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Fantasy football buzz: Travis Hunter plays D, Burrow injured

Fantasy football buzz: Travis Hunter plays D, Burrow injured



Sep 15, 2025, 09:25 AM ET

Everything that happens in the NFL has some additional context when viewed from a fantasy football perspective. From position battles to injuries and so much more, the news cycle will constantly affect player values in fantasy football.

Our fantasy football buzz file, with contributions from our ESPN fantasy writers and our NFL Nation reporters, aims to provide fantasy managers with the intel they need as news breaks around the NFL.

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Sept. 15: Who got the ball on Sunday? Usage notes beyond the box score

Notebook by Eric Moody

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Liz Loza: Rhamondre Stevenson very much the Patriots’ RB1

Liz Loza details why fantasy managers shouldn’t sleep on Rhamondre Stevenson’s fantasy potential heading into Week 3.

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Should fantasy managers rank Odunze ahead of Moore?

Eric Karabell breaks down Rome Odunze’s nice start to the season and whether fantasy managers should consider him over DJ Moore.

For more observations, see Tristan H. Cockcroft and Matt Bowen’s Week 2 fantasy football winners and losers

Joe Burrow was forced out of Sunday’s game, but Jake Browning showed he can keep the Bengals’ fantasy playmakers afloat. Sam Greene/USA TODAY Network via Imagn Images

Sept. 14: Bengals withstand injury to Burrow, Lions offense roars

Notebook by Tristan H. Cockcroft

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Fantasy managers of Cincinnati Bengals players will be monitoring their injury updates over the next 24 hours and throughout the practice week, after Joe Burrow was forced to leave the team’s Week 2 contest with a toe injury. The star quarterback, the fifth most-started player at his position in fantasy (90.5% of ESPN leagues), scored 7.04 fantasy points before exiting at around the midpoint of the second quarter.

Aggressive-but-erratic backup Jake Browning kept the offense afloat in relief of Burrow, scoring 17.74 points of his own and fueling big scores by Ja’Marr Chase (36.5 PPR fantasy points) and Tee Higgins (14.6). Nevertheless, Burrow’s accuracy is practically impossible for Browning to match, and there’s little doubt that further absences will heighten the challenge for Bengals offensive players — yes, including running back Chase Brown, since the team’s defense grades well below-average.

Browning would be a matchups-oriented streaming option in the event he’s needed to make future starts.

More Sunday takeaways

Stephania Bell’s injury update

Joe Burrow, QB, Bengals: Burrow was taken down with a sack roughly halfway through the second quarter and sustained a toe injury in the process. Burrow’s toe portion of his shoe remained engaged with the turf as his body weight shifted forward and he went to the ground, forcing hyperextension through the toe region. After being examined on the field, Burrow was helped inside the tunnel with the assistance of the medical staff, protecting his left foot by not bearing weight through it. Not every facility has MRI imaging on site, but according to Joe Danneman of Fox19 Now in Cincinnati, Burrow had an MRI at the stadium, shortly after leaving the field. The Bengals initially ruled Burrow questionable to return with a left toe injury and he was ruled out of the game within an hour.

According to ESPN’s Ben Baby, Burrow was using crutches to leave the locker room while wearing a walking boot on his left foot. Coach Zac Taylor had no update on Burrow’s status after the game. There will hopefully be more information in coming days, but as San Francisco 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy’s absence in Week 2 due to a (variant of) turf toe injury indicates, it is difficult to successfully play the position with any acute toe injury. Whether it is driving through the front leg to throw, dropping back to pass, pivoting to hand the ball off or, perhaps most importantly, having enough mobility to protect oneself, the toe plays a critical role.

Washington fears it may be a long time before Austin Ekeler returns to the huddle after Thursday night’s Achilles injury. Peter Casey-Imagn Images

Eric Moody: Austin Ekeler’s injury is a massive shakeup for both the Commanders and fantasy managers alike. Washington fears he suffered a season-ending Achilles tear, which would remove one of the league’s most versatile backs from the offense and fantasy lineups.

Through the first two weeks, Ekeler handled every snap on the first two drives, but Jacory Croskey-Merritt took over early-down work for the remainder of each game. Jeremy McNichols mixed in on passing downs and fully assumed third-down duties after Ekeler’s injury. Even with the Commanders frequently trailing and leaning on QB Jayden Daniels and the passing game, Croskey-Merritt averaged a respectable 4.3 yards per carry.

Croskey-Merritt, rostered in 83.2% of leagues, should become the Commanders’ lead back. He accumulated 10 touches for 14.2 fantasy points in Week 1 and could see 15-plus touches in neutral or positive game scripts. He profiles as an RB2 with upside, especially in PPR formats.

McNichols should maintain a steady role as the passing-down back, offering sneaky value in deeper leagues, particularly in games where Washington is trailing. Chris Rodriguez Jr., a healthy scratch in Week 1 and 2, could now be incorporated in short-yardage and goal-line situations. He will likely see limited action initially, but is worth monitoring in deep leagues.

Deebo Samuel may also pick up additional rushing attempts, providing a creative way for Washington to balance its offense. He’s averaged 2.9 carries and 16.0 yards per game since 2021. The Commanders could also explore the free-agent market, with options like Ezekiel Elliott, Cam Akers, or D’Onta Foreman available. Fantasy managers should monitor this situation closely, as any addition would alter the current depth chart and usage patterns.

Stephania Bell: When Ekeler went to the ground untouched in the fourth quarter, the sequence was all too familiar. While running a route on a pass play, he turned to cut inside and his right leg extended behind him in a lunge position. That lunge position — with the back leg extended, heel to the ground and the body weight leaning forward about to push off — places maximum stretch on the Achilles, the largest tendon in the body.

Pushing off with that leg to propel the body forward results from the calf muscle forcefully contracting, then transmitting that force through the tendon to lift the heel. That extreme of going from maximal lengthening (or stretch) of the tendon to maximal contraction subjects the Achilles to significant strain and is a classic mechanism of injury.

Ekeler went to the ground immediately and reached instinctively for his right lower leg, as is often the case with Achilles injuries. Commanders medical staff evaluated him briefly on the field and then helped escort him off the field with Ekeler bearing no weight on his right leg. Moments later he was seen on a cart heading into the tunnel for further evaluation.

The next steps for Ekeler likely include further physical evaluation, including imaging, to better appreciate the full extent of the injury but reports already indicate the team suspects a torn Achilles. Expect Ekeler to undergo surgery in the near future but sadly his 2025 season has come to a premature conclusion.

Other Thursday night notes

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Jayden Reed, Green Bay Packers: With a defender falling on top of him, Reed landed hard on his right shoulder while making a beautiful end zone catch and came up in pain. Unfortunately the touchdown was negated by a penalty. Worse yet, Reed was obviously in significant discomfort, right arm dangling at his side, as he was escorted into the locker room area for X-rays. He would not return to the game and afterward coach Matt LaFleur announced that Reed suffered a broken clavicle (collarbone).

There will be more information to come as to whether it will be allowed to heal on its own or whether Reed will require surgery to repair the fracture. The size and location of the break will factor into course of treatment. Either way, he will no doubt be placed on Injured reserve as this will be a multiple-week recovery. — Bell

Tucker Kraft of the Packers was an afterthought in many fantasy drafts this summer as the TE11. He exploded against the Commanders, catching six of seven targets for 124 yards and a touchdown. His 57-yard reception from Jordan Love marked his third catch of 50-plus yards since the start of last season, the most by any tight end over that span. Kraft is seeing a rising target rate, making him a TE1 option with top-five upside moving forward. — Moody

Jayden Daniels of the Commanders finished with 19.7 fantasy points, but the box score only tells part of the story. He struggled in the vertical passing game against the Packers’ ferocious defense, facing pressure on 24 of 52 dropbacks (46%), the highest of his career, up from 22% last week. That constant pressure largely explains his lack of downfield success, a trend fantasy managers should watch in future matchups. — Moody

Packers CB Keisean Nixon has been phenomenal so far this season. According to Next Gen Stats, he was targeted six times as the nearest defender in coverage against the Commanders and allowed just one reception for nine yards. He also recorded five pass breakups, the most by any player in a single game since 2021. Fantasy managers should take note if one of their receivers faces the Packers in upcoming weeks. — Moody

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Stephania Bell details injured reserve process for fantasy managers

Stephania Bell issues a reminder to fantasy managers about what happens when players are placed on injured reserve.

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