NFL $70K Divisional Saturday 2 Game Classic
NFL 2025 | Week 20 | Sat, Jan 17, 2026 | BO NIX BRONCOS STACK, MIMS 4.5 PERCENT, SEAHAWKS DST VS PURDY
Winning lineup
| POS | PLAYER | OWN | SAL | PTS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| QB | Bo Nix DEN QB | 25.9% | 5800 | 25.06 |
| RB | James Cook BUF RB | 38.5% | 7300 | 18.1 |
| RB | RJ Harvey DEN RB | 60.9% | 6200 | 11.6 |
| WR | Jaxon Smith-Njigba SEA WR | 80.6% | 8500 | 10.9 |
| WR | Khalil Shakir BUF WR | 53.8% | 5100 | 14.5 |
| WR | Marvin Mims Jr. DEN WR | 4.5% | 3400 | 23.3 |
| TE | Dalton Kincaid BUF TE | 32.5% | 4300 | 20.3 |
| FLEX | Kenneth Walker III SEA RB | 36.1% | 5500 | 38.5 |
| DST | Seahawks SEA DST | 38.1% | 3200 | 21 |
Analysis
Stack summary
This roster wins by making the Buffalo Denver game the main volume source while using Seattle as the slate-breaking scoring block. Bo Nix supplied three passing touchdowns and 279 yards, then Marvin Mims Jr. turned that quarterback choice into a winning stack outcome at only 4.5 percent ownership. Buffalo brought the necessary counterweight through James Cook, Khalil Shakir, and Dalton Kincaid, which gave the lineup six players from the overtime game.
The Denver side mattered because the production was not priced through one expensive star. Nix, RJ Harvey, and Mims gave the roster access to Denver’s 33 points without using the most duplicated salary structure. Mims was the turning point. Eight receptions, 93 yards, and a touchdown at 3,400 salary gave the roster a receiver score that opened the rest of the build.
Buffalo’s production was spread cleanly enough for the bring backs to work. Cook delivered the 100 yard rushing bonus even with a fumble lost. Shakir gave the lineup seven receptions and 75 yards, while Kincaid added the touchdown score from tight end. The build captured Buffalo’s 30 points through three different roles instead of depending on Josh Allen.
The Seattle side decided the slate. Kenneth Walker III scored three rushing touchdowns with the 100 yard bonus, and Seahawks defense turned San Francisco’s collapse into a 21 point DST score. Jaxon Smith-Njigba was highly owned and did not need to be the separator. The winning path came from pairing Walker’s touchdown dominance with the defense against Brock Purdy.
Uniqueness notes
The roster separated through Mims and the decision to leave Josh Allen out of a six-player Buffalo Denver environment. Most builds that wanted that game naturally started with Allen or carried heavier Bills passing exposure. This lineup used Bo Nix as the quarterback engine and kept the Buffalo side as the response.
Mims was the salary and ownership break. At 3,400 salary and 4.5 percent ownership, he gave the lineup a direct Nix touchdown connection while allowing the roster to keep Walker, Smith-Njigba, Cook, Harvey, Shakir, and Kincaid. That salary structure was difficult to match without the Mims score.
Seattle defense was not a throwaway DST click. The Seahawks were part of the same game script as Walker. San Francisco’s offensive failure gave the roster points through sacks, turnovers, and points allowed, while Walker converted Seattle control into touchdowns.
Build details
Roster construction: 6-3
Game key:
BUF@DEN: 6 (QB game)
SF@SEA: 3
Primary lever: Bo Nix with Marvin Mims Jr. while using three Buffalo bring backs
Secondary lever: Kenneth Walker III paired with Seahawks defense against Brock Purdy
Compare Your Lineup
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Winning lineup 183.26 PTS $49,300 SALARY 370.90% OWN
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Parsed rows
Total points
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183.26
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Salary used
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$49,300
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Total ownership
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370.90%
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Shared players
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Players you had that the winner did not
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Players the winner had that you did not
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QB comparison
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Bo Nix
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