Thursday Night Football Fantasy Start/Sit: Justin Fields, Drake Maye, Stefon Diggs Top Options Tonight

Dominate Week 11 with expert Jets-Patriots fantasy analysis. Who should you start and sit in this exciting Thursday night matchup?

The fantasy football landscape shifts dramatically after Week 11, as unexpected performances and emerging storylines reshape our expectations for the season ahead. Some players exceed all projections, while others leave managers scratching their heads, wondering if early concerns were justified or merely a case of growing pains.

Thursday night’s New York Jets-New England Patriots matchup could provide crucial clarity on several key start/sit situations for both AFC powerhouses. Get ready to dive deep into the developments that could make or break your fantasy team’s Week 11 performance.

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New York Jets

Justin Fields, QB

Two first-quarter return touchdowns left the Jets in a weird game script that had their offense hardly on the field, a runout that resulted in the fourth game this season in which Justin Fields finished with single-digit completions.

Garrett Wilson was targeted on a quarter of his routes, a tiny sample that I’d normally try to cling to, but the WR1 isn’t going to play this week. This is a one-dimensional offense facing a defense that excels at taking away that one dimension.

This could get ugly.

Breece Hall, RB

This offense is limited in a lot of ways, but two return touchdowns in the first quarter allowed them to lean into a positive game script, and when that’s the case, Breece Hall is going to pay off (125 yards and a touchdown).

A negative script won’t completely rule out a viable Hall afternoon (five games with 30+ receiving yards this season), but we’ve seen the damage he can do in a neutral-to-positive runout over the past two games (39 carries for 216 yards and two scores, 5.5 yards per carry).

I’m not overly confident that New York will keep this game close, and that introduces a floor outcome that we haven’t seen recently. However, even with that risk factored in, the lead back on a run-centric offense deserves to be ranked as a top 20 back.

Garrett Wilson, WR

Garrett Wilson came into Week 10 with a nagging knee issue, dealt with a Justin Fields issue for much of Week 10, and then exited the game with that same knee issue.

After a catchless effort (three targets, 12 routes), Wilson was forced to the sidelines, and reporting on Monday has him looking at 3-4 missed weeks due to a knee sprain.

READ MORE: Soppe’s Week 11 Fantasy Football Start ‘Em Sit ‘Em: Analysis for Every Player in Every Game

He did avoid surgery, which is good, but are we really sure the 2-7 Jets are going to bring him back in December, with every win potentially hurting their future outlook?

You may have started Wilson for the last time this season. You should put him on IR now and wait, but you’d be wise to make other plans moving forward. If there’s a decision to be made about what to do with him in December, given his expected return, we can have that discussion.

Mason Taylor, TE

Do yourself a favor and don’t add the Jets to your roster.

Mason Taylor was a second-round pick in April, and we saw some good things from him early in the year, but this passing game is a disaster under Justin Fields’ watch, and I can’t imagine that the TE position is how they envision fixing things.

It’s been more than a month since the last time the rookie hit 35 receiving yards in a game, and with red zone trips limited, asking him to get close to 10 PPR points feels unfair.

I’d keep an eye on him for next season should this organization address the QB position, but until then, he’s better left on redraft waiver wires.

New England Patriots

Drake Maye, QB

Drake Maye was intercepted for a third straight start and completed just 51.6% of his passes against a pass funnel Buccaneers defense (previous season low: 65.2% in his 2025 debut).

I’m more than comfortable blaming the conditions (a rainy mix) and moving on.

He showed perfect touch on the 72-yard score to Kyle Williams and now has five straight games with 220+ pass yards, 2+ pass TDs, and 7+ rushes.

That’s something no other QB has done during the 2000s.

No Mike Vick, Jayden Daniels, Josh Allen, or anyone else.

Dillon Gabriel looked like an NFL quarterback against these depleted Jets last week, and there’s no reason to think that Maye is anything but elite in this divisional matchup.

The only question left on Maye at this point is … what excuse are you going to make for not winning your league title after getting such value at the highest-scoring position in our game?

Rhamondre Stevenson, RB

That’s now two consecutive missed games with a toe injury for Rhamondre Stevenson, a player who is averaging just 3.4 yards per carry this season and doesn’t have a single 25-yard rush this season (83 attempts).

The injury to the veteran has forced New England’s hand in terms of relying on TreVeyon Henderson, thus opening the door for Stevenson to lose volume moving forward.

MORE: Free Fantasy Start/Sit Lineup Optimizer

This coaching staff has shown a frustrating amount of loyalty to their RB1 this season despite three lost fumbles, and that makes it difficult to envision a world in which he is sitting on the wrong side of a committee once he is deemed healthy enough to return.

That said, the lack of efficiency means that any decline in volume puts his value at significant risk. The Jets made it clear at the trade deadline before Week 10 that they are in the business of looking past 2025, and that makes any starter facing them worth a look, but I’m not sure that Stevenson’s touch ceiling is much greater than 15 should he return this week, and that makes him a touchdown-reliant RB2 at best.

TreVeyon Henderson, RB

I made note of a TreVeyon Henderson carry early in the win over the Bucs, where he was barely tripped up on a pitch play that had the potential to be a long gain or maybe an 81-yard touchdown, fearing that we missed our chance to get the rookie breakout game.

He may have missed out on that opportunity, but he more than made good on the chances presented to him the rest of the way, finishing with 147 yards and two scores against one of the better run defenses in the league.

I was high on Henderson entering the week, as most were, but it was under the assumption that we’d see his fluidity in the passing game on full display with Tampa Bay largely stuffing between-the-tackle runs.

I still want to see that, but seeing him hit holes at full speed was even better. The game could have been even better if not for a chaotic sequence at the goal line to end the first half, where he was tackled on the doorstep three times before Drake Maye threw a fourth-down fade to Stefon Diggs, but we can’t pick nits.

Do we have a league winner on our hands?

That’s the hope. He’s battling a minor knee injury this short week, but I’m more concerned about the health of Rhamondre Stevenson. This coaching staff has made it well known how valuable the veteran is to them, and that means he’ll be involved to some degree when healthy, even if it skews all logic.

Henderson now has more 35-yard touchdown runs during his career than Stevenson, and I expect that explosion to win out in the touch department for a team that is now chasing the AFC’s top seed. Mike Vrabel’s loyalty to Stevenson sends a good message, but if this team thinks its championship window is open as soon as this year (and why wouldn’t they), my hunch is that we have a change at the top of the depth chart moving forward.

To be clear, that doesn’t mean this is an 80/20 split when all parties are healthy, but rather a 65/35 range, as seen in their last three games together, which makes sense to me, especially with the rookie leading the charge.

He’s to be viewed as a fringe RB1 when Stevenson is inactive, and I’ll be ranking him as an average RB2 until proven otherwise when his backfield mate returns.

If you stuck through the tough times, it’s time to buckle up for the good!

DeMario Douglas, WR

We all want a piece of this New England offense, but it’s a committee at the WR position, and I don’t see that changing.

Kyle Williams hit on the splash play last week, Stefon Diggs has been the most consistent target earner, and KayShon Boutte has had his moments.

Oh, and Mack Hollins followed up a nine-yard game with a 106-yard effort on Sunday because why not?

MORE: Free Fantasy Waiver Wire Tool

DeMario Douglas finds himself in a peculiar position where he doesn’t have a clear role. In Week 9 against the Falcons, he racked up 131 air yards, and on Sunday, he was responsible for only five.

It’s been more than a month since the last time he was on the field for even a quarter of the offensive snaps. That sort of rare usage means he not only belongs on your waiver wire, but that he shouldn’t be on the long list of names you look at when bargain shopping on a Sunday morning as you try to replace inactive players.

Kayshon Boutte, WR

The hamstring injury sidelined Kayshon Boutte last week, and while there’s a chance he returns, you’re chasing ghosts here.

Boutte had a run of three straight games where he was a WR2 or better, which is great, but he achieved this with unsustainable scoring rates. In an offense like this that is structured around Drake Maye’s willingness to spread the ball around, the odds of a floor game far outweigh those of a ceiling performance.

The big-play threat (18.7 yards per catch this season) has scored on 16.1% of his targets this season, a dramatic shift from his first two seasons (4%). He’s a fine dart throw if that is the position you find yourself in, but with only two teams on bye and health question marks, there are likely better swings to take on your waiver wire.

Stefon Diggs, WR

Stefon Diggs has now scored in three straight games, his first such streak since Weeks 11-13 of 2022 with the Bills, and he looks great in doing it.

The explosive plays aren’t really a part of the equation any more (we are a month removed from his last 25-yard reception and in a two-year run that has seen him rip off one 40-yard gain), but as long as Drake Maye continues to make defenses sweat on those long passes to other players, Diggs’ savvy in the short area (8.6-yard aDOT) projects as sustainable.

He was featured from the jump last week (38.9% first-half target share), and if this TreVeyon Henderson breakout is real, then there may be even more to the profile of New England’s WR1.

Back in Week 3, the upset win in Buffalo, Diggs turned six play-action routes into five catches and 77 yards. Maybe pillow-soft deep ball stretches the opponents vertically, and if the running game is now explosive, those middle crossing routes are Diggs’ for the taking.

He’s a top-20 receiver for me on this short week, ranking ahead of DK Metcalf and AJ Brown, to name a few.

Hunter Henry, TE

Drake Maye continues to play at an MVP level, so his indifference to getting his tight end speaks volumes to me.

Hunter Henry has checked in well under 0.5 yards per route run in two of his past three games and hasn’t reached 55 receiving yards in a game since doing it in two of three to open this season.

MORE: Fantasy Football Trade Analyzer

Being attached to a great offense makes sense in theory, but if they are great when not involving your piece of the pie consistently, maybe it’s time to reconsider.

Coltson Loveland is the obvious name, but Theo Johnson and Harold Fannin are among the young tight ends who mean much more to their respective units than Henry does, and that has me ranking all of them a tier ahead of the veteran without a second thought.

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