Previous
(Photo by Mark Alberti/Icon Sportswire)
If you’ve read any of our content, you know that the main premise of our content is rooted in assessing what an RB1* is based on historical data; the facts matter and arbitrary tiering of Fantasy Football running backs is, plainly, annoying. And if you haven’t read any of our content, do us a favor, start here and the rest of this article will make a lot more sense.
Below is a high-level breakdown of the floors and ceilings of both our season-long tiers and their corresponding weekly tiers based on how any given running back performed during that week. To be clear, a weekly score within an RB1* tier doesn’t make a Fantasy Football running back a de facto RB1*, but it does give us a uniform standard of measurement to assess season-long RB1* tiers, weekly performance RB1* tiers, and, what we’ll soon have content on, the season-long trends to justify confidence in a running back continuing to meet or even exceed their weekly RB1* performance(s). Without further ado, here’s the data below, and we’ll have weekly reviews all Fantasy Football RB1*s:
Season-Long Data | Weekly Data | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
RB1M Designator | Season Point Floor | Season Point Ceiling | RB1M Designator | Weekly Point Floor | Weekly Point Ceiling |
Non-Con | 0 | 79.99 | Non-Con | 0 | 4.99 |
RB4 | 80 | 139.99 | RB4 | 5 | 8.74 |
RB3 | 140 | 179.99 | RB3 | 8.75 | 11.24 |
RB2 | 180 | 219.99 | RB2 | 11.25 | 13.74 |
RB2+ | 220 | 259.99 | RB2+ | 13.75 | 16.24 |
RB1 | 260 | 299.99 | RB1 | 16.25 | 18.74 |
RB1+ | 300 | 339.99 | RB1+ | 18.75 | 21.24 |
RB1E | 340 | 409.99 | RB1E | 21.25 | 25.62 |
RB1E+ | 410 | 499.99 | RB1E+ | 25.63 | 99.99 |