Every Saturday morning, I'll take a quick look at all the week's games, offering my own brief take on what I think will happen, as well as touching on significant injury news since our Weekly came out. I'll check in every so often over the course of the day to answer lineup questions, too.

What follows is a brief look at all the games with how I'd react in my own lineups to injury developments or other news. The official rankings are the ones in the Weekly. Those take precedence. But sometimes players are very close, and in those cases I'm glad to offer opinions on how I'd approach those situations. Sometimes I like certain players more or less than Ian, and sometimes I have different risk tolerance with injuries etc.

If your question doesn't get answered, it's possible the rankings are very clear on those choices. I'm not going to disregard all our research to recommend somebody 15 spots below somebody else. Fair? OK, on to the games.

Texans at Steelers: I'm benching David Johnson. Something has to give in this matchup and I doubt it will be Pittsburgh's run defense. If you have to use DJ, he should at least catch some passes. I'm fine using Houston's passing game, just too difficult to consider benching Deshaun Watson. Pittsburgh's offense should be fine.

Bengals at Eagles: Injuries to the Eagles are borderline comical; the Jalen Reagor one came out of nowhere. Cincinnati's defense soft enough that Miles Sanders and both tight ends look good. Can't help but be concerned about Carson Wentz, though. Tough matchup for Joe Mixon. Cincinnati's passing game has a little better matchup. I'd use Drew Sample in PPR and am OK with Green, Boyd.

49ers at Giants: I won't go as far to say Giants upset, but the Niners are certainly vulnerable. I like the Giants offense and would use the main wideouts (no Shepard), Engram and Dion Lewis only from the running backs. For San Francisco, I saw the report thinking Jeff Wilson might be a better option than Jerick McKinnon. I disagree, maybe in standard, not PPR. Jordan Reed with George Kittle out again.

Raiders at Patriots: Gotta think New England's defense will be a little better than it was at Seattle, and the Raiders offense won't be as good as it was against New Orleans. I like the key pieces of New England's passing game, especially Cam Newton. No James White, however. With the Raiders, there's Darren Waller for sure, even knowing Belichick is scheming up double teams to take that away. Josh Jacobs, despite a tough matchup; hard to bench him.

Titans at Vikings: I know the Vikings' backs are to the wall and all, but I wonder if maybe they're not that good. Then again the Titans are really, really fortunate to be 2-0, so maybe they're do for things not to go their way. Anyhoo, I'd use the key players here: Cook, Henry, Thielen, Jonnu. Maybe Tannehill, Corey Davis if necessary. No A.J. Brown again.

A Football Team at Browns: I think if you have Antonio Gibson you're probably just starting him at this point and hoping it pays off. Seems like he's emerging from the committee, which isn't surprising considering what else is there. Bummed by bench stash of Bryce Love is collecting dust, though. Terry McLaurin, Nick Chubb and Kareem Hunt are the definites. Browns passing game, you know, just seems like it will have more quiet games than good ones, and this might be a quiet one.

Rams at Bills: It was nice to see Darrell Henderson have a good game last week. Not so nice if you blew the waiver budget on Malcolm Brown. It's going to happen again this week with somebody who spends money on either Dion Lewis or Devonta Freeman -- they can't both be good. Back to this game. Both teams have started out well. Josh Allen and the top receivers for both teams look decent. Zack Moss out so a week to use Devin Singletary. I'm thinking maybe a lower-scoring game, with both defenses solid, Buffalo's weird near loss in Miami notwithstanding. No Dawson Knox, John Brown not 100 percent.

Bears at Falcons: Obviously the Super Bowl loss was way, way worse. But last week's collapse against Dallas had to sting as much as any Week 2 game can. Bears defense has played well. I can't quite bring myself to bench Matt Ryan for Carson Wentz, given all the injuries in Philly, but I thought about it. For the Bears, we were high on David Montgomery all summer, and I cooled on him with that stupid preseason groin strain. Drafted Mark Ingram one pick before him as my 2nd running back in the fourth round in an expensive league. Painful. Anyway, Allen Robinson and Montgomery should be good in this one. And I can't really sit down Ridley, especially with Julio a gametime decision and seeming unlikely to play. Tough matchup though.

Panthers at Chargers: Maybe it's just me, but the report that a team doctor accidentally punctured Tyrod Taylor's lung while administering a pain-killing injection is the scariest thing I've heard in a while. So Justin Herbert starts, and it's a nice matchup with a team that's kind of toothless (see what I did there) on defense. Thumbs up on Mike Davis, absolutely. And various key Chargers.

Jets at Colts: If I hadn't used the Colts in Week 1, I'd be using them in my Survivor Pool (that I could buy back into in the first three weeks, and did, but I can't use the Colts again. I can't fathom wanting to start any Jets of any kind in this game, particularly with Jamison Crowder out. For the Colts, Jonathan Taylor, the defense, maybe T.Y. Hilton. Like Nyheim Hines more when the Colts are behind, which shouldn't be this week. Jack Doyle will return, hurting the appeal of Mo Alie-Cox.

Cowboys at Seahawks: Should be an entertaining slugfest. Lots of offensive talent on both sides. Start your guys and hope they're the ones who score. I have no more superlatives to offer on Russell Wilson beyond, I wish I had him in more leagues. And that I'd drafted Elliott over Barkley. Oh well.

Bucs at Broncos: Hey, so Tom Brady hasn't done that well in Denver over the years. I'd still be starting Evans, Godwin and maybe Leonard Fournette (with caution), but there's a negative history for him there. For Denver, I like Melvin Gordon, Noah Fant and new No. 1 Jerry Jeudy. And that's pretty much it.

Lions at Cardinals: This was a fun game in Week 1 a year ago, even though it ended in a tie. I think it'll be a fun one again, with lots of offense and an exciting young quarterback and a likable veteran quarterback. Key Cardinals and Lions look good, because points will be scored. Kenny Golladay should return but inactives must be checked. No Christian Kirk.

Packers at Saints: Davante Adams sounds unlikely to play, Michael Thomas too. The starting running backs for both teams should be lineups. Aaron Rodgers looks like a regular starter these days, Drew Brees maybe not. Most of the pass catchers look hit or miss with No. 1 guys out; after getting burned with Emmanuel Sanders last week, I'm hesitant to trust him or TreQuan Smith (though Smith looked really good Monday night). I think Brees has another bounce-back in him and maybe it will come here, but the Saints didn't look much like a Super Bowl contender in Las Vegas.

Kansas City at Ravens: Maybe the best Monday night matchup in a long time, I wonder how the NFL accidentally let this happen. Should be a fun one, and a worthwhile week to pretty much use all key starters on both teams. I'm including Mark Ingram as key, after the quarterbacks, tight ends, Tyreek and Hollywood. Sammy Watkins in concussion protocol.

Final note: I've got some stuff going on today, so your questions may not be answered right away. But I will get to them by the end of the day.

Enjoy the games.