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.

Titans at Jets: Tennessee won't have either A.J. Brown or Julio Jones, which seems like a negative for the offense. Should me more running, and some passes to some nobody wideout and Anthony Firkser, but in general I'm wary of Ryan Tannehill and the offense in general. Jets are expected to have Jamison Crowder back, killing the appeal or Braxton Berrios, but the two could also share the role, making neither appealing. Corey Davis against his former team is literally the only piece of the Jets offense I'm interested in.

Kansas City at Eagles: No noteworthy skill player injuries here. I'm expecting Kansas City's offense to be pretty good and Philadelphia's offense to be OK even if it's after the outcome has been decided. Amusing watching debates over whether the Eagles should be pursuing Deshaun Watson or not. It's the cost, the PR hit, and the fact he might not play before 2022 that works against it, not any question of whether he'd be an upgrade from Jalen Hurts.

Panthers at Cowboys: No Christian McCaffrey, no Michael Gallup, otherwise players are healthy and prepped to do their thing. Two defenses who have exceeded expectations by quite a bit -- the Panthers have been good (schedule has helped, but still), the Cowboys haven't been bad. This will be a nice test for both, but it's easier to bet on Dak Prescott than Sam Darnold.

Giants at Saints: New York is 0-3 with a couple of final play losses, now they're on the road facing a tough defense. Not a great situation, and they won't have Sterling Shepard or Darius Slayton, with Shepard's absence being the biggest deal. Should be more for Kadarius Toney, Collin Johnson and Evan Engram, and in theory Kenny Golladay, but I never liked the fit and we haven't seen much great yet. For the Saints, difficult to invest in the offense beyond Alvin Kamara. Will they pass much, will they pass effectively, will they give Marquez Callaway more than 5 targets? It's weird they've had a whole year with Jameis Winston in the system but seem to have decided Let's not have him pass the ball. Seems like they'll be looking elsewhere in the offseason.

Browns at Vikings: Sounds like the Vikings will have Dalvin Cook back. Worth watching the morning shows to be sure all reports are positive, but sounds like he can be used and Alexander Mattison can't. For the Browns you've got Chubb and Hunt and even Odell Beckham, what with Jarvis Landry out and the Browns not having much else at wide receiver.

Lions at Bears: Am thinking the Lions win this game and just maybe Matt Nagy gets fired before the end of the month. I don't know if the Bears' issues are all on him or if it's a GM thing, but no one can say he has the team headed in the right direction or anything. He's not announcing the quarterback, which only makes it even easier not to use one. David Montgomery yes and Allen Robinson because he's a very good player facing a soft defense, but of course the quarterback situation is not ideal. Lions I'm assuming the standard Jamaal Williams and D'Andre Swift committee, although the Lions did hint this week at more Swift, making him a little more appealing (groin injury isn't supposed to affect him anymore than it has to this point).

Texans at Bills: Escaped with the Bengals as one Survivor Pool entry this week. The Bills are the other, given that they're just a much better team at basically every position than the Texans. I want no part of anything associated with Houston's offense but Brandin Cooks. Bills players grade out favorably, excepting the running back committee making neither one look outstanding.

Colts at Dolphins: Dolphins healthy, but committee backfield and Jacoby Brissett at quarterback, not really appealing. Colts have a gimpy Carson Wentz and some offensive line injuries, so also not great, and Jack Doyle might not play either. Ugly matchup. I'm happy about what Michael Pittman has been doing; a touchdown would be nice at some point, but I guess you can't have everything.

Football Team at Falcons: So Antonio Gibson is banged up. I don't think it sounds too bad but something to monitor, see if it sounds like he'll be spelled more heavily. Worth switching to a similar, fully healthy option if you have one. Falcons won't have Russell Gage and are facing an underperforming defense, so maybe you consider Olamide Zaccheaus as a fill-in, but not too aggressively. I haven't given up on Washington still having a quality D this year, it's only three games and a couple of really tough matchups in there. I've had some questions about Cordarrelle Patterson -- why isn't he higher because of the way he's produced? Look, he's playing in a committee, and past performance no guarantee of future results. You don't get the points he's already scored, and 40-50 percent of Atlanta's running/short receiving game isn't always going to pay off, especially once he doesn't score. But no doubt he's been solid and there's upside, there's just risk, too.

Seahawks at 49ers: Messy. Not sure which San Francisco running back will be the main guy, Trey Sermon is healthier, so probably him rather than Elijah Mitchell, but it's not certain. George Kittle is questionable, another negative for San Francisco, and Trey Lance will probably replace Jimmy Garoppolo at times. For Seattle, Tyler Lockett is questionable with a hip injury; should play, might be limited, risky. DK Metcalf and Chris Carson, at least, look very good, as does Russell Wilson -- let's not get taken by the reputation of San Francisco's defense, it hasn't looked great thus far. No Gerald Everett.

Cardinals at Rams: Darrell Henderson questionable. Decent chance he plays, but might be more of a committee with Sony Michel. A little risky, assuming he's active, Michel becomes appealing if he's not. Nobody needs help to start Stafford, Kupp. DeAndre Hopkins should play, and be closer to full health than last week, but tough matchup for wide receivers. "Why is such and such Cardinals receiver so low?" It's in the writeup, we're not crazy about Kyler Murray against the Rams defense. Once you lower the overall passing projection, it brings the receivers down, it's not like we have their numbers add up to more than Murray is passing for. I'm still starting Murray, since he'll run some, but a tougher situation for him.

Steelers at Packers: How the Steelers beat Buffalo is something that'll look pretty mysterious later in the year. It does already. Green Bay's defense is nothing special so perhaps we'll see Ben Roethlisberger rise up with a good game, but hard to have confidence in the guy right now. Early in the week it seemed like Diontae Johnson and JuJu Smith-Schuster were iffy. Instead they're fine, and Chase Claypool is the one unlikely to play (didn't practice on Friday, hamstring). Najee Harris and key Packer starters look OK. Steelers defense can still play but no one is/should be shying away from Rodgers, Adams, Jones, obviously. If you were planning to start other Green Bay receivers (except perhaps Robert Tonyan), don't. MVS apparently headed for IR, let alone not playing in this one.

Ravens at Broncos: Good game I think, and I'm kind of rooting for the Broncos after the way they got trashed in Ask the Experts this week. Good defense and should cause some problems a time for Lamar Jackson and company. Melvin Gordon is questionable, making him a slightly less appealing play, and you need to confirm he's definitely active, too. If not, Javonte Williams becomes more promising. Doesn't seem to be a shutdown Ravens defense. So I'm OK using Courtland Sutton and Tim Patrick, too. Ravens, avoid the running backs, but sure on Mark Andrews, Hollywood Brown and maybe Sammy Watkins to a lesser extent.

Buccaneers at Patriots: I'm stunned that Rob Gronkowski is doubtful for this game. I'd have figured he'd need to be dead to miss this return to Foxborough. So if he is in fact inactive, he's got to be really hurting. I respect the Patriots defense, but I have no hesitation to use Tom Brady and his main wideouts anyway. And Leonard Fournette as the pass-catching option at running back, with Giovani Bernard out. I'm lukewarm on Cameron Brate because he's not Gronk, so I don't think any effort will be made to get him a score if Gronk is out; he's just like the 3rd or 4th pass catching option. For the Patriots, uh, Jakobi Meyers? Maybe Hunter Henry, with passing needing to be up. Not a super situation for the team.

Raiders at Chargers: Should be a great Monday night game, like both of these meetings a year ago. Justin Herbert is great, Derek Carr seems to also be great these days. Big question is the running back situation with Josh Jacobs or Peyton Barber. If Jacobs is active, I'd like to use him, but since it's Monday I'd need a same game alternative. If I had Barber, great, but I don't. Tricky to use either guy, not everyone can do it. Main Charger pass catchers look great, same with Darren Waller, the wide receivers are less reliable but there should be a good one or two.

Enjoy the games.

--Andy Richardson