X
Lost password?

Don't have an account?
Gain Access Now

X

Receive free daily analysis

NFL
NBA
NHL
NASCAR
CFB
MLB
MMA
PGA
ESPORTS
BETTING

Already have an account? Log In

X

Forgot Password


POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Articles & Tools
Import Your Leagues
Draft Rankings
Draft Simulator
Enter League Settings
Value Picks
Compare Any Players
News and Alerts

Best Early-Season RB Matchups - Fantasy Football Strength of Schedule Analysis

Jahmyr Gibbs - Fantasy Football, Rankings, Draft, Sleeper, DFS, Running Back

Scott looks at 2024 fantasy football strength of schedules and the best RB matchups for the early season. Target these fantasy football RBs in 2024 drafts.

Draft season for redraft fantasy football leagues is rapidly approaching. The preseason is upon us and we will all excitedly watch live football again for the first time in months, inevitably over and underreacting to preseason and training camp results, and cross our fingers that preseason injuries will be at a minimum.

Many in the fantasy football space have spent all off-season preparing (and more importantly striving to prepare you) for draft day, the first chapter of the 2024 redraft fantasy season. Social media and published fantasy football content abound with draft strategies, mock drafts, sleepers, bold predictions, projections, and rankings, but one of my main points of emphasis (both in the preseason and weekly during the season) is focusing on fantasy strength of schedule (SOS).

Some may consider it a fool’s errand to attempt to project the strength of the schedule (real NFL or fantasy) before any regular season games have been played. But I enjoy giving it my best shot and stand by my research and process.

Be sure to check all of our fantasy football rankings for 2025:

 

Projected Strength of Schedule (SOS) Process

In this article, I will present my projected strength of schedule for the fantasy RB position, with a focus on the early part of the season (Weeks 1-4). Once a new season gets its legs, weekly fantasy matchups can be analyzed using fresh data.

A player’s strength of schedule should not be the sole reason you choose to draft or not draft that player. But it should be a piece of the puzzle. It can be a good tiebreaker if you are deciding between two players. If you are on the fence about a certain player at a given draft value, a brutal opening schedule should at least be factored into your decision.

By projecting matchup difficulties now and also breaking the season down into different time frames (e.g., early, middle, late, and fantasy playoffs), it also allows you to strategize for potential trade attempts. Suppose a player has a favorable early season schedule followed by a brutal later season schedule. In that case, you might be able to reap the rewards of both the fantasy points and the subsequent value increase, then trade that player for a better later season schedule and vice versa.

You can keep your eyes on a talented player who underwhelms through a tough early season schedule and make a play for them before their schedule opens up. To that end, a new addition to this year’s article will be the inclusion of a closer look at Weeks 5-9 ("Middle Season"), rather than just being displayed in the full-season color-coded chart.

We’ll start by looking at my season-long projections including some insight into my process and what data I use to project the strength of schedule. Then we’ll look closer at early season SOS (top 10 easiest and top 10 hardest in Weeks 1-4) as well as middle season SOS (top 10 easiest and top 10 hardest in Weeks 5-9) for fantasy RBs.

Fantasy matchups are something I’ve spent a lot of time on over the last three years. During the season I compile game log data for every game to arrive at raw fantasy points allowed to each position as soon as possible each week. The goal is to have the results available before waivers so matchup strength can be factored into those decisions.

Plenty of sites provide fantasy points allowed data. I choose to do it myself so I can rearrange and reorganize in ways I think are helpful. Raw points allowed are helpful but don’t tell the full story. It’s important to dig a little deeper and look at points allowed relative to an opponent’s average.

For example, if Team A gives up 25 fantasy points to Christian McCaffrey and Team B gives up the same number of points to Devin Singletary, raw fantasy points allowed would show Team A and B having the same matchup difficulty versus RBs. Using “Points Over Average (POA)” paints a more accurate picture.

Let’s say McCaffrey has averaged 22 points per game and Singletary has averaged 12 points per game. Using POA, Team A held McCaffrey three points under his average (a POA of -6) while Team B allowed Singletary to score 13 points above his average (a POA of +13). Through this lens, these two teams are far from an equal matchup difficulty. This turns raw fantasy points allowed to an “opponent-adjusted” fantasy points allowed.

The other angle I add once the weeks add up is recency. A team’s season-long average points allowed can look different than over a more recent stretch of games. Defenses improve or regress for a variety of reasons. Players get injured or return from injury, coaches adjust their schemes and game plans (on both sides of the ball), and, more qualitatively, players and teams “figure it out.” Neither season-long nor recent data sets are definitive, but it’s important to look at both when trying to increase the probability of making the right future decisions.

These are the two existing data sets in my process for preseason projections of fantasy strength of schedule:

  1. Previous season POA rank (season-long).
  2. Previous season POA over the team’s last five games (excluding Week 18).

Stopping there doesn’t account for the impact of changes made during the off-season. If we could simply use previous season results to predict what will happen the next season, fantasy football would be a lot easier (and less fun). For the future prediction piece of the process, I use Pro Football Focus (PFF) grades for team defensive lines, linebackers, and secondaries. These grades are added to the equation in the following way:

  • Versus QB: Defensive line and secondary grades.
  • Versus RB: Defensive line and linebacker grades.
  • Versus WRs: Secondary grades.
  • Versus TE: Linebacker and secondary grades.

 

2024 Season-Long Fantasy SOS

I generated tables showing each team’s full season schedule with each weekly opponent color-coded based on that opponent’s projected rank (1-32) versus the fantasy RB position. Lower number ranks with a red color indicate more difficult fantasy matchups. Higher number ranks with a green color represent easier matchups. Also known as schedule “heat maps,” the full season schedule for RBs is included at the end of the article.

Also included are each team’s season-long SOS, which is the average of their opponents’ ranks in Weeks 1-17.

As described above, the projected ranks are based on:

  • 2023 POA season-long rank
  • 2023 POA rank over the team’s last five games (Weeks 13-17)
  • 2024 PFF grades for defensive lines, linebackers, and secondaries
    • In this article, for RBs, it will be defensive line and linebacker grades

 

Softest Early Season Schedules – Process

In separating the full season into “early, middle, and late” time frames, I define each as follows:

  • Early Season: Week 1-4
  • Middle-Season: Weeks 5-9
  • Late Season: Weeks 10-14
  • Fantasy Playoffs: Weeks 15-17

In this article, I will be looking at the Early and Middle Season schedules and the teams with the Top 10 easiest fantasy matchups for RBs. I will look closer at Late Season and Fantasy Playoffs in a future article.

My process for determining the Top 10 easiest Early Season schedules for each team’s RB group is the same as season-long. I average the opponents' ranks in Weeks 1-4 for each team, and the ten highest averages comprise the Top 10.

When I wrote this article during the 2023 off-season, I introduced what I call “Top-Heavy” schedules. Some of the “easy schedules” that are initially determined by average projected rank tend to include an additional top-heavy characteristic:

  1. Top-Heavy schedule: A mixture of bottom-ranked opponents with one Top 10 matchup. This could also be called “Extreme Matchups.” In this scenario, there may be one week where you are hesitant or at least need to curb expectations, but outside of that, the probability of ceiling games for your fantasy players on those teams is higher. I developed a formula for determining Top-Heavy schedules. I remove each team’s most difficult matchup from the average rank. I then averaged the remaining three ranks. From there I added the difference between 32 (easiest rank) and the new average of the team’s three easiest ranks. This is then filtered from highest to lowest to show the Top-Heavy SOS score and rank. The purpose here is to remove the impact of the one difficult matchup on the overall average while also accounting for just how easy the easier matchups are. The bigger the difference between 32 and the average of the team’s easiest three matchups, the lower the score, because that difference is being subtracted.

The reason I chose to look at this particular breakdown was to determine if there is a significant deviation from the score arrived at by simply averaging the ranks of the first four opponents. I know we cannot simply ignore difficult matchups, but I would rather take my potential lumps with one brutal matchup if it means the chances are higher that the other three opponents could be week-winning matchups. The results? The order the teams fall in using the Top-Heavy SOS score is very close to the order generated by averaging the rank of the first four opponents, with some notable exceptions.

 

Soft Early Season Schedules – RBs

The following chart shows the teams with the Top 10 easiest Early Season schedules for fantasy RBs, along with the rest of the teams from 11 to 32.

The following chart shows each Top 10 team’s matchup rank (color-coded) in Weeks 1 through 4, followed by the average rank and Top-Heavy score.

The easiest Early Season RB schedules are littered with fantasy-relevant RBs. Here are the relevant RBs comprising the Top 10 easiest schedules in Weeks 1-4: Najee Harris (and Jaylen Warren), Jahmyr Gibbs (and David Montgomery), Josh Jacobs, Joe Mixon, Alvin Kamara, Rachaad White, Saquon Barkley, Austin Ekeler (and Brian Robinson Jr.), D’Andre Swift, and Isiah Pacheco.

Najee Harris (with some Jaylen Warren sprinkled in) should eat early and often, as Pittsburgh has the easiest Early Season RB schedule looking at both First 4 SOS and Top-Heavy SOS, and by a good margin over the Lions with the second-easiest Early Season SOS. The Steelers’ Early Season RB schedule scores the highest (easiest) of any position group with nothing anywhere close to a Top 10 toughest matchup. Pittsburgh’s toughest Early Season matchup is Week 4 in Indianapolis, and the Colts rank as the seventh-easiest RB matchup.

The Lions’ Early Season schedule is more middle-of-the-pack than the Steelers, but their First 4 SOS is buoyed by a Week 3 matchup against the 32nd-ranked Cardinals. This is why they move from second to the fourth-easiest schedule when looking at Top-Heavt SOS. The other side of that discrepancy coin is the Chiefs. The Chiefs’ Early Season RB schedule ranks as the 10th-easiest in First 4 SOS, but they’re tied for fourth (with Detroit) in Top-Heavy SOS. The reason for this is Kansas City kicks off the season against the third-toughest RB matchup (Ravens), but by Week 3 they get two consecutive Top 5 easiest matchups (28th-ranked Falcons and 30th-ranked Chargers).

The Commanders’ Top 10 Early Season RB schedule is a bit misleading. Like Detroit, Washington gets the 32nd-ranked Cardinals in the first month, but their schedule outside of that cake matchup includes the 16th-ranked Buccaneers, 13th-ranked Giants, and 11th-ranked Bengals. This is reflected in Washington’s Top-Heavy score, which is easily the lowest of the group.

Continuing in the direction of tougher RB matchups, here are the Top 10 toughest early-season schedules for fantasy RBs.

Whatever form the Dallas backfield takes will have a tough go early on. The Cowboys face Top 10 toughest RB opponents in each of the first three weeks (second-ranked Browns, eighth-ranked Saints, and third-ranked Ravens). Even their softest matchup is a Top 15 opponent (15th-ranked Giants). Baltimore also starts with some tough RB sledding, with two Top 10 and two Top 15 toughest RB matchups in the first four games.

The following chart shows each team’s matchup rank (color-coded) for fantasy RBs in Weeks 5 through 9 (Middle Season), followed by the average rank and Top-Heavy score.

The Panthers and 49ers both jump from the Top 10 toughest early-season RB schedules to the Top 10 easiest middle-season RB schedules. Outside of their Week 9 matchup with the eighth-ranked Saints, the Panthers’ toughest opponent is the 19th-ranked Bears, and they have three consecutive RB matchups ranked 28th (Falcons), 27th (Commanders), and 31st (Broncos). The 49ers’ soft Middle Season RB schedule is another one that is propped up with a Cardinals matchup Outside of that, they have two Top 10 toughest matchups and a bye.

The Bears and Lions both keep the good times rolling, remaining among the Top 10 easiest middle-season schedules. In Weeks 5-9, the Bears mirror the Steelers’ Early Season spot atop the favorable matchups mountain. The Bears have far and away the highest First 4 SOS and Top-Heavy SOS. You probably noticed that this is not unfamiliar territory for the Bears, as they sit atop the Middle Season SOS list for QBs and WRs as well. Their schedule is that good Weeks 5-9.

Here is the chart showing the Top 10 toughest middle-season schedules for fantasy RBs.

A multitude of teams move from the Top 10 easiest to the Top 10 toughest schedules during the middle season. The Chiefs, Steelers, Eagles, Commanders, and Texans all see their RB schedules stiffen up after the first month, with the largest increase in difficulty going to the Steelers. They go from the top early-season RB schedule (by far) to the second-toughest Middle Season schedule (and they have their bye).

Only two teams ride the stingy matchups train and make the Top 10 toughest RB SOS during both timeframes. The Vikings and the aforementioned Cowboys.

Here is the difference in SOS between each team’s early and middle season schedule for the fantasy RB position, sorted from highest (schedule gets easier) to lowest (schedule gets harder).

Before I go, I will leave you with the full-season heat map schedules for each team versus the fantasy RB position. The strength of schedule for the other fantasy skill positions (QB, WR, TE, and DST) will be presented in future articles Good luck in your upcoming drafts, and have a great fantasy season in 2024!

 

2024 Strength of Schedule vs. RB

Thank you so much for reading! I love diving deep into the fantasy strength of schedule with the hope that I can help you make the best decisions possible in the maze of fantasy football decisions. I will not be writing the weekly DST article for Rotoballer again this year, but I will still be compiling the data, and I am always available to help out. If you have any questions about this article or general questions about fantasy football, reach out to me on X (@MunderDifflinFF).



Download Our Free News & Alerts Mobile App

Like what you see? Download our updated fantasy football app for iPhone and Android with 24x7 player news, injury alerts, rankings, starts/sits & more. All free!

More Fantasy Football Analysis




POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Articles & Tools
Import Your Leagues
Draft Rankings
Draft Simulator
Enter League Settings
Value Picks
Compare Any Players
News and Alerts

REAL-TIME FANTASY NEWS

Malik Monk

Kings "Not Actively Engaged" in Trade Discussions Involving Malik Monk
P.J. Washington

Mavs Likely to Offer P.J. Washington a Contract Extension
Kenny Pickett

Raiders Acquire Kenny Pickett From Browns
Cincinnati Bengals

Bengals Give Trey Hendrickson a Raise
Amari Cooper

Signs One-Year Deal With Raiders
NHL

Jan Rutta Lands in Switzerland
Kirby Dach

Skates on Monday
COL

Tyson Barrie Retires From NHL
Vladimir Guerrero Jr.

Back in Toronto's Lineup
Joe Mixon

to Start Season on Non-Football Injury List
Jaylen Wright

Not Expected to Play in Week 1
Jakobi Meyers

Requests Trade
Jauan Jennings

Not Practicing on Monday, has Avoided IR for Now
Matthew Stafford

Taking 11-On-11 Reps on Monday
Zhang Mingyang

Suffers His First UFC Loss
Johnny Walker

Gets Back In The Win Column
Brian Ortega

Loses Back-To-Back Fights
Aljamain Sterling

Proves Too Much For Brian Ortega
Chris Sale

Penciled in to Start on Saturday
Waldo Cortes-Acosta

Suffers Unanimous-Decision Loss
Sergei Pavlovich

Wins Decision At UFC Shanghai
Terry McLaurin

Signs Three-Year Extension with Commanders
Kevin Borjas

Drops Decision At UFC Shanghai
Sumudaerji

Wins Back-To-Back Fights
Kiefer Crosbie

Still Winless In The UFC
Taiyilake Nueraji

Gets His First UFC Win
Ryan Blaney

Earns his Second Daytona Cup Series Win
Tyler Reddick

Locks Into the 2025 Playoffs Despite Underwhelming Daytona Performance
Erik Jones

Misses the 2025 Playoffs Despite Top-Five Run at Daytona
Justin Haley

Best Performance of 2025 Falls Short of Victory at Daytona
Chase Burns

To Throw Bullpen on Tuesday
Kyle Larson

Enters Playoffs As Co-Points Leader
Alex Bowman

Advances to Playoffs Despite Crashing at Daytona
Cole Custer

Finally Shows Signs of Life at Daytona
Daniel Suarez

Lame-Duck Daniel Suarez Delivers Clutch Second-Place Finish
Logan Gilbert

Punches Out 13 in Victory
Randy Rodríguez

Randy Rodriguez Battling Arm Soreness
Marcus Semien

Out 4-6 Weeks, Could Miss Rest of Season
Ranger Suárez

Ranger Suarez Strikes Out 11 in Win
Cal Raleigh

Sets Catcher Home Run Record
Yordan Alvarez

Likely to Return on Tuesday
Jacob deGrom

to Start on Monday
Kyle Tucker

Homers Twice in Win
Chris Sale

Likely to Return Next Weekend
Brian Robinson Jr.

to be RB2
Najee Harris

to be Ready Week 1?
De'Von Achane

Making Good Progress
Jaylen Wright

Considered "Week-to-Week"
Marcus Semien

Placed on Injured List
Jackson Merrill

Heads to 10-Day Injured List
Jordan Love

Says He'll Play in Week 1
Brice Turang

Absent on Saturday, "Touch-and-Go" With Wrist Injury
Chase Elliott

Despite Being Winless at Daytona, Chase Elliott is Probably the Best DFS Option
Ryan Blaney

Will Likely Lead a Lot at Daytona
Kyle Larson

a Poor DFS Option at Daytona
Christopher Bell

Consistent Enough to Consider for DFS
Chris Buescher

Now Must Win His Way Into Playoffs
Ryan Preece

Being One of the Slowest-Starting Fords Makes Ryan Preece a Strong DFS Option
Ross Chastain

Leads a Lot on Drafting Tracks
Daniel Suarez

Now in Desperation Mode With his Career on the Line
Chase Briscoe

Tendency to Finish Better Than He Runs May Reap Dividends at Daytona
Lamar Jackson

Should Practice on Monday
Carson Hocevar

Hard to Forecast Since He's Rarely Given 100 Percent at Daytona
Michael McDowell

has a Solid Drafting Record
AJ Allmendinger

A.J. Allmendinger Arguably Starting Too Well for Place-Differential Points
Austin Dillon

Will Likely Be Too Conservative for DFS Consideration
Matt Chapman

Activated and Starting on Saturday
Moses Moody

Warriors Not Interested in Trading Moses Moody
Kevin Durant

Rockets Expected to Agree on New Contract
Trey Murphy III

Warriors, Spurs Interested in Trey Murphy III
Zack Wheeler

to Undergo Season-Ending Surgery
Yoán Moncada

Yoan Moncada Hits a Pair of Home Runs on Friday
Willy Adames

Belts Two Solo Home Runs on Friday
CAR

Luke Kunin Joins Panthers on One-Year Deal
Auston Matthews

Says His Health is "Good" Before Start of Season
Roope Hintz

"Feeling Good" Ahead of New Season
Matthew Tkachuk

Recovering From Surgery
Marco Rossi

Wild Re-Sign Marco Rossi to Three-Year Deal
Bubba Chandler

Records Four-Inning Save in Debut
Walker Buehler

Officially Moving to Bullpen
NBA

Malik Beasley Now Drawing Interest from Teams
Brian Robinson Jr.

Traded to 49ers
Zhang Mingyang

Set For UFC Shanghai Main Event
Johnny Walker

In Dire Need Of Victory
Brian Ortega

An Underdog At UFC Shanghai
Aljamain Sterling

Set For UFC Shanghai Co-Main Event
Waldo Cortes-Acosta

Looks To Extend His Win Streak
Sergei Pavlovich

A Favorite At UFC Shanghai
Kevin Borjas

Set for UFC Shanghai Main-Card Bout
Sumudaerji

Looks To Win Back-To-Back Fights
Kiefer Crosbie

Set To Open Up UFC Shanghai Main Card
Taiyilake Nueraji

Set For His UFC Debut
Connor Ingram

Clears Player Assistance Program
Frank Nazar

Inks Seven-Year Extension With Blackhawks
COL

Victor Olofsson Signs One-Year Deal With Avalanche
Tee Higgins

has Injury Scare on Thursday
Dallas Cowboys

Micah Parsons Expected to Play in Week 1
Chris Godwin

Expected to be Activated from the PUP List
Dru Smith

Aims to Be Healthy for Training Camp
Jayson Tatum

Provides Injury Update
RJ Barrett

Considered a Trade Candidate
Golden State Warriors

Warriors "Remain Very Confident" About Signing Al Horford
Jahmir Young

Agrees to Deal With Heat
Devaughn Vele

Traded to Saints
Demarcus Robinson

Issued Three-Game Suspension
Hideki Matsuyama

Looks to Bounce Back at Tour Championship
Corey Conners

Looking to Reverse Struggles at East Lake
Cameron Young

Stays Hot Ahead of Tour Championship
Harris English

Aims for Complete Game at East Lake
Sepp Straka

Back in Action at East Lake
Ben Griffin

a Strong Value Play at East Lake
Rory McIlroy

Chasing Another Win at East Lake
Patrick Cantlay

Finishes Tied for 30th at BMW Championship
Ludvig Aberg

Finishes Tied For Seventh at BMW Championship
Collin Morikawa

Finishes Tied for 33rd at BMW Championship
Keegan Bradley

Finishes Tied for 17th at BMW Championship
Robert MacIntyre

Finishes Second at BMW Championship
J.J. Spaun

Finishes Tied for 23rd at BMW Championship
Scottie Scheffler

Wins BMW Championship
Harry Hall

Hot at the Right Time for Tour Championship
PGA

Sungjae Im Wants to Rebound at Tour Championship
Jacob Bridgeman

has One Weakness Heading to Atlanta
Nikola Vučević

Nikola Vucevic Not Expecting to Be Moved Before the Season
Nick Taylor

a Long Shot to Win Tour Championship
Josh Giddey

Bulls Not Interested in Sign-and-Trade Deal Involving Josh Giddey
Brian Harman

Trying to Crack Top 20 at Tour Championship
Andrew Novak

Attempts to Bounce Back in Atlanta
Oscar Tshiebwe

Signs New Two-Way Deal With Jazz
Justin Rose

Seeks Even More Success at Tour Championship
Washington Wizards

Alondes Williams Joins Wizards for Training Camp
Washington Wizards

Wizards Add Skal Labissiere for Training Camp

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP