
Hosted by Muffed · EN

No description available

Prescott was the number 6 fantasy quarterback in total scoring on the back of league-leading volume, elite play-action efficiency, and 17 starts — a genuine bounce-back from the 2024 injury. The one thing the data flags: his rushing expected points added came in at minus 9.4 on just 53 carries and two scores, and without designed-run production, the weekly floor leans entirely on touchdown variance through the air.

Williams delivered a number 12 overall and number 12 per-game finish on the back of volume, efficiency, and a rock-solid weekly floor — a genuine bounce-back from the Denver years. The clear weakness in the data: the receiving game. Minus 22.7 receiving expected points added on 51 targets, just 137 yards, and a nine percent target share means he's leaving real PPR points on the table every week he doesn't find the end zone on the ground.

Pickens delivered a top-six fantasy wide receiver season in both total and per-game scoring — a legitimate alpha-level breakout with elite air yards share and finishing efficiency. The nit in the data: four games under 10 PPR including a 1.9 dud in Week 18, so the weekly floor wasn't airtight inside a monster overall year.

Lamb finished as the number 22 wide receiver in total points and the number 10 in per-game scoring — a clear top-tier talent whose fantasy ceiling got capped by missed games and a shared target tree. The glaring weakness was the touchdown column: just 3 scores on 117 targets despite a 34 percent air yards share. The finishing equity simply didn't convert this year.

Season MVP is George Pickens — ninety-three catches, one thousand four hundred and twenty-nine yards, nine touchdowns, and plus eighty-eight point seven receiving expected points added in his first year in Dallas. The fix is everything on the defensive side: eleven takeaways all year and a forty-eight percent third-down conversion rate allowed are both bottom-ten numbers, and until those move, the offense is carrying weight it can't carry alone. The run defense allowing plus forty-one expected points added — ninth percentile — has to come up too, because a defense that can't stop the run on early downs never gets to the third-down stops in the first place.

Javonte Williams delivered a genuine career-best bounce-back as the number 12 running back in both total and per-game PPR — a high-floor workhorse who justified every one of those two hundred and fifty-two carries. The one clear weakness: his receiving work graded out at minus 22.7 in expected points added on a nine percent target share, and thirty-five catches for just one hundred and thirty-seven yards is a genuinely poor per-reception number for a back seeing that many passing-down snaps.

Pickens finished as the number 5 wide receiver in total PPR and the number 6 per game — a genuine alpha season earned through volume, air yards dominance, and a full healthy slate. The soft spot: only 9 touchdowns on a 32 percent air yards share and 137 targets is a modest conversion rate near the goal line, with room for more damage given how often he had the ball in space.

Lamb's 2025 was a down year by his standards — the number 22 wide receiver in total PPR and the number 10 in per-game scoring, dragged down by three missed games and a career-low 3 receiving touchdowns on 117 targets. The biggest red flag: scoring just 3 times on that volume with a 34 percent air yards share is a massive underperformance, and the drops — by his own admission a mental issue — cost him finishes inside the end zone.

Season MVP is Dak Prescott — 4,552 yards, 30 touchdowns, 10 interceptions, plus 113.3 in passing expected points added, and the new all-time leading passer in Cowboys history. The fix is obvious and it lives on the other side of the ball: the defense allowed plus 130.8 expected points added through the air and plus 41.1 on the ground, generated just 11 takeaways, and let opponents convert 48 percent of third downs. Until those numbers move, the fireworks don't matter.