Geeks Vegas Lines Week 10

Welcome back to Week 10 of the Daily Fantasy Football season. Week 9 was another solid week for me and most of the DFS Army team- check out our “Week in Review” column where you can check out our winning lineups and takeaways from the slate. We’ve got some fantastic games to cover this week; I took a quick glance at the player salaries on DraftKings and research is going to be more critical than ever with very few free squares available.

Before moving on, I want to take a moment to congratulate my friend and DFS Army Member Linaw314 on taking down the NBA 600K Mega 4 Point Play for a cool $50,000 prize. Linaw314 already had a couple of spots on our DFS Army Wall of Fame but this one takes the cake. In general, the early results from our NBA team that includes our custom projections, pro player picks, and daily spreadsheets has been fantastic. Makes me wish I had the time to invest in Daily Fantasy Basketball. Linaw314 aka LamarcGasoldridge in our VIP slack chat is one of our top contributors and makes a full-time living playing DFS.

DFS Strategy – Embrace the Variance

Most people think that player selection is the key to success in daily fantasy sports, and they are wrong. Player selection is just one component of the equation for success. Daily Fantasy Sports contests, be it NFL or any other sport, involve a ton of variance. These are real people, playing in real games. Every week, without fail, we see situations where a missed tackle or strange bounce of the ball makes all the difference. When I analyze games, and come up with a player list to use, I do so with the understanding that some of the picks will hit and some will miss.

You may be thinking, “Those words sound nice, but what do you mean specifically?” I accept that within each slate there are plenty of great players in great spots; the key is not to get too hung up on any one player or lineup. Focus on expanding the pool of players that you use and instead of worrying if Antonio Brown or Julio Jones will get the most points, focus on building a lineup that is correlated to that individual player’s success.

I look at my player picks like a well-diversified stock portfolio. I hedge to make sure that if a player that won’t be chalky or even in a great spot goes off, that I have some exposure. It’s why I wound up using DuJuan Harris, Jay Ajayi and Mark Ingram in a bunch of lineups this past week. Ajayi was not necessarily in a great spot facing a Jets D that stops the run, but he was at home and gets workhorse touches in the Dolphins offense. Ingram was someone we discussed on the pod- the coach benches him last week and talks about getting Hightower more involved in the offense. It was going to go one of two ways. Most people stayed away figuring that he was on the hot seat and a risky play. I thought the coach may have been trying to motivate him and see how he responded this week. Harris was another risk that worked out- the 49ers coaches had made some comments about how Harris had earned more looks even when Carlos Hyde was expected to play. When Hyde was declared out, Harris seemed like a safe bet in a prime matchup for min salary.

The point of all of this is to explain the importance of diversification in your pool of lineups. It’s impossible to always be on the right players; the key is to understand the inherent variance in fantasy sports and embrace it. Build GPP and hybrid lineups around themes; if you think the Saints vs the 49ers will be high-scoring then build a lineup around that theme. Make sure the players are correlated; if you like a Defense, stack the kicker or RB with their defense. Those positions are all correlated. When you embrace the variance, you build lineups that can withstand the inevitable misses we have each week.

Contest Selection

I rarely play mass-entry double ups, and I’m not even sure why those types of contests exist. If I want to play $100 or $500 in a double up contest, I can simply find one with that dollar amount. Putting 100 of the same lineup in a massive $5 double up shouldn’t be allowed. Why am I mentioning this? Last week in our team slack forums, someone had asked me if it was normal that the cash line in the big multi-entry double ups was as high as the cash line in GPPs. I wasn’t sure if it was normal or not because, as I mentioned before, I rarely enter that contest. To test the theory, I jumped in to one this week and, low and behold, the cash line was identical to the cash line in most of the larger GPPs; that’s two weeks in a row for that phenomenon. I had noticed this phenomenon during NBA as well last season which basically tells me it’s a “thing.”

In GPPs, people are using some of the hedging techniques I mentioned in the previous paragraph to reach for top scores using lower-owned players. That causes players to purposefully use lineups that are -EV in a cash game environment. Theoretically, the top scores in that type of contest will be higher, but the mean scores will be much lower. The statistics bear this out- With the mean score lower in massive GPPs, the cash line, which requires a top 25% score, is similar to the cash line in the mass multi-entry double ups and 50/50s.

Never play in a 50/50 or Double Up contest that allows multi-entry. You might as well simply enter a GPP with 25% payouts because the cash line will be very similar and the upside is greater.

I prefer using head-to-head contests as the baseline for my DFS entries. There is so much safety in one-on-one contests. Take a single hybrid lineup and figure out how much bankroll you want to use on it. Let’s say you want to risk $25; I’d do 15 $1 head-to-heads, then ladder up with a $3 50/50 (Single Entry!!) $2 Triple Up, $2 Quintuple Up, $1 20-person league, $1 100-person league and a $1 GPP.

DFS Army VIP Membership

If you are looking for a place where you can jump in for five to 10 minutes, have someone feed you lineups, and then go on with your day, I suggest you look elsewhere. That’s not what we are about. The DFS Army team is all about sharing research and teaching our members the fundamentals of lineup construction and bankroll management. Our projections and spreadsheets, alongside our multi-entry optimization tool provide our members with all the tools and information the “Pros” use to succeed regardless of the size or style player you are. We cover just about every DFS sport with experts in that sport assigned to channels in our team slack forums. We encourage all of our VIP’s to contribute ideas and insights as equal members of our team. If this sounds like a good fit we’d love to have you on board.

I’ve set up a code to lock in at 20% off our normal monthly rate of $20 for readers of this column – go to DFS Army VIP Membership and use code: GEEK to lock in the discount.

Week 10 Vegas Lines

Thursday Night Football



8:25 ET At Baltimore -10 Cleveland 45

The Thursday night contest pits division rivals against one another as the Browns head to Baltimore as massive underdogs to take on the hated Ravens. The Browns bring a slate low 17.5-point projection to the table in this one and the Ravens have been tough defensively this season, particularly at home. There isn’t much to like about the Browns offense in this spot- with Kessler in there, Terrelle Pryor Sr. has been so-so in the right matchups, mainly when it’s volume-based. The return of Corey Coleman limits that upside a bit, so I’m not touching any of these guys.

The Ravens have a fantastic matchup on paper, as the Browns are one of the worst defensive teams in the league and that extends to just about every category. The trick will be trying to figure out who to play. Whenever I see a 10-point favorite, my first thought is to use that defense and this is no exception; the Ravens D will be an elite play this week. My next thought would be to pair that D up with a kicker or RB. I don’t discuss kickers in this column, so let’s talk about the Ravens RBs and it’s Terrance West that appears to be the lead back. Last week in a tough matchup against an underrated Steelers run defense, West tallied 15 carries and three targets in the passing game. West was spelled by Ken Dixon to the tune of nine carries for 13 yards. Dixon still has some growing to do as a pass protector so I think West’s role as the lead back is secure at least for this upcoming game. The WR situation for the Ravens is possibly even more tricky. Last week we saw the return of Steve Smith Sr., who wound up leading the team with seven targets and actually looked spry out there for an old guy. Mike Wallace dominated the stat sheet with a big 95-yard touchdown catch; his price jumped up to a stud level $6200 on DraftKings and that’s too rich for someone that dependent on big plays. With SSS back in the mix, I don’t expect the volume to justify the price tag on Wallace going forward.

Elite Plays: Ravens Defense

Secondary: Terrance West, Steve Smith Sr.

Sunday Main Slate

Houston -1 At Jacksonville 43

The Sunday slate starts with a division game between the Texans and Jaguars. The Texans are slight home favorites in a game Vegas sees as close and low scoring. Oh, how the mighty hath fallen. Going into the season, Houston looked like they would have a high-flying offense. Instead they have looked below average across the board. Brock Osweiler looks like a big money Scott Mitchell-esque bust for the Texans, but I suppose he could turn it around at some point. Even though he’s in his first year as a starter, he’s dead to me for DFS purposes. On the flip side, we have a very disappointing Jags offense. Blake Bortles appears to be regressing in his sophomore season; he’s been a turnover machine fueled exclusively by garbage time scoring so far this season.

The Jags face a Texans defense that has been shutting down enemy pass catchers for the most part. The Texans show a -25% DVOA vs WR1 and a similar DVOA vs WR2 and they’ve been even better against enemy TEs. This doesn’t bode well for a Jags offense that may be without #2 WR Alan Hurns, and that should open up some extra targets for WR3 Marquise Lee. Lee is priced at a reasonable $3900 on DraftKings and makes for an acceptable punt play in a week with very few salary relief options. The Texans proficiency against TEs renders Julius Thomas more unusable than he normally is. Allen Robinson is usable in a contrarian stud factor sort of way even though the matchup looks rough on paper.

I’ve got a surprising stat for you: Did you know that the Jaguars are the #1 team overall at stopping enemy RBs in the passing game? According to Football Outsiders, they show a DVOA of -54.5%, #1 overall. They are just average at stopping RBs on the ground, and that’s where I expect Lamar Miller to do the damage in this one. In a close and low scoring home game, the RB spot is king for me so Miller sets up as a nice play this week. At WR we don’t know the status of Will Fuller; he had been gimpy the past couple of games and reaggravated a leg injury in the Texans last game before their bye week. I don’t trust him at all with the leg issue even if he plays. This game sets up well for Deandre Hopkins to see a lot of targets. We’ve seen this movie before folks- Hopkins has failed to deliver time after time this season due to the lack of chemistry between him and Brock Lobster. Still, anytime we can project double digit targets for a WR it’s worth taking note.

Elite Plays: Lamar Miller

Secondary: Deandre Hopkins, Allen Robinson

At Carolina -3 Kansas City 44.5

The Chiefs travel to Charlotte for a date with the Panthers as slight underdogs in a game Vegas sees as low scoring and close. Defensively, the Chiefs have been very solid in all facets. The only chinks in their armor has been a slightly above average DVOA against enemy WR1 and TE. On the flipside, the Panthers have been a classic funnel defense so far this season- very solid against the run but vulnerable through the air.

For the Chiefs, this is an interesting spot. Since they are normally a run-heavy offense, they will probably need to adjust their game plan to attack the Panthers defense. Assuming they get Spencer Ware back this week, he will be a sketchy play at best. Alex Smith & Co. will likely need to air things out. Last week everyone was buzzing about Tyreek Hill as the sleeper of the week; that didn’t work out but I think it was a week too soon. Hill is in a much better situation this week facing a vulnerable Panthers secondary. To make matters better for Hill, it looks like Maclin won’t be suiting up for this one. It’s worth noting that Albert Wilson actually led the Chiefs with eight targets last week. Wilson has been around for a while and his next big fantasy game will be his first. Travis Kelce is another player to consider this week.

The Panthers are somewhat matchup proof at home which is a good thing because this Chiefs defense is solid across the board. My gut is telling me that this is a Greg Olsen special since TEs tend to excel in tough defensive matchups. Kelvin Benjamin is playable as well but I’m tempering expectations there.

Elite Plays: Greg Olsen, Tyreek Hill

At New Orleans -1.5 Denver 48

Fresh off a whooping on Sunday night at the hands of the hated Raiders, the Broncos travel to the “Coors Field” of football in New Orleans for a showdown with the Saints. Vegas sees this one as close and high scoring. The Broncos will be without Aquib Talib for this one.

Let’s start with the Broncos. They have looked worse and worse on offense as the season has progressed. That said, Colin Kaepernick and the 49ers pass catchers did literally nothing until the Saints came marchin’ in. Last week facing the Saints league-worst secondary, the 49ers air attack looked like Steve Young and Jerry Rice had come out of retirement. That said, I would expect the Broncos to game plan for a run-heavy attack to keep the ball out of Brees’ hands. Devontae Booker has been somewhat ineffective in his two starts for the injured C.J. Anderson. This past week he completely bombed on the road at the Raiders. The buzz this week is all about Kapri Bibbs potentially taking a bite out of Booker’s stranglehold on the RB position. Last week Kapri had the one 60-yard check down TD. I’m not convinced, but if Booker continues to struggle, it’s a possibility. Looking at the pass catchers for the Broncos, both Demaryius Thomas and Emanuel Sanders are in play for this one.

The Saints get what looks like a difficult draw at home. Let’s face it, no team has lit up the Broncos through the air this season. The Broncos D has actually been much more vulnerable to opposing RBs. That said, Brees is at home and he won’t be completely shut down. It’s tough to know which of the Saints pass catchers will be featured or put up the big numbers but Michael Thomas has been on fire recently and Brandin Cooks has the home/road splits thing going for him. At RB, I’m not really sure what to expect. Last week both RBs beasted but Tim Hightower out-touched Ingram 23 to 15.

Elite Plays: Demaryius Thomas

At NY Jets -3 Los Angeles 42

The Rams head into East Rutherford as slight underdogs to take on my beloved Jets. Ryan Fitzpatrick, AKA The Bearded Interception Machine, has a sprained MCL and is currently day-to-day. If he doesn’t play, unknown backup Bryce Petty will get the nod. This game has all the makings of a defensive slugfest. As terrible as the Jets secondary has been, I could see some value in the Rams WRs. If I were forced to choose one, it would probably be Tavon Austin. I think the Jets have the defense to stop Gurley at home.

Elite Plays: None

At Philadelphia -1.5 Atlanta 49.5

The Falcons bring their league-leading offense to Philly as slight underdogs to take on the Eagles and their top-ranked defense. Vegas slapped one of the highest totals of the week on this game.

The Falcons face an Eagles D that is solid across the board; they are particularly good against the pass and the opposing WR1 so this is not an ideal match up for Julio Jones. Looking at the DVOA stats by position, the one area where the Eagles have been a bit vulnerable has been to pass catching RBs so that means Freeman could do some damage in the check down game. It’s also important to consider the line on this game; on paper this may not be a great spot for Matt Ryan and the Falcons pass catchers but they are projected to score 24 points in this one and those TDs need to come from somewhere.

It’s now or never for the Eagles fantasy assets since the Falcons are one of the worst at defending the pass this season. Jordan Matthews has been targeted like crazy in recent weeks averaging 12 targets per game over the past two weeks. Nelson Agholor and Dorial Green-Beckham are bit players in this offense for the most part; neither can be trusted in cash lineups. Zach Ertz is coming off an eight-target, 97-yard performance. The Falcons are giving up 8.6 receptions and 62 yards per game to opposing TEs. I’ll take that with the hope of a TD for Ertz, but the other player I like in this one is Sproles. He’s officially the lead back and there’s some solid upside in what could be a high-scoring game.

Elite Plays: Devontae Freeman, Julio Jones, Zach Ertz, Darren Sproles

At Washington -2.5 Minnesota 42.5

The Vikings travel to Washington to make Defense Great Again, as they take on the Redskins in a game Vegas sees as close and low scoring. The Vikings sport a defense that has shown some chinks in the armor these past few weeks. That said, they remain a unit to be feared. The Redskins defense has been below average across the board. Both teams have a shutdown CB1 which should funnel targets away from #1 WRs assuming we can figure out who those #1 WRs actually are.

The Vikings are hoping to get their mojo back this week; their offense just hasn’t been working for a while. Last week they used a dreaded three-headed RB attack rendering all of their guys worthless. With Josh Norman looming as a potential shadow for Stefan Diggs, TE Kyle Rudolph stands to benefit with some increased targets. I could also see a sneaky pivot from Diggs to Adam Thielen as a play on the Norman factor.

I’m generally not going to use players facing the Minnesota defense, particularly when they are a mediocre overall team. The Redskins offense is a pass for me this week outside of contrarian GPP plays.

Elite Plays: None

GPP Contrarian: Vikings Defense, Adam Thielen

Green Bay -2 At Tennessee 48.5

The Packers travel to Tennessee as slight road favorites in a game Vegas sees as close and high scoring. This is a game to target for fantasy purposes. The interesting thing in this one is that both teams bring a funnel-style defense to the table. They stop the run and are vulnerable to the pass.

Looking at the Titans, Marcus Mariota has been on fire for weeks averaging 25+ fantasy points per game since Week 4. His primary pass catcher appears to be Rishard Matthews who is coming off a 10-target game in which he saw a snap share of close to 90%. That said, this offense does spread the ball around a ton and it’s always a crapshoot choosing between Matthews and Kendall Wright. TE Delanie Walker is the safest bet for pass catching production for the Titans; his salary is similar to the Titans WRs and the consistency is much better. Keep in mind that the Packers have been solid against TEs this season. Obviously, DeMarco Murray is a weekly stud RB. This matchup also isn’t ideal because the Packers run defense is top ranked. That should keep Murray’s ownership numbers down a bit. One note of shade: Mariota has been limited with an ankle issue this week. It’s never good when a mobile QB has an ankle injury.

The Packers get another ideal draw, as the Titans have been vulnerable to enemy passing attacks. The trickiest thing about the Packers right now is trying to figure out which WR will be fed. Nelson, Cobb and Adams are all being heavily targeted right now. I’d assume Jordy is the top play simply because the Titans don’t have a scary CB1 that can hang with him. Last week I was disappointed with Ty Montgomery’s usage and after the game we found out that the Packers had him on a snap count. The offense flowed much better when he was in there. Montgomery’s salary has exploded on DraftKings to a ridiculous $6500. I’m not sure I can justify that price point. The top cash play here may be Aaron Rodgers naked. He should be able to get three TDs in this one and the lack of a run game helps insure that Rodgers will have a piece of all the Packers scoring.

Elite Plays: Aaron Rodgers

Chicago -1 At Tampa Bay 46.5

This line has been moving like crazy to start the week. It’s all dependent on whether Mike Evans will play or not. Looking at the lower total, and the road team favored, it looks like they are assuming Evans will be out.

The Bears will face a Bucs defense that has been solid against the run and vulnerable through the air. Last week in his return from injury, Cutler looked solid and motivated. The performance against the Vikings vaunted defense was an eye opener. Now, Cutler gets a much easier draw. His preferred pass catchers have been Alshon Jeffrey and Zach Miller; that duo looks good for this game as well. Tampa has a -22% DVOA against the TE position so the cash play is Jeffrey here. Last week Jordan Howard emerged as the feature back for the Bears, but this isn’t exactly the best matchup for him since Tampa is better versus the run then the pass. Even though that may be the case, this isn’t a matchup I’m scared of. Howard shredded the dreaded Vikings D and the Bucs aren’t as good.

It’s pretty tough to discuss the Bucs offense in this game. If Evans plays, he remains an elite WR option. I’d also consider Peyton Barber at RB (assuming Jacquizz is still out). Without Evans, this entire offense will suffer. We’ll have to wait until later in the week to know what to do here. No Evans would also open up the possibility of using Bears D in this one. The Bucs simply don’t have a worthy replacement for Evans production.

Elite Plays: Alshon Jeffrey, Mike Evans (If healthy), Peyton Barber (If Evans Plays and Quizz is out)

At San Diego -3.5 Miami 48

This is as close to a chalk alert as I can find right now. The Dolphins travel to San Diego to take on the Chargers as road dogs in a game Vegas sees as close and high scoring. This may as well be called the battle of the hot RBs. Melvin Gordon and Jay Ajayi are both coming off big games and carrying a ton of momentum right now.

Miami gets to face a Chargers defense that has been above average in all areas this season. Jay Ajayi should see plenty of volume in this one and makes for a solid play. However, I’m less confident in the Miami pass catchers. Jarvis Landry has seen his average targets per game drop from 13 earlier on the season to around seven. His recent production does not justify his sky high-$7200 salary on DraftKings. DeVante Parker will have a big game at some point this season but I’m not touching him outside of a GPP shot in the dark.

The Chargers will likely be without Travis Benjamin for this one. He was in and out of last week’s game with knee issues. That should open up more volume for Tyrell “The Gazelle” Williams, Dontrelle Inman and Antonio Gates. All three are viable plays and stackable with Rivers in this one. Melvin “Its Pronounced Gore-Dahn” Gordon has been beasting 25/8 and that should continue this week as well.

Elite Plays: Phillip Rivers, Melvin Gordon, Tyrelle Williams, Antonio Gates, Jay Ajayi

At Arizona -13 San Francisco 48

Chalk Alert!! Chalk defense, I mean. Whenever a team is favored by 13 points I immediately think defense and RB. It helps that the 49ers run defense is historically bad. Let’s keep this one simple- all in on Arizona Defense and David Johnson! It’s that easy. We saw last week, that when a team can run the ball at will they may not need a ton from their passing game. “Sheriff” John Brown and J.J. Nelson both make for salary saving punt options with big play potential in this one.

Elite Plays: Arizona Defense, David Johnson

At Pittsburgh -2.5 Dallas 50

Now this is more like it. Here we have the highest total of the slate with the Cowboys heading to Pittsburgh as slight underdogs in the highest projected game of the week. Neither of these teams’ defenses are anything to worry about.

Last week Ben Roethlisberger returned with a thud. He didn’t look particularly healthy out there and it showed in the final numbers. Who knows what another week of rehab will bring, but I’d expect a slightly better version. The good thing for the Steelers offense is that they tend to play better at home. Last week I assumed the Steelers would lean on Le’Veon Bell and he only wound up with just 14 carries. He made up for it a bit with six receptions but even with all of that, he produced a disappointing 13 fantasy points. Assuming Big Ben is healthier this week I’d expect much better out of Bell. Antonio Brown remains the gold standard of WRs in DFS and this is an excellent matchup for him; Dallas doesn’t have anyone that can cover Brown. One important note from last week was the breakout game from slot WR Eli Rogers. I suspect that had more to do with Ben’s inability to throw down the field with accuracy as opposed to anything else.

Looking at the Cowboys, everything starts with the running game. Zeke Elliott is the man and if the game goes as Vegas thinks it will, Elliott should benefit. Last week Dez Bryant took a back seat to Jason Witten for some reason- I don’t expect that to continue. This is the perfect type of game to stack. If the Steelers are on point, both teams will need to do a ton of scoring. That means all studs on deck. Elliott, Dez and Dak Prescott with a shmear of Cole Beasley for good measure.

Elite Plays: Dak Prescott, Dez Bryant, Zeke Elliott, Leveon Bell, Antonio Brown

Sunday Night Hammer

At New England -7 Seattle 49

The final game of the main slate has the Seahawks traveling to New England as heavy road dogs in a game Vegas sees as close and high scoring.

The Seahawks will face a Patriots defense that does very well at home. Statistically, the Patriots D is a top 10 unit against the run and a bottom unit against the pass. They’ve been burned by opposing TEs regularly as well. It feels a bit like chasing points but Jimmy Graham is playable is a plus matchup. The one caveat is that the Patriots will game plan specifically to stop Graham after seeing what he did to the Bills last week. That alone makes me want to pivot to Doug Baldwin in this one. I just read another blurb about how Pete Carrol is promising more touches for C.J. Prosise. It makes sense that he will be more utilized in a game that Seattle projects to be playing from behind for the most part.

Say it with me – Gronksmash! I have a feeling we will get a smash or two on Sunday night. Seattle’s top of the line corners tend to funnel targets to the middle of the field and that’s exactly where Rob Gronkowski operates; this game sets up well for my favorite player. I could also see Julian Edelman doing some damage out of the slot. It’s tough to actually trust Edelman considering he’s done close to nothing this season but I suppose that could change. The Seahawks have been a top defense against the run this season so I’ll pass on Blount this week outside of a possible GPP flier.

Elite Plays: Tom Brady, Jimmy Graham, Rob Gronkowski

Secondary: C.J. Prosise

Monday Night Football

11/14 8:30 ET At NY Giants -2.5 Cincinnati 46

In the last game of the slate the Bengals take on the Giants as slight underdogs in a game Vegas sees as close and having a middling score.

The Bengals have a reputation as a solid defensive team but the statistics show that hasn’t been the case this season. They are ranked in the bottom 10 in DVOA against both the pass and rush this season. This is a decent spot to fire up an Eli to Odell Beckham Jr stack. As far as the running game goes, the pendulum is swinging in the direction of Paul Perkins. I’m not ready to jump on the bandwagon just yet but I have a feeling that it’s coming soon. Last week Perkins and Jennings had a 50/50 timeshare going.

The Bengals face off against a Giants D that has been above average overall, ranked 10th and 13th respectively vs the pass and run. Those rankings are fine but nothing to panic over. Looking specifically at DvP, they have been pretty good at stopping the opposing WR1 and vulnerable to enemy TEs so fire up Tyler Eifert as an elite play this week. I’m not worried about using A.J. Green in this one as either, but Eifert has the better matchup on paper. At the RB position, there’s no rhyme or reason to the way the Bengals mix in Gio Bernard and Jeremy Hill. Both are volatile GPP only plays for me.

Elite Plays: Eli Manning, Odell Beckham Jr, Tyler Eifert, A.J. Green

That’s it for the week 10 slate. Good luck this weekend!

Week 10 DFS Army NFL Content

Geek’s Vegas Lines – Week 10 DFS Strategy, Player Picks, & Game Breakdown

DFS Army Week 10 NFL Vegas Lines Podcast

DFS Army VIP Projections/Stats Spreadsheet

DFS Army NFL Week 10 Kickers Corner



NFL DFS Army Winners Losers Lineups and Week 10

Single Lineup ro Multi Entry in DFS Cash Games

The VIP Podcast link is available in Slack Chat!