
Week 7 Early Fantasy Football Rankings: Jaxson Dart Nears QB1 Status and Rising Number of Bell Cow RBs
Ian Hartitz presents the Week 7 early fantasy football rankings, going through the QBs, RBs, WRs and ETs moving up and down the ranks, like Jaxson Dart.
Hide your kids, hide your wife: Week 7 is here. It's time to win another fantasy matchup, people!
What follows are my abbreviated early PPR ranks along with some key questions and answers ahead of this week's slate of action. Check out our Fantasy Life Rankings for full ranks from our squad of alleged expert rankers (download Comet and get FantasyLife+ FREE for a year).
As always: It's a great day to be great.
Quarterback
Is Jaxson Dart's rushing production worthy of QB1 fantasy treatment?
Pretty close! The main reason why Jaxson Dart (my QB14) just missed the cut is because of this week's less-than-ideal matchup against Pat Surtain and the Broncos, who have allowed the second-fewest fantasy points per game to opposing QBs this season.
That said: Goodness gracious has this rookie been electric as a ball carrier this season. Overall, Dart has posted 10-54-1, 7-55-0, and 13-58-1 rushing lines in his lone three starts–that's already tied for the most 50-plus yard rushing performances by a QB this season! Overall, Dart's average of 9.6 fantasy points per game from purely rushing ranks first at the position ahead of guys like Justin Fields (8.3), Jalen Hurts (8.3) and Josh Allen (7.8, pre-MNF).
Madness, but it's not quite as surprising when you consider that Dart leads all QBs in both scramble rate and designed rush rate this season.

While it'd do Dart some good to not take after his teammate Cam Skattebo quite as much in terms of throwing caution to the wind at the point of contact, it's hard not to be impressed with the 2025 NFL Draft's 25th overall pick through three career starts—particularly considering the utter lack of proven high-end pass-game options inside an offense without Malik Nabers (knee, IR) and (obviously to a lesser extent) Darius Slayton (hamstring).
Don't be surprised to see the rookie firmly inside the position's top 12 in more friendly future matchups against the banged-up Eagles, 49ers, and Bears.
What defenses are getting absolutely gashed by opposing passing games?
The below chart denotes every defense's EPA allowed per pass and run through six weeks of action (pre-MNF).

There are two groups of defenses we should feel especially good about targeting with QBs in fantasy land:
- Bad everywhere groups: The Cowboys, Dolphins, Ravens, Bengals, Jets and Titans stand out as the six worst defenses in the NFL when it comes to, you know, playing defense.
- Pass funnel defenses: The Buccaneers, Browns, Patriots, Seahawks, Raiders and Saints stand out as six defenses who are actually solid at stopping opposing rushing games, but have struggled to hold up against the pass. We can also throw the injury-ravaged Lions and 49ers into this group.
You don't need me to tell you to feel good about playing guys like Jayden Daniels against the Cowboys or Drake Maye against the Titans, but there are two especially solid streaming options I particularly like during the next two weeks for those dealing with byes.
- Falcons QB Michael Penix vs. 49ers/Dolphins: Hopefully Penix will get Darnell Mooney (hamstring) back by next week; either way he's a candidate to flirt with a high-end outcome against the Fred Warner and Nick Bosa-less 49ers. Hell, Baker Mayfield didn't have his top-four WRs for most of Sunday afternoon … and he still managed to throw for 256 yards and 2 TDs on just 23 attempts. Obviously the … MVP favorite? … is a better QB than Penix; just realize this version of San Fran boasts Cowboys-esque weekly fantasy-friendly shootout potential. Penix also has a pristine Week 8 matchup on the horizon against the Dolphins' sad excuse for a professional secondary.
- Texans QB C.J. Stroud vs. Seahawks/49ers: It's been an up-and-down season for Stroud, with most of his good performances coming against objectively bad defenses like the Ravens and Titans. That said: Stroud is averaging a career-high 24.4 rushing yards per game (pre-MNF) to complement his usual Nico Collins-induced passing upside. We've seen the Seahawks get shredded by Mayfield (379-2-0) and Trevor Lawrence (258-2-0) in back-to-back weeks while dealing with multiple injured starting cornerbacks. Don't be surprised if Stroud is the latest to shred this banged-up Seattle D. Week 8's matchup with the aforementioned injury-riddled 49ers defense is also juicy.
Other notes
QB10 Justin Fields: Quite literally responsible for two of the three worst QB performances of the season … but Fields has finished as the QB2, QB4 and QB7 in his other three starts. We can probably all agree the Panthers are a bit closer to the Steelers, Dolphins and Cowboys vs. the Bills and Broncos. I had Fields higher before getting the news that Garrett Wilson (knee) is expected to miss a couple of weeks. Either way: Style points don't count extra in fantasy land, and the erratic 26-year-old QB continues to profile as one of the position's more fantasy-friendly options as long as his coach continues to back him.
QB19 Trevor Lawrence: There's a chance that we'll still be debating whether or not T-Law is a good NFL QB in the year 2030. In 2025, I still don't really have a clear clue, but I'm starting to really lean towards "no." Sure, the Jaguars have dropped 16 passes this season—second-most in the NFL—but Lawrence has also been afforded clean pockets at a top-10 rate in terms of pressure rate. Maybe the allegedly generational 26-year-old talent just needs more time to fully gel with Liam Coen and his pair of first-round receivers, but the returns through six weeks have certainly been disappointing.

QB22 Aaron Rodgers: The Steelers are putting up their best team-wide passing numbers in yards per attempt (7.4, 13th), EPA per dropback (+0.07, 15th), explosive pass rate (13.4%, 14th), passer rating (105.4, 8th) and completion rate (69.3%, 10th) since pre-2019 AKA when Ben Roethlisberger originally injured his elbow. Credit to Rodgers and DK Metcalf for spearheading the attack and putting Mike Tomlin in position to again reach nine wins before likely getting blown out in the Wild Card Round. Me being a dickhead aside: This connection has really looked good in recent weeks, and we could see the duo flirt with another high-end outcome on Thursday night against an already-bad Bengals defense that could also be without Trey Hendrickson (back).
QB30 Dillon Gabriel: The rookie has struggled out of the gate in back-to-back brutal matchups against the Vikings in London and then against a rested Steelers squad in Pittsburgh. Overall, Gabriel is the only QB averaging under five yards per pass attempt this season. Now, Joe Flacco is the next-worst QB in that metric; the Browns continue to offer one of the least QB-friendly environments in the NFL. That said: Don't be surprised if/when the Dawg Pound starts chanting for Shedeur Sanders should Gabriel and company fail to bounce back against the lowly Dolphins. This sort of stuff isn't going to go over well in front of a home crowd.
Running Back
Are there more workhorse RBs than usual?
It sure feels that way! I mean, some of these RB touch paces at the moment are pretty wild:
17-game touch paces:
- Christian McCaffrey (436—would be the most since DeMarco Murray had 449 in 2014)
- Josh Jacobs (384)
- Jonathan Taylor (383)
- James Cook (347, pre-MNF)
- Ashton Jeanty (337)
- Saquon Barkley (323)
- Javonte Williams (323)
- Kyren Williams (320)
- Jahmyr Gibbs (312)
- De'Von Achane (298)
- Breece Hall (298)
- Alvin Kamara (298)
Hell, Tony Pollard (291), Travis Etienne (289) and Cam Skattebo (289) aren't too far behind, and we've also seen handcuffs like Rico Dowdle and Rachaad White assume every-down roles during their respective starter's absence.
But yeah: Nine RBs clearing the 300-plus touch mark would equal last year, which was good for the most in a season since 2019—and before that 2013. Obviously, the move to a 17-game schedule skews things a little bit, but if it seems like there are more three-down workhorses than usual, that's largely because there are! Hopefully you have one or two on your roster because it's VERY hard for RBs with this sort of high-end volume to overly bust in fantasy land.
Who are some underrated handcuffs to keep an eye on?
As we've seen with Dowdle and (to a lesser extent) White over the last two weeks: Backup RBs are capable of going from zeroes to heroes in a heartbeat. Kudos to anyone who managed to roster either, but you know what's the only thing cooler than landing the handcuff of the week off the waiver wire? Already having them on your bench in the first place!
With this in mind: The following nine RBs are rostered in under 35% of ESPN and/or Yahoo leagues alike, yet do profile as the sort of options just *one* injury away from rocketing up the ranks.
Falcons RB Tyler Allgeier (33% on ESPN, 34% on Yahoo): Possesses the sort of every-down ability and clear depth chart to be 75% Bijan Robinson AKA a rock-solid weekly upside RB2.
Jaguars RB Bhayshul Tuten (31% on ESPN, 45% on Yahoo): Fantasy community non-stop glazing aside, Tuten's size/speed profile is borderline erotic, and he'd profile as an immediate top-20 option at the position at worst should Travis Etienne miss any game action—there are RB1 heights here if LeQuint Allen were to not see a role change and mostly just continue to be a pass-down specialist.
49ers RB Brian Robinson (31% on ESPN, 35% on Yahoo): Remember that CMC touch stat? B-Rob is the clear next man up, and while nobody will mistake his pass-down ability for McCaffrey, there would still be RB2 upside here a la Elijah Mitchell and Jordan Mason in past years.
Saints RB Kendre Miller (25% on ESPN, 35% on Yahoo): It doesn't sound like Alvin Kamara will be traded, but you could imagine what it'd be like if he was, and Miller is a good enough handcuff anyway just from an injury perspective. Shoutout to the third-year back for ranking fourth in tackles avoided per carry (32.6%) this season.
Titans RB Tyjae Spears (24% on ESPN, 24% on Yahoo): Was looking SHIFTY in Week 6 on his way to actually leading this backfield in snaps. Don't expect the Titans to provide too many excess scoring opportunities, and Tony Pollard isn't going anywhere, but Spears has the sort of explosive pass-catching skill set that we look for in bench stashes.

Cowboys RB Jaydon Blue (19% on ESPN, 17% on Yahoo): In an ideal world Blue profiles similarly to Spears. But even if he's worse: He's the clear next man up behind Javonte Williams in one of the league's best offenses with Miles Sanders (ankle/knee) done for the season.
Rams RB Blake Corum (14% on ESPN, 14% on Yahoo): Has clearly been the RB2 behind Kyren Williams all season long. We'd likely see Jarquez Hunter get some run should Williams miss any time, but Corum would still profile as THE running back, y'all, for Sean McVay (AKA one of the league's most-willing coaches to feature one workhorse RB).
Dolphins RB Ollie Gordon (17% on ESPN, 18% on Yahoo): Hasn't exactly carved out standalone value alongside De'Von Achane, but the rookie remains the clear-cut No. 2 RB ahead of Jaylen Wright.
Bills RB Ray Davis (9% on ESPN, 13% on Yahoo): Would instantly be in the upside RB2 conversation with an injury to James Cook. Maybe Ty Johnson would turn it into a 1A/1B situation, although Davis did command 23 of the backfield's 27 opportunities in Cook's only missed game last season.
Who was *this* close to having a much bigger Week 6?
The following players were tackled at the one-yard line and did NOT score a TD on the same drive last week (pre-MNF):
- Saints RB Alvin Kamara (vultured by that terrorist Taysom Hill)
- Lions RB Jahmyr Gibbs
- Ravens RB Derrick Henry
- Patriots RB Rhamondre Stevenson
- Falcons WR Drake London (as the 2nd quarter clock expired and MAN was he close)
- Bears WR DJ Moore
- Bengals WR Tee Higgins
- Cardinals WR Michael Wilson
- Ravens TE Mark Andrews (x2, same drive)
- Chiefs TE Travis Kelce
The Andrews sequence REALLY pissed me off: The Ravens had the audacity to give Andrews back-to-back tush push opportunities when, you know, THEY EMPLOY DERRICK F*CKING HENRY. Sure, the big dog got stuffed on 4th down as well, but I'm sure Ravens players and fans alike would have much rather gone down with four consecutive Henry plunges instead of whatever the hell this was.
Other notes
RB20 Kimani Vidal and RB43 Hassan Haskins: The former RB led the Chargers backfield in snaps (67%), rush attempts (72%) and routes (54%) alike in Week 6. Credit to Vidal for looking good on his way to posting 18-124-0 rushing and 3-14-1 receiving lines. Unfortunately, Vidal won't get to play the Dolphins every week, but fantasy managers should still be grinning at the potential for 15-20 combined carries and targets inside this Justin Herbert-led offense. He's deserving of premier waiver wire treatment and profiles as a low-end RB2 for however long Omarion Hampton (ankle, IR) remains sidelined.
RB21 Rhamondre Stevenson and RB35 TreVeyon Henderson: We were expecting something close to an even split between Stevenson and Henderson with Antonio Gibson (knee, IR) out of the picture, but instead it was largely the Mondre show. It would've been a lot cooler if Stevenson managed more than 18 scoreless yards on his 13 touches; just realize a 70/30 snap split here should produce bigger days for the Patriots' clear RB1. Would it be a lot cooler if Henderson got more involved and accordingly prevented my wife and kids from leaving due to me blowing our savings on this underperforming rookie? Yes, but at the same time Henderson simply needs to make more out of his opportunities: He ranks 32nd and 31st in yards per carry (3.6) and yards per reception (6.2), respectively, among 43 qualified RBs this season.
RB26 Kenneth Walker and RB31 Zach Charbonnet: Charbonnet gets criticized a lot for his lack of big-play ability, and that's warranted: He boasts the position's third-worst explosive play rate this season. That said: Charbonnet ALSO has emerged as the league's worst RB in terms of stuff rate—AKA the percentage of carries in which an RB gains zero or negative yards. So … yeah. Fun times, especially with the Seahawks continuing to feed Charbonnet basically every goal-line carry.

RB28 Chase Brown: Has posted back-to-back season-low 53% snap rates over the past two weeks, as the Browns' general ineffectiveness has seemingly led to more opportunities for Samaje Perine. It'd make sense if Brown flirts with some higher-end outcomes with the Bengals' schedule finally chilling out just a bit over the next few weeks, but man, this dude hasn't managed to get ANYTHING going in the way of big plays this season. Obviously the offensive line and QB play haven't helped matters, but Brown now has a league-high 94 touches without a single gain of 15-plus yards—the next-closest RB has just 36!
RB30 Zonovan Knight and RB37 Michael Carter: It was Carter leading the way in Week 5, but pregame reports eventually came to fruition with Knight posting backfield-high marks in snap rate (49%) and rush attempt share (48%) in Week 6. Now, Emari Demercado (ankle) is banged up; I would probably prefer Carter still if the team's pass-down specialist/Week 5 deserved scapegoat is ultimately sidelined for next week. Even then, meh, particularly with the potential for Micah Parsons and company to more or less shut this offense completely down.
RB32 Jaylen Warren, RB36 Kenneth Gainwell and RB51 Kaleb Johnson: The Steelers kept not one, not two, but three RBs involved following their Week 5 bye. Warren still led the way and deserves to be the preferred fantasy option; just realize this sort of rotation is no bueno in fantasy land and should generally be avoided, if possible.

Wide Receiver
What the hell is wrong with the Injury Gods?
I maintain that anyone who doesn't turn off injuries when playing Madden or NCAA Football is a monster. But yeah: Some KEY receivers got all kinds of banged up in Week 6:
Rams WR Puka Nacua (ankle): "Day to day," according to head coach Sean McVay, although NFL Network's Ian Rapoport has reported that fantasy's WR1 is likely to miss time. It'd make sense if the Rams are cautious ahead of Sunday's London-themed matchup against the Jaguars with their Week 8 bye around the corner. Obviously this expected absence cements Davante Adams as a top-10 option at the position, but don't sleep on Jordan Whittington being asked to do his best Puka impression on designed YAC plays. I'm much more willing to throw a dart at Whittington in desperate FLEX plays over one-dimensional field-stretcher Tutu Atwell (hamstring).
Buccaneers WR Emeka Egbuka (hamstring): Also expected to miss some time per Rapsheet. Ideally Mike Evans (hamstring) manages to return to the lineup this week because Chris Godwin (hamstring) also isn't expected to play against the Lions next Monday night. Should all three pass-game options be sidelined, Tez Johnson, Sterling Shepard and Kameron Johnson would be expected to start in three-WR sets—I'm most inclined to fire up the pint-sized speedster Tez, but the real winner might just be TE Cade Otton, who has gained 132 yards over the last two weeks and boomed with 8-100-0, 9-81-2, and 8-77-1 receiving lines with Evans and Godwin sidelined in Weeks 7-9 last season.
Jets WR Garrett Wilson (knee): Expected to miss a couple of weeks after hyper-extending his knee. TE Mason Taylor gets a decent bump in the ranks as Justin Fields' new de facto No. 1 pass-game option. I am also forced to move Josh Reynolds and Arian Smith into WR5 territory in the year 2025, but I would say that generally fantasy football *should* be fun, and I would rather eat a bowl of nails—without the milk—than actually rely on either WR for meaningful fantasy production.
Cardinals WR Marvin Harrison Jr. (concussion): Potential short-term absence would elevate Zay Jones and Michael Wilson into WR4/5 land. There would also be a small bump for short king Greg Dortch. That said: It sure wouldn't be surprising to simply see the Cardinals' underwhelming offense more or less wilt in Week 7's matchup against the Packers—I'm more than fine not playing anyone here not named Trey McBride.
Titans WR Calvin Ridley (hamstring): It's possible we don't see Ridley again until Week 12 if this is indeed a multi-week issue considering the Titans have a Week 10 bye. Sad! Elic Ayomanor and Van Jefferson would receive bumps up the ranks if so, but that wouldn't exactly make them sought-after fantasy commodities. Ayomanor would be the preferred option; just realize the rookie has finished with under 45 yards in all but one game this season—when he boomed for 56 yards!—inside this dumpster fire of offense/organization.
Good news: Rashee Rice is BACK and ready to lead faithful fantasy managers to the promised land, while there's also hope for CeeDee Lamb (ankle) and Mike Evans (hamstring) to return this week. Feel free to check out The Fantasy Life Show throughout the week for more injury updates and general fantasy goodness.
Who have been fantasy's biggest PPR scams?
The below chart denotes every top-48 WR in PPR points per game and what percentage of their production has come from receptions, receiving yards and receiving TDs.

Three takeaways from this:
- Look at how even Amon-Ra St. Brown's numbers are. That's an ethical fantasy baller right there.
- The PPR-scam allegations tossed Chris Olave's way are warranted. That said: Style points don't matter in fantasy land, so keep on firing up the Saints' WR1 as a rock-solid borderline WR2.
- The next-biggest scammers out there will hopefully find some better luck in the TD regression department in the upcoming weeks. Overall, Jerry Jeudy (48 targets without a receiving TD), Jakobi Meyers (43), Stefon Diggs (37) and Calvin Ridley (35) are the only players with at least 35 targets this season and zero trips to the end zone.
Who left some serious meat on the bone in Week 6?
"Unrealized air yards" measure the total amount of air yards on incomplete targets. This helps identify players who had all sorts of fantasy-friendly downfield opportunities, but they simply couldn't come up with completions for one reason or another.
Anyway, nine players had more than 60 unrealized air yards in Week 6 (pre-MNF):
- Browns WR Jerry Jeudy (105)
- Steelers WR DK Metcalf (90—his day was almost MUCH bigger)
- Bears WR Rome Odunze (89)
- Falcons WR Drake London (74)
- Jaguars WR Dyami Brown (72)
- Ravens WR Zay Flowers (69)
- Bengals WR Tee Higgins (66)
- Giants WR Lil'Jordan Humphrey (65)
- Titans WR Elic Ayomanor (64)
- Rams WR Davante Adams (61)
- Broncos WR Marvin Mims (61)
Of course, these only cover targets that actively counted and weren't nullified by penalty. Unfortunately, there were three HUGE plays nullified by objectively annoying flags:
- Brian Thomas Jr. hauled in a 54-yard TD … but Travis Hunter pulled a Kadarius Toney and lined up offsides.
- Demario Douglas hauled in a second 61-yard TD, only for the score to be nullified on an OPI call on Diggs that occurred on the other side of the field.
- Later Diggs himself caught a 51-yard pass down the sideline, only to again be called for OPI.
- Bears WR Rome Odunze somehow caught this absolutely awesome 11-yard TD … only for it to be nullified by an objectively ticky tack illegal formation penalty. Who exactly asked for the NFL to start cracking down on those?
Other notes
WR20 Kendrick Bourne: Has posted 10-142-0 and 5-142-0 receiving lines in his last two games with virtually the entire 49ers WR/TE room banged up. I'm drinking the Kool-Aid ahead of Week 7's potential sneaky-shootout with the Falcons IF we continue to see Ricky Pearsall (knee), Brandon Aiyuk (knee, IR) and George Kittle (hamstring, IR) sidelined. Kittle, for one, is expected to return to practice this week.
WR21 A.J. Brown and WR28 DeVonta Smith: Smith could have had a 90-yard TD last week if Jalen Hurts were a bit better at throwing the football. Still: The Eagles have gone from ranking 31st in dropback rate over expected (-7%) in Weeks 1-3 … to first (+9%) in Weeks 4-6! Week 7's matchup against the Vikings' league-best defense in EPA allowed per dropback isn't ideal; just realize both Brown and Smith remain awfully great real-life receivers who should have better fantasy days should this volume persist.
WR27 Wan'Dale Robinson: Has gone 3-14-0, 5-30-0 and 6-84-1 receiving in three games with Dart under center. Of course, the latter also came with Darius Slayton (hamstring) joining Nabers (knee, IR) on the sideline. Note that ace Broncos CB Pat Surtain hasn't spent more than nine snaps in the slot this season, meaning Robinson should mostly be freed from the wrath of arguably the game's single-best corner.
WR32 Romeo Doubs and WR37 Matthew Golden: The rookie flashed all over the place in Week 6 on his way to racking up a career-best 102 total yards. That said: He still earned just 5 targets, and it sure seems like Christian Watson (knee, IR) will be returning soon. Jayden Reed (collarbone, IR) might not be too far behind. This is a crowded passing game unlikely to consistently enable any single WR to high-end fantasy heights, and through six weeks Doubs has been that guy anyways, pal.
WR46 Travis Hunter: Here's a fun stat, Travis Hunter leads all WRs in missed tackles forced per reception. The man is SHIFTY with the ball in his hands and has also snagged 2 of his 4 targets thrown 20-plus yards downfield this season. Of course, Hunter is also … the WR75 in PPR points per game. Maybe last week's season-high 88% route rate is a sign of better things to come, but for now the 2025 NFL Draft's No. 2 overall pick remains a borderline WR4 and one of the season's biggest fantasy busts.

Tight End
Who is in our tight end circle of trust?
Tight end is probably the most frustrating position to figure out in fantasy football because there's usually not much consistency outside of the position's top handful of performers.
With this in mind: What TEs are both scoring fantasy points and demanding the sort of target shares to give us reason to believe the good times will continue?

TEs we can fully trust: Feature Trey McBride, Jake Ferguson and Tyler Warren … and I truly think that's about it. PLEASE get healthy soon, Brock Bowers (knee) and George Kittle (hamstring, IR).
TD-dependent options in good offenses: Include Darren Waller, Dallas Goedert, Dalton Kincaid and Tucker Kraft. Each are rock-solid TE1 options, even if there's weekly dud potential due to limited high-end volume potential. A similar sentiment is true for AJ Barner and Kyle Pitts.
Other notes
TE12 Michael Mayer: Served as Geno Smith's de facto checkdown option on his way to catching 5 of his 7 targets for 50 yards and a score. The talented 24-year-old handled a near every-down 92% snap rate and is a deserving streamer target for managers still trying to find an answer while Bowers is sidelined.
TE17 Jake Tonges: Has scored the ninth-most PPR points among all TEs this season despite basically everyone other than his parents having no idea who he was two months ago. Such is life as a TE in fantasy football land, but here's to hoping the clock strikes midnight on his fairytale season and we see Kittle get back to doing Kittle things sooner rather than later.
TE18 Oronde Gadsden: Saw a bump in usage last week despite the Chargers TE room being healthy at this point. Don't expect Gadsden to consistently work ahead of any of the team's top three WRs, but there's something going on here!

TE20 Harold Fannin and TE21 David Njoku: Fannin will be a top-10 option at the position *if* Njoku (knee) is ultimately sidelined. Otherwise, neither will be an overly recommended option in an offense that can't realistically ask Dillon Gabriel to throw the football 52 times ever again … right? Honestly, both of these ranks feel low; I'm fairly indifferent to however you want to rank my TE13-TE22.
TE22 AJ Barner: Has caught 17 of 19 targets this season with 4 TDs along the way. Of course, last week was saved by a late-game play-action shot that featured Barner get loose for 61 yards. Not to take away anything from the dude; just realize Barner has been forced to work with 3 or fewer targets in all but one game this season. That's not exactly what consistent fantasy hopes and dreams are made of.
Players Mentioned in this Article
- JaxsonDartQBNYG
- PPG
- 17.14
- Proj
- 19.77
JustinFieldsQBNYJ- PPG
- 16.62
KimaniVidalRBLAC
PukaNacuaQWRLAR

