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Fantasyland welcomes Class of '14 early

If the theme of Week 2 was the wicked sting of the injury bug, this weekend may go down as the dawn of the Class of 2014.

If the theme of Week 2 was the wicked sting of the injury bug, this weekend may go down as the dawn of the Class of 2014.

Injury and ineptitude led to a changing of the guard at quarterback in Minnesota and Jacksonville, respectively. Much like Derek Carr in Oakland, both Teddy Bridgewater and Blake Bortles have stepped into less-than-desirable offensive situations and cannot be expected to prosper in the short term. Meanwhile, in Cleveland, a certain uber-hyped freshman QB still awaits his turn, perhaps because his achingly short "highlight" reel features as many yellow flags as red ones.

Alfred Blue, Bishop Sankey, and Lorenzo Taliaferro joined Carlos Hyde, Jeremy Hill, and Terrance West as rookie runners to be reckoned with. If not right away, then soon enough.

Jordan Matthews put rookie of the year voters on notice with his star turn in Philly. He joins Brandin Cooks, Kelvin Benjamin, and Mike Evans as first-year wideouts with promising futures. And their definition of "future" is a whole lot shorter than we might have expected. John Brown, who also turned heads Sunday, faces a more daunting path to fantasy relevance given the established veterans above him in the Cardinals' WR pecking order.

One rookie making headlines for all the wrong reasons was Nate Freese, who missed four of his seven field-goal attempts this season and was released Monday by Detroit, which signed former Eagle Alex Henery.

Catch 'em while you can

Donald Brown, RB, Chargers. Now that Danny Woodhead (ankle, leg) has joined Ryan Mathews (knee) on the sideline, Brown is the last healthy and proven running back standing in San Diego.

Lorenzo Taliaferro, Ravens. So much for Bernard Pierce (thigh) solidifying his starting job. Now that Taliaferro has had his moment in the sun, the talented rookie surely has earned his fair share of Baltimore's now-three-headed backfield.

Alfred Blue, RB, Texans. Those who drafted Arian Foster (hamstring) knew they were assuming a significant injury risk, and the inevitable came to pass in Week 3. Blue, a sixth-round rookie out of LSU, did a serviceable job as Foster's proxy, and should be scooped up at a minimum by those banking on Foster.

Jordan Matthews, WR, Eagles. Rookie wideouts are notoriously inconsistent fantasy contributors, but Matthews has the potential to defy the odds. After his breakout game against Washington, he certainly seems more deserving of a roster spot than Riley Cooper. It's a good thing when Nick Foles takes a shine to you.

Don't be fooled

Blake Bortles, QB, Jaguars. It was only a matter of time before the No. 3 overall draft pick was handed Jacksonville's starting job, but that doesn't make Bortles roster-worthy. After all, he steps into one of the worst offenses in the land, with arguably the weakest offensive line to protect him. Look away.

Teddy Bridgewater, QB, Vikings. Again, move along. Nothing to see here. The Bridgewater Era has arrived in Minnesota, a bit earlier than anticipated due to Matt Cassel's broken foot. Let him work through his growing pains as a free agent - or better yet, on an opponent's roster.

Eddie Royal, WR, Chargers. Let's think: Where have we seen this before? Oh, yeah, last season - when Royal caught five TD passes in the first two games. Then we scarcely heard from him again outside of a brief, midseason cameo.