Buffalo Bills fantasy football preview www.billscheapshop.com , Week 2: Is Josh Allen a sleeper? of rookie Josh Allen. Head coach Sean McDermott is looking for an offensive spark that at least resembles competence after a pathetic showing from the position last week against the Baltimore Ravens. As a fantasy football manager and a Buffalo Bills homer, some of us may be tempted to add Allen to our fantasy roster (some of us may have already done so). Is Allen worth a start this week as the Bills host the Los Angeles Chargers? Yahoo! projects Allen to score 10.15 points this week, throwing for 199 yards with 1 touchdown and 1 interception. They also project that he will run once for three yards. This projection places Allen at the bottom of the Yahoo! quarterback rankings for the week, three points behind Sam Bradford of the Arizona Cardinals. If you’re feeling lucky, or your quarterback situation isn’t terribly stable, you may want to take a flier on Buffalo’s great hope. Otherwise, Allen is best left on the waiver wire for now, or added in deeper leagues, dynasty leagues, or leagues that play two QBs or a “super flex.”As for the other Bills to think about playing, here are some of the better bets for the weekend.RB LeSean McCoyYou have to play him...right? If he’s on your roster, you can’t sit him. After a terrible week one showing (7 carries, 22 yards; 1 reception, -1 yard) Buffalo Bills T-Shirt , McCoy is in line for a bounce-back day in Buffalo’s home opener. Offensive coordinator Brian Daboll will certainly look to take the pressure off of Allen, making his first career start, so McCoy should see a much heavier workload than he had in the first week.WR Kelvin BenjaminThis is a gut feeling here, but after head coach Sean McDermott called Benjamin out publicly in his Wednesday press conference, the veteran wideout should have plenty of motivation to play better. I also expect the quarterback play to be far more competent with Allen at the helm instead of Peterman. In any case, Benjamin was two drops in the pouring rain away from salvaging his Week One stat line of one catch for 10 yards. Had he held on to a long pass broken up by Marlon Humphrey and a touchdown strike in the fourth quarter, Benjamin’s day would have looked far better. He isn’t a bad flex play if you’re looking to start a Bill.K Stephen HauschkaWhile Buffalo’s outstanding kicker was not very good last week, making a 35-yard field goal and missing on a 52-yard attempt, the improved weather this weekend should help his chances of scoring. Hauschka was 12-of-14 on field goal attempts at home last year, and he made all 17 of the extra points he attempted at New Era Field. Hauschka was one of the league’s better kickers in 2017, and he is certainly worthy of rostering and starting this yearBuffalo Bills offensive yardage against Baltimore Ravens among lowest in franchise history After compiling proficient preseason statistics, quarterback Nathan Peterman won the Buffalo Bills quarterback competition, edging out rookie Josh Allen and leading general manager Brandon Beane to trade AJ McCarron to the Oakland Raiders for a fifth-round draft pick. On Sunday, Peterman showed just how inconsequential preseason statistics are, “leading” the Bills offense to one of the all-time worst showings in franchise history. The Buffalo Bills (0-1) bumbled their way through a horrific season-opening effort in Baltimore (1-0) Buffalo Bills Hats , being held without a first-half first down for the first time since at least 2001. Peterman and a porous offensive line deserve much of the blame for this atrocious effort. Peterman regressed big-time, completing only five of 18 passes for 24 yards, two interceptions, and an abysmal quarterback rating of 0.0. Buffalo’s offensive line failed in every aspect of the game: no holes for the running backs to exploit, and no time for Peterman to find a receiver downfield. Baltimore sacked Peterman three times, and brought down Josh Allen three more times in the third quarter, for a total of six sacks. Then there were the penalties. So many penalties. Three offensive holding calls plus a false start jeopardized the Bills chances before the offense could even get going. Baltimore rolled up 233 net yards of offense in the opening half, compared to a paltry 33 net yards of offense by Buffalo. All told, the Bills mustered only 107 total yards of offense (with Allen directing 46 of those yards on the final drive)—the fourth-fewest all-time, and the least-productive offensive showing since the team managed 76 yards of offense against the Miami Dolphins in 1973. Offensively, it has to get better in Week 2 when the Los Angeles Chargers come to New Era Field at 1 p.m. Sunday for the home opener, right?