Lions training camp notebook: The heat is on for Day 11

News and notes from Day 11 of Detroit Lions training camp on Jeff Okudah, Tracy Walker, Jamaal Williams and more

Monday marked the 11th session of Detroit Lions training camp. It was a sweaty day in Allen Park for the unusual afternoon practice, with a 90-degree day with high humidity following a heavy morning rain.

We didn’t get a lot of offense vs. defense in practice, with the players not in full pads. The practice emphasis was on special teams drills, and that dominated the action until a brief downpour ended the practice early out of precautionary measures.

Here’s what I saw, heard and observed in Allen Park on Monday:

Jamaal Williams’ emotional post-practice speech will almost have you believing in the Lions

The Lions might be good!

The Detroit Lions are coming off a dreadful 2021 season. They finished with a 3-13-1 record last season but closed the year off strong with three quality wins in their final six games. So, there were signs of improvement — something positive to take into the offseason.

But wow, it might take just one speech from Jamaal Williams to have us *very* optimistic about the Lions in 2022. He had his entire team ready to run through a wall for him.

With the Lions being this year’s focus on HBO’s Hard Knocks, the team provided a mic’d-up look at practice ahead of Tuesday’s premiere. Williams’ speech was the clip they chose, and you can see why: He had the Lions looking like compelling TV in just 40 seconds.

Williams — visibly holding back tears — said as he broke down the team huddle:

“Today is the minimum of effort. Do not give up. Do not feel like you tired. When you tired, think of last year and think of that (expletive) record. Every time I get tired or I think I can’t go no more, I think of that (expletive) record! Last year wasn’t it. That ain’t us. We can make it. Have some heart. I get emotional about this. I’m about to cry ’cause I care about y’all! Do your best. Let’s go! Lions on three.”

He even had NFL fans fired up.

Sleepers and Value Picks: Running Backs

2022 Fantasy Sleepers – Running Backs

The Average Draft order shows a general picture of how your draft will unfold and where values/sleepers and bad values/busts likely exist. Any green highlight means the player is a good value that could be taken earlier. A red highlight signifies an overvalued player that is a bad value or just too high of a risk for that spot. No color means the pick is a reasonable value at that spot.

See also:
Sleepers and Value Picks: Quarterbacks
Sleepers and Value Picks: Running Backs
Sleepers and Value Picks: Wide Receivers
Sleepers and Value Picks: Tight Ends

Average Draft order – Value picks

ADP Tm Running Back
1 IND Jonathan Taylor Was No. 1 last year, has better schedule this year. Same system designed around him.
2 CAR Christian McCaffrey When he plays, he consistently a top fantasy play. When he plays, he’s a dual-threat and a monster weekly starter. When he plays… When he plays… feel lucky?
3 TEN Derrick Henry King Henry was mortal last year. After two seasons of historic usage, the foot gave out last October. He’s back and they’ll be significantly lightening his load to keep him fresh… who am I kidding? The only question on most plays is which side of the line he’ll be crashing through.
4 LAC Austin Ekeler He will miss one or two games. But he’ll always challenge for most receptions by a RB. Draft Spiller and sleep better.
5 PIT Najee Harris 381 touches as a rookie. New QB(s), same mediocre O-line and worse schedule but hey, may end up with another 381 touches.
6 MIN Dalvin Cook Great when healthy but always misses three or four games. New offense intends to throw more, run less. Still a safe pick but likely to take a small step back from previous seasons.
7 DET D’Andre Swift Productive when he isn’t missing three or four games per year. Great O-line and great schedule points at a career-high year if he stays on the field.
8 CIN Joe Mixon Blew up as the No. 4 RB last year. Dangerous passing offense means Mixon gets less focus. Rock-solid Top-10 with upside.
9 CLE Nick Chubb This  is about where he ends up every year. Top rusher but only around one   reception per game.
10 GB Aaron Jones Loss  of Davante Adams may mean Jones could top his career-high 52 catches of last   year, but GB has a terrible rushing schedule and AJ Dillon gets more involved. This is a little high, but his risk is balanced with minor upside   as a receiver.
11 NO Alvin Kamara This is a steal if his legal situation gets pushed out to 2023 and he plays all 17 games. He’s always a lock for Top-10 and offense remains the same from last   year.
12 DEN Javonte Williams No.17 as a rookie last year, gets a better QB in Russell Wilson. He’d be a   Top-10 lock if Melvin Gordon did not re-sign. One of the most talented young   backs.
13 NYG Saquon Barkley Third time a charm or that dog just won’t hunt anymore? This assumes that he’ll be back to form but miss a few games. Bad O-line a little better but schedule is even worse.
14 TB Leonard Fournette Oddity is that Fournette alternates great seasons with down years. Signed a big contract and is reliable for the Bucs, but 2021 was No. 6, 2020 was No. 34,  2019 was No. 7, 2018 was No. 38. Needs to break that trend.
15 DAL Ezekiel Elliott Down 2021 with a torn PCL but still his fifth-straight Top-10 season. Some believe   Tony Pollard is better, but not the DAL coaching staff. O-line still an advantage and this assumes he has the worst year of his career. Because of  voidable contract years, this is actually a contract season for him so plenty   to play for in 2022.
16 CHI David Montgomery Great 2020 was sandwiched by two years around No. 20. New offense hints more use of   Khalil Herbert, so Montgomery remains solid but less upside and runs behind arguably the worst O-line in the NFL.
17 ARI James Conner First year in ARI was best of his career. He was No. 5 last year, so this seems a   hard drop after scoring 18 TDs in 2021. Will get banged up for a game or two, but this is a great value pick for a guy that faced the No. 32 rushing   schedule strength and upgrades to only average.
18 BAL J.K. Dobbins Blew an ACL a year ago and missed last season. Was No. 28 as a rookie and still   plays in a committee backfield. Better schedule this year but O-line a little worse. Plus BAL told Lamar Jackson he can run wild again.
19 WAS Antonio Gibson Has never been worse than No. 14 in his two seasons and WAS has a nice upgrade in running strength of schedule. But Commanders leaning to more of a committee   this year with a healthy J.D. McKissic and short-yardage rookie Brian   Robinson. This is a safe spot. Maybe less upside now.
20 LAR Cam Akers Finished rookie season on a high note, but then tore Achilles. Somehow returned for playoffs but looked bad. More risk here than this spot should have. HC Sean   McVay even referred to Darrell Henderson as big factor in the backfield. Also drops from No. 3 down to No. 24 rushing strength of schedule.
21 SF Elijah Mitchell Everything they expected – from Trey Sermon. Mitchell was one of the best surprises of 2021. Was wildly productive with five 100-yard rushing games. Also missed six   games and suffered five injuries (shoulder, rib, finger, concussion, knee)   all in one year. Just very risky on an offense that changes the backfield   constantly. Raheem Mostert was a similar star in 2019.
22 LVR Josh Jacobs Always Top-20 and was No. 8 in 2020. But all new coaches bring in an RBBC history   and drafted Zamir White to help. Kenyan Drake returns from an ankle injury and worse yet, Raiders fall from No. 20 to No. 32 rushing schedule.
23 JAC Travis Etienne Love that upside. Etienne was lost for 2021 with a Lis Franc injury but in his own words, he picked a good year to take off. The 1.25 pick of 2021 is healthy   and wowing in camp. Dual Threat. Has about as much upside as any other RB.   Let him shine in a preseason game and this shoots much higher.
24 KC Clyde Edwards-Helaire No arguing that the Chiefs first-round pick of 2019 was a disappointment. And this rank is about where he landed as a rookie. He’s suffered ankle, hip, MCL and shoulder injuries over just two   years. But he’s slated to do more as a receiver with Tyreek Hill gone. There   is still upside here, but one more year of injury and under-performance will   be too much. Worth a shot at this spot.

Sleepers and overvalued players

ADP Tm Running Back
25 NE Damien Harris This seems like a steal since he scored 15 TDs last year, but OC Josh McDaniels is gone and Rhamondre Stevenson keeps getting hyped. Harris a solid pick but lacks upside.
26 GB A.J. Dillon Dillon was the No. 22 RB last year but that was filling in for Aaron Jones twice while going against the No. 2 best rushing schedule. This year it falls to No. 25. Not a bad pick, just a bit high.
27 NYJ Breece Hall Everyone loves the first RB drafted. The rookie Hall lands on one of least productive   offenses of 2021 but the NYJ schedule and O-line are much improved from last year. Prototypical workhorse back that can catch the ball.  Plenty of upside if passing game also improves.
28 PHI Miles Sanders Sanders has declined in each season and missed four games in each of the last two years. Dogged with knee, hamstring, ankle and hand injuries. Philly wants to   pass more with A.J. Brown on the team and it looks more like an RBBC involving Kenneth Gainwell as well.
29 SEA Rashaad Penny He was so great in four games at the end of 2021 – versus the worst four   defenses. Otherwise, his entire career has been the occasional rushing   attempt between injuries. Seahawks drafted Kenneth Walker as the second RB   this year, so even they don’t think Penny’s late-season burst was a new   normal.
30 CLE Kareem Hunt He gets banged up, but his moderate fantasy value skyrockets if Nick Chubb gets   hurt.
31 DAL Tony Pollard Nice spot and productive when given the chance and holds at least this much value   even with Ezekiel Elliott healthy. Expectation is that he sees more receptions since DAL receivers are banged up to start the year and Amari   Cooper is gone.
32 BUF Devin Singletary Improved all three years and turned it up nicely to finish 2021. BUF is a pass-first   offense and they added Isaiah Spiller to  their mostly committee approach, but powerful offense, good O-line and the No. 1 rushing schedule strength should see Singletary challenge for RB2   fantasy status.
33 JAC James Robinson Tore his Achilles at the end of last season but may be ready to play early in the season, if not Week 1. But scary injury to return from and Travis Etienne will drain much work. He needs to prove health in training camp or a very   risky pick.
34 MIA Chase Edmonds Okay, so he didn’t take over in Arizona and while he is listed as No. 1 in Miami, he probably won’t be more than a piece of a committee. As a late RB3 you could do worse. Marginal upside but should offer roughly this level.
35 DEN Melvin Gordon New coaches in Denver may not reprise the same committee backfield as last year. Then again, HC Nathaniel Hackett imports the GB scheme that used Aaron Jones and AJ Dillon. Should be a safe pick for a back that historically has always   been Top-20.
36 SEA Kenneth Walker III The second RB drafted in 2021 is a 4.38/40 speedster out of Michigan State that ran for 1,636 yards and 19 TDs last year. The only one above him on the depth chart is the always-injured Rashaad Penny. Yeah. Love this pick and willing   to wait a few weeks for big things to happen.
36 ATL Cordarrelle Patterson Patterson made the shockingly effective switch to RB last year but then sputtered by   the end of the season. He’s 31 years old and probably even less likely to handle more than 150 carries. Worth it as an RB4 to see if he starts adding   tons of catches again as he did early in 2021.
37 NE Rhamondre Stevenson Saw much more use after Week 10 last year and even logged two 100-yard rushing   efforts. Expectations are that he will see even more action and is slated to   start catching more passes. The NE backfield has long been a source of   frustration and dashed hopes, but Stevenson as an RB4 is just too good to pass   up. Just his pace last year would have been around No. 24 had he played in   all games.
38 MIN Alexander Mattison Back up for Dalvin Cook. Three years and never better than this ranking.
39 NYJ Michael Carter Jets drafted Breece Hall and now Carter is just the No. 2 for the Jets – when has   that ever paid off? Good handcuff for the Hall owner but likely not enough production to merit a fantasy start unless Hall was out.
40 BUF James Cook Bills drafted Cook as the third RB taken this year with the plan to make him into a   pass-catching back to complement Devin Singletary as the main rusher. Anyone catching passes in the Bills’ offense needs to be owned. Reasonable handcuff   for the Singletary owner but should carry stand-alone fantasy value.
41 KC Ronald Jones II The info on Jones is conflicting. He’s said to be challenging Clyde   Edwards-Helaire to be a starter, and also speculated to not make the 53-man cut. Doesn’t help that KC has given first-team reps to undrafted Isaiah Pacheco who will also play special teams unlike Jones. As an RB4, he carries   some upside and if he flops, it won’t kill you.
42 LAR Darrell Henderson HC Sean McVay referred to his backfield as being both Cam Akers and Darrell   Henderson. Not Akers and his backup. The Rams like to pass anyway and Henderson has been around the No. 30 back for the last two years. No game   changer, but worth owning.
43 IND Nyheim Hines Was deemphasized last year but ranked No. 17 in 2020 when he caught 63 passes and   scored seven TDs. HC Frank Reich said he wants the 2020 version of Hines back   this year and that makes this a steal.
44 WAS J.D. McKissic Like Nyheim Hines, McKissic is not going to save your fantasy team but should see a return to an every-week value play in PPR leagues. He caught 80 passes in   2020 but missed six games last year. Nice value.
45 MIA Raheem Mostert In a best-ball league as a final pick maybe. But chances that Mostert is going to offer reliable fantasy points is too hard to buy into.
46 HOU Dameon Pierce Fourth-round pick could challenge Marlon Mack as the top back but a committee is expected, the rushing schedule is No. 30 and the O-line remains one of the worst. Upside here around the start of RB5, but not a lot.
47 HOU Marlon Mack Starting RB in Houston but virtually no upside and more likely to fall from this level.
48 SEA Chris Carson Retired. Will wash out of ADP.
49 NO Mark Ingram No. 2 in NO should be gold if Alvin Kamara is suspended, but that is no longer a  lock (at least for this year) and Ingram is 32 years old and a nonfactor since 2019.
50 LAC Isaiah Spiller Great handcuff for the Austin Ekeler owner but hard to reach since he tends to be   taken before the Ekeler owner can get there. Solid RB5 that could be huge if Ekeler missed much time.
51 CAR Chuba Hubbard Even with Christian McCaffrey flaming out last year, Hubbard only No. 36. Just a handcuff with marginal value even if McCaffrey misses time.
52 ATL Tyler Allgeier Good-sized back (5-11, 220) could beat Damien Williams out to be the No. 2 in Atlanta, and Cordarrelle Patterson faded last year. Bad schedule and bad O-line is a major challenge, but Allgeier could end up as the No. 1 RB in Atlanta this year.
53 DET Jamaal Williams D’Andre Swift tends to miss several games per year and Williams ranked No. 43 last season. DET has a great O-line and schedule, so Williams has minor value   regardless and becomes a starting consideration when Swift gets hurt.
54 PHI Kenneth Gainwell Ended as the No. 40 RB as a rookie last year and led the Eagles backfield since Miles Sanders was injured. Has minor stand-alone value and upside in this improving offense.
55 TB Rachaad White A popular sleeper-type this summer, White takes over for Ronald Jones as the   No. 2 back in TB. Worth owning in that productive offense but likely needs Leonard Fournette to be injured to offer any reliable fantasy starts.
56 ARI Darrel Williams Comes over from the Chiefs where he was the No. 21 back last year. Replaces Chase Edmonds as the No. 2 back in Arizona who was No. 33 in 2021. Should offer much more value than this spot and Conner usually misses a couple of games.
57 MIA Sony Michel Certainly Michel has value after a surprising year with the Rams, but the Miami backfield is a mess that’s hard to buy into.
58 BAL Gus Edwards Torn ACL last September and Ravens O-line not as good. Staying away from players returning from blown knees and playing in a committee backfield.
59 SF Tyrion Davis-Price Why not? SF has a tendency to make stars out of surprising players. Elijah Mitchell was the newest star last year, before that, Jeff Wilson, before   that, Raheem Mostert, before that, Matt Breida… Davis-Price was the  fifth RB drafted this year, so he’s not just a bottom of the roster filler.
60 NYG Matt Breida Handcuff for Saquon Barkley. No real value to anyone else and even if Barkley crashes yet again, Giants have a bad schedule, bad O-line and are installing a new offense.

 Best of the rest

Brian Robinson Jr. (WAS) – Firmly No. 3 behind Antonio Gibson and J.D. McKissic, the ex-Alabama bruiser could see short-yardage work and steps in if either starter is injured.

Hassan Haskins (TEN) – The Titans offense is meant to run and Derrick Henry proved he was not immortal last year with the foot injury. Haskins already impressed in camp and will be a hot commodity if Henry misses any time.

Khalil Herbert (CHI) – New offense in Chicago changes backfield roles and Herbert looks likely to receive more work. A needed handcuff for the David Montgomery owner, but may have stand-alone fantasy value anyway. 

Lions training camp position preview: Running back

The Lions have depth wiht dynamic and diverse skills at the RB position

Up next in the Detroit Lions 2022 training camp preview series is arguably the deepest position on the entire roster: running back.

The Lions have a nice group of diversely skilled backs under RB coach Duce Staley, a reflection on the coach himself as a player. Detroit deploys multiple backs without a traditional lead or bell-cow back, so having depth is important.

This group also features what figures to be one of the biggest training camp battles for a roster spot or two. A lot depends on how many RBs the Lions decide to keep, which means special teams get factored in strongly after the top two roster locks.

 

Lions training camp position preview: Quarterback

Lions training camp position preview: Tight end

Detroit Lions who will be free agents after the 2022 NFL season

All the Detroit Lions players who will be free agents after the 2022 NFL season

One of the few constants in the NFL is change. Injuries, retirements and free agency for players equals considerable roster turnover every offseason. For the Detroit Lions, the last factor there could be a major factor following the 2022 season.

The Lions currently have 41 players whose contracts expire after next season. That’s nearly half the roster potentially heading for free agency.

Not all free agency is equal. Five of the players here will be restricted free agents (RFA), meaning the Lions have the ability to keep them in the den with a qualifying tender offer. Other teams can pay the tender price and acquire the player, though that is not a common occurrence in today’s NFL.

Several will be exclusive rights free agents, or ERFA. Those 13 players simply need to be given the NFL minimum salary by the Lions and they are locked in.

Detroit can also extend players before their contracts expire. With over $10 million in remaining salary cap room, a couple of the more prominent names here are definitely candidates to be taken off the list with new deals before the end of the year.

Status is as of June 20th and players are listed in order of snaps played in 2021

2022 Fantasy Strength of Schedule: Running Backs

2022 fantasy strength of schedule for running backs

Schedule strength for running backs considers both rushing and receiving yards as today’s players rarely rely on just running production anymore. The analysis also considers the venue. There is a difference between how defenses respond either home or away, which creates 64 “different defensive matchups” depending on where the game is played.

See also:
2022 fantasy football schedule strength – Quarterbacks
2022 fantasy football schedule strength – Running Backs
2022 fantasy football schedule strength – Receivers

The scoring was a point for every ten yards rushing or receiving, six-point touchdowns, and a point per reception. The average fantasy points allowed to running backs are at the bottom of this page for reference.

Total Points

Below are the total points for each backfield according to their schedule, using the averages allowed in 2021 by those defenses.

BUF DET CHI SEA MIA NE BAL CAR LAC WAS IND
422 412 412 411 411 410 410 409 407 406 406
KC DEN NYJ SF DAL NO JAC CLE TEN ARI
405 403 402 401 401 400 398 397 396 395
CIN PHI LAR GB MIN PIT ATL NYG HOU TB LV
394 393 393 393 392 392 389 388 385 381 381

The differences do not appear dramatic. And the Bills and Lions are primarily passing teams with committee backfields. David Montgomery is nicely situated but will be in a new offense.  The Seahawks, Dolphins, Patriots, and Ravens are the next best, but all also rely on a combination of several running backs.

Weekly Play

Three different views are below. Week 1 to 17 is the full-season fantasy strength of schedule. “The Dorey Rule” says to draft by considering the first six weeks for a hot start. Finally, Weeks 15 to 17 represent the most common fantasy playoff weeks. “Good” games against a Top-22 venue from last year; “Bad” was when they played in one of the Bottom-22. Bye weeks were also considered as “bad”.

Notable schedules

Antonio Gibson / J.D. McKissic (WAS) – The Commanders’ schedule is very advantageous for their running backs. As it works out, they battle three bad matchups by Week 6 but then the only remaining negative is a Week 14 bye. Better yet, six of their final nine weeks contain weaker defenses and Weeks 15 and 17 are at home versus the Giants and Browns. The workload looks to be more distributed this year, and there is the specter of Brian Robinson Jr. cutting into the workload. By midseason, the schedule looks profitable for the backfield.

Ravens Backfield (BAL) – One of the murkier backfields gets a lighter slate of games. Both J.K. Dobbins and Gus Edwards return from injury, Mike Davis was added and Tyler Baddie was drafted. The best part of this schedule is Weeks 1 to 8 which contain five soft matchups and no bad ones. The second half of the season is much less favorable, but at least they end up with home games against the Falcons and Steelers during fantasy playoffs.

D’Andre Swift / Jamaal Williams (DET) –  The Lions face one of the better schedules for running backs with a nice opening to the season with three of five matchups favorable and ending with only one tough venue in the final seven games of the fantasy season. D’Andre Swift already enters 2022 with promise, and his schedule will work with him if he can stay healthy.

Rashaad Penny / Kenneth Walker (SEA) – The respective roles are up for grabs in the Seattle backfield, but an intention to run more and a kind schedule should help. After Week 6, the only negatives are the bye and Week 14 versus the 49ers. Overall, this could let the rookie Kenneth Walker shine if Rashaad Penny continues to have injury issues. Fantasy championships at home versus the Jets sound like a winner.

Devin Singletary / James Cook (BUF) – Another backfield with less clarity after the Bills made James Cook as the third running back taken in the NFL draft. Devin Singletary likely remains the primary back but faces a tough opening with three bad matchups over the initial four games. It clears up the rest of the way with only a bye and Week 16 at the Bears, but otherwise, they enjoy seven favorable matchups between Weeks 5 to 14.

Dalvin Cook (MIN) – The Vikings’ stud running back has already fallen in fantasy drafts this year and that’s likely compounded with a glance at his schedule.  Cook battles a brutal stretch between Weeks 4 and 12, with every matchup in a tough venue other than hosting the Bears in Week 5 as a neutral pairing. It lightens over the final five games but still plays the Colts and at the Packers during fantasy playoffs.

Najee Harris (PIT) – The top rookie rusher last year, Najee Harris was a fantasy goldmine but he’ll have a tougher time repeating with a new quarterback and a schedule that contains just three favorable venues against eight top defenses plus a bye week. Even his fantasy playoffs holds road trips to the Panthers and Ravens.

Josh Jacobs / Kenyan Drake (LV) – There’s a chance that even the rookie Zamir White could also limit what Josh Jacobs and Kenyan Drake accomplish this year. Jacobs star isn’t as bright, and Drake returns from a broken ankle. Worse yet, after opening at the Chargers, the Raiders don’t have a favorable matchup until Week 12. And when you need them the most, this backfield faces the 49ers, Patriots and Steelers during fantasy playoffs.

2022 weekly grid

Week ARI ATL BAL BUF CAR CHI CIN CLE
1 KC NO @NYJ @LAR CLE SF PIT @CAR
2 @LV @LAR MIA TEN @NYG @GB @DAL NYJ
3 LAR @SEA @NE @MIA NO HOU @NYJ PIT
4 @CAR CLE BUF @BAL ARI @NYG MIA @ATL
5 PHI @TB CIN PIT SF @MIN @BAL LAC
6 @SEA SF @NYG @KC @LAR WAS @NO NE
7 NO @CIN CLE bye TB @NE ATL @BAL
8 @MIN CAR @TB GB @ATL @DAL @CLE CIN
9 SEA LAC @NO @NYJ @CIN MIA CAR bye
10 @LAR @CAR bye MIN ATL DET bye @MIA
11 SF CHI CAR CLE @BAL @ATL @PIT @BUF
12 LAC @WAS @JAC @DET DEN @NYJ @TEN TB
13 bye PIT DEN @NE bye GB KC @HOU
14 NE bye @PIT NYJ @SEA bye CLE @CIN
15 @DEN @NO @CLE MIA PIT PHI @TB BAL
16 TB @BAL ATL @CHI DET BUF @NE NO
17 @ATL ARI PIT @CIN @TB @DET BUF @WAS
18 @SF TB @CIN NE @NO MIN BAL @PIT
DAL DEN DET GB HOU IND JAC KC
1 TB @SEA PHI @MIN IND @HOU @WAS @ARI
2 CIN HOU WAS CHI @DEN @JAC IND LAC
3 @NYG SF @MIN @TB @CHI KC @LAC @IND
4 WAS @LV SEA NE LAC TEN @PHI @TB
5 @LAR IND @NE NYG @JAC @DEN HOU LV
6 @PHI @LAC bye NYJ bye JAC @IND BUF
7 DET NYJ @DAL @WAS @LV @TEN NYG @SF
8 CHI @JAC MIA @BUF TEN WAS DEN bye
9 bye bye GB @DET PHI @NE LV TEN
10 @GB @TEN @CHI DAL @NYG @LV @KC JAC
11 @MIN LV @NYG TEN WAS PHI bye @LAC
12 NYG @CAR BUF @PHI @MIA PIT BAL LAR
13 IND @BAL JAC @CHI CLE @DAL @DET @CIN
14 HOU KC MIN bye @DAL bye @TEN @DEN
15 @JAC ARI @NYJ LAR KC @MIN DAL @HOU
16 PHI @LAR @CAR @MIA @TEN LAC @NYJ SEA
17 @TEN @KC CHI MIN JAC @NYG @HOU DEN
18 @WAS LAC @GB DET @IND HOU TEN @LV
LAC LAR LV MIA MIN NE NO NYG
1 LV BUF @LAC NE GB @MIA @ATL @TEN
2 @KC ATL ARI @BAL @PHI @PIT TB CAR
3 JAC @ARI @TEN BUF DET BAL @CAR DAL
4 @HOU @SF DEN @CIN @NO @GB MIN CHI
5 @CLE DAL @KC @NYJ CHI DET SEA @GB
6 DEN CAR bye MIN @MIA @CLE CIN BAL
7 SEA bye HOU PIT bye CHI @ARI @JAC
8 bye SF @NO @DET ARI @NYJ LV @SEA
9 @ATL @TB @JAC @CHI @WAS IND BAL bye
10 @SF ARI IND CLE @BUF bye @PIT HOU
11 KC @NO @DEN bye DAL NYJ LAR DET
12 @ARI @KC @SEA HOU NE @MIN @SF @DAL
13 @LV SEA LAC @SF NYJ BUF @TB WAS
14 MIA LV @LAR @LAC @DET @ARI bye PHI
15 TEN @GB NE @BUF IND @LV ATL @WAS
16 @IND DEN @PIT GB NYG CIN @CLE @MIN
17 LAR @LAC SF @NE @GB MIA @PHI IND
18 @DEN @SEA KC NYJ @CHI @BUF CAR @PHI
NYJ PHI PIT SEA SF TB TEN WAS
1 BAL @DET @CIN DEN @CHI @DAL NYG JAC
2 @CLE MIN NE @SF SEA @NO @BUF @DET
3 CIN @WAS @CLE ATL @DEN GB LV PHI
4 @PIT JAC NYJ @DET LAR KC @IND @DAL
5 MIA @ARI @BUF @NO @CAR ATL @WAS TEN
6 @GB DAL TB ARI @ATL @PIT bye @CHI
7 @DEN bye @MIA @LAC KC @CAR IND GB
8 NE PIT @PHI NYG @LAR BAL @HOU @IND
9 BUF @HOU bye @ARI bye LAR @KC MIN
10 bye WAS NO @TB LAC SEA DEN @PHI
11 @NE @IND CIN bye @ARI bye @GB @HOU
12 CHI GB @IND LV NO @CLE CIN ATL
13 @MIN TEN @ATL @LAR MIA NO @PHI @NYG
14 @BUF @NYG BAL CAR TB @SF JAC bye
15 DET @CHI @CAR SF @SEA CIN @LAC NYG
16 JAC @DAL LV @KC WAS @ARI HOU @SF
17 @SEA NO @BAL NYJ @LV CAR DAL CLE
18 @MIA NYG CLE LAR ARI @ATL @JAC DAL

 

Fantasy points allowed per game to running backs

These are the values applied to this year’s schedule to determine strength of schedule for running backs.

NYJ 36.1 @SF 24.7 @BUF 21.5
DET 31.1 @PHI 24.7 @DEN 21.5
@SEA 30.8 @ATL 24.6 TB 21.3
SEA 30.7 @KC 24.6 NE 21.2
PIT 29.7 HOU 24.6 @NO 20.9
@NYJ 29.6 MIA 24.5 @CHI 20.8
@NYG 27.1 @CIN 24.3 @CLE 20.6
@LVR 26.9 @MIN 24.2 @PIT 20.6
LVR 26.4 @TB 24.1 TEN 20.5
CIN 26.1 KC 23.6 DAL 20.5
@LAC 26.0 @IND 23.5 @DAL 20.3
@NE 25.9 GB 23.4 @CAR 20.3
WAS 25.8 PHI 23.3 @BAL 20.2
@HOU 25.6 CHI 23.0 @MIA 20.2
CLE 25.5 @ARI 22.9 @GB 20.1
ATL 25.3 BAL 22.5 @WAS 20.1
NYG 25.2 DEN 22.2 ARI 19.6
@LAR 25.2 @JAC 22.2 SF 19.3
LAC 25.1 CAR 21.9 LAR 18.9
MIN 25.0 BUF 21.9 IND 18.0
JAC 24.9 @TEN 17.4
@DET 24.9 NO 16.8

 

Jamaal Williams doesn’t give a bleep about being on Hard Knocks

Williams just wants to win a Super Bowl in Detroit

When the Detroit Lions were announced as the subject of the 2022 edition of HBO’s Hard Knocks, anyone and everyone close to the team instantly thought of Jamaal Williams as a potential star of the behind-the-scenes documentary series. But Williams himself doesn’t care about that.

In his media appearance on Wednesday, Wiliams was asked about Hard Knocks. He lowered his head and whispered, “I don’t give a (censored).”

The veteran RB quickly elaborated on why such a mediagenic personality isn’t excited about more camera time.

“All that is to me now is more cameras walking around staring at me,” Williams continued. “I don’t care. I just want to play football. I want to win a Super Bowl. This year. Forget the Hard Knocks, all that stuff. It’s just going to happen, you know what I mean? Like, people think I’m funny, but I don’t do it on purpose. It’s just me. I just walk around and just be me all the time, that’s it. I can’t fake nothing.”

Williams did later joke that he’s working on his abs to show off for the camera and “maybe” he’ll smile when he sees the camera on him.

Lions offseason: So many needs but RB isn’t one of them

The Lions need a lot of things this offseason but RB should be dead last on the list

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When Detroit Lions general manager Brad Holmes leads the team in writing out the offseason shopping list, it’s going to be a long one. Going 3-13-1 and finishing near the bottom in both offense and defense means there are plenty of needs for Detroit in the 2022 NFL draft and free agency.

But there is one position Holmes won’t have to write on the shopping list. The Lions are fully stocked at running back.

Coming off the best ground game Detroit has produced in 20 years, the Lions bring back the top four RBs and the entire starting offensive line for 2022. The quartet at running back is all under contract through the next season.

Jamaal Williams returns as the ringleader. The veteran played well in his first year in Detroit, topping 600 yards on the ground on 153 carries. Williams also caught 26 of 28 passing targets and was a rock in pass protection. His effusive energy and playful personality were a much-needed dose of positivity for the Lions. Williams is signed through the 2022 season for $4.63 million in total compensation.

D’Andre Swift led the Lions in rushing yards with 617 (16 more than Williams) and also showed he’s a fantastic threat out of the backfield. Swift caught 62 passes for over 400 yards and scored seven total touchdowns. He has two years left on his rookie contract.

Craig Reynolds exploded off the practice squad with a commanding two-week performance as the primary back. In Weeks 14-15, Reynolds hammered the ball for 195 yards on 37 carries. That performance earned the young journeyman a stable contract through the 2022 season in Detroit that will pay him just under $1 million. That’s exceptional value for a quality No. 3 RB.

Then there’s Jermar Jefferson. A sixth-round rookie from Oregon State, he was a healthy scratch for most of his first season. When Jefferson did get a chance, he too was effective: 15 carries for 74 yards and two TDs. He’s tied to the Lions through the 2024 season for less than $1 million per season on average. There is certainly room for improvement in the passing game for Jefferson, but he’s a keeper.

Fullback Jason Cabinda can also come back. Cabinda, who came to Detroit as a linebacker, is a restricted free agent and was effective enough to return for another season.

It leaves no urgent need to add any running backs this offseason. If Holmes & Co. decides to save some money and get rid of Williams, then that changes. But signing a veteran free agent or using a draft pick on a running back this offseason is quite literally the last thing these Lions need to do in 2022.

Kings of third down: Running Backs

The best running backs on third down.

Want to know who is really a third-down back? That guy who has to keep the drive alive as the most reliable weapon for that play? Some of the names will surprise, but this shows every third-down attempt made by a running back that had at least ten attempts during the season. Overall, the players with the most third-down plays were Najee Harris (43), Jonathan Taylor (40), and Ezekiel Elliott (38) but let’s take a look at how they broke down.

Below are the Top-20 in the category considering the 44 running backs with least ten third-down attempts. This is an interesting and relative measurement as to how reliable and successful running backs were for their team as they strived to keep offensive drives alive. Plays resulting in touchdowns on third down were counted as a first down since they were the most successful conclusion to a play.

Third-down rushes

Third Down Runs Carries First Downs
1 James Conner 32 18
2 Jonathan Taylor 31 20
3 Antonio Gibson 28 16
4 Ezekiel Elliott 27 18
5 Javonte Williams 23 13
6 Najee Harris 22 12
7 Rex Burkhead 21 13
8 Sony Michel 21 8
9 D’Andre Swift 21 6
10 Dalvin Cook 19 7
11 Brandon Bolden 19 6
12 Alvin Kamara 19 5
13 AJ Dillon 17 12
14 Jamaal Williams 17 11
15 David Montgomery 17 8
16 Leonard Fournette 16 12
17 Saquon Barkley 15 7
18 Joe Mixon 15 6
19 Darrell Henderson 15 5
20 Devontae Booker 14 8

James Conner was expected to be the No. 2 back in Arizona but was given the most rushing attempts on third down of any back. Jonathan Taylor naturally shines in this category and it’s encouraging to see that Javonte Williams was the preferred rusher on third downs for the Broncos. This also indicates how more complex offenses have become, with running backs averaging fewer than two such plays per game at most.

And it also points at how committee backfields spread out their workloads, with surprisingly high ranks for Rex Burkhead, Sony Michel, Brandon Bolden and Jamaal Williams. Of course, third downs are very often passing downs, and these stats only reflect totals without considering games missed due to injury. But these are how often a back ran the ball on third down.

Third-down yards-per-carry

Yards Per Carry YPC Carries
1 Chase Edmonds 12.9 11
2 Kareem Hunt 8.3 11
3 Travis Homer 8.3 8
4 D’Andre Swift 7.3 21
5 Aaron Jones 7.3 8
6 Dalvin Cook 6.8 19
7 Javonte Williams 6.7 23
8 D’Ernest Johnson 6.7 14
9 Ty Johnson 6.6 8
10 Michael Carter 6.3 7
11 Devontae Booker 6.2 14
12 Kenneth Gainwell 6.1 13
13 Leonard Fournette 5.5 16
14 Alvin Kamara 4.6 19
15 David Johnson 4.4 9
16 Ezekiel Elliott 4.3 27
17 Mike Davis 4.0 7
18 James Robinson 3.8 10
19 Brandon Bolden 3.8 19
19 Jonathan Taylor 3.8 31
19 Najee Harris 3.8 22

The yards-per-carry can reflect how many yards there were to go for a first down and the infamous “run the ball on third-and-18” does apply. D’Andre Swift (7.3) and Javonte Williams (6.7) were the best with over 20 carries.  Several “no names” like Travis Homer, Ty Johnson, Mike Davis appear, but they all had low carries to judge.

Third-down rushing success

Made First Down Success % First Downs Carries
1 Aaron Jones 88% 7 8
2 J.D. McKissic 86% 6 7
3 Chase Edmonds 82% 9 11
4 Leonard Fournette 75% 12 16
5 Michael Carter 71% 5 7
6 AJ Dillon 71% 12 17
7 Melvin Gordon 70% 7 10
8 Kenneth Gainwell 69% 9 13
9 Ezekiel Elliott 67% 18 27
10 Christian McCaffrey 67% 4 6
11 Jamaal Williams 65% 11 17
12 Jonathan Taylor 65% 20 31
13 Tony Pollard 63% 5 8
14 Rex Burkhead 62% 13 21
15 James Robinson 60% 6 10
16 Miles Sanders 60% 6 10
17 Darrel Williams 58% 7 12
18 Antonio Gibson 57% 16 28
19 Devontae Booker 57% 8 14
20 Mike Davis 57% 4 7

Aaron Jones (88%) was the best at converting third-down runs, but AJ Dillon (71%) was also effective which indicates the strength of the Green Bay offensive line. The most successful rushers on third down were mostly those with fewer attempts. Ezekiel Elliott had a down year but was still the most successful rusher of those with higher attempts. J.D. McKissic surprises with 86% of his seven rushes gaining a first down. Antonio Gibson (57%) was also Top-20 indicating the Commanders blocking was better than expected this year.

Third-down receptions

This only counted catches, not targets. In fairness, many if not most incompletions to running backs are the quarterback throwing the ball away. So only receptions were considered.

 Receptions Catches First Downs
1 Najee Harris 21 9
2 Brandon Bolden 18 10
3 Austin Ekeler 15 5
4 J.D. McKissic 15 6
5 D’Andre Swift 13 8
6 Ty Johnson 13 8
7 Melvin Gordon 13 4
8 Javonte Williams 13 5
9 Mike Davis 12 4
10 Aaron Jones 12 3
11 Cordarrelle Patterson 12 8
12 David Johnson 12 5
13 Rex Burkhead 12 5
14 Ameer Abdullah 11 7
15 Ezekiel Elliott 11 7
16 Chase Edmonds 11 3
17 Myles Gaskin 10 6
18 Alvin Kamara 10 3
19 David Montgomery 10 5
20 Christian McCaffrey 10 7

This is where the third-down backs should shine. But Najee Harris dominated the category and yet had  far more rushes than the others. Javonte Williams did well as a third-down rusher and split 26 catches with Melvin Gordon, which shows where the passes end up on third down in Denver. Still, only Harris and Bolden averaged more than one per game.

Third-down yards-per-catch

Yards Per Catch YPC Catches
1 James Conner 17.8 5
2 Darrel Williams 13.5 8
3 Joe Mixon 13.5 6
4 Jonathan Taylor 12.8 9
5 Cordarrelle Patterson 12.2 12
6 Michael Carter 12.0 3
7 Brandon Bolden 10.6 18
8 J.D. McKissic 10.5 15
9 Travis Homer 10.0 9
10 Ty Johnson 9.7 13
11 Devontae Booker 9.6 9
12 Ameer Abdullah 9.5 11
13 D’Andre Swift 9.3 13
14 Austin Ekeler 9.3 15
15 David Montgomery 8.4 10
16 Dalvin Cook 8.4 5
17 Miles Sanders 8.4 5
18 Javonte Williams 8.2 13
19 Ezekiel Elliott 7.9 11
20 Tony Pollard 7.7 7
21 Christian McCaffrey 7.7 10

James Conner shows his worth to the Cardinals in many metrics, and while he only had five catches on third down, he made the most of them. He averaged over ten yards per catch in five different matchups. Jonathan Taylor did well despite being the focus of most opposing defenses regardless of down or distance. The Patriot backfield was very well represented in all of the metrics since their passing scheme was so short in most weeks, and that’s likely to recede for 2022 as Mac Jones throws more downfield.

Third-down reception success

Made First Down success % First Downs Catches
1 James Conner 100% 5 5
2 Antonio Gibson 100% 3 3
3 Devonta Freeman 75% 3 4
4 Christian McCaffrey 70% 7 10
5 Joe Mixon 67% 4 6
6 Cordarrelle Patterson 67% 8 12
7 Ezekiel Elliott 64% 7 11
8 Ameer Abdullah 64% 7 11
9 Ty Johnson 62% 8 13
10 D’Andre Swift 62% 8 13
11 Myles Gaskin 60% 6 10
12 Dalvin Cook 60% 3 5
13 Kenneth Gainwell 57% 4 7
14 Brandon Bolden 56% 10 18
15 Devontae Booker 56% 5 9
16 Travis Homer 56% 5 9
17 Darrel Williams 50% 4 8
18 David Montgomery 50% 5 10
19 Leonard Fournette 50% 3 6
20 Kareem Hunt 50% 3 6
20 Saquon Barkley 50% 1 2

Half of the NFL teams had a running back with over 50% success when catching a third-down pass. James Conner and Antonio Gibson had minimal catches but gained a first on each. Gibson was expected to play a far larger role as a receiver in 2021 than he did, but this says they under-used him to be sure. None of the Top-20 had more than ten first downs as a receiver, but this metric says as much about the offensive scheme as it does the player. Plenty of the names here had only minor fantasy value at best.

Third-down overall

This is the “Big Daddy Ranking” for how successful running backs were combining rushes and receptions on third down.

Player Success % Total Thirds Total Firsts Catches First Downs Carries First Downs
1 Christian McCaffrey 69% 16 11 10 7 6 4
2 Leonard Fournette 68% 22 15 6 3 16 12
3 AJ Dillon 67% 18 12 1 0 17 12
4 Ezekiel Elliott 66% 38 25 11 7 27 18
5 Kenneth Gainwell 65% 20 13 7 4 13 9
6 James Conner 62% 37 23 5 5 32 18
7 Antonio Gibson 61% 31 19 3 3 28 16
8 Jamaal Williams 60% 20 12 3 1 17 11
9 Michael Carter 60% 10 6 3 1 7 5
10 Jonathan Taylor 58% 40 23 9 3 31 20
11 Cordarrelle Patterson 57% 21 12 12 8 9 4
12 Ty Johnson 57% 21 12 13 8 8 4
13 Devontae Booker 57% 23 13 9 5 14 8
14 Darrel Williams 55% 20 11 8 4 12 7
15 Rex Burkhead 55% 33 18 12 5 21 13
16 J.D. McKissic 55% 22 12 15 6 7 6
17 Chase Edmonds 55% 22 12 11 3 11 9
18 Tony Pollard 53% 15 8 7 3 8 5
19 Kareem Hunt 53% 17 9 6 3 11 6
20 Javonte Williams 50% 36 18 13 5 23 13
21 Myles Gaskin 50% 24 12 10 6 14 6
22 Aaron Jones 50% 20 10 12 3 8 7
23 Ameer Abdullah 50% 16 8 11 7 5 1
24 Najee Harris 49% 43 21 21 9 22 12
25 David Montgomery 48% 27 13 10 5 17 8
26 Melvin Gordon 48% 23 11 13 4 10 7
27 Joe Mixon 48% 21 10 6 4 15 6
28 Saquon Barkley 47% 17 8 2 1 15 7
29 Travis Homer 47% 17 8 9 5 8 3
30 Miles Sanders 47% 15 7 5 1 10 6
31 James Robinson 47% 15 7 5 1 10 6
32 Chuba Hubbard 45% 20 9 6 1 14 8
33 Brandon Bolden 43% 37 16 18 10 19 6
34 Mike Davis 42% 19 8 12 4 7 4
35 Dalvin Cook 42% 24 10 5 3 19 7
36 D’Andre Swift 41% 34 14 13 8 21 6
37 Josh Jacobs 38% 16 6 4 0 12 6
38 Sony Michel 36% 22 8 1 0 21 8
39 D’Ernest Johnson 36% 22 8 8 3 14 5
40 Devonta Freeman 33% 15 5 4 3 11 2
41 Darrell Henderson 29% 17 5 2 0 15 5
42 Austin Ekeler 29% 24 7 15 5 9 2
43 David Johnson 29% 21 6 12 5 9 1
44 Alvin Kamara 28% 29 8 10 3 19 5

These were the 44 running backs with at least ten attempts on third down. Some running backs didn’t reach ten due to injury. Some reached ten while filling in for better running backs who missed time injured. But this is what third-down looked like for running backs in the NFL in 2021.

The Good – Christian McCaffrey is such a force when he is healthy. Ezekiel Elliott seemed less effective this year, but not on third down. Jonathan Taylor was the top running back for 2021 and showed up with 58% success on third down. Most of the top backs did well in this overall measurement that yields encouragement for this season for AJ Dillon, Antonio Gibson, Michael Carter, and Leonard Fournette where ever he ends up.  Kenneth Gainwell and Jamaal Williams were surprisingly effective in their respective roles in committee backfields. The expectation was that the top fantasy backs would be at the top, but the Top-20 was chock-full of lesser players with marginal fantasy value. It speaks to the continued division of duties in backfields, along with the effects of injuries and COVID-19.

The Bad – Alvin Kamara – are you okay? The Saints entered the year with one of the best offensive lines, but he was only successful on 28% of his third-down attempts. Austin Ekeler had a fine year for fantasy but just wasn’t that good on third down on a team that featured a very capable passing game to concern the opposing defense. Each running back had a unique situation and their success is still dependent on the entire offense doing their job. Dalvin Cook (42%), Josh Jacobs (38%) and D’Andre Swift (41%) were all highly rated backs entering 2021 and just didn’t fare as well on third down as most other starting running backs.

The Interesting – It may be overly optimistic to make any hard and fast conclusions about these running backs, but it is one more piece of information to throw in to each players’ bucket of characteristics. Here are a few of the questions that this spawns for me – you might find others as well.

James Conner – He’s only 26 and a free agent. He outperformed Chase Edmonds in every measurement, and even more so here. He was in a “pass first” offense but was effective rushing and receiving on third down. The Edmonds experiment is over, what will the Cards do?

Leonard Fournette – He’s only 27 and a free agent.  He was already the most productive back on the market and second only to Christian McCaffrey on third down. The Bucs are undergoing a change in 2022 anyway, but Fournette’s outlook seems bright regardless of where he ends up.

Kenneth Gainwell and Miles Sanders – The success of Gainwell (65%) over Miles Sanders (47%) was maybe the biggest surprise. What will Year 2 under HC Nick Sirianni look like?

Jamaal Williams and D’Andre Swift – The first season for HC Dan Campbell was hoped to unleash Swift more, but both he and Williams missed three games. And the backfield overall was split. Williams was effective on third down (60%) but Swift (41%) lagged on his 34 attempts as opposed to the 20 for Williams. Can Swift justify being more than just a busy third-down back? He didn’t last year.

Michael Carter – He squeaked in with only ten third-down attempts but was successful on 60% while a rookie on a very bad offense. And behind one of the worst lines in the NFL. Hard to expect much with the Jets in a perpetual cycle of rebuilding, but has he earned a bigger role this year as the most effective rusher and Tevin Coleman likely gone? Then again, Ty Johnson (57%) was nearly as effective and had double the third-down attempts.

Third down is a critical part of all offensive drives and running backs tend to be the most relied on for most NFL offenses. But this is evaluating only one or two plays per game for the listed backs. It is an interesting measurement, but certainly not the only one or even the most important. But the importance of third-down success is hard to overvalue.

Lions had best team’s best rushing attack in almost 20 years in 2021

The Lions had the best team’s best rushing attack in almost 20 years in 2021

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One of the strengths of the 2021 Detroit Lions was the offensive rushing attack. The Lions relied on a good offensive line and a trio of skilled backs to produce the most prolific ground game in Detroit in a long time.

The Lions averaged 110.9 rushing yards per game in 2021 and did so by averaging 4.4 yards per carry. The 110.9 yards ranked the Lions 18th while the 4.4 YPC just missed cracking the top 10, tying for 11th in the NFL.

It’s been almost 20 seasons since the Lions averaged over 110 yards per game on the ground and 4.4 yards per carry. The last time the team topped each benchmark was the 2004 season. Those Lions, who finished 6-10 under Steve Mariucci as head coach, averaged 111.1 yards per game on the ground at a 4.4 YPC clip.

For those that don’t remember or (mercifully) blocked out the futile Lions’ first decade of this century, Kevin Jones had a quietly great year in 2004. Jones trucked his way to 1,133 yards and five TDs on 241 carries, a 4.7 YPC average. Shawn Bryson chipped in 264 yards at 5.3 YPC, too. Artose Pinner and Joey Harrington posted almost identical rushing stats that brought the average YPC back a little.

Detroit didn’t top 100 yards per game on the ground again until 2009. The 2013 Lions ran for 112 yards per game but averaged just 4.0 yards per carry, with Reggie Bush and Joique Bell sharing the RB duties. The 2020 Lions ran for 93.7 yards per game at 4.1 YPC.

Detroit’s running attack in 2021:

Carries Yards YPC
Jamaal Williams 153 601 3.9
D’Andre Swift 151 617 4.1
Craig Reynolds 55 230 4.2
Godwin Igwebuike 18 118 6.6
Jared Goff 17 87 5.1
Jermar Jefferson 15 74 4.9
Amon-Ra St. Brown 7 61 8.7

After the bye week in Week 9, Detroit averaged 116 yards per game on the ground and averaged 4.7 yards per carry in those games.