NFL $181K Wild Card Saturday 2 Game Classic

NFL 2025 | Week 19 | Sat, Jan 10, 2026 | LOVE PACKERS DOUBLE STACK, COKER PLAYOFF SMASH, PUKA RAW POINTS

NFL $181K Wild Card Saturday 2 Game Classic
NFL $181K Wild Card Saturday 2 Game Classic

Winning lineup

POS PLAYER OWN SAL PTS
QB
Jordan Love
GB QB
25.6% 5300 33.02
RB
D'Andre Swift
CHI RB
47.9% 5700 17.2
RB
Kyren Williams
LAR RB
65.8% 6400 15.5
WR
Romeo Doubs
GB WR
17.2% 4400 29.4
WR
Jayden Reed
GB WR
21.1% 4000 15.7
WR
Jalen Coker
CAR WR
18.9% 4500 31.4
TE
Colston Loveland
CHI TE
58.5% 4400 26.7
FLEX
Puka Nacua
LAR WR
90.0% 8700 37.5
DST
Rams
LAR DST
51.6% 3500 5

Analysis

Stack summary
This roster wins through the Packers Bears game as the quarterback engine, then uses Rams Panthers for raw point pressure. Jordan Love supplied 323 passing yards, four touchdowns, and the 300 yard bonus. Romeo Doubs and Jayden Reed captured two of the four touchdown throws, while Colston Loveland and D'Andre Swift answered from Chicago. The build used five players from the quarterback game, and every slot in the group produced a score worthy of the roster spot. The diagnostic read starts with Love. He was not merely a salary saver. He was the best quarterback result on the slate because the passing touchdowns were spread through usable salaries. Doubs was the main separator from the Green Bay side. Eight receptions, 124 yards, a touchdown, and the receiving bonus at 17.2 percent ownership created the highest value return in the stack. Reed added a second touchdown path at 4,000, which made the double stack efficient without forcing a premium salary receiver. Chicago mattered because the Bears won 31-27 while still allowing Love to push the slate. Loveland was the highest scoring tight end by a wide margin, and Swift gave the roster touchdown plus receiving equity. The opposing side did not need Caleb Williams. The roster captured Chicago through positions with touchdown access and lower quarterback dependency. Rams Panthers supplied the second ceiling layer. Puka Nacua carried massive ownership, but his 37.5 points were too much to fade. Jalen Coker was the pressure point. His 9 reception, 134 yard, touchdown score gave Carolina the exact bring back needed against Puka and Kyren Williams. Rams defense was not a ceiling score, but it added sacks and takeaways while keeping the roster attached to the winning team.
Uniqueness notes
The lineup separated by combining a popular Rams Panthers core with a more precise Packers passing tree. Puka Nacua was 90 percent owned, Kyren Williams was 65.8 percent owned, Colston Loveland was 58.5 percent owned, and Rams defense was 51.6 percent owned. Those were not the separators. The separators were Romeo Doubs, Jayden Reed, Jordan Love, and Jalen Coker. The Packers stack was sharper than a broad game stack because it captured two touchdowns and the receiving bonus without overpaying. Doubs and Reed combined for 45.1 points at 8,400 salary. Love added 33.02 at 5,300. The combined output created enough salary headroom for Puka while still leaving room for Loveland and Swift. The predictive read is about playoff two game slates with extreme ownership on obvious stars. When one player reaches 90 percent ownership, the question becomes where the lower owned production can outrun the duplicated roster shape. Here, the answer was not fading Puka. The answer was pairing Puka with Coker, then letting Love, Doubs, and Reed create the unique ceiling from the other game.
Build details
Roster construction: 5-4 Game key: GB@CHI: 5 (QB game) LAR@CAR: 4 Primary lever: Jordan Love with Romeo Doubs and Jayden Reed Secondary lever: Jalen Coker as the Panthers bring back with Puka Nacua and Kyren Williams