My least favorite thing about fantasy football Twitter are injury predictors. They regularly respond to thought-out explanations about a perfectly healthy player with, “He’ll be hurt by Week 5.” Sometimes this actually winds up happening (I’m so sorry, Raheem Mostert), while other times veterans like Joe Mixon and James Conner are able to break or set career-high marks in games played despite handling the most robust workloads of their life.
Click here for more PFF tools:
Rankings & Projections | WR/CB Matchup Chart | NFL & NCAA Betting Dashboards | NFL Player Props Tool | NFL & NCAA Power Rankings
Best Bets Tool
I avoid this problem entirely in Madden and NCAA Football by turning off injuries; today we’ll do the same and re-simulate the 2021 season under the pretense that all of our favorite running backs are physically unable to get hurt. Predicting injuries before the fact is at a minimum awfully difficult and at a maximum borderline impossible, so getting a handle on how the position might have looked without anything going wrong could be useful in looking ahead to 2022.
This approach requires going through every team and determining what the most likely opportunity split was for each respective backfield if none of the team’s running backs had gotten hurt all year. Note that I’m only considering injuries to the running back position, playoffs are included when applicable (we’re looking for the largest sample possible) and the production is only from the games relevant to the split. In some cases, I basically canceled out a backup for a starter such as Elijah Mitchell for Raheem Mostert and James White for Brandon Bolden, while for some other full-season injury types (Cam Akers and J.K. Dobbins) it made sense to incorporate some of their 2020 numbers.
Every single variable in the study isn’t perfect, but neither is life. Roll with the punches; the following table denotes the top-24 fantasy backs if injuries were turned off. I included their actual overall PPR rank, the difference between the two and a quick note on the relevant split used.
Player | Team | No Injury Rank | Real Rank | Difference |
Christian McCaffrey | Panthers | 1 | 39 | +38 |
Derrick Henry | Titans | 2 | 23 | +21 |
Jonathan Taylor | Colts | 3 | 1 | -2 |
Austin Ekeler | Chargers | 4 | 2 | -2 |
Leonard Fournette | Buccaneers | 5 | 6 | +1 |
Alvin Kamara | Saints | 6 | 9 | +3 |
Joe Mixon | Bengals | 7 | 4 | -3 |
D’Andre Swift | Lions | 8 | 15 | +7 |
Najee Harris | Steelers | 9 | 3 | -6 |
Aaron Jones | Packers | 10 | 11 | +1 |
Dalvin Cook | Vikings | 11 | 16 | +5 |
Cordarrelle Patterson | Falcons | 12 | 10 | -2 |
Josh Jacobs | Raiders | 13 | 12 | -1 |
Raheem Mostert | 49ers | 14 | 154 | +140 |
Ezekiel Elliott | Cowboys | 15 | 7 | -8 |
James Conner | Cardinals | 16 | 5 | -11 |
Nick Chubb | Browns | 17 | 13 | -4 |
Cam Akers | Rams | 18 | 144 | +126 |
Kareem Hunt | Browns | 19 | 50 | +31 |
David Montgomery | Bears | 20 | 19 | -1 |
Antonio Gibson | Football Team | 21 | 8 | -13 |
J.K. Dobbins | Ravens | 22 | N/A | N/A |
Damien Harris | Patriots | 23 | 14 | -9 |
Devin Singletary | Bills | 24 | 20 | -4 |
Some key takeaways:
CMC is truly a cheat code in fantasy land. Christian McCaffrey posted PPR RB1, RB3, RB15, RB4 and RB3 finishes in his five-game sample. You could even exclude the “dud” because he was “only” fed 18 touches in his first game back from injury. CMC essentially plays a different position than every other running back; his projected 119 receptions are 30 more than second-place. The No. 1 running back in PPR points per game ever, McCaffrey will continue to vie for overall RB1 treatment whenever healthy enough to suit up in 2022.
Subscribe to PFF Edge to continue reading
Already have a subscription? Sign In
This news is republished from another source. You can check the original article here