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

Optimal Running Backs Draft Strategy for 2022 Fantasy Football Drafts

austin ekeler fantasy football rankings NFL DFS lineup picks

Kyle explains the best draft strategies for running backs in the 2022 fantasy football season. Use his fantasy football draft strategies to target optimal RBs.

The running back position has been evolving in recent years. While having an elite back is a great way to usually win a fantasy championship, it is important to understand the shift taking place in the NFL landscape when it comes to running backs.

Teams are continuing to value the running back position less and less due to its overall fragility. Running backs tend to have a shorter shelf-life than the other positions and most backs usually see a steep decline in production by age 28.

In lieu of these changes taking place, it is important to adjust your approach on your league's draft day. We will take a look at the Anchor or Hero RB approach, Zero RB, Robust RB, and a balanced approach. All of these can be effective strategies when implemented properly. In fantasy football, there are multiple avenues to winning a league and it is important to spend time determining your overall tolerance for risk, as well as which approach you feel the most comfortable executing during a draft.

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

 

Introduction

Last season, only one running back saw 80-plus percent of their team's offensive plays, that being Steelers running back Najee Harris. Several years earlier, five running backs saw at least 82% of their team's offensive snaps in 2019, but the number has been declining ever since. As fewer bell-cow running backs have existed in the NFL, this leads to more wide receivers, as well as one tight end usually being in the first round of fantasy drafts.

In 2018 and 2019, Panthers running back Christian McCaffrey dominated the fantasy football world by putting up 720 points in half PPR over that stretch and finished as the RB2 and RB1 in fantasyland. He averaged 24.0 PPG during that span, but after playing back-to-back seasons with 90% of the team's offensive snaps, injuries limited him to 10 of a possible 33 games in 2020-21. Many who drafted him the last two years had their fantasy seasons crushed and it has changed the way fantasy players view running backs in future drafts.

 

History of First Round RBs by Season

Below is a list of all the running backs drafted in the first round in the last 10 years in the NFL:

Year Pick Player Team
2021 1.24 Najee Harris Steelers
2021 1.25 Travis Etienne Jaguars
2020 1.32 Clyde Edwards-Helaire Chiefs
2019 1.24 Josh Jacobs Raiders
2018 1.02 Saquon Barkley Giants
2018 1.27 Rashaad Penny Seahawks
2018 1.31 Sony Michel Patriots
2017 1.04 Leonard Fournette Jaguars
2017 1.08 Christian McCaffrey Panthers
2016 1.04 Ezekiel Elliott Cowboys
2015 1.10 Todd Gurley Rams
2015 1.15 Melvin Gordon Chargers
2012 1.03 Trent Richardson Browns
2012 1.31 Doug Martin Buccaneers
2012 1.32 David Wilson Giants

There were several years in there: 2022, 2014, and 2013 where no running backs went in the first round at all.

NFL teams have continually stopped prioritizing running backs from a pure value standpoint. In 2018, Todd Gurley was the RB1 in all of fantasy. By the time 2021 had rolled around he was already out of the NFL. No other position usually sees such a drastic decline in production. As more front offices have begun to embrace analytics, it has led to the devaluation of running backs.

As we can see in the chart below from Mike Braude over at Apex, peak seasons for running backs from 2010-present have gotten more difficult to achieve past age 26.

 

Robust RB Approach for Drafts

The old-school, standard approach to fantasy drafting has always been to load up on running back early. It's typically an approach many didn't question until several years ago. Since running backs tend to score the most points of all the position players, it only made sense to keep drafting them early. However, due to the rash amount of injuries that have ravaged running backs people began to shift their strategy.

While this approach can help you win leagues, it comes with a lot more risk the earlier your league's draft is before the season. Since we are just barely into the preseason at this juncture, you are taking on additional injury risk by drafting this many running backs with high draft capital. If you are in a draft that takes place right before the season starts you mostly don't have to worry about any of your running backs going down before the season even starts. A robust RB approach is typically more beneficial in 1QB leagues that only have 1 flex and are half PPR or standard scoring.

 

Hero/Anchor RB Approach for Drafts

This method is called many different names but all have the same meaning: a Hero RB approach is locking up one stud running back in the first two rounds, but then loading up your roster elsewhere. Instead of taking a second running back early, you are mostly solid at quarterback, wide receiver, and even tight end before another running back is drafted. The idea with this approach is to target running back again around the 8th or 9th round by looking for handcuffs or backup running backs on good teams who profile as pass catchers.

By taking a Hero RB approach we are doing so with the idea that we will be stronger than the other teams in our league by year's end because we ended up hitting on the later running backs we drafted or we used our FAAB/waiver priority wisely to pick up running backs who were thrust into action after an injury to the starter.

Here's an example of a Hero RB roster in a 1QB league with 2RB, 3WR, 1 TE & 1 Flex from the 1.04:

QBs: Trey Lance (7.04), Mac Jones (14.09)
RBs: Christian McCaffrey (1.04), Kareem Hunt (8.09), James Cook (9.04), Rachaad White (10.09), Kenneth Gainwell (13.04), D'Ernest Johnson (20.09)
WR: Tyreek Hill (2.09), Tee Higgins (3.04), Diontae Johnson (4.09), DeVonta Smith (6.09), Jalen Tolbert (11.04), Jakobi Meyers (12.09), Wan'Dale Robinson (15.04), Curtis Samuel (17.04)
TEs: George Kittle (5.04), Evan Engram (16.09)

This is a very competitive roster out of the gate with the only glaring weakness at RB2. While some do have questions about Trey Lance for 2022, he has some tremendous rushing upside. Should the running backs drafted later break into the starting lineup due to injury this team will be a very formidable foe down the stretch and into the playoffs.

 

Zero RB Approach for Drafts

There was a recent full article done on Zero RB that can be found here. The premise of Zero RB is mostly to "punt" on the running back position all together while loading up at wide receiver and having a dominant quarterback and tight end. A Zero RB drafter will then shift their focus towards handcuffs, rookies, and other running backs with upside in the later round of the draft.

This approach usually leads to a slow start during the season, but with the use of FAAB and later drafted running backs seeing the field after an injury, your roster should be as strong as your league mates by the season's end.

The allure of a Zero RB approach is that you can start your roster out with the likes of Justin Jefferson or Travis Kelce followed up by Tyreek Hill or CeeDee Lamb. A Zero RB is typically more effective in deeper leagues with Full PPR scoring and multiple flexes. A Zero RB approach is not recommended with the likes of Jonathan Taylor, Christian McCaffrey, Austin Ekeler, or Derrick Henry still on the clock. It is a better approach used towards the end of the first round when you are likely missing out on the top running backs anyway.

 

Balanced Approach for Drafts

While "playing the board" to see who falls is never a bad idea, having a balanced team can be good and it can also be bad. Having a balanced team can leave you without any glaring holes or weaknesses, but it can also not leave you with much of an advantage at any of the positions either. A good rule to remember on draft day is that you want to be strong in at least three offensive positions and only have a weakness in one.

Sometimes the draft board may fall differently than you want, but often I see too many teams who are strong at wide receiver, average at tight end, but weak at quarterback and running back. By shoring up three of the four areas during the draft, you can either trade from a position of strength to address that weakness or use your FAAB to address it. A balanced approach may sound good in theory, but it's much like trying to hold Europe early on during a game of Risk leaving you fighting too many battles on all sides.

 

Conclusion

There is no right or wrong answer to the question. For me, I am most comfortable with the Hero RB approach as I feel it is a great way to build a solid roster that gets stronger as the season goes on, but everyone is different. There are so many things that factor into how to go about building the best roster on draft day: pick position, scoring, format, and the overall behavioral patterns of the people in your league. Nonetheless, it's always important to know other strategies and roster builds in case a draft doesn't go as planned.



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

Reilly Smith

Completes Multi-Goal Night With Buzzer-Beating Winner
Mark Stone

Sustains Upper-Body Injury Saturday
Chase Elliott

No Longer Leads Enough to Be Worthy of DFS Play After Qualifying Ninth
Joey Logano

Likely to Look Past Kansas in Preparation for Playoffs
Ty Gibbs

Only Worth Starting in DFS If You Think He'll Lead
Carson Hocevar

a Great DFS Option If He Doesn't Crash
Daniel Suarez

Struggles to Convert Strong Qualifying Runs into Finishes at Kansas
Chase Briscoe

Will Chase Briscoe Remain Mediocre at Kansas with Faster Cars?
Shane Van Gisbergen

Passing Time between Road Courses
Michael McDowell

Texas Near-Miss Makes Michael McDowell Look Better than He Seems on Paper
Todd Gilliland

Consistently Mediocre at Kansas
Zane Smith

Will Likely Finish Around Where He Starts
Cole Custer

Likely Needs Strategy to Contend at Kansas
Cody Ware

Too Little Attrition for Cody Ware to Get a Decent Finish at Kansas
Aaron Judge

Blasts Two More Homers
Shea Langeliers

Powers A's Past Yankees With Five RBI
Corey Seager

Tallies Three Extra-Base Hits, Two Homers In Return To Lineup
Jacob deGrom

Records 10 Strikeouts
Ross Chastain

Don't Count Out Ross Chastain At Kansas
Alex Bowman

Confident Despite Qualifying 21st At Kansas
Brad Keselowski

Qualifies 36th At Kansas As Playoff Hopes Continue To Dim
Jose Altuve

Exits Early On Saturday
Kyle Busch

Fast In Practice But Will Start 35th At Kansas After Hitting Wall In Qualifying
Oneil Cruz

Exits With Back Issue
Erik Jones

Has Struggled At Kansas In Next Gen Era
Austin Dillon

Looking To Keep Momentum Rolling At Kansas
AJ Allmendinger

The Slowest In Practice At Kansas
Ricky Stenhouse Jr

. A Strong Place-Differential Play At Kansas
Ty Dillon

A Safe Mid-Pack Pick At Kansas
Anthony Stolarz

Progressing But Not Close To Return
Miro Heiskanen

Ruled Out For Game 3 Against Jets
Mark Jankowski

Remains Out Saturday
Calvin Pickard

Misses Game 3 Against Golden Knights
Brayden McNabb

Out On Saturday
Brandon Saad

Unavailable For Game 3 Against Oilers
Pavel Dorofeyev

Set To Return Saturday
Cleveland Browns

Cleveland Signs Rookies Dylan Sampson, Carson Schwesinger
Blayne Taylor

Signs With Indianapolis
Jauan Jennings

Still Views Himself As The No. 1. Option In San Francisco
Deone Walker

Being Eased Into Rookie Minicamp
Tyler Shough

Now In Line To Start For Saints?
Derek Carr

Announces His Retirement
Nicolas Roy

Avoids Suspension
Auston Matthews

Picks Up Two Assists In Losing Effort
John Tavares

Scores Twice In Friday's Loss
Evan Rodrigues

Ends Slump With Two Assists
Brad Marchand

Secures Victory In Game 3 Against Maple Leafs
Nikolaj Ehlers

Tallies Three Points In Game 2 Victory
Connor Hellebuyck

Records Fourth Postseason Shutout
Lourdes Gurriel Jr.

Launches Grand Slam, Racks Up Five RBI On Friday
Michael Lorenzen

Dominates Red Sox In Pitcher's Duel
Shohei Ohtani

Smacks Three Extra-Base Hits
Ketel Marte

Homers Twice, Reaches Base Four Times
Jasson Domínguez

Jasson Dominguez Smashes Three Homers On Friday
Erick Fedde

Fires First Career Shutout
San Francisco 49ers

49ers Waive Drake Jackson
Andre Dillard

49ers Sign Andre Dillard
Jaylon Smith

Trying Out With Raiders
Kelvin Banks

Jr. Signs Four-Year Rookie Deal
Jalon Walker

Signs Rookie Deal With Falcons
Kaleb Johnson

Steelers Sign Kaleb Johnson To Four-Year Rookie Deal
Lil'Jordan Humphrey

Giants Cut Lil'Jordan Humphrey
Rashod Bateman

Cowboys Looked Into Trading For Rashod Bateman
Colston Loveland

Unavailable For Rookie Minicamp While Rehabbing Shoulder
Tarik Skubal

Records 12 Strikeouts In Win
Jorge Soler

Scratched On Friday With Groin Tightness
De'Andre Hunter

Ready To Play Friday
Evan Mobley

Returns Friday
Darius Garland

Officially Available Friday
Sam Hauser

Likely To Remain Out On Saturday
K'Andre Miller

Working His Way Back From Surgery
Mark Jankowski

May Return To Hurricanes Lineup Saturday
Charlie Lindgren

Returns To Practice Friday
Pavel Dorofeyev

Traveling With Team For Game 3
Chase Petty

Reds Calling Up Chase Petty
Miro Heiskanen

Still Out On Friday
Austin Hays

Activated And Starting On Friday
Hunter Greene

Placed On 15-Day Injured List With Groin Strain
Tai Felton

Minnesota Signs Tai Felton Among Four Rookies
Belal Muhammad

Set For His First Title Defense
Jaylin Noel

Signs With Houston
Jack Della Maddalena

Has A Chance To Become UFC Champion
Manon Fiorot

Looks To Become The New Champion
Kyle Williams

Patriots Signs Kyle Williams To Rookie Deal
Valentina Shevchenko

Set For UFC 315 Co-Main Event
Aiemann Zahabi

Looks For His Sixth Win In A Row
José Aldo

Jose Aldo Set For Featherweight Bout
Nick Chubb

Unlikely To Return To Cleveland
Natalia Silva

Looks To Extend Her Win Streak
Alexa Grasso

Returns At UFC 315
Iván Herrera

Ivan Herrera Activated Off 10-Day Injured List, Starting On Friday
Kyle Prepolec

Set For UFC 315 Main-Card Opener
Benoît Saint Denis

Benoit Saint Denis Looks To Get Back In The Win Column
Donovan Peoples-Jones

Saints Invite Donovan Peoples-Jones To Camp
Kenneth Grant

Signs Four-Year Rookie Deal With Dolphins
Kris Bubic

Throws Seven Scoreless Innings
Bobby Witt Jr.

Posts Four-Hit Game
Stephen Curry

Unsure When He Can Return From Injury
De'Andre Hunter

Iffy For Friday
Evan Mobley

May Miss Another Game
Darius Garland

Questionable For Game 3
Hunter Greene

Diagnosed With Grade 1 Groin Strain
Nikola Jokić

Nikola Jokic Held In Check Wednesday
Chet Holmgren

Logs Double-Double In Game 2 Win
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

Leads Thunder To Blowout Win
Derrick White

Close To Another Double-Double In Game 2
Jaylen Brown

Struggles In Second Half Wednesday Night
Josh Hart

Leads All Scorers With 23 Points In Game 2 Against Celtics
Mikal Bridges

Makes Late Impact Again
Karl-Anthony Towns

Turns It Around In Game 2
Jalen Brunson

Leads The Knicks To Another Win
Kristaps Porzingis

Logs Only 14 Minutes In Game 2
Jayson Tatum

Has Another Rough Shooting Night
Rob Dillingham

Remains Out For Game 2 Against Warriors
Al Horford

Starts Game 2 Against Knicks
Will Zalatoris

Looking To Find Consistency Heading Into Philadelphia
Justin Rose

In Solid Form Ahead Of Truist Championship
Russell Henley

Looks To Keep Building Momentum At Truist Championship
Brian Harman

In Great Form Heading Into Philadelphia
Corey Conners

Red-Hot Heading Into Truist Championship
Daniel Berger

In Great Form Ahead Of Truist Championship
Sahith Theegala

Struggles Continue Ahead Of Truist Championship
Xander Schauffele

Eyeing Strong Finish At Truist Championship
Collin Morikawa

Poised To Rebound At The Truist Championship
Tony Finau

Trying To Find Form In Philadelphia
Justin Thomas

Looking To Keep Winning Ways Going Art Truist Championship
Maverick McNealy

In Great Form Ahead Of Truist Championship
Michael Kim

Looking To Recapture Elite Form In Philadelphia
Rory McIlroy

The Headlining Favorite At Truist Championship
Tommy Fleetwood

Eyeing First Victory At Truist Championship
Patrick Cantlay

Looking To Stay Hot In Philadelphia
Andrew Novak

Looking To Keep Hot Stretch Of Play Going In Philadelphia
Shane Lowry

Still Having An Amazing Season Ahead Of Truist Championship
Stephan Jaeger

Trying For Top-10 Result In Philadelphia
Aaron Rai

Heads To Philadelphia Playing Well
Lucas Glover

Hot And Cold Heading To Truist Championship
Deiveson Figueiredo

Loses Back-To-Back Fights
Cory Sandhagen

Gets Back In The Win Column
Reinier de Ridder

Extends His Win Streak To Four
Bo Nickal

Suffers His First Loss At UFC Des Moines
Santiago Ponzinibbio

Suffers TKO Loss At UFC Des Moines
Daniel Rodriguez

Wins Back-To-Back Fights
Daniel Marcos

Undefeated No More
Montel Jackson

Extends His Win Streak
Serhiy Sidey

Gets Decision Win At UFC Des Moines
Jeremy Stephens

Unsuccessful In His UFC Return
Mason Jones

Wins Decision At UFC Des Moines
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF