NFL Millionaire Maker
NFL 2025 | Week 1 | Sun, Sep 07, 2025 | FIELDS RUSHING CEILING
Winning lineup
| POS | PLAYER | OWN | SAL | PTS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| QB | J. Fields NYJ QB | 1.8% | 5400 | 29.52 |
| RB | B. Robinson ATL RB | 10.7% | 8000 | 27.4 |
| RB | D. Achane MIA RB | 15.6% | 6900 | 16.5 |
| WR | P. Nacua LAR WR | 6.3% | 7600 | 26.1 |
| WR | R. Pearsall SF WR | 12.6% | 4500 | 17.8 |
| WR | E. Egbuka TB WR | 25.9% | 4600 | 23.6 |
| TE | J. Johnson NO TE | 0.8% | 3300 | 15.6 |
| FLEX | J. Smith-Njigba SEA WR | 7.5% | 5800 | 23.4 |
| DST | Broncos DEN DST | 16.8% | 3800 | 14 |
Analysis
Stack summary
This build is anchored by a quarterback score that does not need to route through a teammate. Fields reaches the slate winning range through rushing touchdowns, so the lineup is free to shop for volume and efficiency across unrelated games.
The receiver layer is intentionally mixed. Nacua and Smith Njigba are reception driven points, built to accumulate across the full game without needing fragile touchdown timing. Egbuka is the swing piece. Two receiving touchdowns on limited catches is the kind of profile the field misses because it is hard to land cleanly without forcing a team stack.
The backfield is not decorative. Robinson and Achane both contribute through receiving production, which protects the lineup from needing every touchdown to land through the same position group.
Denver closes the build with event scoring against rookie Cam Ward. Six sacks plus a defensive touchdown is a complete slate outcome, not a bonus. It pairs well with a lineup already carrying its ceiling elsewhere.
Uniqueness notes
Fields provides the separation point, but the more useful detail is what the roster does after Fields. There is no dependency on a single game breaking in a clean, concentrated way. The salary is spread into roles that can score through different mechanisms.
The common duplication trap on slates like this is a popular midrange cluster at receiver and tight end. This lineup avoids that clustering by combining one low owned tight end with a high volume receiver core, then adding a touchdown heavy wideout who can outscore higher volume options on fewer touches.
Denver is the final filter. Defense ownership usually follows matchup labels. This one gets paid through pressure and a defensive touchdown, which is the scoring lane that actually wins tournaments.
Build details
Primary lever: Rushing quarterback ceiling with no forced pass catcher pairing
Secondary lever: Volume receivers plus one touchdown concentrated wideout, then event scoring defense versus rookie quarterback