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The NFL waiver wire is the gift that keeps on giving.

Week 2 started seeing some things return back to normal. But not everywhere—those Tampa Bay Buccaneers are still beating good teams on the back of huge performances from Ryan Fitzpatrick, of all people.

Fitzpatrick's outbursts are a good example of both how silly the start to a new season can be and how generous the waiver wire can be for fantasy owners. Those who need some help after poor drafting, injuries or otherwise still have starter-level players available on the open market if they look in the right places.

With Week 3 on the horizon, the following guys are worth looks.

Week 3 Waiver-Wire Targets

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Blake Bortles, QB, JAX (28 percent owned)

Ryan Fitzpatrick, QB, TB (18 percent owned)

Corey Clement, RB, PHI (21 percent owned)

Javorius Allen, RB, BAL (8 percent owned)

Tyler Boyd, WR, CIN (2 percent owned)

John Brown, WR, BAL (24 percent owned)

Antonio Callaway, WR, CLE (5 percent owned)

Dede Westbrook, WR, JAX (17 percent owned)

Jesse James, TE, PIT (8 percent owned)

Austin Hooper, ATL, TE (17 percent owned)

Blake Bortles, QB, JAX (28 percent owned)

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Owners clearly didn't buy into Fitzpatrick, yet it should go without saying he's worth a stash even after Jameis Winston returns.

Perhaps more interesting though is Blake Bortles, the man who just won a staring contest with Tom Brady and the New England Patriots.

That's only halfway sarcastic, too, as Bortles put up 377 passing yards and four touchdowns with one interception as his Jacksonville Jaguars got a 31-20 win. Granted, Bortles isn't going to put up four touchdowns every game, but he's quietly improved each of the past few seasons to the point nobody can joke about him anymore.

Keep in mind this is a guy who lost the likes of Allen Robinson over the offseason and didn't have Leonard Fournette on Sunday:

Bortles scored 14.24 points in Week 1 on the road, so there is variance here. But he's producing even without big names around him, and his ability as a runner (322 yards and two scores last year) helps him produce in streamable fashion with starter upside.

Corey Clement, RB, PHI (21 percent owned)

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There could be a much bigger role coming for Corey Clement with the Philadelphia Eagles.

That means owners are going to want to strike.

Clement looked great over the weekend during a loss to the Buccaneers, taking six carries for 30 yards and a score while catching five passes for another 55 yards. That was good for 17 points.

This outburst came courtesy of the veteran Darren Sproles being inactive and Jay Ajayi going down with an injury for a few quarters. The result was 11 touches for Clement plus starting duties on punt returns, giving him ample opportunity to produce.

For owners, Clement is a wait-and-see stash. It's hard to imagine that the Eagles won't want to work him into the base offense more often, and there isn't a guarantee the guys in front of him on the depth chart will stay healthy anyway.

With chances to add true producers at running back so rare now, Clement is a must-have commodity.

Antonio Callaway, WR, CLE (5 percent owned)

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It was going to be interesting to see how the Cleveland Browns worked in fourth-round pick Antonio Callaway with Josh Gordon on his way out the door.

So far, so good:

After scoring zero points in Week 1, the Florida product erupted with increased usage in Week 2, turning four targets into three catches for 81 yards and a score. That added up to 16.3 points as the Browns came up short yet again, this time 21-18 against the New Orleans Saints.

For those owners in need, Callaway isn't going to provide weekly consistent production. But the good news is he inflicted the above numbers in the second half of the Week 2 game, so it's reasonable to think his role will keep growing now that he has the attention of quarterbacks and his offense as a whole.

Hailed as one of the most talented wideouts in the 2018 class but falling on draft day due to non-football concerns, there is an outside chance Callaway is one of the most productive rookie receivers all year. Owners now have a guarantee Gordon won't come in and spoil it. With Callaway showing flashes like this, it's hard to imagine they choose to bring in a free agent like Dez Bryant, either, so Callaway should be gobbled up in all leagues.

Jesse James, TE, PIT (8 percent owned)

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The 0-1-1 Pittsburgh Steelers are one of the biggest messes in the NFL right now, but it doesn't mean the offense is devoid of producers.

With Le'Veon Bell out of the picture, tight end Jesse James is seeing a notable workload and finding nice spots in defenses for Ben Roethlisberger to abuse. He's got five targets apiece over his first two outings this year, the first going for 7.5 points and the second for 22.3 points by way of five catches for 138 yards and a score.

The emergence wasn't hard to see coming for those who were paying attention:

At worst, James is a quality streaming option the rest of the season. Vance McDonald has yet to make an impact and he might not, whereas James is playing his fourth year with Big Ben.

This showed in Week 2 while James used the defense's focus on Antonio Brown and JuJu Smith-Schuster to his advantage—that won't be the last time it happens this season.

All scoring info, points-against info and ownership stats courtesy of Yahoo standard leagues.