
Paul Charchian outlines four fantasy-relevant players with brutal opening schedules for 2025 and how it impacts their stock in Guillotine Leagues™, given the importance of Weeks 1-4.
For guillotine leaguers, September is the most important month of the year. After half a year of anticipation and speculation, September finally rolls around with four weeks of NFL games.
Of course, guillotine players are hyper-focused on September, because nobody wants the indignity of getting chopped in the first month of the season. Your roster will become increasingly powerful as the season goes along, so surviving September is of paramount importance. It only takes one dud game to end your season.
Also, "September" is an iconic Earth, Wind & Fire song from 1978, and an earworm, so click the link with caution. It was written by lead singer Maurice White and for-hire songwriter Allee Willis, who'd later write the theme song for Friends, "I'll Be There For You," a far more insipid earworm. When it debuted, "September" was an instant sensation, hitting No. 1 on the Billboard R&B charts and No. 8 on the pop chart.
Any discussion of Earth, Wind & Fire needs to have two key disclaimers. First, there's no Oxford comma, which, for erudite readers, will disqualify the band from any further discussion. Second, neither Earth, Wind, nor Fire corresponds to a particular band member. It's an all-encompassing catchphrase for the whole band. Twelve different people played on "September." If they gave everyone a classical element name, they'd run before they got to the horn section. And "Earth, Wind, Fire, Metal, Aether, Air, Stone, Ice, Wood & Gas" doesn't exactly roll off the tongue.
In 2021, Rolling Stone listed "September" as the 65th-best song on their list of the "500 Greatest Songs of All Time."
The song opens with the lyrics, "Do you remember // The twenty-first night of September?". Guillotine players, the night of September 21st will be memorable for you. That night, you'll be following live scoring in the guillotine app, as the Chiefs travel to the Giants for Sunday Night Football. On that night, perhaps you'll need a big game from Travis Kelce to avoid the chopping block.
Or maybe Travis Kelce will have already gotten you chopped weeks earlier.
Let's look at a notable player from every position that has a particularly brutal September stretch to his season, beginning with the aforementioned Travis Kelce.
Before we talk about Travis Kelce's vicious September schedule, let's acknowledge some of the other elements working against him. He's 35 years old, and the drop-off in his performance last year was tangible. Last year, Kelce was the most-chopped tight end (!) and the 11th most-chopped player at any position. If his production erodes similarly this year, he'll fall outside of the top ten tight ends.
Compounding matters, for the first time in years, Patrick Mahomes has a surplus of viable targets: Xavier Worthy, Hollywood Brown, Rashee Rice, and maybe even rookies Jalen Royals and Brashard Smith. There's a very real chance Kelce's target volume drops significantly.
But also, Kelce has one of the hardest September schedules of any player at any position.
At the outset, let me emphasize that I adore Bucky Irving and believe he's as talented a runner as anyone in the league. He's capable of defying some of the difficulties that he'll experience in the opening month.
The loss of elite left tackle Tristan Wirfs is a major blow for Bucky, who'll miss Wirf's blocking. But also, Wirfs is arguably the best pass-blocking left tackle (PFF's No. 1 ranked tackle!) and without Wirfs on the field, Todd Bowles and Josh Grizzard may choose to give extra reps to Rachaad White, a far better pass protector than Irving.
Speaking of Grizzard, the loss of Liam Cohn, now the head coach in Jacksonville, could be significant, particularly since Grizzard doesn't have play-calling experience. It may take some time for Grizzard to adapt to the rigors of his new job.
With Dak Prescott (who, correspondingly, has a brutal September, btw) back at the helm, I'm optimistic that CeeDee Lamb will return to form in 2025. But it might not happen early in the season. His first five games are arguably the toughest of any player at any position. Four of those five games come against secondaries that ranked in the top 8 against the position last year.
Granted, you probably weren't going to start Geno Smith anyway, since his ADP is QB26. But for the quarterback sloughers reading this, here's what you need to know about Smith's September schedule, the toughest of any quarterback.