Quality Over Quantity?: A Review of RB1* Point-Per-Touch Based on Overall Team Rush Offense Rank

Quality Over Quantity?: A Review of RB1* Point-Per-Touch Based on Overall Team Rush Offense Rank
Quality Over Quantity?: A Review of RB1* Point-Per-Touch Based on Overall Team Rush Offense Rank

(Photo by Ric Tapia/Icon Sportswire)

One aspect of my overall strategy in identifying potential Fantasy Football RB1*s is obvious and simple: What offense are they in and how well does that offense run the ball?

I’ve have to learn the hard way ignoring that very relevant fact. In 2016, my first-round draft pick was Adrian Peterson, a pick that was an over-reaction to past foibles in drafting guys like C.J. Anderson in the first round that had the opposite of a high-probability for RB1* production. I thought to myself in 2016, “Peterson has been a machine his entire career; let’s play it super safe and take him late in Round 1!”. Well, Peterson was averaging less than 2 yards per carry in that Vikings offense before he went down in Week 3 for the remainder of the Fantasy Football season. I don’t have enough room in this post to review all of the other obvious signs I missed that were reasons not to draft AD that year, not the least of which was most also obvious: the Vikings offense, and in particular, their terrible offensive line that season.

Moving forward from that learning experience, I really began focusing on the offense guys would be in when I drafted them, not just their talent, past performance, etc. It was Alvin Kamara late in the 2017 draft. It was taking James Conner last in my 2017 and 2018 drafts. Guys that, at the time, didn’t necessarily project to a lot of usage (if any at all…it was a miss in 2017 for Conner but I hit the jackpot in 2019), but had talent, and most importantly, were going into situations where running backs just seemed to always succeed. Because if, for some reason, they do end up getting some notable PT you never know what could happen from there…

But this all leads me to my next point: what’s the value of a Fantasy Football RB1*’s touches, based on the quality of the rush offense they run in? Before we dive further into this one, first, feast your eyes on some delicious raw data (some of it isn’t really relevant to this post but it’s just so fun to look at):


Year Team Off. Rush. Rk Player Total Touches PPT Rush Atts Recs Designator
2017 New Orleans Saints 5 Alvin Kamara 201 1.35 120 81 RB1
2000 St. Louis Rams 17 Marshall Faulk 334 1.24 253 81 RB1E+
2018 New Orleans Saints 6 Alvin Kamara 275 1.12 194 81 RB1+
2002 Oakland Raiders 18 Charlie Garner 273 1.11 182 91 RB1+
2006 San Diego Chargers 2 LaDainian Tomlinson 404 1.10 348 56 RB1E+
2001 St. Louis Rams 5 Marshall Faulk 343 1.10 260 83 RB1E
2018 Los Angeles Rams 3 Todd Gurley 315 1.07 256 59 RB1+
2002 Kansas City Chiefs 3 Priest Holmes 383 1.06 313 70 RB1E
2013 Kansas City Chiefs 10 Jamaal Charles 329 1.04 259 70 RB1E
2003 Kansas City Chiefs 15 Priest Holmes 394 1.04 320 74 RB1E
2017 Los Angeles Rams 8 Todd Gurley 343 1.02 279 64 RB1E
2018 Carolina Panthers 4 Christian McCaffrey 326 1.00 219 107 RB1+
2008 Carolina Panthers 3 DeAngelo Williams 295 1.00 273 22 RB1
2016 Arizona Cardinals 18 David Johnson 373 0.98 293 80 RB1E
2002 Denver Broncos 5 Clinton Portis 306 0.98 273 33 RB1
2018 New York Giants 24 Saquon Barkley 352 0.96 261 91 RB1+
2005 Seattle Seahawks 3 Shaun Alexander 385 0.96 370 15 RB1E
2016 Buffalo Bills 1 LeSean McCoy 285 0.95 234 51 RB1
2011 Philadelphia Eagles 5 LeSean McCoy 321 0.95 273 48 RB1+
2010 Kansas City Chiefs 1 Jamaal Charles 275 0.95 230 45 RB1
2003 San Diego Chargers 6 LaDainian Tomlinson 413 0.94 313 100 RB1E
2005 Kansas City Chiefs 4 Larry Johnson 369 0.93 336 33 RB1E
2006 Philadelphia Eagles 11 Brian Westbrook 317 0.92 240 77 RB1
2010 Houston Texans 7 Arian Foster 393 0.91 327 66 RB1E
2011 Baltimore Ravens 10 Ray Rice 367 0.90 291 76 RB1+
2009 Tennessee Titans 2 Chris Johnson 408 0.90 358 50 RB1E
2014 Seattle Seahawks 1 Marshawn Lynch 317 0.90 280 37 RB1
2003 Green Bay Packers 3 Ahman Green 405 0.89 355 50 RB1E
2003 Denver Broncos 2 Clinton Portis 328 0.89 290 38 RB1
2007 San Diego Chargers 7 LaDainian Tomlinson 375 0.89 315 60 RB1+
2013 Denver Broncos 15 Knowshon Moreno 301 0.89 241 60 RB1
2007 Philadelphia Eagles 8 Brian Westbrook 368 0.88 278 90 RB1+
2014 Pittsburgh Steelers 16 Le’Veon Bell 373 0.88 290 83 RB1+
2016 Dallas Cowboys 2 Ezekiel Elliott 354 0.87 322 32 RB1+
2004 New York Giants 11 Tiki Barber 374 0.86 322 52 RB1+
2009 Baltimore Ravens 5 Ray Rice 332 0.86 254 78 RB1
2006 St. Louis Rams 17 Steven Jackson 436 0.85 346 90 RB1E
2002 Seattle Seahawks 20 Shaun Alexander 354 0.84 295 59 RB1
2012 Minnesota Vikings 2 Adrian Peterson 388 0.84 348 40 RB1+
2009 Minnesota Vikings 13 Adrian Peterson 357 0.84 314 43 RB1
2005 San Diego Chargers 9 LaDainian Tomlinson 390 0.84 339 51 RB1+
2011 Houston Texans 2 Arian Foster 331 0.84 278 53 RB1
2000 Green Bay Packers 23 Ahman Green 336 0.83 263 73 RB1
2013 Philadelphia Eagles 1 LeSean McCoy 366 0.83 314 52 RB1+
2004 Seattle Seahawks 8 Shaun Alexander 376 0.83 353 23 RB1+
2015 Atlanta Falcons 19 Devonta Freeman 338 0.83 265 73 RB1
2016 Pittsburgh Steelers 14 Le’Veon Bell 336 0.83 261 75 RB1
2017 Kansas City Chiefs 9 Kareem Hunt 325 0.83 272 53 RB1
2013 Chicago Bears 16 Matt Forte 363 0.82 289 74 RB1
2000 San Francisco 49ers 18 Charlie Garner 326 0.82 258 68 RB1
2000 Denver Broncos 3 Mike Anderson 320 0.82 297 23 RB1
2009 Jacksonville Jaguars 10 Maurice Jones-Drew 365 0.81 312 53 RB1
2005 New York Giants 6 Tiki Barber 411 0.80 357 54 RB1+
2000 Indianapolis Colts 16 Edgerrin James 450 0.80 387 63 RB1E
2000 Jacksonville Jaguars 10 Fred Taylor 328 0.80 292 36 RB1
2010 Cleveland Browns 20 Peyton Hillis 331 0.80 270 61 RB1
2000 Minnesota Vikings 6 Robert Smith 331 0.79 295 36 RB1
2014 Chicago Bears 27 Matt Forte 368 0.79 266 102 RB1
2004 San Diego Chargers 6 LaDainian Tomlinson 392 0.79 339 53 RB1+
2001 Green Bay Packers 21 Ahman Green 366 0.78 304 62 RB1
2006 San Francisco 49ers 6 Frank Gore 373 0.78 312 61 RB1
2002 Miami Dolphins 2 Ricky Williams 430 0.78 383 47 RB1+
2000 Seattle Seahawks 22 Ricky Watters 341 0.78 278 63 RB1
2001 Seattle Seahawks 9 Shaun Alexander 353 0.78 309 44 RB1
2012 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 15 Doug Martin 368 0.78 319 49 RB1
2004 Houston Texans 12 Domanick Williams 370 0.78 302 68 RB1
2001 Kansas City Chiefs 6 Priest Holmes 389 0.78 327 62 RB1+
2002 New Orleans Saints 17 Deuce McAllister 372 0.77 325 47 RB1
2003 Seattle Seahawks 10 Shaun Alexander 368 0.77 326 42 RB1
2002 New York Giants 14 Tiki Barber 373 0.77 304 69 RB1
2006 Kansas City Chiefs 9 Larry Johnson 457 0.77 416 41 RB1E
2002 San Diego Chargers 8 LaDainian Tomlinson 451 0.76 372 79 RB1E
2018 Dallas Cowboys 10 Ezekiel Elliott 381 0.76 304 77 RB1
2016 Tennessee Titans 3 DeMarco Murray 346 0.76 293 53 RB1
2003 Baltimore Ravens 1 Jamal Lewis 413 0.76 387 26 RB1+
2006 Pittsburgh Steelers 10 Willie Parker 368 0.74 337 31 RB1
2017 Pittsburgh Steelers 20 Le’Veon Bell 406 0.74 321 85 RB1
2011 Jacksonville Jaguars 12 Maurice Jones-Drew 386 0.73 343 43 RB1
2004 New York Jets 3 Curtis Martin 412 0.73 371 41 RB1
2004 Indianapolis Colts 15 Edgerrin James 385 0.72 334 51 RB1
2012 Houston Texans 8 Arian Foster 391 0.72 351 40 RB1
2008 Chicago Bears 24 Matt Forte 379 0.72 316 63 RB1
2014 Dallas Cowboys 2 DeMarco Murray 449 0.72 392 57 RB1+
2008 Atlanta Falcons 2 Michael Turner 383 0.72 377 6 RB1
2002 Buffalo Bills 24 Travis Henry 368 0.72 325 43 RB1
2005 Indianapolis Colts 16 Edgerrin James 404 0.71 360 44 RB1
2006 New York Giants 7 Tiki Barber 385 0.70 327 58 RB1
2000 New York Jets 24 Curtis Martin 386 0.69 316 70 RB1
2003 New Orleans Saints 11 Deuce McAllister 420 0.69 351 69 RB1
2001 New York Jets 4 Curtis Martin 386 0.69 333 53 RB1
2000 Tennessee Titans 7 Eddie George 453 0.69 403 50 RB1+

First, let’s take a moment to acknowledge the unicorn angel of Fantasy Football efficiency that is Alvin Kamara. In his first season in the NFL he averaged 1.35 points per touch in half-point PPR leagues. If you had Alvin Kamara on your roster and he got 15 touches in a game, on average that was worth 20.25 points. That is absurd. As a rookie, he had the most efficient Fantasy Football season this century. But, the following year, his efficiency dropped by 17%. Sounds awful, right? Not really. That was good enough for the 3rd most efficient Fantasy Football season of this century, second only to some guy named Marshall Faulk. Granted, Kamara is hitting these ridiculous efficiency levels on ~100 fewer touches than other similar running backs which is indeed relevant, but that doesn’t change how historically great Alvin Kamara has been. I’m a fan, if you couldn’t already tell, and there is not a player I enjoy following in Fantasy Football or watching live on TV than Alvin Kamara.

With that out of the way, let’s look at a few basic takeaways here:

  1. The average rush offense rank for an RB1* is 9.84, but we’ll just call it 10: the average RB1* runs on a Top 10 rush offense or better (shocker, I know). There’s only been 34 RB1* seasons (completed by 25 different NFL running backs) on a rush offense ranked outside of the Top 10 in the NFL since 2000; 63% have been on a Top 10 rush offense or better. If the guy you’re targeting as an RB1* is on a rush offense that’s outside of the Top 10 in the NFL, historically, you’ve got roughly a 33% chance of that player finishing as an RB1*.
  2. Since 2000, no NFL team has produced more RB1* seasons (8; 2001-2003; 2005-2006, 2010, 2013, 2017) or unique RB1* rushers (4; in order: Priest Holmes (3x), Larry Johnson (2x), Jamaal Charles (2x), Kareem Hunt (1x)), or repeat RB1* seasons (3; Priest Holmes, Larry Johnson, Jamaal Charles) than the Kansas City Chiefs. So, if the guy you’re targeting is a Kansas City Chief, you’re targeting a guy in what have historically been the most RB1*-friendly rush offenses in the NFL this century. TIFWIW.
  3. Out of 91 RB1* seasons in half-point PPR leagues since 2000, only 8 have been on teams outside the Top 20 rush offenses (another shocker). Of note, Matt Forte and Ahman Green did it twice, which I believe notably adds to their cache as fantasy football studs in their hey-day.
  4. There has never been an RB1E or better on a 20th ranked or worse NFL rushing offense.
  5. Let’s see what things look like when you’re talking PPT based purely on rush offense rank:

To be perfect honestly, I really wanted to find some sort of honey pot of insight from the data set to the right but I’m still not quite sure how powerful it is. Sure, it’s obvious that an RB1* in a Top 5 or better rush offense means you’re averaging nearly a point per touch (.91), but there’s been just as many RB1*s on the 5th ranked rushing offense than the 1st ranked rushing offense, but the 5th ranked rushing offense scores nearly 1/5 a point more per touch historically. ::shrugs:: I don’t even know what to do with that.

Going a bit deeper, if you look at the bottom 5 ranks in the data set to your right, RB1s in those offenses have historically averaged .79 points per touch, where as running backs in the Top 5 ranks in that same data set average .91 points per touch. There’s just over a 1/10 of a point per touch difference between the Top 5 and Bottom 5 ranked rush offenses in the NFL for RB1*s that rush in them. That doesn’t sound like much but we’re talking about a 14% difference in efficiency.

Going even deeper now, if you’ve got an RB1* in a Top 5 rush offense getting 20 touches in a game, they’re scoring 2.4 points more per game than an RB1* in a historically Bottom 5 rush offense. Over the course of an entire 16-game season we’re talking 38.4 points, could be the difference in an RB1 and an RB1+, or an RB1+ and an RB1E from a tiering perspective.

Though it seems pedestrian at first given that we’re dealing with pretty small numerical differences, there is a notable difference between rush offense rank and fantasy efficiency performance for RB1*s. One important factor in that difference that can (and should) affect your draft strategy, trade proposals, etc., is that talent and opportunity seem to be able mask deficiencies in rush offense rank when that a running back’s situation dictates a high-level of pass catching. Take for instance the following eight guys:

  1. 2014, Matt Forte, RB1 – 102 recs (rush off. rank: 27)
  2. 2008, Matt Forte, RB1 – 63 recs (rush off. rank: 24)
  3. 2002, Travis Henry, RB1 – 43 recs (rush off. rank: 24)
  4. 2000 Curtis Martin, RB1 – 70 recs (rush off. rank: 24)
  5. 2018, Saquon Barkley, RB1+ – 91 recs (rush off. rank: 24)
  6. 2000, Ahman Green, RB1 – 73 recs (rush off. rank: 23)
  7. 2000, Ricky Waters, RB1 – 63 recs (rush off. rank: 22)
  8. 2001, Ahman Green, RB1 – 62 recs (rush off. rank: 21)

Man, poor Matt Forte. Dude was languishing on bottom-feeder rush offenses and still crushing it like nobody’s business. And a hallmark of Matt Forte’s career has been his pass catching ability, which is also what allows running backs on bottom-tier rush offenses to still reach RB1* value. The average RB1* across all NFL rush offense rankings in half-point PPR leagues averages 58 receptions on the season. Those 8 guys noted above? They averaged nearly 71 receptions per game, with only Travis Henry in 2000 being the sub-60 reception running back (he ran the ball the most out of those 8 guys though in that 2000 season, toting the rock 325 times).

So if you’re looking to draft a guy as an RB1* who you know will be in a sub-par rush offense for any host of reasons (bad offensive line, non-rational coaching, etc.), you go into knowing they’re also likely to be less efficient with each tough, so better then be targeting a guy you’re confident in getting at least 60 catches this season or your odds are slim to squeeze RB1 value out of them, much less anything better.

Rush Rank # of RB1*s PPT
1 5 0.88
2 9 0.85
3 8 0.91
4 3 0.87
5 5 1.05
6 7 0.86
7 4 0.80
8 5 0.84
9 4 0.80
10 7 0.83
11 3 0.82
12 2 0.76
13 1 0.84
14 2 0.80
15 4 0.86
16 4 0.80
17 3 0.96
18 3 0.97
19 1 0.83
20 3 0.79
21 1 0.78
22 1 0.78
23 1 0.83
24 4 0.77
27 1 0.79

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