TAP FOR 6 MONTHS OF PREMIUM FREE 💰
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
Import Your Leagues
Weekly Rankings
Compare Any Players
Projections
Articles & Tools
Weekly Planner
24x7 News and Alerts

Predicting Adrian Peterson's Performance in 2015 and Beyond

By MN National Guard [CC BY 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Fantasy Expert Owen Elle compares Adrian Peterson to the all time great NFL running backs to project Peterson's 2015 fantasy football relevance and his future.

Over the past year there has been perhaps no more interesting and ever-changing storyline than the roller coaster ride that Adrian Peterson has been on. While much has been made about what the appropriate punishment should have been and whose morals and ethics determine what’s right and wrong with guaranteed money in contracts and how to discipline children, very few have been discussing what Peterson’s impact will be on the field for a team that likely would have competed for a playoff spot if he hadn’t derailed an already tumultuous season for the Vikings.

In order to better understand how Peterson should perform in 2015 and beyond as a 30-year-old running back, it is appropriate to look at other running backs and how they performed over 30. Emmitt Smith, Walter Payton and Eric Dickerson will be the three all-time greats looked at and LaDainian Tomlinson, Frank Gore and Steven Jackson will be the three more recent examples looked at. Studying Smith, Payton and Dickerson is fair when looking at Peterson because when his career is all said and done (10K+ rushing yards, 91 total TD, 5.0 YPC and growing) he will be enshrined in Canton.

Editor’s Note: If you’re looking for a new, awesome, highly customizable and free option for year-round commissioner & dynasty leagues, something more capable than Yahoo, better looking than CBS, and built from the ground up with fantasy football in mind, play free fantasy football with our friends at Fleaflicker.
 

Featured Promo: Looking for some more fantasy football action? Adopt a dynasty orphan team over at FFPC. Sign up today and get $25 off any FFPC league. Sign Up Now!

Emmitt Smith

Age 21-28: Smith rarely missed a game, and other than his rookie and ninth season, ran for over 1,200 yards every year. From age 23-26, Smith basically averaged over 100 YPG and 18.25 TD per season. He was named to six Pro Bowls in that time.

Age YDs TDs YPC YDs% TDs% YPC%
29 1,332 4 4.2
30 1,397 13 4.2 105% 325% 100%
31 1203 9 3.1 86% 69% 74%
32 1021 3 3.9 85% 33% 126%
33 975 5 3.8 96%% 167% 97%
34 256 2 2.8 26% 40% 74%
35 937 9 3.5 366% 450% 125%

Note: The YDs%, TDs%, and YPC% columns refer to performance that year vs the previous year.
 

Walter Payton

Age 21-28: Excluding his rookie season and his 1982 season, where he started in 7 and 9 games respectively, Payton was one of the most dominant running backs of his era, rushing consistently over 1,300 yards and running for 1,852 yards in 1977. In his early twenties, double digit touchdowns in a season were a regular occurrence.

Age YDs TDs YPC YDs% TDs% YPC%
29 1421 6 4.5
30 1684 11 4.4 119% 183% 97%
31 1551 9 4.8 92% 82% 109%
32 1333 8 4.2 86% 89% 88%
33 533 4 3.7 42% 50% 88%

 

Eric Dickerson

Age 23-28: Dickerson was named to five Pro Bowls in his first six years, missing minimal playing time due to injuries. His WORST season was his 1987 where he ran for 1,288 YDS and 6 TD. Dickerson often ran for over double digit touchdowns in a season and ran for over 1,600 YDs four times in his first six seasons, hitting the all-time single season rushing total with 2,105 YDS in his sophomore campaign in 1984.

Age YDs TDs YPC YDs% TDs% YPC%
29 1311 7 4.2
30 677 4 4.1 52% 57% 97%
31 536 2 3.2 79% 50% 78%
32 729 2 3.9 136% 100% 122%
33 91 0 3.5 12.50% 0% 89%

 

LaDainian Tomlinson

Age 22-28: Tomlinson was named to five Pro Bowls in his first seven seasons. A typical LT season was an average of over 1,520 YDS and 16 TDS before he hit age 29.

Age YDs TDs YPC YDs% TDs% YPC%
29 1110 11 3.8
30 730 12 3.3 66% 109% 87%
31 914 6 4.2 125% 50% 127%
32 280 1 3.7 31% 16% 88%

 

Frank Gore

Age 22-28: Gore was named to two Pro Bowls in his first seven seasons. While he wasn’t showered with yearly accolades, Gore has been more about consistency, rushing for over 1,000 YDS in every season that he has played over 11 games in.

Age YDs TDs YPC YDs% TDs% YPC%
29 1214 8 4.7
30 1128 9 4.1 93% 113% 87%
31 1106 4 4.3 98% 44% 105%

 

Steven Jackson

Age 21-28: Jackson was named to three Pro Bowls in his first eight seasons. He averaged over 1,000 yards and contributed over 6 rushing TD per year, rushing for 13 at age 23 in 2006.

Age YDs TDs YPC YDs% TDs% YPC%
29 1045 4 4.1
30 543 6 3.5 52% 150% 85%
31 707 6 3.7 130% 100% 106%

 

Average Percentage Growth/Decline for All Six Players

Age YDs% TDs% YPC%
30 80.98% 156.00% 92.17%
31 101.67% 65.80% 99.75%
32 84.43% 59.48% 98.63%
33 49.83% 72.33% 91.36%

 

Applying Statistics To Adrian Peterson

Because Peterson only played in one game during the 2014 season, his 2013 season will be used as his last season for statistical purposes.

2013: 14 G, 1,266 YDS, 10 TD, 4.5 YPC
2013 (Stats adjusted for 16 games): 1,447 YDS, 11.43 TD, 4.5 YPC

Age YDs TDs YPC
30 1171 17 4.1
31 1190 11 4.1
32 1005 6 4.0
33 501 5 3.7

 

Obviously these statistics assume a lot, such as an older running back remaining healthy for all 16 games. They also just factor in six players, however it is a good mix of recent running backs and all-time greats. Adrian Peterson should qualify as an all-time great given he ranks 28th all-time in total rushing yards and 14th all-time in total rushing touchdowns and still has multiple years to move up even higher on the list. Also, while there are a plethora of factors that could influence Peterson’s performance such as the play of the offensive line, the continued maturation of Teddy Bridgewater and his own contract, this study at least gives fans an idea of what to expect if Peterson follows the same decline as other running backs did post-30.

To bring everything back to a fantasy football perspective, based off the projections this is how Adrian Peterson will fare in each upcoming season in a standard scoring league. The table below will show where Peterson will rank and shows which 2014 player he was most similar to from a production standpoint. (factoring in 30 additional points for receiving yards and receiving touchdowns; Peterson over his career has averaged 242 YDS and 1 TD through the air each season which equals 30 points).

Age Points Rank vs 2014 RBs Rank vs 2014 OVR
30 255 3rd Behind Le'Veon Bell 14th Behind Tony Romo
31 221 6th Behind Eddie Lacy T-25 Behind Demaryius Thomas
32 172 9th Behind Justin Forsett T-40th Behind Derek Carr
33 110 T-25th Behind Tre Mason T-130th Behind Michael Floyd

 

Conclusion

Based on the study, Peterson should continue being a very productive running back on the field and in your fantasy football league for about three more years. However, the trouble with trying to quantify the production of Adrian Peterson gets murky when your factor in that he essentially missed an entire season, meaning his legs and body don’t necessarily have all of the wear and tear that a normal 30 year old running back would have, which could elongate Peterson's production and his career.

Also while the Vikings offensive line has been below-average and is in the process of changing, John Sullivan, Brandon Fusco and Phil Loadholt are all good-to-great offensive lineman. Factor in that while Matt Kalil has been mostly terrible for two seasons, he was near elite in his rookie season. Now that the mediocre left guard Charlie Johnson is no longer on the team, perhaps Kalil can rekindle the magic he had in his first season. Additionally young, talented players like T.J. Clemmings, Tyrus Thompson and David Yankey all could fight for the remaining guard spot or take over if Kalil plays poorly, giving the offensive line some flexibility and making it more efficient than it has been in years past, which could mean that Peterson can be even more productive.

Here's a list for you: Brooks Bollinger, Kelly Holcomb, Christian Ponder, Josh Freeman, Gus Frerotte, Donovan McNabb, Joe Webb, Brett Favre, Matt Cassel, Tarvaris Jackson. What do all of these quarterbacks have in common? All ten of them have played with Adrian Peterson during his seven years in Minnesota. With the exception of Favre in 2009, no quarterback has been remotely effectivem meaning that Peterson, since his rookie season, has accumulated his statistics with eight, nine and sometimes even ten guys in “the box”. Now that the Vikings have a mature, up-and-coming and productive quarterback in Teddy Bridgewater, Peterson will no longer have to deal with so many opposing players focusing on him. Kyle Rudolph, Mike Wallace and a solid rotation of role receivers like Jarius Wright, Charles Johnson, Adam Thielen and Cordarrelle Patterson should mean that Peterson has the opportunity to be even more productive than he has ever been.

Additionally, an intangible that can’t be measured or compared to other running backs is the fact that Peterson is one of the most athletic, god given freaks the NFL has ever seen, if not the greatest. Peterson literally changed the landscape of the NFL from December of 2011 to January of 2013 when he came back from a torn ACL and MCL in only eight months and had the best season any running back has ever had, propelling a bad Vikings team into the playoffs. While Eric Dickerson still holds the all-time single season rushing record, Peterson was only eight yards short and was only one total touchdown short of Dickerson that season. Peterson was significantly more effective though as he had 31 fewer rushing attempts with a 6.0 YPC while Dickerson had a 4.5 YPC.

Given that Adrian Peterson is not like the normal running back, while we can only use the statistics provided by other running backs to attempt to determine what degree of success he can have in 2015 and beyond, there is no reason to believe that Peterson can’t play just as long as Emmitt Smith and have a shot at breaking the all-time career rushing record. As far as the immediate future is concerned, Peterson's ready to be a RB1 again and should be one of the first players off the board in every fantasy football league.

 

NFL & Fantasy Football Chat Room

[iflychat_embed id="c-0" hide_user_list="yes" hide_popup_chat="no" height="700px"]

 




POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

Expert Advice
Import Your Leagues
Weekly Rankings
Compare Any Players
Projections
Articles & Tools
Weekly Planner
24x7 News and Alerts

REAL-TIME FANTASY NEWS

Robert MacIntyre

Brings Solid Form to Bay Hill
Scottie Scheffler

the Tournament Favorite at Bay Hill
Jonathan Drouin

Ready to Go Wednesday
Xander Schauffele

Trending Well Ahead of API
Jake Walman

Avoids Major Injury Tuesday
Marcus Johansson

Makes Early Exit Versus Lightning
Cole Smith

Golden Knights Pick Up Cole Smith From Nashville
Michael McCarron

Sent to Wild for Second-Round Pick
Ryan O'Reilly

Sustains Eye Injury Tuesday
Artturi Lehkonen

Deemed Week-to-Week
Kevin Love

Active Wednesday Night
Jaden Ivey

to Miss Five-Game Road Trip
Zach Edey

Has Season-Ending Ankle Surgery
Matas Buzelis

Exits Early Tuesday
Josh Giddey

Hurts Ankle Tuesday
Jarrett Allen

Exits Early With Knee Injury
Si Woo Kim

Looking to Return to Top Form at Bay Hill
Ben Griffin

Looking to Return to Form at Arnold Palmer Invitational
PGA

Nico Echavarria Looks to Build on Cognizant Classic Win at Arnold Palmer
Sam Burns

Searching for Consistency at Arnold Palmer Invitational
Daniel Berger

Offers Sneaky Upside at Bay Hill
Jack Hughes

Contributes With Two Assists
Dougie Hamilton

Picks Up Two Points in Win
Jacob Markstrom

Cruises to Win
Dylan Guenther

Picks Up Two Points on Tuesday Night
Jeremy Swayman

Defeats the Penguins
Zion Williamson

Ready to Take on Lakers
VJ Edgecombe

Sustains Back Injury Tuesday
Ivica Zubac

Remains Absent Wednesday
Neemias Queta

Returning to Action Wednesday
Robert Williams III

Available Wednesday Night
Kris Murray

Iffy for Wednesday
John Collins

to Miss Second Consecutive Game
Obi Toppin

Probable for Wednesday's Action
Aaron Nesmith

Tagged as Questionable for Wednesday
Andrew Nembhard

Could Miss Another Contest Wednesday
Pascal Siakam

Listed as Questionable for Wednesday
Santi Aldama

Now Ruled Out Tuesday
Justin Thomas

Making Season Debut at API Following Lower-Back Surgery
Santi Aldama

Available Versus Timberwolves
NASCAR

Collin Morikawa Hopes To Better Last Year's Runner-Up Finish at API
Emmet Sheehan

Behind in Camp Due to Illness
Cedric Coward

Returns to Grizzlies Lineup
Ty Jerome

Back in Action Tuesday
Brady Singer

Lit Up in Cactus League Debut
Tommy Fleetwood

Isn't As Confident of a Start at Bay Hill as Previous Weeks
Christian Yelich

to Make Spring Debut on Wednesday
Quinn Priester

Might Not be Ready for Opening Day
Josh Hader

Could Throw a Bullpen Next Week
Blake Lizotte

Unavailable Against Bruins
Marcus Foligno

Considered Week-to-Week
Jonas Brodin

Rejoins Wild Lineup
John Carlson

Misses Fourth Consecutive Game
Mikael Granlund

Troy Terry, Mikael Granlund Remain Out Tuesday
J.T. Miller

Lands on Injured Reserve
Mark Stone

Ruled Out Tuesday
Isaac Paredes

Starting at First Base on Tuesday
Kyler Murray

Will be Released
Trey Hendrickson

Bengals Not Using the Franchise Tag on Trey Hendrickson
Daniel Jones

Colts Place Transition Tag on Daniel Jones
Brendan Rodgers

to Seek Second Opinion on Shoulder
Adam Scott

Might Endure Tough Times at Bay Hill
Merrill Kelly

Throwing from 60 Feet
Aldrich Potgieter

Extremely Risky When it Comes to Bay Hill
Bobby Miller

Throws Off Mound Tuesday
Hunter Gaddis

Dealing With Forearm Tightness
PGA

Sungjae Im to Make Season Debut at Arnold Palmer Invitational
Jordan Spieth

an All-or-Nothing Option at Bay Hill
Harry Hall

Trying to Rebound After the Genesis Invitational
Jurickson Profar

MLBPA to Challenge Jurickson Profar's 162-Game Ban
Royce Lewis

Back in Grapefruit League Lineup on Tuesday
Matt McLain

Emerging as Late-Round Sleeper?
Spencer Jones

Changes his Swing to Resemble Dodgers Superstar
Nolan McLean

"Day-to-Day" With Illness
Ryan Gerard

Needs Better Start at Bay Hill
Edgar Quero

Showing Improvement This Spring
Jurickson Profar

Facing 162-Game Ban After Second PED Violation
Kenneth Walker III

Won't Get the Franchise Tag
Patrick Cantlay

Still Plagued by Bad Putting Ahead of Arnold Palmer Invititational
Daniel Jones

Colts Expected to Use Transition Tag on Daniel Jones
Thomas White

Marlins Reassign Thomas White to Minor-League Camp
Breece Hall

Jets Placing Franchise Tag on Breece Hall
Max Scherzer

Completely Past his Thumb Issues
CFB

Mark Stoops Joining Texas Coaching Staff
Francisco Lindor

Plays Catch, Hopes to Take BP on Wednesday
Mike Burrows

Looking Strong in Early Spring Action
Nick Seeler

Suffers Lower-Body Injury Versus Maple Leafs
Pierre-Olivier Joseph

Injured in Monday's Loss
Jason Day

Attempts to Bounce Back from The Genesis Invitational
Jacob Bridgeman

Rolling into Arnold Palmer Invitational
Russell Henley

Looks to Defend Title at the Arnold Palmer Invitational
Nicolai Hojgaard

Continues to Search for First PGA Tour Victory at API
Khalil Mack

Will Play in 2026
MMA

Lone'er Kavanagh Gets Back In The Win Column
Brandon Moreno

Gets Outclassed
Marlon Vera

Loses Fourth Fight In A Row
Daniel Jones

Colts Have "50/50" Chance to Get a Deal Done With Daniel Jones
David Martinez

Remains Undefeated In The UFC
Daniel Zellhuber

Loses Third Consecutive Fight
King Green

Gets Second-Round TKO Win
Felipe Bunes

Drops Decision At UFC Mexico City
Édgar Cháirez

Edgar Chairez Wins Back-To-Back Fights
Ryan Blaney

Falls to Eighth Despite Running Most of the Race in the Top Five At COTA
Ty Gibbs

Wins A Stage and Finishes Fourth At COTA
Christopher Bell

Earns First Top-Five Finish of the 2026 Season at COTA
Kyler Murray

"Repeatedly" Linked to Jets
Shane Van Gisbergen

Falls Short of Victory At COTA
Tyler Reddick

Wins At COTA and Makes NASCAR History
David Montgomery

Texans Acquire David Montgomery From Lions
Kyler Murray

Likely to be Released
Travis Etienne Jr.

Not Expected to be Franchise-Tagged
Aaron Jones Sr.

Vikings Planning to Release Aaron Jones Sr.?
Tyler Reddick

Could Make History at COTA
Shane Van Gisbergen

Shane van Gisbergen Still the Favorite at COTA
Christopher Bell

Will Be Tough to Beat at COTA
AJ Allmendinger

Could Contend at COTA
Connor Zilisch

Carries Plenty of Upside for DFS at COTA
Chase Elliott

May be A Strong Contender Again at COTA
Chris Buescher

Is Nothing But Consistent at Road Courses
Ross Chastain

May Be An Underrated Competitor for the Win at COTA
William Byron

Is William Byron a Viable DFS Option for COTA?
Carson Hocevar

Needs Clean Race at COTA
Kyle Larson

Could be A Decent DFS Option for COTA Lineups
Ryan Blaney

Could Ryan Blaney be A Sleeper DFS Option for All Formats for COTA?
Chase Briscoe

Should DFS Players Roster Chase Briscoe at COTA?
NASCAR

Bubba Wallace Is A Favorable Value Option for COTA DFS Lineups
Ty Gibbs

Could Ty Gibbs Be A Rosterable DFS Play for COTA?
A.J. Brown

Patriots "Have Explored Trade Talks" Involving A.J. Brown
Lone'er Kavanagh

Set For UFC Mexico City Main Event
Brandon Moreno

Looks To Bounce Back
David Martinez

Set For UFC Mexico City Co-Main Event
Marlon Vera

In Dire Need Of Victory
King Green

Looks To Win Back-To-Back Fights
Daniel Zellhuber

Aims To Snap Two-Fight Skid
Felipe Bunes

Looks To Get Back In The Win Column
Édgar Cháirez

Edgar Chairez A Favorite At UFC Mexico City
George Pickens

Cowboys Not Interested in Trading George Pickens
Ashton Jeanty

Not in Line for Workhorse Role in 2026?
Anthony Richardson Sr.

Colts Give Anthony Richardson Sr. Permission to Seek a Trade
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF