The fantasy football landscape shifts dramatically after Week 8, 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 simply growing pains.
Thursday night’s Minnesota Vikings-Los Angeles Chargers matchup could provide crucial clarity on several key start/sit situations for both NFC powerhouses. Get ready to dive deep into the developments that could make or break your fantasy team’s Week 8 performance.
Minnesota Vikings
Carson Wentz, QB
I don’t think any of us were under the impression that Carson Wentz was playing for the lead role in Minnesota as much as he was keeping the seat warm for J.J. McCarthy. Still, with more interceptions (four) than touchdowns (three) over the past month, he’s clearly a Band-Aid that we need not worry about.
Yes, I’m aware that he’s cleared 310 passing yards in two of those games, but for me, that’s more of a positive signal for McCarthy than anything: you don’t have to play the position at a high level to put up some impressive numbers.
Can #Vikings QB Carson Wentz keep the streak going tonight?? #NFL pic.twitter.com/kPzFCtfVBz
— NFC North News (@NorthNewsNFC) October 23, 2025
There’s a chance Wentz handles this week on short rest before the team goes back to McCarthy (that was the rough timeline when he was injured back in Week 2). But even with six teams on a bye, I can’t imagine you having to go this deep in the player pool to roster a competitive team for Week 8.
J.J. McCarthy, QB
J.J. McCarthy suffered a high-ankle sprain back in Week 2 and was reported to be a six-week injury.
According to Adam Schefter, nothing has changed on that front, so this week is another TBD situation. However, we are operating under the assumption that he’s currently on the wrong side of questionable.
He showed well late in Week 1, his first action as an NFL starter, but McCarthy struggled before and in Week 2 before getting injured. He’s the future of the quarterback position in Minnesota and might even be a future fantasy asset, but the future is not now.
If you want to circle back to this conversation in December, we can. By then, we will have more data points and a few favorable spots on tap (Commanders, Cowboys, and Giants in Weeks 15-17). I’m not turning out the light on McCarthy, seeing his stock increase as this season wears on, though we do need to see it before we waste time getting excited about that favorable late-season run.
Aaron Jones Sr., RB
Aaron Jones was eligible to be activated off of IR last weekend, but the hamstring continues to plague the veteran, and the specifics surrounding his return remain cloudy. His return window opened on Tuesday afternoon, though that doesn’t include an exact plan.
On one hand, Jordan Mason hasn’t exactly stolen this role the way I thought he might (last three games: 3.77 yards per carry), and he failed to earn a single one of Carson Wentz’s 40 targeted passes in the loss to the Eagles.
On the other hand, we are 11 months clear of the last time Jones had a 20-yard run.
READ MORE: Aaron Jones Injury Update: What’s the Latest on the Vikings RB, and Will He Play in Week 8?
The moving piece here is the quarterback position. We think this team will lean toward J.J. McCarthy when given the green light, but who he is more comfortable with is unknown. Jones profiles as the pass catcher, and that holds value, though with an unproven quarterback, it’s hard to label that skill set as one that will elevate his floor every week.
For me, Jones is the type of running back that I’m happy to wait on. I’m not 100% sure Jones is a fantasy starter as it is, so I’m really not going this direction if his health is a question mark. If he proves he’s healthy and produces on my bench, I’ll live with it.
Jordan Mason, RB
Mason took advantage of Jones being sidelined for another week, scoring for the fourth time in as many games.
That said, he’s not exactly forcing his way into an extended role the way we saw Rico Dowdle do in Carolina following the Hubbard injury (one game with a 20-yard gain this season). I have him ranked ahead of Jones for the rest of the season and am defaulting to that position until proven otherwise, but should the veteran return, my ranking of Mason will fall from RB2 to a mediocre flex.
I’m aware that the Bolts were picked apart by Taylor last week.
Minnesota doesn’t have a Taylor on their roster.
Adam Thielen, WR
The Vikings are trending toward one of the more concentrated passing attacks in the league, and even when they branch out a bit, are we sure that Adam Thielen is the next man up?
Jalen Nailor earned twice as many targets as Thielen against the Eagles, and whenever Jones returns, that’s another target drain.
Two dozen players on your waiver wire have a more straightforward path to a random weekly breakout: there’s no reason to have this 35-year-old occupying the last spot on your roster, and every roster spot matters as we enter the second half of the season.
Jordan Addison, WR
Giddy up!
I believe that this Kevin O’Connell offense is mainly going to function similarly no matter who is under center, so the fact that Jordan Addison was targeted on four of his seven first-quarter routes speaks volumes to me.
READ MORE: Soppe’s Week 8 Fantasy Football Start ‘Em Sit ‘Em: Analysis for Every Player in Every Game
Included in that sample was a twisting 34-yard catch that could have been an even bigger gain had the pass been on target, but the ability to shake free and open windows was on full display last week against the Eagles.
Addison isn’t a threat to out-earn Justin Jefferson on any sort of consistent basis. That said, I’m not sold on this running game, and the Vikings project to have only two potential weather spots remaining on their schedule.
Nice conditions and an offensive savant is a good way to find flex value, especially when the subject of discussion is someone who has proven capable of scoring touchdowns in bunches.
Addison checks in as a low-end WR2/high-end flex for me this week, and that’s roughly where I’ll have him most weeks.
Justin Jefferson, WR
If Cooper DeJean doesn’t get his hand in the mix at the last possible second to disrupt a Jefferson touchdown, we are viewing last week as a win.
Instead, the elite wideout finished with a 50% catch rate and looked less connected with Wentz than Addison.
I’m not the least bit worried, and I can’t imagine you are either.
Jefferson has been QB and matchup proof for the majority of his career, and by earning double-digit targets in back-to-back-to-back games, that’s still very much the way to approach #18.
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His slot usage is tracking for a career low while his deep target rate is a career high — a profile I’d fear for most receivers, but not Jefferson. We know that Kevin O’Connell has a scheme that centers around him and that his ball/route skills are nothing short of elite.
Los Angeles has seen a featured WR clear 20 PPR points in three of their past five games, and the two exceptions were teams that struggle to put any WR fantasy points on the board (Giants and Dolphins).
Jefferson is in the WR1 overall conversation this week, for the remainder of this season, and in dynasty formats.
T.J. Hockenson, TE
That’s consecutive games with six receptions for T.J. Hockenson, a nice step forward, but he’s still searching for his first 50-yard outing of 2025, and that’s a problem for a player who has one TD catch on his resume over his past 19 regular-season games.
With just two end zone targets to his name this season and a 5.0-yard aDOT, his game truly is one of volume. We saw the Chargers give up plenty of short-ball success last weekend against the Colts, thus putting Hock in a position to stumble his way into the top 10 at the position.
That said, the downside is more threatening than the upside is impactful: he’s a fringe option that isn’t worth the trust his name gives you.
Los Angeles Chargers
Justin Herbert, QB
The game script got completely away from Los Angeles last week, and that was golden for owners of Justin Herbert (420 passing yards on 55 attempts to go along with 31 yards on the ground).
You obviously can’t rely on that sort of game weekly, but Jim Harbaugh continues to lean into this high pass rate (38+ attempts in four of his past five), and we have to assume it stays this way with the running backs struggling to impact the game much on the ground.
Only Atlanta blitzes more than Minnesota this year and the Vikings blitzed Justin Herbert at a record rate when these two played in 2023.
Herbert has been nice against the blitz in recent years, and torched that Vikings D for 405 yards.
🤔 Prop: Justin Herbert O253.5 Pass Yds pic.twitter.com/Y4ipmZ2Ona
— GameScript™ (@GameScriptAI) October 23, 2025
The comfort in the system looks better and better on Herbert with each passing week. In September, he completed 39.2% of his pressured passes with a 50.2 passer rating, since he’s at 52.5% and 94.7.
That type of growth comes with confidence and allows him to project well in this spot. He has three receivers that he very much trusts, and the sudden usage of Oronde Gadsden is just another reason to like Herbert as a top-5 QB this week and for the rest of the season.
Kimani Vidal, RB
Kimani Vidal clearly wasn’t the asset last week against the Colts as he was against the Dolphins the week prior: he’s likely to settle somewhere in the middle value-wise, and I suspect that’s what we see on Thursday night.
Hassan Haskins has been ruled out, and that’s obviously helpful. Joe Alt, taking part in practice in a limited fashion this week, could help cure the efficiency woes from a week ago (nine carries for 20 yards), and the blitz-happy nature of the Vikings (highest blitz rate since the beginning of 2023) gives Vidal a chance to see his 4-5 targets again.
The floor is there because of his role. Even if the ceiling probably isn’t near what we saw in Week 5, numbers that were as much matchup-driven as anything, he’s a good bet for double-digit PPR points, and in a week like this, that’ll work!
Keenan Allen, WR
The Keenan Allen touchdown last week was a work of art and was a great example of why, in his age-33 season, he’s still able to produce like a weekly lineup lock.
With Herbert on the move, the veteran receiver was thinking two steps ahead, located a hole in the zone, and sat down in it at the perfect time.
Touchdown, easy game.
Allen has earned at least seven targets in every game this season, scoring in four of them and adding a 20+ yard grab in four of his past six. Ladd McConkey is a younger version of him, and Johnston offers far more athleticism. Still, for a team with a high PROE rate like this, the reliability of Allen is just as critical as anything.
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For the season, he has more catches on third down (14) than any of his teammates have targets on the critical down, and leads the Bolts across the board in receiving production when Herbert is blitzed (catches, targets, and fantasy points).
Those are great traits to carry into a showdown with a team as aggressive as the Vikings, especially if you think the running game struggles to the degree that they did over the weeks (RBs vs. IND: 10 carries for 23 yards).
Ladd McConkey, WR
In September, Ladd McConkey didn’t have a single game with 14 expected PPR points, but in October, he has had nothing but games like that, earning 31 looks across those three contests.
More impressive than the target count is the placement of those looks: 67.3% slot rate along with six end zone targets.
It’s hard to argue that McConkey’s ceiling rivals that of Quentin Johnston, but he’s back to showing the elevated floor that we fell in love with last season, and that has him checking in as my top Bolt moving forward.
He’s deserving of WR1 consideration this season, but he’s a lineup lock regardless of how you split hairs.
Oronde Gadsden, TE
It’s Jake Ferguson. It’s Trey McBride. And it’s Oronde Gadsden II.
Those are the tight ends with consecutive seven-reception games this season.
His snap share has increased each week he’s been active, and the 11.4 aDOT against the Colts last week speaks to how much this athletic profile can threaten defenses.
On a different team, you’d be able to sell me on Gadsden as a top 10 tight end. Asking him to thrive alongside three receivers that are objectively more dangerous is difficult at best and disastrous at worst.
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The high-PROE stylings of Jim Harbaugh in 2025 give us hope of keeping the 22-year-old on the streaming radar, but is a blitz-heavy opponent really the spot for it?
I have a hard time seeing Gadsden getting much past a handful of targets, and with a game total sitting under 45 points on short rest, I think there’s serious “chase the Week 7 production and lose Week 8 as a result” potential here.
