Najee Harris ready to be the top rookie

Harris steps into a workhorse role in Pittsburgh.

The first running back selected in the NFL draft is always the biggest source for fantasy optimism and this year is no different when the Steelers tabbed Najee Harris with the 1.24 pick. No matter that five quarterbacks, four wide receivers and even a tight end were selected first, Harris attracts the highest rookie draft picks and auction dollars. And for good reason.

No position cranks out immediate rookie fantasy points as running backs. No position has a shorter life span than the American Professional Running Back. Bottom line – they have the most touches of any position and offer the best potential. And the recent “first running back drafted” include  Josh Jacobs, Saquon Barkley, Ezekiel Elliott, and Todd Gurley.

The most attractive element with Harris and those players is that they went to teams that did not use a backfield committee. Most NFL teams split up the load between short yardage, first and second downs, third down, receiving, goal line, and such depending on the talent and their need.

Alabama University

Harris  was the workhorse for Alabama, rushing 209 times in 2019 while the next best Brian Robinson only carried 96. Last season in their National Championship run, Harris handled 251 rushes to only 91 for Robinson.

He also caught 43 passes as the busiest receiver on the team other than Heisman Winner DeVonta Smith. Though a four-year player, he only started the final two seasons so he’s not worn down as many elite backs leaving college. Alabama loves to ride their top back – just ask Derrick Henry.

He offers yet another big back from Alabama that is poised to wreck NFL defenses. Harris is 6-2, 230 pounds and runs around a 4.5 40-time. He’s a deadly combination of size, speed and power with the ability to catch like a third-down back. He is very quick, patient, and has great vision. He’s even a solid pass blocker with plenty of size to protect the quarterback when needed.

He can be a violent runner and may end up shortening his eventual career with his willingness to take on tacklers and get the extra yards. But that spells success as a rookie back and hence, the first one chosen last April.

Pittsburgh Steelers

The rookie shows up in Pittsburgh as the new starting running back. James Conner left for Arizona. Benny Snell is the likely No. 2 back again this year but there is talk about him not making the final cut. Kalen Ballage was also signed but he only managed 3.3 yards on his career-high 91 carries for the Chargers and only that because he was asked to replace Austin Ekeler for three games. Anthony McFarland was a fourth-round rookie but only ran for 113 yards on 33 carries (3.4 yards per carry).

Harris is the only Steelers’ back with any pedigree or expectations.

The Steelers’ offense bogged down last year with James Conner and Benny Snell unable to run the ball. The backfield combined for just 1,183 rushing yards (No. 29) and 350 receiving yards (No. 30). This from a backfield that relied on Le’Veon Bell to great success just a couple of seasons prior.

The Steelers offensive line is no longer an elite unit and is not an advantage. But the passing offense hopes to improve with a healthier Ben Roethlisberger throwing farther down the field this year. That helps spread out the defense and yields plenty of opportunities to dump the ball off to the running back.

The Steelers also enjoy the No. 5 strength of schedule for rushing. This is, by far, the best situation that any rookie running back will encounter this season. There are no other first-year backs that are locks to lead their backfields in touches.

Great situation, great rushing schedule, tremendous success in college against top-flight opponents, all the measurables of an elite workhorse, and minimal competition for touches. He’s going as the No. 12 running back in fantasy drafts, around the middle of the second round.

You’ll never see him that cheap again.

Joe Burrow and Ja’Marr Chase look to rekindle their Tiger connection

Joe Burrow and Ja’Marr Chase had monster seasons at LSU that turned into Top-5 overall draft picks over the last two seasons.

The last game that Ja’Marr Chase played saw him catch nine passes for 221 yards and two scores from Joe Burrows while they beat Clemson for the National Championship. That was a great year.

But it is only the start.

The Bengals reunited the pair when they used their 1.05 pick this year to select Chase.

Joe Burrow

The Bengals drafted Joe Burrow with their 1.01 pick in 2020 after he won both a National Championship and the Heisman Trophy. Burrow had only two seasons as a starter, and after a very ho-hum junior season, he posted an incredible 5,671 passing yards with 60 touchdowns in 2019. He ran in five more scores and added 368 yards as a rusher.

After being drafted with the Bengals 1.01 pick, he threw for 2,688 yards and 13 touchdowns over ten games before blowing out his knee. He was on a pace for 4,300 yards and 21 scores as a passer, and 230 rushing yards with five running touchdowns. That would have ended around No. 12 as a fantasy quarterback as a rookie on a team with marginal pass options and an even worse offensive line. And a bad schedule.

Burrow’s recovery from a torn ACL has gone well, and he is expected to be ready for training camp. His rushing may decline in light of his knee, but his passing looks to improve.

Ja’Marr Chase

Like Burrow, Chase only played in one season of any note and it was  nothing short of jaw-dropping. After only catching 23 passes as a freshman, Chase paired with Burrow for a scorching 84 receptions for 1,780 yards and 20 touchdowns. His season not only included nine 100-yard efforts over 14 games, but he topped 200 yards on three occasions that included the monster showing in the National Championship win over Clemson. He totaled eight receptions for 50+ yard touchdowns.

Burrow left for the NFL in 2020 and Chase opted out of the season because of COVID-19. Plus he really had nothing more to prove, and the Burrow-less Tigers spun through three different quarterbacks last year as they stumbled to a 5-5 season.

Sitting out the year didn’t hurt his draft stock. The Bengals took Chase with their 1.05 pick as the first wideout selected. That pick was speculated to be either OT Penei Sewell, who would shore up a below average offensive line, or throw caution (and a lot of passes) into the wind and reunite Chase and Burrow whose preference already carries weight around the War Room.

The outlook on Chase is high. He won the Biletnikoff Award as the nation’s best receiver in 2019. His ability is considered the caliber of a future Hall-of-Famer with incredible acceleration, flypaper hands, and 4.38 40-time speed from a 6-0, 201-pound frame.

He is elite in causing separation and can play from any wideout position and excel against all three levels of the secondary. He wasn’t just great in college, he excelled against the best defenses in the NCAA.

His only downside is if he’ll be rusty from sitting out a season. Already a noted  workout warrior with a good work ethic, it would be a surprise if it takes longer for him to get up to speed. He’ll start from Week 1.

The 2021 season

Pairing Burrow and Chase together makes for a high-upside connection from a duo that absolutely destroyed the NCAA in their one magic season of 2019. He’ll join Tee Higgins and Tyler Boyd as the starting wideouts. Chase takes the split-end role that can best use his speed and downfield threat. Higgins comes off a fine rookie season with 67-908-6 after 16 games. Head coach Zack Taylor enters his third season in Cincinnati with what should be one of the best three-wide units in the NFL.

Taking Chase delayed taking a much-needed offensive lineman but they used their second-round pick on OT Jackson Carman and brought in RT Riley Rieff to improve the blocking. The Bengals are still not elite with O-lineman, but at least they’ll be better than last year and could prove at least average – that’s a significant improvement over recent seasons.

The schedule is also kinder for 2021, with the passing strength of schedule going from 2020’s No. 21 to No. 12. Burrow has NFL experience now and appears ready to resume the fine showing as a rookie. Chase couldn’t ask for a better landing spot rejoining Burrow in an offense that spent their first-round picks on the pair over the last two years. Chase holds great appeal in dynasty leagues, but his upside as a rookie is just as high.

Chase has been going around mid-sixth round this summer as around the No. 27 wideout drafted. And you’ll never see him that cheap ever again.