craver last year during his freshman season at Mississippi State and knew he could be a dangerous playmaker. He has been an absolute game changer for Marcel Reed and Texas A&M’s passing game with an FBS-leading 443 receiving yards and four TDs on just 20 receptions. The 5-foot-9, 165-pound wideout isn’t flying under the national radar anymore after burning Notre Dame’s secondary for a career-best 207 yards on seven catches, and his 279 yards after catch are nearly 100 more than any other pass catcher in the country.

Ahmad Hardy, RB, Missouri: Hardy had a prolific freshman season at UL Monroe and hasn’t slowed down one bit since making his move to the SEC. He’s now the second-leading rusher in the FBS with 462 yards and five TDs after a ridiculous 250-yard day against Louisiana last week. The sophomore has played in only 15 career games, yet he already has three 200-yard performances on his résumé, and he leads all FBS backs with 29 forced missed tackles, according to ESPN Research.

Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele, QB, Cal: The true freshman from Hawaii was a late riser in the recruiting rankings as a high school senior, and we’re quickly learning why he became so coveted. Sagapolutele signed with Oregon but flipped back to Cal in early January, believing he’d have a chance to start right away for the Golden Bears. The 6-foot-3, 225-pound lefty has flashed big-time arm talent and exciting potential with 780 passing yards and seven total TDs while leading a 3-0 start. He’s becoming must-see TV on a Cal squad that looks poised to exceed expectations. — Max Olson

Quotes of the Week

Georgia Tech is off to a hot start at 3-0 after a win over Clemson in Week 3. Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Clemson coach Dabo Swinney on speculation about his job security:
“Hey, listen, if Clemson’s tired of winning, they can send me on my way. But I’m gonna go somewhere else and coach. I ain’t going to the beach. Hell, I’m 55. I’ve got a long way to go. Y’all are gonna have to deal with me for a while.”

Texas coach Steve Sarkisian on quarterback Arch Manning:
“Here’s a guy who’s had an awesome life, the way he’s grown up, the people he’s been surrounded by. I think you learn a lot about yourself through adversity and overcoming adversity. … When he gets on the other side of it, I think all of this is going to serve well not only for him, but for us as a team.”

LSU coach Brian Kelly:
“LSU won the football game, won the game. I don’t know what you want from me. What do you want? You want us to win 70-0 against Florida to keep you happy?”

Michigan fill-in coach Biff Poggi on Bryce Underwood:
“He might actually be Batman. We need to do a DNA test on him.”

Georgia Tech coach Brent Key addressing his team after beating Clemson:
“Enjoy the s— out of it, man. Guess what? Next week is going to be bigger.”



Source link

September 18, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
College football Bottom 10 following Week 3
Esports

College football Bottom 10 following Week 3

by admin September 17, 2025


  • Ryan McGeeSep 17, 2025, 07:00 AM ET

    Close

    • Senior writer for ESPN The Magazine and ESPN.com
    • 2-time Sports Emmy winner
    • 2010, 2014 NMPA Writer of the Year

Inspirational thought of the week:

Time everlasting
Time to play B sides
Time ain’t on my side
Time I’ll never know

Burn out the day
Burn out the night
I’m not the one to tell you what’s wrong or what’s right
I’ve seen suns that were freezing and lives that were through
But I’m burning, I’m burning, I’m burning for you

— “Burnin’ For You,” Blue Oyster Cult

Here at Bottom 10 Headquarters, currently located behind the huge pile of to-go containers that Jess Sims brings home from all of her “College GameDay” road eats segments, we know that where there is smoke, there is also fire. And barbecue. And ash. But hopefully no ash on the barbecue.

There are a lot of chairs being barbecued in college football these days. Hot seats that became kindling, and way too early for an October fall harvest bonfire. UCLA and Virginia Tech became the first FBS teams to part ways in-season with their head coaches, one a legendary former player and the other a legendary former assistant coach. And that has led to a hunka hunka burning “Who’s Next?” hot seat lists.

It isn’t even really CFB Week 4 yet and hot seats are already… pic.twitter.com/WvZIxzD7fs

— Ryan McGee (@ESPNMcGee) September 14, 2025

It’s enough to make one, well, take a seat, and pause to contemplate their place in this world. Might one day we wake up to find an athletic director standing in the door of our office with a pink slip? Or a booster who sells cars and thinks he’s an expert on the spread offense standing in our door with a buyout check? Or Lane Kiffin standing in the door of our kitchen with a tape measure and fabric samples? And … wait … as we sit here … did someone spill some Tabasco on this chair or did we accidentally get some muscle rub in our drawers?

With apologies to Navy O-lineman Connor Heater, Ole Miss D-tackle Jon Seaton and Steve Harvey, here are the post-Week 3 Bottom 10 rankings.

The Amherst Amblers fell to 0-3 via a 47-7 loss at Iowa, which was also Kirk Ferentz’s 206th victory, making him the winningest coach in Big Ten Conference history. It was a fitting coincidence considering that Ferentz took the Hawkeyes job while the original Minutemen were still in Massachusetts.

The Bearkats kouldn’t enjoy the bye week on their kalendar bekause they still kouldn’t kover the spread against Open Date U. Now they will kombat Texas and kuarterbacking konundrum Arch Manning.

There are currently 11 0-and-something teams in the FBS, and five reside in #MACtion. Sources have told Bottom 10 JortsCenter that those teams have all asked Ohio if they can have the contact info for West Virginia’s scheduling guy.

In related news, sources are also telling us that after firing head coach DeShaun Foster, UCLA officials attempted to see if the NCAA would let them return to the Pac-2, but their calls kept getting kicked to voicemail because the NCAA lines were tied up with all of the UCLA players ringing the transfer portal hotline.

Editor’s Picks

2 Related

Since their dramatic run to the College Football Playoff national title game, the Irish are 0-3. It’s not an ugly 0-3. It’s 0-3 against three ranked teams by a combined 15 points — and the two losses this season are by a combined four points. But with no conference championship at their disposal and only one ranked opponent remaining on their schedule, the Irish CFP safety net is thinner than the margin of whether Rudy was or wasn’t offside.

Virginia Tech spent the offseason having its roster raided like a rum runner boat boarded by Jack Sparrow, lost a game to the son of its legendary coach, got run over by Vandy, got blown out by supposed little brother in-state school Old Dominion and fired its head coach so early in the season that the players who were left from the first transfer portal raid could start their own transfer portal exit if they wanted. My pal Marty Smith hasn’t been this upset since I accidentally spilled Swiss Miss on his white Air Jordan Dior’s.

7. Oregon Trail State (You have died of dysentery) (0-3)

Full disclosure: I am currently writing this in a hotel room in Corvallis, where I’m working on a “College GameDay” feature about the platypus trophy that the Beavers and Ducks will play for this weekend. I am … pretty … sure … they’re … messing … wItH … THEE … hOtEl … WHYFY … 2 … kEEp … mE … frum … FY-LING … this … STorY …

I don’t want y’all to get too excited, but I am looking at the schedule and on back-to-back Tuesday nights in November, Weeks 12 and 13, Akron hosts UMess and State of Kent. That rapid clicking you heard was me checking on hotels and flights and then emailing the “GameDay” honchos to try to convince them to do shows from Akron with me for seven straight days. That one solitary click you heard was them hanging up on me.

The Golden Flashes in the Pan lived up to that name, constructing a NSFW 21-play, 93-yard, 12-plus-minute drive to take a 28-24 lead over the Buffalo Bulls Not Bills with 2:38 remaining … and then surrendering 76 yards on eight plays in 1:29 to lose their 24th straight FBS game, 17th straight MAC game and 11th straight conference game at home. That’s not NSFW, that’s NC-17. Shoutout to a year ago, when the Flashes’ upcoming visit to Florida State would have been the Pillow Fight of the Week.

Speaking of NC-17, have y’all peeped Florida’s schedule? It’s the scariest thing I’ve seen since that time my family visited a Florida truck stop and my daughter bought what she thought was a souvenir rubber alligator, but then a few miles down the road it bit the dog.

Waiting list: Do You Know The Way to San Jose State, Northworstern, My Hammy of Ohio, Western Not Eastern or Central Michigan, Kennesaw Mountain Landis State, No-vada, the team that barely beat No-vada, Baller State, We’re Not In Kansas State Anymore, replay reviews that make on-field refs quit.





Source link

September 17, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Virus symbol, computer protection, cyber attack, antivirus, digital worm and bug icon. Futuristic abstract concept 3d rendering illustration.
Gaming Gear

A terrifying, self-replicating malwaere has infected npm packages with over 2 million downloads per week – here’s how to stay safe

by admin September 17, 2025



  • A new supply-chain attack compromised at least 187 npm packages, targeting developer secrets across software projects
  • Shai-Hulud worm looks to steal credentials, modify packages, and spread malware through GitHub Actions and npm tokens
  • Researchers warn the number of compromised packages is likely to grow

At least 187 malicious npm packages have been uncovered, part of a yet another major supply-chain attack against software developers.

Security researchers from Socket, StepSecurity, and Aikido all detected an ongoing campaign, apparently being orchestrated by the same group that targeted Nx several weeks ago.

Similar to that campaign, in this one the miscreants were also after developer secrets, including login credentials, AWS keys, GCP and Azure service credentials, GitHub personal access tokens, cloud metadata endpoints, or npm authentication tokens.


You may like

Many affected

However, the attack methodology evolved, the researchers noted.

“The scale, scope and impact of this attack is significant,” they explained. “The attackers are using the same playbook in large parts as the original attack, but have stepped up their game.”

This time around, the attackers created a worm, called Shai-Hulud (a nod to the Dune worm), which not only steals secrets and publishes them to GitHub publicly (using tools like TruffleHog and queries on cloud metadata endpoints), but also drops a malicious GitHub Action that sends secrets to an attacker-controlled webhook and hides them in logs, and uses stolen npm tokens to modify and republish every package the maintainer controls, embedding the worm in each one.

Among the compromised npm packages are those from cybersecurity experts CrowdStrike, as well as others with millions of weekly downloads.

Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!

CrowdStrike, on its end, did what it could to mitigate the risk and minimize the damage.

“After detecting several malicious Node Package Manager (NPM) packages in the public NPM registry, a third-party open source repository, we swiftly removed them and proactively rotated our keys in public registries,” a CrowdStrike spokesperson said, The Register reports.

“These packages are not used in the Falcon sensor, the platform is not impacted and customers remain protected. We are working with NPM and conducting a thorough investigation.”

At the moment the number of packages affected by the attack sits at 187, the researchers warned that the number will most likely continue to rise. Some potentially compromised packages are currently pending validation.

Via The Register

You might also like



Source link

September 17, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
A New PlayStation Presentation, Possibly A State Of Play, Is Coming Next Week - Report
Game Updates

A New PlayStation Presentation, Possibly A State Of Play, Is Coming Next Week – Report

by admin September 16, 2025



Sony is reportedly prepping a new PlayStation event for next week, according to reliable leaker NateTheHate2. However, it’s not clarified whether this could be a State of Play or Showcase, though there hasn’t been a version of the latter in over two years at this point.

The last two PlayStation State of Play events have each focused on a single game. The July presentation put the spotlight on first-party exclusive Ghost of Yotei, while earlier this month, Sony showed off the James Bond title 007: First Light from Hitman developer IO Interactive. If this recent report pans out, that would mean two major PlayStation events in one month. At the start of September, NateTheHate2 nailed when the latest Nintendo Direct would happen.

Size:640 × 360480 × 270

Want us to remember this setting for all your devices?

Sign up or Sign in now!

Please use a html5 video capable browser to watch videos.

This video has an invalid file format.

Sorry, but you can’t access this content!

Please enter your date of birth to view this video

JanuaryFebruaryMarchAprilMayJuneJulyAugustSeptemberOctoberNovemberDecember12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031Year202520242023202220212020201920182017201620152014201320122011201020092008200720062005200420032002200120001999199819971996199519941993199219911990198919881987198619851984198319821981198019791978197719761975197419731972197119701969196819671966196519641963196219611960195919581957195619551954195319521951195019491948194719461945194419431942194119401939193819371936193519341933193219311930192919281927192619251924192319221921192019191918191719161915191419131912191119101909190819071906190519041903190219011900

By clicking ‘enter’, you agree to GameSpot’s

Terms of Use and
Privacy Policy

enter

Now Playing: Marvel’s Wolverine | PlayStation Showcase 2021

One game that could be featured at the possible PlayStation event next week is Marvel’s Wolverine from Insomniac Games. On top of past rumblings about its appearance, a new report from MP1st states that Marvel’s Wolverine is slated to arrive in 2026. The game was first announced in 2021.

Other prospects for popping up include Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet from Naughty Dog, Saros from Returnal developer Housemarque, or any number of third-party titles. So far this year, Sony has held five different PlayStation State of Play events. Keep in mind the company hasn’t officially announced anything yet.



Source link

September 16, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
XRP ETF news
NFT Gaming

First US Spot XRP ETF Set To Debut This Week: All You Need To Know

by admin September 16, 2025


REX Shares says it will list the first US exchange-traded fund offering spot exposure to XRP this week, trading under the ticker XRPR. “The REX-Osprey XRP ETF is coming this week!” the issuer posted on X, adding that the product will be the first US ETF to deliver investors spot exposure, currently the third-largest cryptoasset by market value.

XRP Makes Wall Street History

Unlike the SEC-approved spot bitcoin and ether products—structured as ’33 Act commodity trusts—the REX-Osprey fund is being launched as a ’40 Act open-end ETF. That structure permits an ETF to operate as a registered investment company and can mix exposures, rather than holding only a single commodity in a trust format. The SEC itself emphasizes that spot bitcoin and ether “ETPs” are not ’40 Act ETFs, underscoring the distinct regulatory regimes at play here.

In its latest Form N-1A filing, the fund is presented alongside sister products and described as seeking results that correspond to the performance of the token. The principal strategy commits to investing at least 80% of net assets in XRP and/or other assets that provide exposure to the token, either directly or via a wholly-owned Cayman subsidiary.

The filing also caps investment in that subsidiary at 25% of total assets. Creation and redemption are available to authorized participants, with the fund reserving the right to settle redemptions in cash and noting a standard T+2 payout timeline, extendable to seven days under stress.

The prospectus further allows the ETF to invest in other investment companies (including ETFs) subject to Section 12(d)(1) limits and contemplates the use of derivatives as permitted under the ’40 Act—language that provides flexibility, but does not make derivatives the primary exposure.

Bloomberg’s James Seyffart, who tracks crypto ETPs, cautioned that the product is not “pure” spot, explaining “it will hold spot directly and other spot XRP ETFs from around the world to get its exposure.” He added: “The fund documents also have language that would allow derivatives usage for exposure if needed but that definitely isn’t the primary exposure method.”

ETF Store president Nate Geraci framed the launch as a regulatory maneuver enabled by the ’40 Act: “First ETF offering spot XRP exposure set to launch this week…REX-Osprey using clever regulatory end-around via ‘40 Act structure to bring this to market. Will be another good litmus test for ‘33 Act spot XRP ETF demand. Futures-based XRP ETFs already nearing $1bil in assets.”

Market Backdrop And Futures Momentum

The debut comes as derivatives set records. In late August, CME XRP futures surpassed $1 billion in open interest, the fastest pace for any new contract on the venue, and industry commentators now peg US futures-based ETFs as nearing $1 billion in assets—a relevant yardstick for gauging initial demand for spot exposure in an ETF wrapper.

A broader wave of ’33 Act spot proposals is also in the queue. Any eventual approvals of ’33 Act spot trusts would add a second, more direct structural path to US spot exposure, alongside the REX-Osprey ’40 Act route.

Notably, REX-Osprey previously introduced the Solana + Staking ETF (SSK) via a comparable framework—context for how the firm is threading the regulatory needle. Separately, the issuer has guided that a Dogecoin ETF (DOJE) is also on deck this week, highlighting how alternative structures are opening US markets to non-BTC/ETH assets.

At press time, XRP traded at $3.00.



Source link

September 16, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • …
  • 9

Categories

  • Crypto Trends (1,098)
  • Esports (800)
  • Game Reviews (772)
  • Game Updates (906)
  • GameFi Guides (1,058)
  • Gaming Gear (960)
  • NFT Gaming (1,079)
  • Product Reviews (960)

Recent Posts

  • This 5-Star Dell Laptop Bundle (64GB RAM, 2TB SSD) Sees 72% Cut, From Above MacBook Pricing to Practically a Steal
  • Blue Protocol: Star Resonance is finally out in the west and off to a strong start on Steam, but was the MMORPG worth the wait?
  • How to Unblock OpenAI’s Sora 2 If You’re Outside the US and Canada
  • Final Fantasy 7 Remake and Rebirth finally available as physical double pack on PS5
  • The 10 Most Valuable Cards

Recent Posts

  • This 5-Star Dell Laptop Bundle (64GB RAM, 2TB SSD) Sees 72% Cut, From Above MacBook Pricing to Practically a Steal

    October 10, 2025
  • Blue Protocol: Star Resonance is finally out in the west and off to a strong start on Steam, but was the MMORPG worth the wait?

    October 10, 2025
  • How to Unblock OpenAI’s Sora 2 If You’re Outside the US and Canada

    October 10, 2025
  • Final Fantasy 7 Remake and Rebirth finally available as physical double pack on PS5

    October 10, 2025
  • The 10 Most Valuable Cards

    October 10, 2025

Newsletter

About me

Welcome to Laughinghyena.io, your ultimate destination for the latest in blockchain gaming and gaming products. We’re passionate about the future of gaming, where decentralized technology empowers players to own, trade, and thrive in virtual worlds.

Recent Posts

  • This 5-Star Dell Laptop Bundle (64GB RAM, 2TB SSD) Sees 72% Cut, From Above MacBook Pricing to Practically a Steal

    October 10, 2025
  • Blue Protocol: Star Resonance is finally out in the west and off to a strong start on Steam, but was the MMORPG worth the wait?

    October 10, 2025

Newsletter

@2025 laughinghyena- All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
Laughing Hyena
  • Home
  • Hyena Games
  • Esports
  • NFT Gaming
  • Crypto Trends
  • Game Reviews
  • Game Updates
  • GameFi Guides
  • Shop

Shopping Cart

Close

No products in the cart.

Close