LOS ANGELES -- For 54 dull and rainy minutes, the Los Angeles Rams defense appeared to be carrying Jared Goff to a victory in his NFL debut.With two dramatic drives, Ryan Tannehill and the Miami Dolphins washed it all away.DeVante Parker caught a 9-yard touchdown pass with 36 seconds to play, and the surging Dolphins rallied for two late scores to spoil Goffs big day with a 14-10 victory Sunday.Tannehill passed for 172 yards in the fifth straight victory for the Dolphins (6-4), who were dominated by the Rams defense until their final chances for redemption. Miami left the Coliseum crowd in disbelief and barely kept alive its longest winning streak since 2008.I dont even know (how the comeback happened), Dolphins coach Adam Gase said. Just nothing was going right for us. We were terrible on offense.After Jarvis Landry caught a 10-yard TD pass with 4:02 to play, the Dolphins got the ball right back and drove downfield for Parkers diving TD reception in the corner. Miami gained 152 of its 240 total yards on the final two drives, leaving the Los Angeles defense heartbroken and furious.We played pretty much great the whole day, Rams defensive end Robert Quinn said. We kept fighting, but those last 6 minutes, I think its going to haunt us.Todd Gurley scored on a 24-yard run in the first quarter for Los Angeles (4-6), but neither team managed much offense until Miamis late surge.GOFFS TURNUntil the late swerve, the game was a decent coming-out party for the NFLs No. 1 draft pick.Goff went 17 of 31 for 134 yards after finally getting his chance in the 10th game of the season. But the Rams did little between Miamis two touchdowns, and when Los Angeles got the ball back at its 41 with 29 seconds left, Goff moved the team only 12 yards before throwing an incompletion in the end zone as time expired.Felt good, Goff said. Were obviously disappointed with the result there at the end and how things turned out, and how we felt through the whole game and how in control we were. At the end, 6 minutes left, we just kind of couldnt put it away.Nearly seven months after the Rams traded up to draft Goff, their prized rookie finally got his first start and was introduced to raucous cheers on a rare rainy day in downtown LA, but he made few memorable plays in a conservative game plan.The rookie got his first NFL completion on a short pass to fellow rookie Tyler Higbee, but neither team made much headway in the first three quarters. Goff showed mobility in the pocket and made a handful of key third-down throws to keep the Rams moving.I was disappointed in the outcome of the game, but I think you could see the light, Los Angeles coach Jeff Fisher said. There was a light there for (Goff), so well continue to allow him to get ready, continue to progress.BEATING THEMSELVESFisher called it one of the most disappointing losses of his long career.To play 3 1/2 quarters of good football and then to let things slip away in the last 6 minutes was really disappointing, Fisher said.Los Angeles took its first double-digit lead at home this season on a 46-yard field goal by Greg Zuerlein in the third quarter. But after Zuerlein missed a 48-yard attempt off the upright with 6:40 to play, the Dolphins finally mounted a scoring drive capped when Landry caught a short pass and his teammates pushed the pile 4 yards into the end zone.Its all about will, Landry said. I couldnt get in there alone. I closed my eyes and went for the ride.AWAY FROM HOMEThe Dolphins spent the week in California after beating San Diego last weekend, but their offense was mostly awful until Tannehill got it moving in the final minutes. Parker had eight catches for 79 yards, and Jay Ajayi rushed for 77 yards.INJURY REPORTDolphins: OG Laremy Tunsil started at left tackle in place of Branden Albert, but injured his shoulder during the first half. Backup RT Sam Young moved over to the left side. Albert had surgery on a torn ligament in his wrist, but wouldnt rule out playing next week.Rams: Quinn started five days after spending the night in a hospital with an apparent case of dehydration. ... C Tim Barnes also started after weeklong concerns about his foot. ... Rookie LB Josh Forrest hurt his knee in the first half and didnt return.UP NEXTDolphins: Return home to host struggling San Francisco (1-9).Rams: At New Orleans for yet another long road trip in a season full of travel.---For more NFL coverage: http://www.pro32.ap.org and http://www.twitter.com/AP-NFL Cheap Nike Free Authentic . Despite dominating possession, Schalke needed an own goal from Nicolas Hoefler for the breakthrough a minute before the interval. The Freiburg midfielder misjudged Jefferson Farfans corner and bundled the ball into his own net. Cheap Nike Free For Sale . The injury bothered Bledsoe in the Suns victory over the Clippers on Monday and he sat out the teams home loss to Memphis on Thursday night. http://www.discountnikefree.com/ . The Browns coaching search remains incomplete. Wholesale Nike Free . Just not the game. Kyle Palmieri scored two straight goals in the third period to rally the Anaheim Ducks past the Philadelphia Flyers 3-2 on Tuesday night. Authentic Nike Free Free Shipping .C. -- Chris Thorburn thinks one of the reasons the Winnipeg Jets have been successful under new coach Paul Maurice is that theyre playing together as a team. Maybe youre not a gamer, but at the end of this years Draft Day Manifesto, I wrote the following.If youve read this far, youre a gamer. You get it. You know how much fun, how awesome, how addicting fantasy football is. You know how it brings people together. So why keep it all to yourself? Make it your goal to convince one person in your life who has never played before to try a league this year. We need more women playing, more kids, more senior citizens. Fantasy football is something everyone can enjoy, so ask your parents, your kids, your neighbor, co-worker, someone. Just one person. Come on. Help me spread the word.I hope people took me up on that. If every single one of us invited just one person who had never played before to enjoy the game, taught them about it so they feel like they know what they are doing and wont be intimidated by phrases and slogans they havent heard, then we will be pretty close to my goal of getting every man, woman and child playing fantasy football.These werent empty words. I meant them, and I also wanted to practice what I preach. So for my one person who has never played before, I chose Chelsea Handler.Ive read a lot of her books, watched her on TV for years. Shes always great on Howard Sterns show. Shes so smart and funny. Her books really are terrific. Ive been a big fan of hers for a long time. So when a producer of her new show, Chelsea, reached out and invited me on as a guest, I jumped at the chance. One of the segments on the show is Chelsea learning about things she knows nothing about, and she wanted to learn what the hell fantasy football was.In addition to being fun for me and good promotion for ESPN Fantasy, I had an ulterior motive. I wanted to not just explain our game, I wanted to convince her to play. In a league. With me. She was going to be my one newbie this year.The segment was fun (you can find it on Netflix if youd like to see it). Chelsea was great in person, and when we were done, I made my pitch. She smiled and said ... you bet. Lets do it.And so, Chelsea Handler is a part of the second annual ESPN Fantasy Focus Podcast Celebrity Fantasy Football League. In fact, she enjoyed the draft so much she set up a second league and is playing with the staff of her show. And while she has been slow out of the gate in the podcast league, she leads the league in trash talk. As you might imagine, shes hilarious. As I write this, she has been going back and forth with Dale Earnhardt Jr. (no slouch himself in the trash talk department) via email.I can hear some of you complaining already. All he does is name drop celebrities. That podcast spends way too much time talking to famous people. Hes so self-centered and egocentric.Look, Ive got no answer for the third one. Guilty as charged. But as the second year of the ESPN Fantasy Focus Podcast Celebrity Fantasy Football League is now underway, I wanted to mention Chelsea and talk about the league for a very specific reason.Every single person reading this column, playing their league out for FREE on ESPN.com, checking their scores on the free app and spending the next few months enjoying the greatest game ever invented, should sit there and thank these celebs. Support their projects, follow them on social media and when the subject of a celebrity league comes up -- or just celebrities in general playing fantasy football -- can it already with the holier-than-thou sneer.We are a country that places a great deal of value on celebrity. You dont have to like it, you can say its whats wrong with our country and that it is warping our values, and youd find a ton of support for that opinion. But it is what it is. We pay attention to what celebrities say, do, wear and date. An inordinate amount of attention. Its the true national pastime.And so when a celebrity does something like, say, play fantasy football, people notice. And they think ... oh, maybe I should do that. Chelsea Handler has an enormous fan base, including tons of women. If Chelsea has a fun experience playing fantasy football and says something on her show or tweets about her fantasy team once or twice ... thats amazing. That will do more to spread the word about the fun and ease of fantasy sports than any ESPN commercial we could air.And its not just Chelsea. Its every celebrity, be they in our podcast league or not. The more people who play it, the more advertisers want to be associated with it. And the more advertisers who want to be associated with it, the more free games, tools, fantasy football marathons and fantasy columns there will be.Thats why the celeb league is among my favorite things we do on the podcast, and while it is very popular, I have heard some podcast listeners and readers of this column say that they wish it were pure football and to stop it with the high jinks and the drops and the celebs. While I certainly understand that point of view, I disagree with it. I have a more open worldview. I want everyone to play, not just the people who think they are the smartest and most competitive people in the room. And to me, this is a great way to expand our game.I will take one paragraph to indulge in blatant promotion and say that this year, we managed to not only get a great cross section of celebrities, we also got celebrities who hadnt done (as far as I know) public fantasy leagues before. And all of the celebs actually play fantasy football competitively, except for our two newcomers (In addition to Chelsea, Anna Faris is playing for the first time with her podcast co-host, Sim Sarna. So one of you out there is off the hook for getting one person to play this year, I got you covered). This is the second year of the league, and because it was so successful last year, we actually had celebs asking us to play in it; so much so that we expanded to a 14-team league with PPR scoring. Heres who is in it (in alphabetical order): 1. Ike Barinholtz 2. Kevin Durant (our defending champ!) 3. Dale Earnhardt Jr. 4. Zac Efron 5. Chelsea Handler 6. Evan Longoria 7. Phil Lord & Chris Miller (directors of 22 Jump Street, Lego Movie, and currently filming the new Han Solo movie) 8. Jim Parsons 9. Darius Rucker 10. Miles Teller 11. Unqualified podcast (Anna Faris & Sim Sarna)Plus, Field Yates, Stephania Bell and I round out the 14. Its a great group -- a cross section of people, interests, level of experience -- its got movie stars, pro athletes, musicians and some of the biggest TV stars around. Its got married folks and single people, parents and party animals, young and old, from all different parts of the country and all different backgrounds. Its everything a fantasy league should be. Weve been having members of the league on the podcast once a week and will continue to do so, so hopefully youll check it out. Or if its not your thing, just click on it. We dont care if you listen, we just want the downloads.But the most important thing about the league is that its promoting fantasy football. Something we should all do. Because our game is not free from attacks. There are still naysayers. There are still those who dont get it. There are still those who are negative and only like for-real football.Thats why I desperately hope folks took me up on the just one person idea, and if they didnt, I hope they will in the future. Because its not just on celebs, its on all of us.So if theres someone in your life who hasnt tried it yet, I will bet anything that person is a fan of at least one member of our league. And that might just be enough.Come on, try fantasy football. Kevin Durant plays it! Try it once. For KD. And me.Lets get to it.Quarterbacks I love in Week 4Matthew Stafford, Lions: Im running out of ways to make puns out of Jim Bob Cooters name. Coot-tastic! Coot-some! Supercooterfragilisticexpialidocious! (Too much?) I may have run out, but JBC has not run out of ways to get the ball to Marvin Jones. Stafford is locked in as a top-10 QB for the season, and I dont expect the Bears to generate much of a pass rush (Chicago has blitzed the least in the NFL this season, and Stafford is completing 70.4 percent of passes when not blitzed), so he should sit back and pick apart a decimated Bears secondary.Kirk Cousins, Redskins: Told you. Look, his play still has some head-scratchers (what WAS that final sequence at the end of the first half last week?), but the recipe continues to be there: poor defense, inconsistent running game and high-volume passing attack with talented pass-catchers. Facing a Browns squad that has allowed multiple passing scores and at least 275 passing yards in each game this season makes Cousins a legit top-10 play this week and an obvious target for Aaron Rodgers owners if somehow he is still available in your league (his ownership rate was 76 percent as of this writing).Andy Dalton, Bengals: An inconsistent defense traveling on a short week versus Dalton, who is terrible in prime time. Something has to give here. Cody Kessler had almost 250 yards against the Dolphins last week, and prior to facing the tough Denver defense last week, Dalton had been terrific. Its a bit of a gut call here, but gimme the Red Rifle as a top-10 option at the position this week.Others receiving votes: Even after last weeks solid showing against the Titans, the Raiders are still last in passing yards allowed per game. The Ravens cant run the ball, and I expect the Raiders to be able to score here, which means Joe Flacco will have to throw. Hell be a viable fill-in this week. ... Look, I certainly dont expect Trevor Siemian to do what he did last week. This is still a run-first offense, but similar to last week, I could see the Broncos ground game struggling here, forcing Siemian to pass against a Bucs defense that has allowed the sixth-most points to opposing QBs and has allowed multiple touchdown passes in 13 of its past 16 games, including last week to Case Keenum. I repeat, Case Keenum. Siemian is useful this week for the deeper-league desperate. ... Extra time to prepare and no love lost between Rex Ryan and Bill Belichick. If Jimmy Garoppolo is out there, I like him to have a decent game here against a Bills team thats giving up 285 passing yards a game and wont be able to pressure him the way they did Carson Palmer last week.Quarterbacks I hate in Week 4Russell Wilson, Seahawks: If he were healthy, Wilson would be a no-brainer for the other list. While I love and admire the guys toughness, its hard to see him as a top-10 play this week. He scored 13 points or fewer in all three games so far and has yet to throw multiple touchdown passes in any of them. (Incidentally, he started slowly last season too). If his mobility is limited because of injury, so is his upside on any fantasy points from rushing. The Jets defensive weakness lies in the secondary, not the run defense, so if you have to start Wilson, you can hang your hat on that. But on the road, Im expecting a heavy dose of Christine Michael and a solid but unspectacular game from Wilson, landing him outside the top 10 this week.Eli Manning, Giants: The email I just got telling me I have a large inheritance, the idea that Im not losing my hair, the Vikings defense -- at least one of these things is totally legit. The Vikes lead the NFL in sacks and are third in number of blitzes, whereas Eli struggles against pressure (fifth-worst QBR against the blitz this season). With just one touchdown pass in the past two weeks, Manning doesnt have a lot of momentum to face a defense that already has stopped Aaron Rodgers and Cam Newton. Not a strong option this week.Marcus Mariota, Titans: Even without J.J. Watt chasing him around, Mariota is not a start this week, even in deeper leagues. While some of the numbers are inflated by that weird Patriots game, the fact is that the Texans have allowed just one passing touchdown and just 151 passing yards per game this season. Sure, theyve played the Bears, Chiefs and a third-string Patriots QB, but theyve also had extra time to prepare. I expect the Titans to come in with a run-heavy offense (yes, even more than normal), especially if Delanie Walker misses another game. Mariota is simply not a top-15 play this week.Running backs I love in Week 4DeMarco Murray, Titans: You knew the Titans wanted to run the ball this year, but the surprising thing is how much they use Murray in the passing game. He has five or more catches in three straight games. Youll win a bar bet with this one: Murray has more catches this season than Allen Robinson. A struggling run defense -- the Texans have given up a rushing touchdown or 100 yards rushing in all three games this season; did you SEE what LeGarrette Blount did to them? -- that just lost J.J. Watt should see a lot of Murray (at least 18 touches in each game), who is an easy RB1 for me this week and someone who will probably be under-owned in daily.Jeremy Hill, Bengals: Oh, the joy of having a Thursday night player in one section and then he does the opposite of what you expect. Oh yeah, those Fridays are fun. Hill is one of the more inconsistent players out theere and he just had a huge game, which means you know hes going to tank this.dddddddddddd. But here I am, on Hill this week. Miami gets run on A LOT (second most in the NFL at 34 attempts a game) and theyre getting gashed too, coughing up 147 yards per game on the ground. When the Bengals run, its Hill most of the time (71 percent of RB carries this season), so expect to see a lot of him. Traveling on a short week to face an angry Bengals team, I dont like the Dolphins chances of containing him. Top-20 play for me this week.Jordan Howard, Bears: As I often say, you dont have to be the best-looking guy in the bar, you just have to be the only guy in the bar. Meet Jordan Howard, fresh off your waiver wire and into your lineup. No KaDeem Carey or Jeremy Langford, which means Howard should get the majority of work against a Lions team giving up a league-high 5.1 yards per carry this season. Detroit hasnt given up a touchdown to an opposing running back this season and I expect Chicago to be down a decent amount in this game, but Howard does have six receptions on the season (compared to 12 carries). Because of the Bears willingness to dump it off to him when he has been in the game, Im not scared of game flow here. Howard is a top-20 play for me.Isaiah Crowell, Browns: There is something to be said about consistency. Washington has given up two rushing touchdowns to running backs in each of its three games this season. Whether inflated by big runs or not, Crowell has averaged better than 5 yards per carry in each game this year, and the use of Terrelle Pryor in a prominent role opens up the entire offense. Expect another healthy workload and a top-20 day.Others receiving votes: Cameron Artis-Payne got four carries before Fozzy Whittaker got one last week and touched the ball on better than 48 percent of his snaps. Game flow killed his opportunity against the Vikings, but with an easier opponent, I expect Carolina will lead, helping CAPs cause. I like him as a flex this week. ... Denver doesnt scare me as it relates to Charles Sims, as hell be on the field a lot. Hes part of the Bucs passing game and so far this season, Denver hasnt been any good against the run. ... Matt Jones is getting 70 percent of the Redskins RB carries through three weeks, including 19 touches last week. The Browns are giving up 103 rushing yards per game to running backs so far. ... Gut call, but I think Dwayne Washington has a strong game Sunday. The Bears have given up four RB touchdowns the past two weeks and if theres a rushing score in this one, Washington is the most likely to get it.Running backs I hate in Week 4Latavius Murray, Raiders: Today in numbers going the wrong way, Murrays touch count for his past five games, dating to last season: 24-15-15-14-11. Hes in a three-way time-share, you just havent noticed because he keeps scoring TDs. And he could easily get in the end zone this week too, but Im nervous. The Ravens are decent against the run and last week Murray had an eight-point touchdown run and then 10 other touches that totaled one point. If I said you were going to start a RB that might get only 11 or so touches, would you be excited about that? Murray is a flex play at best this week, not the top-15 guy he has been so far.Jerick McKinnon, Vikings: The Giants have given up only one rushing touchdown this season, theyre allowing just 3.2 yards per carry, McKinnon is splitting carries and the Vikings cant block. Bleagh.Any Dolphins, Giants or Ravens running back: Unsure workload, bad matchup and, in general, not a lot of talent. Hells to the no.Note: I know, I know. Kind of a weak running back list. Heres the problem: The position is so ugly that its hard to hate anyone with a pulse. I mean, I am lower on Devonta Freeman and Tevin Coleman this week than I ever have been, but my guess is you dont have better options.Wide receivers I love in Week 4Marvin Jones, Lions: Not that you were ever considering benching him, but Im putting him in here because hes in my top 10 this week, and thats not a fluke. Its legit. Super Cooter Duper! No? OK, Ill show myself out. Thanks.Demaryius Thomas, Broncos: The No. 1 wide receiver facing the Buccaneers has scored every week: Julio Jones, Larry Fitzgerald and Tavon Austin. This is a secondary that has not stopped anyone, allowing seven scores to wideouts in three games. Per my friend Mike Clays invaluable WR/CB matchup chart, Thomas, who is 6-foot-3, should spend a lot of time facing off with the struggling Alterraun Verner, who is 5-10. DT has increased his reception total each week thus far, and that should continue this week in Tampa.Jarvis Landry, Dolphins: He needs a slogan. Something snappy. Jarvis, not just for PPR leagues! The Bengals have given up a slot touchdown in each of the past three games, and I cant imagine the Dolphins being able to run the ball here, so through the air is the only way theyll move the ball. Expect another heavy target day for Landry.Travis Benjamin and Tyrell Williams, Chargers: Do you want a lot of stats here, or do you want me to just point to the schedule where it says vs. New Orleans? Williams, by the way, is quietly one of only eight wide receivers with at least 60 receiving yards in every game this season. I continue to really like him for season-long leagues. This might be your last chance to buy semi-low.Terrelle Pryor, Browns: I am so mad at myself. Podcast fans know I have been talking about Pryor for a while now, ever since the preseason. And I liked him last week, talked him up enough on the podcast and elsewhere. I could have sworn I wrote about him in Love/Hate last week. At 10:07 a.m. ET on Sunday morning, I sent this tweet:Terrelle Pryor avail in 74% of ESPN lgs. As pod fans know, I like him in general but quite a bit today. Even if you dont start, grab him.- Matthew Berry (@MatthewBerryTMR) September 25, 2016Anyway, this isnt bragging. OK, its a little bragging, but believe me, I got plenty of calls wrong last week, and always do and will. But Im just so mad I didnt put him in this column last week. Regardless, hes all sorts of legit. The quarterback play will continue, the running ... all of it. Hes the Browns most talented playmaker, and there is a connection between Hue Jackson and Pryor going back to Oakland. Hue is a great coach and will continue to find creative ways to get the ball in his hands. So Im putting Pryor here to say that (A) hes not a fluke, he was on the field for 82 snaps last week, and (B) Im not worried if Josh Norman shadows him this week; they will line him up all over. Top-20 play for me.Others receiving votes: In two games versus Indy last season, with Vontae Davis shadowing Allen Robinson, Hurns went burns -- as in he burned the Colts! Ha! Its getting late. Im a bit loopy. At any rate, he went over 100 yards and had a score in each game. While the Jags offense isnt clicking like last season thus far, Davis should be on A-Rob again, making Hurns a strong play this week. ... Same game, gimme some Phillip Dorsett, who led the Colts in snaps played last week and should spend a good chunk of the game being guarded by Davon House, currently Pro Football Focus 96th-ranked cornerback out of 104. ... You know I am on Kirk Cousins, so DeSean Jackson and Jamison Crowder should continue to be WR3s with upside.Wide receivers I hate in Week 4Sammy Watkins, Bills: Im not even convinced he plays, but even if he does, he has never had more than 60 yards receiving in four career meetings against Bill Belichick and has just one score. It depends who else you have on your team, of course, and Watkins is talented enough that any one play can make your week, but in the two-WR, one-flex, 16-team PPR league that I own Watkins in, I am starting DeAndre Hopkins (obviously), Terrelle Pryor and Willie Snead over him this week. And if Snead cant go, Ill probably play Tyrell Williams over Watkins. I expect a lot of Malcolm Butler on Watkins in this one, and at less than 100 percent, he is outside my top 20.Dez Bryant, Cowboys: I dont think he plays, and if he does suit up for the Cowboys, hes not suiting up for me. I feel hed be out there just as a decoy.Tajae Sharpe, Titans: He has cooled off after a hot start, and you know I think this game leans run-heavy. Sharpe has seen his targets decline after a big Week 1, and its worth noting, Marcus Mariota struggles when under pressure. And while theres no J.J. Watt in this one, I still expect Houston to bring pressure here and the Titans to run a lot to counter that. There are likely better options on your team.Julian Edelman, Patriots: Wake me when Tom is back. Anything is possible, but I am expecting a run-heavy game script that takes some shots to Rob Gronkowski. Edelman has just one red zone reception in three weeks, which makes him more a WR3 this week and not the automatic start he normally is.Jordy Nelson, Packers: Hes on a bye this week. Just making sure youre paying attention.Tight ends I love in Week 4Dennis Pitta, Ravens: The past two weeks, Joe Flacco has eyes for Pitta only. At least it seems that way. Almost 30 percent of Flaccos completions in the past two weeks have gone to The Peach. (Get it? The Peach? Peach Pitta? No? What? Am I still here? Im still here. I shouldnt be. Excuse me. Ill leave now.) The Raiders got destroyed by the Falcons Jacob Tamme, and I expect a good game for Pitta here.Jimmy Graham, Seahawks: With Russell Wilson immobile, the Hawks will want to use Graham to control the middle of the field, and theyll be successful at it. The Jets pass defense is their weakness, allowing opponents to complete a league-high 71.3 percent of passes this season. The Chiefs tight ends just gashed New York last week, so I like Graham this week to continue his strong start.Zach Miller, Bears: Can Brian Hoyer stay the Bears QB forever? Asking for a friend. Who happens to own Miller. And is actually me. Hoyer kept looking his way last week (nine targets), and he should do it again in a matchup he can win. The Lions have allowed a touchdown to a tight end each week this season, coughing up 216 yards and five TDs to TEs on only 19 catches (50 fantasy points, most in the NFL).Others receiving votes: Kyle Rudolph has scored in back-to-back weeks and is getting targeted on 28 percent of all Vikings passes, behind only Stefon Diggs. ... Cameron Brate is getting all the love now that Austin Seferian-Jenkins is no longer on the team, and while its not a great matchup, youre better off attacking the middle of the field with your tight end against Denver than you are going after their corners. ... It doesnt look like Antonio Gates will play this week, so Hunter Henry gets another shot after running a route on better than 65 percent of his snaps played last week. Bad fumble aside, he looked good and now gets, ahem, the Saints.Tight ends I hate in Week 4Clive Walford, Raiders: The Ravens have been strong against tight ends this season, and with 50 yards or fewer in three straight, Walford is a touchdown-dependent TE2.Jesse James, Steelers: Heres Jesses target count by week: 7-5-4. In their past 13 games, the Chiefs have allowed just one touchdown to an opposing tight end. One. How lucky do you feel?Defenses I love in Week 4Cincinnati Bengals: At home on a short week, the return of Vontaze Burfict should give a lift to a defense that is allowing the fourth-lowest completion percentage this season.Minnesota Vikings: How am I the only guy with them in the top three?New York Giants: Theyve allowed just one rushing touchdown this season, and their front is for real. I see Big Blue getting up for a game on a national stage, and that Vikings offensive line will struggle against the Giants front.Others receiving votes: So Bill has had extra time to prepare for Rex, and the game is in New England? OK. ... The Rams are fourth in blitzes this season, and pressure is one thing Carson Palmer struggles with, ranking 26th of 31 qualified passers in QBR versus the blitz this season. The Rams will get after Palmer in this one, and a few sacks and a turnover are strong possibilities.Defenses I hate in Week 4Buffalo Bills: Even after last week, even with a banged-up, backup QB. I want no part of Rexs defense against Belichick.Dallas Cowboys: The Cowboys have allowed the second-most yards before contact this season, which should allow the 49ers to run the ball and control the clock, limiting the number of potential turnovers.Thats all we have this week. A reminder to tune in to see Fantasy Football Now on Sunday morning, 11 a.m. ET on ESPN2. Thanks to Kyle Soppe of ESPN Fantasy for his help with this column. Good luck in Week 4!Matthew Berry, The Talented Mr. Roto, is trying to figure out how he can get Anne Hathaway to play fantasy football next year. To, you know, just pick a name out at random. He is the creator of RotoPass.com, a paid spokesman for DraftKings.com and one of the owners of the Fantasy Life app. ' ' '