Every Saturday morning, I'll take a quick look at all the week's games, offering my own 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 questions, too.

Hurricane Joaquin is in the news, though it won't have a huge effect on the NFL. The Jets are in England, the Giants are in Buffalo, the Patriots are on a bye. We have a lot of rain here in the Northeast, but no actual games being played. Just Washington-Philadelphia, and indications are that game will be played. This is a reminder, though, to glance ahead at the late-season schedule and see which teams might be most affected by November-December weather. See if you're relying too much on players who might be playing in snow or foul weather, and limited in those games. Or you know, those stupid Week 11 byes the schedule is giving us. OK, let's go.

Jets vs. Dolphins across the pond: This game starts at 9:30 a.m. Eastern time, so some people (no matter where they are) will be just waking up when it kicks off. Make sure you either do or don't have Eric Decker in your lineup. He's a gametime decision, and after the Chris Ivory thing last week (active but didn't play), I don't think you can reasonably even consider Decker. Bench him and get your 8-12 points somewhere else. Ivory, though, I would definitely use, as he's healthy and should run all over Miami. No Dolphins but Jarvis Landry are in my lineup or on my teams, and I feel good about that.

Texans at Falcons: Houston has a credible defense but Devonta Freeman is a full-time running back and Matt Ryan and Julio Jones are having themselves a year, so not sure matchups matter with them. I wouldn't use any other Falcons, though, and DeAndre Hopkins is the only sure Texan. Now, if Arian Foster is out, you can start Alfred Blue, and that's how I THINK things will go. But we won't know until tomorrow. If I had Arian Foster, well, I'd kind of like to see him play before using him, although if he's practicing fully this week I'd use him Thursday against the Colts. I won't be using him at Atlanta.

Giants at Bills: No LeSean McCoy or Sammy Watkins, which reduces the Bills options, but makes other ones look better. Karlos Williams, certainly, and Percy Harvin. For the Giants, Victor Cruz is definitely out of the picture, so Rueben Randle looks safer. The only running back I'd consider is Shane Vereen, thinking of how the Patriots approached the Bills (and my general lack of enthusiasm for "running" backs Rashad Jennings and Andre Williams).

Raiders at Bears: It's been pointed out to me that Chicago's defense hasn't exactly been garbage so far; it was respectable up in Seattle. And that's fair. Nonetheless, I really like Latavius Murray here, as he's playing close to full-time, and think Amari Cooper should also be great. Chicago, they're keeping us guessing as to whether Jay Cutler is playing, but the good news is it does not matter. There's no Alshon Jeffery anyway so you don't want to invest in the Bears passing, EXCEPT for Martellus Bennett, who faces a defense that I can only assume is unaware that some offenses use their tight ends as receivers.

Kansas City at Bengals: At a glance this looks like a good game between two teams in that second tier of AFC contenders. Based on how things have gone so far, though, the Bengals should soon be 4-0 and have some nice offensive production in this game. I'd be starting Jeremy Hill and other key Bengals. You don't need anyone's help to start Charles and Kelce. That's about it with this one.

Jaguars at Colts: Andrew Luck has been a disappointment so far, and now he may not play for the first of those sweet, delicious cupcake games you drafted him for. Chuck Pagano says he has no doubt Luck will play, but I'm not sure Pagano has much of a clue; he just says things sometimes. Anyway the question isn't as much of whether Luck will play (he probably will) but if he'll actually be Andrew Luck, or just handing it off a lot. The running game should work well and Luck will probably pass a lot less even if he plays. So I think you need to sit him down as long as you have a viable backup. To my mind, "viable" is everyone down to about 13 in our rankings, plus Eli Manning. I am personally shying away from Hilton and Moncrief, too, for comparably ranked players. And I don't want to use Coby Fleener, but would once Allen is definitely inactive. For Jacksonville, you've got the two main wide receivers and T.J. Yeldon, and that's it.

Panthers at Buccaneers: People act like defenses are based on luck, but I disagree. I think it's heavily, heavily matchup driven, which is why Carolina has been a fine defense to start so far (4 very favorable matchups) and why I'll probably kick them to free agency after this week (Bye, followed by several tougher games). Anyway, Cam Newton and Greg Olsen look good. Jonathan Stewart seems to be OK for the game, it's just not the scoring thing that's an issue. And Mike Tolbert is also probable. Bucs could be using a committee at running back with Doug Martin not 100 percent. Sign me up for Mike Evans and Vincent Jackson.

Eagles at Washington: Game could be delayed or moved. It should still be played this week, though it's not like it's loaded with fantastic fantasy starters. Jordan Reed and Jordan Matthews, yes. I'm using Darren Sproles in PPR because he's been awesome. But I'm not sure how Murray and Mathews will divide up the main carries, and Washington isn't terrible against the run. Washington will also use a Morris-Jones committee, reducing the appeal there. Just not a great situation for those hoping to start a running back, though at least with Washington you can say, they'll run a lot. Especially if the game is actually played where and when it's supposed to be, and weather is a factor.

Browns at Chargers: I made the Chargers my Survivor Pool pick this week, just because betting against the Browns seems like a reasonable idea. But San Diego's offensive line is gutted, so they might not be quite as good as you'd hope. Still, I do like Melvin Gordon, line issues and all, and Keenan Allen. Cleveland is Cleveland. I suppose you can consider Isaiah Crowell, but if you do, you can't feel bad if you get burned.

Rams at Cardinals: There will apparently be a heavy workload for Todd Gurley here, but I'm still leaving him on my bench until we see it, and the matchup is poor anyway. Chris Johnson leads the backfield for Arizona, and his matchup is also poor. To my mind you start the ones who have been doing it for you so far, including CJ, but I doubt he'll post huge numbers. Can't sit down Larry Fitzgerald now, obviously, and I'm opting for John Brown in the PPR flex over CJ.

Vikings at Broncos: I think I started Peyton Manning (over Luck) in the Super League this week. I like the matchup and Denver's passing game over its running game. But I'm not entirely sold that Manning is still Manning. There was more gushing about his game in Detroit than I thought his play warranted. It looked like work for him. Anyway, our huge respect for Denver's defense means Adrian Peterson and maybe Kyle Rudolph are the only Vikings to consider. I still view C.J. Anderson as Denver's best runner, but am not crazy about the matchup.

Packers at 49ers: Picked up the Green Bay defense to face Colin Kaepernick, who I have given up on. Carlos Hyde, though, is intriguing against the Packers. No Vernon Davis, no real interest in San Francisco's passing game regardless. For the Packers, don't use Davante Adams, even if he happens to be active (which he won't be). Once he's ruled out, Ty Montgomery becomes an option in deeper leagues, while James Jones is a virtual must-start. You wonder a little why the Giants cut Jones. You can say, well, they expected to have Victor Cruz, but maybe Jones would have been a better insurance policy to keep than Preston Parker or Dwayne Harris. Just sayin'.

Cowboys at Saints: Drew Brees returns. I'm sitting him for Cam Newton, but it sounds like Brees should be OK. Accordingly, maybe this will be the week Brandin Cooks rewards those who have been starting him. Decent game last week that could have been better. I like Mark Ingram, too. For Dallas, it's Brandon Weeden, which is a negative, but I'd still use Witten and, yes, Terrance Williams. On Joseph Randle, well, he was a little lucky last week. One nice run, and then several chances from the 1-yard line equaled a great game. But I'm not buying him as the answer long-term, and am hanging onto Christine Michael.

Lions at Seahawks: Oh joy, it's a Monday night matchup of teams who have played in the last two Sunday night games. Hurrah. I think the NFL and/or networks believe these teams are far more interesting to watch than they actually are. I guess the Seahawks are deserving and stuff, but I'm not really pumped for this game. And we have to wonder if it will be Marshawn Lynch or Thomas Rawls, complicating everything for fantasy teams. I think Ameer Abdullah will get a bigger workload, though obviously the matchup isn't great. And it appears that things won't end well for Jim Caldwell in Detroit (everyone wondered why he got the head coaching job in the first place). Matchup poor for Calvin Johnson and Golden Tate, though it's not easy to sit them down in typical leagues.

Enjoy the games.

--Andy Richardson