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.

Three fewer games to preview this week, since three happened on Thursday. Hopefully you started Calvin Johnson, Matthew Stafford or Eddie Lacy and are working with a nice lead. Stafford actually showed up higher in the rankings than I thought; sadly I sat him for Eli Manning. Always a drag when I set lineups too soon or too carelessly, which happens sometimes with these Thursday games sneaking up on you. Oh well.

Vikings at Falcons: No Devonta Freeman, and I have enough respect for the Vikings defense that I'm not looking to start many players in this game. Julio Jones yes, and with Leonard Hankerson out, Jacob Tamme looks better. But I kind of expect Minnesota to go into Atlanta and win something like 24-17, so I'm not keen on Tevin Coleman or Matt Ryan. Oh, no Matt Bryant either.

Rams at Bengals: I have the Rams Defense as a starter in one league, and I want to replace them but there's no worthwhile defenses available, plus I don't want to drop anyone. So for now I'm sticking with the Rams. For the Bengals, it's a tough matchup. You can use Eifert and Bernard and Green, but that's about it for the appealing choices. Bengals D against Nick Foles, back in the lineup not by choice.

Saints at Texans: I understand not being thrilled about Brian Hoyer or somebody like Nate Washington, but it's a really bad Saints defense. So you have to consider them unless you have a really appealing option. For example, I think Hoyer might be better than Matt Ryan this week. For the Saints, their offense should be fine. Not a great matchup, but I'm not betting against Brees-Cooks-Snead-Ingram.

Buccaneers at Colts: Bucs are the better team right now and I expect them to not just win but win easily. Doug Martin, VJax, Evans, bring 'em on. For the Colts, Frank Gore and T.Y. Hilton are the guys to consider, nothing special about the Bucs defense. Bucs could actually sneak into the wide-open NFC wild-card race.

Chargers at Jaguars: Don't want to dwell too much on here. It's over for the Chargers and I'm wary of everyone on the roster. Antonio Gates, Stevie Johnson and Danny Woodhead are the noteworthy guys. For the Jaguars, I like everyone. They'll score in the mid- to high-twenties in this game. Blake Bortles, T.J. Yeldon, very high in our rankings.

Bills at Kansas City: Kansas City defense playing very well, making all the Bills but LeSean McCoy hands off types. I guess you consider Sammy Watkins if you have him, because the talent and opportunity will be there, but the Bills passing game has been poor. I'm benching him. Kansas City it should be a whole lot of Spencer Ware and Travis Kelce.

Dolphins at Jets: Jarvis Landry is the questionable player here, one of the few Dolphins you would like to start if healthy since Darrelle Revis won't play. Lamar Miller looks fine, maybe not as a runner but as a receiver if the Jets stop the run. Guy I really like here is Chris Ivory. Great matchup, great against them in the earlier meeting, and New York needs to take some pressure off the passing game.

Raiders at Titans: Latavius Murray and the wideouts for Oakland. Delanie Walker and Kendall Wright (back from injury) for Tennessee. Maybe even Marcus Mariota. Titans should pass, Raiders should run and only pass to Cooper and Crabtree. Raiders should win pretty easily.

Giants at Washington: Interesting game because these are the NFC East teams who might finish over .500. I like the Giants offense, aside from the fact the running game is split four ways. For Washington, I like Cousins and his three main receivers. Will steer clear of this running back committee, as well. Jordan Reed is good to go and in lineups.

Cardinals at 49ers: Carson Palmer is starting for me over Matt Ryan and a bunch of other quarterback options. San Francisco's defense has played better at home, but I'm buying the season Palmer is having. Stay healthy, man, because the NFC is a lot less interesting if you don't. Chris Johnson, maybe Andre Ellington in PPR. If you're considering using any 49ers, I feel for you. Anquan Boldin begins and ends the realistic options.

Steelers at Seahawks: Fun game I think. Steelers have the great passing game, Seahawks have the great secondary. Steelers pretty good against the run, but Seahawks counter with a tough young running back. I think this game might be a little higher scoring than you'd think. Not sure anyone can realistically sit down Antonio Brown regardless of matchup. I wish this were the Sunday night game.

Patriots at Broncos: Speaking of which. If the Patriots can come in and do much of anything against this defense, I'll be impressed. My worry is that their own defense will cause problems for Brock Osweiler, who was fortunate to get a win in Chicago last week. This has the feel of a game where both defenses will cause problems for the opposing offenses. I don't want to use any Patriots, I don't really want to use Broncos, although certain guys I think have to start: Demaryius Thomas, Rob Gronkowski. I have Danny Amendola in a league and am going to be watching the shows tomorrow morning to see if he'll be out there. If he is, he'll probably catch 7 or 8 passes and be viable in PPR. But it seems like a low-scoring affair where you want to avoid any non-elite players. And maybe some of the elite.

Ravens at Browns: I don't really understand how this thing ended up as a Monday Night Football game. We didn't know the Ravens would be this bad, of course, but there was little reason to think the Browns would be any good, and the fact that it would be a meaningless late November game isn't terribly shocking. Scheduling fail. Neither defense is any good, at least, so Javorius Allen and Kamar Aiken can factor in lineups (although Aiken needs Matt Schaub to do something), and maybe you'll get something decent out of Josh McCown and Travis Benjamin. And of course Gary Barnidge. But who wants to actually watch these teams play. McCown versus Schaub. Seriously.

Enjoy the games.

--Andy Richardson