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 I don't get to your question, either I missed it (it happens) or the rankings are very clear.

Colts at Titans: Carson Wentz is a game-time call. I think the humor of him possibly trying to play with two sprained ankles merit a look, but the likelihood of him either being physically compromised or more likely needing to take a seat at some point makes him unusable and most of the offense undesirable. Apparently Brett Hundley is as likely to be the backup as Jacob Eason, and it's possible all three will be active. If I had Jonathan Taylor I think I'd use him and cross my fingers, but would hopefully have better alternatives than Michael Pittman (though he's a maybe for me) and Jack Doyle. Titans offense (and defense) look promising.

Falcons at Giants: Sounds like Evan Engram will play, Saquon Barkley is something close to full health, and the matchup looks pretty good for key Giants. Kenny Golladay is questionable but I'm assuming if he's active he's good to go (though I'd rather use Sterling Shepard). Falcons passing game looks promising, I'm wary of the Mike Davis-Cordarrelle Patterson committee. No Russell Gage, but I wouldn't go any deeper down the roster than Ridley-Pitts.

Chargers at Kansas City: Should be a higher-scoring game where I'd use the key starters on both sides. People seem to be relatively healthy. Wrote about this one for the Weekly and not much to add there. Theoretically a promising situation for Clyde Edwards-Helaire, but hard to feel good about him these days. Which means maybe he'll have a good game. Hoping for a Tyreek bounce-back after last week's disappointment.

Bengals at Steelers: Bengals defense has exceeded expectations so far, while Steelers offense has been as suspect as anticipated. Roethlisberger playing hurt but should play. Diontae Johnson has already been ruled out and Tee Higgins is doubtful, which usually means out. In both cases this is a plus for the other players, notably JuJu Smith-Schuster, Chase Claypool, JaMarr Chase, Tyler Boyd. Both starting running backs should be viable for their three-down roles.

Bears at Browns: Justin Fields will start, and one guesses Andy Dalton won't be healthy enough to return to the starting lineup until Fields has a really bad game. I was pessimistic about the Bears receivers with Dalton and similar with Fields -- one day they'll be better, but in Week 3 with Cleveland's aggressive pass rush getting in the backfield? Different story. Darnell Mooney questionable anyway. Odell Beckham will play for the Browns, and since somebody has to catch passes he might be surprisingly productive. But you're running the risk of limited snaps in a run-first offense against a Bears defense that's legit, so you know, there's more downside, I think, than upside. Should be lots of running from both teams.

Ravens at Lions: One of my two Survivor picks was Carolina last night. The other will either be this one or the Broncos at home against the Jets. One negative with the Ravens is that they'll be without several defensive starters due to a COVID close contact situation. Credit to the Lions for playing tough against San Francisco and Green Bay the first two weeks, but they seem to be pretty short-handed defensively, so Baltimore's offense will definitely be fine. Two running back committees in this game that will be difficult to invest in. At least Swift (questionable with a groin injury) and Jamaal will both catch a lot of passes, which can't be said about whoever the Ravens send out on the field. Love the tight ends in this game! And Marquise Brown.

Saints at Patriots: Marquez Callaway and Juwan Johnson will not be in my lineup this week. I think Alvin Kamara is the only Saint to consider and hard to feel great about him, given the apparent state of the offense and the matchup. New Orleans also has an above-average defense (Week 1 yes, Week 2 not so much), so not a week to get too cute with many Patriots beyond James White, Damien Harris, and just possibly Jakobi Meyers. But all around this should be a lower-scoring game.

Cardinals at Jaguars: DeAndre Hopkins (ribs) is a game-day decision and didn't practice all week. I would say that if you wanted to hold a star player out for a week to get him some rest and get healthy, this is the matchup to do it in. Hopefully we'll know more about his status come Sunday, but I personally need to get some more positive info than we have right now to use him with much confidence. If he is out, Christian Kirk becomes more appealing. Rondale Moore I think I'm using in a couple of leagues anyway. Jaguars, we saw last week that it's possible to put up good numbers against Arizona, but I'm not certain we can count on that with them right now.

Football Team at Bills: Not sure what to make of Washington defense which was supposed to be good but hasn't been through the first two games. Not the matchup likely to make everything better. I'd continue to use key elements of the Bills passing game, not as sure about Devin Singletary. For Washington, Buffalo defense isn't so scary that I'm concerned about Terry McLaurin or Logan Thomas. Antonio Gibson looks OK.

Jets at Broncos: Going with the Broncos as a Survivor pick. Nice spot for them to move to 3-0. Broncos do have some injuries so maybe Corey Davis has a better outing than against New England, but nothing else in the offense I'd really want to use. Jets a little better against the run than the pass but the Broncos running backs look viable and so do Courtland Sutton, Noah Fant and Tim Patrick. And their defense, natch. No Jamison Crowder for the Jets, so probably Braxton Berrios has a usable PPR floor.

Dolphins at Raiders: The Tua Tagovailoa breakout off to a bumpy start. He's out, and we've got Jacoby Brissett leading the Miami offense to a likely mediocre game against a seemingly improved Raiders defense. Raiders offense has been humming along and they're home, so I'm fine using Carr-Drake-Ruggs. I would not use or roster Peyton Barber.

Bucs at Rams: Should be a good one, with lots of potential for offense on both sides. The slight uncertainty over how Antonio Brown will be replaced has me unwilling to use either Scotty Miller or Tyler Johnson. If I were going to use a third receiver it'd be Van Jefferson, against a Bucs defense that can't be run on and can be passed on regularly. Along those same lines, I don't care if Darrell Henderson plays or not -- no interest in Henderson if he plays or Sony Michel if he doesn't. Most likely Henderson sits, so if you want a starting running back in this game, Michel is the better bet. But I wouldn't use him, and I don't think the Rams will run much.

Seahawks at Vikings: Neither defense has played well yet, both offenses are putting up good numbers. Big question here is whether Dalvin Cook (ankle) plays. My lean is to use him if he's active, even though he didn't practice all week, but it's easier if he's out and they have Alexander Mattison as a full-time type of running back. I can't promise Cook will have a full-time role if active, so if you have a decent alternative, might be best to avoid the issue. The quarterbacks and main wideouts for both teams look great.

Packers at 49ers: Green Bay has some offensive line issues, making their offense look less potent, but I'd be fine using Rodgers-Jones-Adams-Tonyan -- San Francisco defense wasn't scary against the Lions and was close to giving up more production to the Eagles. Key Green Bay players (which do not include MVS, Cobb) look OK to me. San Francisco will apparently be starting Trey Sermon at running back, with some combination of Trenton Cannon and Jacques Patrick behind him. I agree with the ranking of Sermon though there's some risk (but great upside if he does get 15-plus carries). As with Baltimore in Weeks 1-2, we have Green Bay playing in primetime in Weeks 2-3. Why? Is it so hard to get us a different teams in primetime on back to back weeks?

Eagles at Cowboys: Amari Cooper (ribs) should play. I think both offenses look promising in this game, and would use quarterbacks, main receivers, starting running backs. Looks like no Zach Ertz, a plus for Dallas Goedert. An entertaining Monday night game.

Enjoy the games.

--Andy Richardson