Saquon Barkley Score a Touchdown Props • Philadelphia

I think this is a sneaky good spot to play Calcaterra, given the Chiefs’ breakdown in coverage last week against a technically weaker Chargers offense. They allowed 68 yards on three catches to L.A.’s two tight ends, and last year they also allowed the seventh-most targets to opposing tight ends. The middle of the field should be wide open again.
On the flip side, the Chiefs got tremendous push up front and sat top-10 in both pass protection and run blocking, with the interior doing most of the heavy lifting. KC will be able to establish the run, and that could open the door for Hunt to get involved in a myriad of ways.
Thornton saw 72% of the snaps last week after Worthy was injured, and he delivered a huge 38-yard catch-and-run on a day when he caught two of his four targets. The matchup couldn’t be any better, too, with Adoree’ Jackson coming off a bad game and standing as Philly’s worst starting corner, and all we need in theory to get home here is one or two catches.
Kareem Hunt is never going to get back to the form of his early years in Kansas City, but he had seven touchdowns in 13 games last season, and we’re getting +260 on him to score on Sunday.
The Chiefs might be forced into running the ball a bit, and after seeing the Cowboys’ success last week, they’ll be hunting for the end zone on the ground.
Hurts rushed 14 times for 62 yards and a pair of touchdowns last week. He has now scored a TD in 12 of his last 15 games, including the Super Bowl when he rumbled for 72 yards and a score against the Chiefs. Hurts is practically unstoppable at the goal line thanks to the "tush push" that was nearly banned in the offseason. The Chiefs defense looked vulnerable in Week 1, surrendering 27 points and ranking 30th in the league in defensive EPA. They struggled to generate pressure outside of Chris Jones and their secondary was torched by Justin Herbert. The Eagles should be able to score points and Hurts should find the end zone.
AJ Brown has the classic squeaky-wheel narrative this week after seeing just one target in Week 1. For reference, his worst game last season was 36 yards and a touchdown in Week 17 vs. Dallas. He scored in 9 of 17 games, including the playoffs, and had a TD in the Super Bowl against the Chiefs despite limited volume. Kansas City gave up two touchdowns to Quentin Johnston last week and made Justin Herbert look like an MVP candidate. I’ll take the bounce-back spot on a motivated WR1 at a decent number.
I'm not discounting the Eagles for a soft Week 1 showing, due to a weird weathe delay and Jalen Carter's ejection. This is the defense that gave Patrick Mahomes fits in the Super Bowl and Vic Fangio is already prepping for a KC attack that's looking to stretch the field - despite a thin WR corps. Some books have Philadelphia as a fave, some are at a pick'em. But I'll take the points with the Eagles, who are in much better shape heading into Week 2 than the Chiefs.