 What's going on? I am Greg Sesma. Enjoy today by Tom Vecchio, a fan duel who's here to give us the value plays. You have to give us the high powered guys that he's going with on Tuesday. You gotta figure out a way to get them all in there. That's what today is for. What's up, Tom? I'm doing good. We need these cheaper guys to round out our lineup and we're looking at a few players who actually have a good amount of touchdown equity. And that actually is exactly how we're gonna start off because you like Zach Moss's week for the Buffalo Bills price at $5,200. Immediately saw red zone work in favor of Devon Singletary in week one and Moss certainly had a chance to score a touchdown here in week two. Yeah, absolutely. Like you said, those red zone touches, those are the highest upside touches that we wanna be targeting. He's cheaper than Singletary in week one. Zach Moss had a total of nine rushing attempts, but seven of them came inside the 20 and three of those seven came inside the five yard line compared to Singletary who only had one total touch inside the 20. We did see Moss score via the air in week one. So things are kind of setting up for him to take over that Frank Boer role from last season where they're using Singletary inside the 20s and then when it gets to goal line work, it comes down to Zach Moss. We're not gonna be seeing 20 total touches out of him on an only 45% snap share what we saw from last week, but the high upside touches are there and we're getting a great matchup against the Dolvins who at least after week one are the lowest rated rush defense that we have on number fire. So $5,200 for a player could see nine, 10 touches inside the 20, sign me up. $5,200 for Zach Moss and you're banking on the touchdown, but that's okay because so many of those touches could come in the red zone. We saw him score through the air last week. Wouldn't be surprising to get in the end zone on the ground here in week two. Moving over from running back, we get to wide receiver and that brings us to the lizard. Allen Lazar, wide receiver for the Green Bay Packers. I don't never know what to think of Allen Lazar because Mark is about that scantily. He had the big play in week one. Then Allen Lazar did the same a little bit later on. The Green Bay Packers offense still trying to figure it out outside of Devonte Adams, but you liked Lazar at $5,600 here this week, Tom. Why is that? Like you said, they're trying to figure out the offense outside of Devonte Adams. We know the Russian game is led with Jones, but after Devonte Adams in the passing game, is it gonna be MTS, is it gonna be Lazar? And this is what I want to bank on. The cheaper receiver who has some touchdown upside. Last week, only four targets for him, one of which came in the red zone, which he converted into a touchdown, which is great, but more importantly, I want to be targeting this game. And I think getting a cheaper exposure or a cheaper receiver in this game is interesting. Versus the Lions, this opened up at 46 and a half. It's now up to 49 and a half. We saw the Lions kind of collapse on defense late in the game. We saw the Packers have kind of a bad defensive game despite the fact that they scored 40 plus offensive points. So if Devonte Adams is clear number one and number two is gonna be fluctuating every week for the Packers, I'm taking the cheaper guy with Lazar. Let's go with the value. We don't know who's going to be the number two wide receiver in Green Bay on a consistent basis. So give us whichever player is cheaper. Against Detroit, who like you said blew it last weekend in Chicago, our Rogers may have a field day. So let's get a small piece of this offense here for $5,600. Let's move over to tight end now, getting all the skill positions in and that brings us to Johnny, who's Smith. Smith is $4,900 for the Titans in week two, facing off against Buffalo as we mentioned earlier. Smith was a major part of the offense in week one replacing Delaney Walker, officially as the starter here in 2020. Walker currently a free agent, but you know, Smith has been someone we've been waiting to break out, waiting to be able to rely on. Why is this week that opportunity for all of us? I think everything is kind of coming together. First of all, we have a great price tag under 5,000. Like you said, sitting at 4,900. I don't think it's going to stay there too long. So I want to get it before the price rises. He had the third most targets in week one, the third highest target share. You know, we don't normally see a player under 5k who's seeing six, seven targets, especially at the tight end position. So I want to be going back to him this week. I had a few shares of him on Monday night. He caught a TD in the red zone. We have the Titans as home favorites with a 25.5 implied team total against the Jaguars. Like everything is lining up. You know, I don't expect Corey Davis to be that consistent on a week-to-week basis. AJ Brown had a little bit of a down game. And if it's just kind of going to be a little bit jumbled in the receiving options for the Titans, I'm going with the cheaper guy again, like Bazar, who has red zone equity and is seeing the targets. When all else fails, go with the guy that's cheapest. That's Janus Smith, $4,900 under 5k for a player that's going to be very involved, at least we hope, inside the red zone this season. There you have it. This is a value place to pair up with the top guys for earlier this week, and that's how you're going to win a little bit of money here on FanDuel. Tom, we appreciate the time. Good luck this weekend. Seeing you. All right, tomorrow, Jim Sanis will join me as we're talking about which teams we are stacking in preparation of week number two. For Tom Mechio, I'm Greg Salsman. Thanks so much for watching and enjoy Thursday Night Football.