This article is part of our Backfield Breakdown series.
All eyes remain on the San Francisco backfield, which took yet another turn (for the worse) this week. Derrick Henry and Christian McCaffrey aside, it was a down week for RB production, including three guys who topped 80 percent snap share yet finished with single-digit fantasy points.
Steelers rookie Najee Harris led all backs in snap share for a second straight week, and while he struggled on the ground again, Harris made up for it with his contributions as a pass catcher. Saquon Barkley, Alvin Kamara, Joe Mixon and David Montgomery put up disappointing stat lines despite dominating snaps, but all should have big games soon enough if the usage continues.
We'll take a look at all 16 games and 32 backfields below, but first let's check out Week 2 leaderboards, injuries, routes and goal-line work, followed by waiver picks, sleepers and drops for Week 3...
Week 2 Usage Leaderboard
Top 10 in Bold. Only shows RBs with more than five touches or 30 percent of snaps.
Snap % | Carries | Carry Share | Targets | Tgt Share | Pass Snaps | Touch Share | PPR pts | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Najee Harris | 94.6% | 10 | 71.4% | 5 | 12.5% | 40 | 36.6% | 19.1 |
2 | Saquon Barkley | 84.1% | 13 | 46.4% | 3 | 9.4% | 36 | 30.0% | 8.9 |
3 | Alvin Kamara | 84.1% | 8 | 47.1% | 6 | 28.6% | 26 | 42.9% | 7 |
4 | Joe Mixon | 83.6% | 20 | 100.0% | 2 | 6.9% | 25 | 53.9% | 8.1 |
5 | David Montgomery | 80.0% | 20 | 58.8% | 4 | 17.4% | 22 | 46.9% | 10.9 |
6 | Dalvin Cook | 77.0% | 22 | 81.5% | 3 | 9.4% | 22 | 49.0% | 16.8 |
7 | Derrick Henry | 76.1% | 35 | 87.5% | 6 | 15.4% | 26 | 61.2% | 47.7 |
8 | James Robinson | 72.7% | 11 | 68.8% | 3 | 9.1% | 27 | 46.7% | 9.4 |
9 | Kenyan Drake | 71.2% | 7 | 28.0% | 6 | 16.20% | 37 | 22.6% | 10.5 |
10 | Christian McCaffrey | 71.1% | 24 | 72.7% | 6 | 17.1% | 29 | 49.2% | 24.7 |
11 | Ezekiel Elliott | 71.0% | 16 | 51.6% | 2 | 7.4% | 26 | 33.3% | 17.7 |
12 | Miles Sanders | 68.4% | 13 | 44.8% | 2 | 8.3% | 21 | 34.2% | 6.9 |
13 | Darrell Henderson | 66.7% | 13 | 44.8% | 5 | 17.2% | 24 | 33.3% | 17.2 |
14 | Devin Singletary | 66.2% | 13 | 43.3% | 3 | 10.3% | 25 | 31.9% | 17.1 |
15 | Clyde Edwards-Helaire | 64.7% | 13 | 72.2% | 0 | 0% | 18 | 31.0% | 2.6 |
16 | Chase Edmonds | 63.9% | 8 | 38.1% | 5 | 14.7% | 28 | 26.0% | 12.5 |
17 | Mike Davis | 63.4% | 9 | 45.0% | 7 | 14.6% | 33 | 29.1% | 13.3 |
18 | Chris Carson | 63.0% | 13 | 72.2% | 0 | 0.0% | 19 | 32.5% | 15.1 |
19 | Austin Ekeler | 62.9% | 9 | 47.4% | 9 | 22.5% | 31 | 36.0% | 22.5 |
20 | Elijah Mitchell | 61.4% | 17 | 44.7% | 2 | 6.7% | 16 | 31.7% | 7.3 |
21 | Myles Gaskin | 60.8% | 5 | 25.0% | 5 | 11.9% | 37 | 20% | 8.6 |
22 | Antonio Gibson | 60.6% | 13 | 59.1% | 2 | 4.6% | 27 | 26.8% | 9.3 |
23 | Melvin Gordon | 59.4% | 13 | 43.3% | 2 | 5.9% | 26 | 26.8% | 8.9 |
24 | Nick Chubb | 57.4% | 11 | 32.4% | 1 | 4.8% | 16 | 22.6% | 16.8 |
25 | James White | 49.2% | 5 | 20.8% | 6 | 21.4% | 23 | 23.9% | 18.5 |
26 | Leonard Fournette | 49.2% | 11 | 52.4% | 4 | 11.1% | 20 | 33.3% | 11.6 |
27 | Ty'Son Williams | 47.9% | 13 | 31.7% | 2 | 8.0% | 14 | 25.4% | 11.3 |
28 | Jonathan Taylor | 46.2% | 15 | 57.7% | 1 | 2.9% | 15 | 33.3% | 6.3 |
29 | Ty Johnson | 45.2% | 12 | 38.7% | 0 | 0.0% | 19 | 24.0% | 5 |
30 | Michael Carter | 45.2% | 11 | 35.5% | 3 | 9.1% | 20 | 26.0% | 10.8 |
31 | J.D. McKissic | 43.7% | 4 | 18.2% | 6 | 13.6% | 23 | 16.1% | 20.3 |
32 | David Johnson | 42.6% | 6 | 21.4% | 2 | 7.1% | 18 | 17.4% | 6.7 |
33 | Damien Harris | 42.4% | 16 | 66.7% | 1 | 3.6% | 9 | 37.0% | 13.4 |
34 | Ronald Jones | 41.3% | 6 | 28.6% | 3 | 8.3% | 16 | 15.6% | 4.6 |
35 | Javonte Williams | 40.6% | 13 | 43.3% | 1 | 2.9% | 13 | 25.0% | 8.4 |
36 | James Conner | 39.3% | 8 | 38.1% | 0 | 0% | 11 | 16.0% | 2.6 |
37 | Kareem Hunt | 37.7% | 13 | 38.2% | 1 | 4.8% | 8 | 26.4% | 6.3 |
38 | Latavius Murray | 37.0% | 9 | 22.0% | 0 | 0% | 9 | 15.3% | 9.6 |
39 | Nyheim Hines | 36.9% | 1 | 3.8% | 2 | 5.9% | 21 | 4.2% | 3.2 |
40 | JaMycal Hasty | 35.7% | 5 | 13.2% | 5 | 16.7% | 15 | 15.0% | 9.9 |
41 | Tony Pollard | 33.9% | 13 | 41.9% | 3 | 11.1% | 8 | 29.6% | 23.0 |
42 | Cordarrelle Patterson | 33.8% | 7 | 35.0% | 6 | 12.5% | 17 | 21.8% | 23.9 |
43 | Kenneth Gainwell | 31.6% | 6 | 20.7% | 3 | 12.5% | 7 | 19.5% | 7.2 |
44 | Mark Ingram | 31.1% | 14 | 50.0% | 2 | 7.1% | 5 | 32.6% | 5 |
45 | Salvon Ahmed | 31.1% | 6 | 30.0% | 3 | 7.1% | 15 | 13% | 1.7 |
46 | Peyton Barber | 28.8% | 13 | 52.0% | 0 | 0% | 4 | 24.53% | 3.2 |
47 | Zack Moss | 27.7% | 8 | 26.7% | 2 | 6.9% | 8 | 21.3% | 15.4 |
48 | Tony Jones | 27.3% | 3 | 17.6% | 0 | 0.0% | 5 | 10.7% | 0.7 |
49 | Sony Michel | 26.7% | 10 | 34.5% | 0 | 0% | 6 | 20.8% | 4.6 |
50 | Chuba Hubbard | 25.0% | 8 | 24.2% | 0 | 0% | 10 | 13.6% | 1 |
51 | Phillip Lindsay | 23.0% | 5 | 17.9% | 1 | 3.6% | 6 | 13.0% | 9.4 |
Week 2 Injury Report
Inactives
- Josh Jacobs (toe)
- Rashaad Penny (calf)
In-Game Injuries
- Elijah Mitchell (shoulder) returned to the game after a brief exit.
- Trey Sermon suffered a concussion and didn't return.
- JaMycal Hasty suffered a high ankle sprain. He's out for Week 3, at least.
- Darrell Henderson injured his ribs early in the fourth quarter and didn't return.
- Christian McCaffrey (calf/cramps) briefly left the game but returned.
- Dalvin Cook played through an ankle sprain.
Week 2 Route Report
Includes all RBs with 10+ routes and/or multiple targets
Red-Zone Report
Inside the 5-Yard Line (Week 2 only)
Opportunities | Rush Att. | Rush TD | Targets | Rec. TD | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jonathan Taylor | 5 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Chris Carson | 2 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
Damien Harris | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Christian McCaffrey | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Mark Ingram | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Alvin Kamara | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Nick Chubb | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Darrell Henderson | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Cordarrelle Patterson | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Derrick Henry | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Tony Pollard | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
J.D. McKissic | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Ty Johnson | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Elijah Mitchell | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Ty'Son Williams | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Miles Sanders | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
JaMycal Hasty | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Zack Moss | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Andy Janovich | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Darrel Williams | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Inside the 5-Yard Line (Weeks 1+2)
Goal-Line Looks | Rush Att. | Rush TD | Targets | Rec. TD | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jonathan Taylor | 6 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Mark Ingram | 5 | 5 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Darrell Henderson | 3 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
Nick Chubb | 3 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Derrick Henry | 3 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Alvin Kamara | 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
JaMycal Hasty | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Chris Carson | 2 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
Christian McCaffrey | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Joe Mixon | 2 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Damien Harris | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Austin Ekeler | 2 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Andy Janovich | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Ty'Son Williams | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Ezekiel Elliott | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Najee Harris | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Cordarrelle Patterson | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Darrel Williams | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Tony Pollard | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Dalvin Cook | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Josh Jacobs | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
J.D. McKissic | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
David Montgomery | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Phillip Lindsay | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Jamaal Williams | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Miles Sanders | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Ty Johnson | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Zack Moss | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Elijah Mitchell | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Kareem Hunt | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Mike Davis | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Red Zone Opportunities (Weeks 1 + 2)
Only includes players with two or more RZ looks. There are four RBs with 20+ total touches who haven't seen enough red-zone work to qualify: Antonio Gibson (one), Miles Sanders (one), Myles Gaskin (one), James Robinson (zero).
Red-Zone Looks | Rush Att. | Rush TD | Targets | Rec. TD | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jonathan Taylor | 13 | 12 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Christian McCaffrey | 12 | 11 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Mark Ingram | 11 | 10 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Derrick Henry | 11 | 10 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
Leonard Fournette | 9 | 6 | 0 | 3 | 0 |
Darrell Henderson | 9 | 7 | 2 | 2 | 0 |
Nick Chubb | 8 | 8 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
Alvin Kamara | 8 | 6 | 0 | 2 | 1 |
Austin Ekeler | 8 | 7 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Saquon Barkley | 7 | 5 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
Chris Carson | 6 | 6 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
Damien Harris | 6 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
David Montgomery | 6 | 5 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Ezekiel Elliott | 5 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Mike Davis | 5 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
Ty'Son Williams | 5 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Najee Harris | 5 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
Devin Singletary | 5 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Cordarrelle Patterson | 5 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
Kareem Hunt | 5 | 5 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
James Conner | 5 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Javonte Williams | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Zack Moss | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
Melvin Gordon | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Michael Carter | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
James White | 3 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
D'Andre Swift | 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Phillip Lindsay | 3 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
JaMycal Hasty | 3 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Elijah Mitchell | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Josh Jacobs | 3 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
Salvon Ahmed | 3 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
Kenyan Drake | 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Chase Edmonds | 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Dalvin Cook | 3 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Latavius Murray | 3 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
Clyde Edwards-Helaire | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Joe Mixon | 2 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Andy Janovich | 2 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Malcolm Brown | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
David Johnson | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 1 |
Reggie Gilliam | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Damien Williams | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Tony Pollard | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Kenneth Gainwell | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Ty Johnson | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Tony Jones | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Waivers and Sleepers
Limited to RBs that are rostered in half or less or Yahoo leagues.
Waivers, Pt. 1 — Potential Week 3 Starters/Streamers
- Alexander Mattison - 33% rostered
- James White - 42%
- Kenneth Gainwell - 36%
- J.D. McKissic - 29%
- Cordarrelle Patterson - 15%
- Michael Carter - 50%
- Ty Johnson - 9%
- Peyton Barber - 10%
Waivers, Pt. 2 — Bench Stashes & Sleepers
- Chuba Hubbard - 16%
- Tony Jones - 24%
- Devonta Freeman - 8%
- Jeff Wilson - 13%
- Damien Williams - 8%
- Carlos Hyde - 19%
- Marlon Mack - 6%
- Jerick McKinnon - 2%
- Salvon Ahmed - 2%
- JaMycal Hasty - 6%
- Benny Snell - 2%
- Anthony McFarland - 1%
Drops and Benchings
Drop'em
- Devontae Booker
- Phillip Lindsay
- Rhamondre Stevenson
- Tevin Coleman
- Malcolm Brown
- Giovani Bernard
- Larry Rountree
Bench'em
Game-by-Game Breakdowns
Giants (29) at Washington Football Team (30)
Snap Share | Carries | Carry Share | Targets | Target Share | Pass Snaps | Touch Share | PPR pts. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saquon Barkley | 84.1% | 13 | 46.4% | 3 | 9.4% | 36 | 30% | 8.9 |
Devontae Booker | 14.5% | 2 | 7.1% | 1 | 3.1% | 5 | 6% | 2.1 |
- With Barkley returning to his three-down role and logging 58 snaps, third-stringer Gary Brightwell strictly played special teams (the rookie had one catch on eight snaps Week 1).
- In the first half, Barkley played 74.2% of snaps and saw five carries and two targets.
- After halftime, Barkley logged 92.1% of snaps with eight carries and one target.
- Barkley's 41-yard run in the first quarter accounted for 59.4% of his total yards.
- QB Daniel Jones had a 9-91-1 rushing line, with a six-yard score in the first quarter and a 58-yard-almost-score that was reduced to a 46-yard gain with a 10-yard holding penalty. He had a 6-27-1 rushing line Week 1, with a four-yard score on the final play of regulation.
- Jones has accounted for 15 of the Giants' 48 rush attempts through two weeks, including 13 of 46 non-kneeldown carries (28.3%).
- Looking at tailback touches only, Barkley has 23 of the 29 carries (79.3%) and six of the nine targets (66.7%) through two weeks. He should be back in all lineups for a Week 3 home game against Atlanta.
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Tgts. | Tgt. % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Antonio Gibson | 60.6% | 13 | 59.1% | 2 | 4.6% | 27 | 26.8% | 9.3 |
J.D. McKissic | 43.7% | 4 | 18.2% | 6 | 13.6% | 23 | 16.1% | 20.3 |
- McKissic rebounded in a huge way, after getting one target and one carry on 36% of snaps Week 1. A better day for the Washington offense helped, and so did a pair of long drives in the two-minute drill (one at the end of each half).
- McKissic had four touches for 12 yards and a TD on Washington's final drive of the first half (scoring from two yards out on third downs). And then three touches for 13 yards on the last drive of the second half. But his best play of the night — a 56-yard reception — came with about five minutes left in the game.
- Outside of the two two-minute warnings, Gibson played 42 of 55 of snaps (76.4%). And McKissic only 15 of 55 (27.3%).
- Through two weeks, Gibson is averaging 16.5 carries for 79.5 yards and 2.5 catches for 11 yards on 63% of snaps. Which is similar to his workload when he was healthy during the second half of last season, though he finished his rookie year with an average of only 12.1 carries per game (his role was smaller in September, and a toe injury limited his snaps in two December games).
Saints (7) at Panthers (26)
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alvin Kamara | 84.1% | 8 | 47.1% | 6 | 28.6% | 26 | 42.9% | 7 |
Tony Jones | 27.3% | 3 | 17.6% | 0 | 0.0% | 5 | 10.7% | 0.7 |
- Kamara landed on the wrong side of a blowout after getting 20 carries and four targets the previous week. Buy low, if anyone is foolish enough. Kamara has a team-high 10 targets through two games, with his 24.4% target share leading all NFL running backs. The 30-point fantasy games will come when the Saints play in more competitive contests... which should happen pretty often given that they're neither a great team nor a bad one.
- Kamara and Darren Waller (29.2%) are the only non-WRs above 24 percent target share through two games. Ok, Travis Kelce (23.8%) is pretty close. And Christian McCaffrey (22.1%) isn't too far back either. Pretty funny that the list is already exactly who we expected after a sample of only two games; a nice reminder that target share is stable and predictable relative to darn near everything else we analyze about football.
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Christian McCaffrey | 71.1% | 24 | 72.7% | 6 | 17.1% | 29 | 49.2% | 24.7 |
Chuba Hubbard | 25.0% | 8 | 24.2% | 0 | 0% | 10 | 13.6% | 1 |
- McCaffrey missed part of the third quarter while bothered by his calf/cramps, but he returned in the fourth to take eight touches for 22 yards and a TD. Seems like he's fine.
- Hubbard got only two carries in the first half. He had four in the fourth quarter, including three in a row to finish out the game. So his workload was aided by garbage time in addition to the McCaffrey injury, i.e., don't expect another eight touches next week.
Bengals (17) at Bears (20)
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Joe Mixon | 83.6% | 20 | 100.0% | 2 | 6.9% | 25 | 53.9% | 8.1 |
Samaje Perine | 5.5% | 0 | 0.0% | 1 | 3.5% | 3 | 0.0% | 0 |
Chris Evans | 3.6% | 0 | 0.00% | 1 | 3.5% | 2 | 2.6% | 2.4 |
- Mixon struggled, but the workload remains promising. Through two weeks, Mixon has played 80.6% of snaps and handled 49 carries and six targets. And he's run 40 routes on Joe Burrow's 66 dropbacks (60.6 percent).
- Last year, in his six games, Mixon ran a route on 45.1% of Burrow's dropbacks.
- Mixon played seven of Cincy's 11 snaps (63.6%) on 3rd-and-medium/long in Week 2, up from five of 11 (41.7%) in Week 1. In other words, Mixon definitely is getting a larger share of the passing-down work post-Gio; it just hasn't led to much receiving production yet (five catches for 26 yards on six targets).
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
David Montgomery | 80.0% | 20 | 58.8% | 4 | 17.4% | 22 | 46.9% | 10.9 |
Damien Williams | 23.1% | 2 | 5.9% | 3 | 13.0% | 10 | 8.2% | 2.4 |
- Though his production suffered, Montgomery actually took on a larger workload than in Week 1 (59% snaps, 16 carries, 1 target). It was basically the same as his 2020 usage, with a role that included most of the passing-down work.
- Montgomery got 10 of 15 snaps (66.7%) on 3rd-and-medium/long, with Williams handling the other five. Montgomery also got four of seven (57.1%) in the season opener, so it looks like the Bears prefer him on both early downs and late downs (but also trust Williams to handle either, or both).
- Montgomery got the team's only snap inside the 5-yard line, but it was a pass play.
Texans (21) at Browns (31)
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
David Johnson | 42.6% | 6 | 21.4% | 2 | 7.1% | 18 | 17.4% | 6.7 |
Mark Ingram | 31.1% | 14 | 50.0% | 2 | 7.1% | 5 | 32.6% | 5 |
Phillip Lindsay | 23.0% | 5 | 17.9% | 1 | 3.6% | 6 | 13.0% | 9.4 |
Rex Burkhead | 18.0% | 0 | 0.0% | 0 | 0.0% | 9 | 0.0% | 0 |
- Ingram now has 40 carries (plus three targets) on 55 snaps this year. The broadcasters weren't kidding when they mentioned how his presence on the field signals a run play.
- Burkhead didn't get any touches but did play eight of the 16 snaps on third down. Johnson got nine of 16. Yeah, this is a mess.
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nick Chubb | 57.4% | 11 | 32.4% | 1 | 4.8% | 16 | 22.6% | 16.8 |
Kareem Hunt | 37.7% | 13 | 38.2% | 1 | 4.8% | 8 | 26.4% | 6.3 |
Demetric Felton | 4.9% | 0 | 0.0% | 2 | 9.5% | 3 | 3.8% | 13.1 |
D'Ernest Johnson | 4.9% | 0 | 0.00% | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% | 0 |
- This was a low-volume game overall, with a lot of run plays from both teams and very few incompletions. Plus, QB Baker Mayfield and FB Andy Janovich both stole short rushing TDs.
- Chubb played both inside-the-five snaps, with one being the Janovich touchdown and the other being a Chubb carry (no TD). Chubb's score came from 23 yards out in the fourth quarter.
- Chubb has played four of five snaps inside the 5-yard line through two weeks, including three carries. Janovich and Hunt have one carry apiece inside the five.
- Chubb may have taken more pass snaps overall, but Hunt still handled obvious passing downs, taking five of the six chances on 3rd-and-medium/long.
- Felton's first NFL touch was a 33-yard TD on a screen pass from the slot. He played three snaps, but none came in the backfield. The rookie may eventually lose RB eligibility where he has it.
Rams (27) at Colts (24)
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Darrell Henderson | 66.7% | 13 | 44.8% | 5 | 17.2% | 24 | 33.3% | 17.2 |
Sony Michel | 26.7% | 10 | 34.5% | 0 | 0% | 6 | 20.8% | 4.6 |
Jake Funk | 5.0% | 0 | 0.0% | 0 | 0% | 2 | 0.0% | 0 |
- Henderson played all 39 offensive snaps through three quarters, then injured his ankle on the first play of Q4.
- Michel played 16 of 20 snaps (80.0%) after Henderson's injury, taking 10 carries for 46 yards.
- Start Michel if Henderson is out next week; McVay's lead back will score fantasy points, functioning knees or not. And the Rams barely used Funk even after Henderson's exit, instead giving Michel carry after carry.
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
Jonathan Taylor | 46.2% | 15 | 57.7% | 1 | 2.9% | 15 | 33.3% | 6.3 |
Nyheim Hines | 36.9% | 1 | 3.8% | 2 | 5.9% | 21 | 4.2% | 3.2 |
Marlon Mack | 18.5% | 5 | 19.2% | 1 | 2.9% | 4 | 10.4% | 1.6 |
- Mack rejoined the Colts offense after a Week 1 healthy scratch. Five carries and 12 snaps might not sound like much, but it's enough to bother Taylor's fantasy managers.
- Taylor played all 16 snaps in the first quarter but only 14 snaps (28.6%) thereafter. In fact, Mack had just three fewer carries and two fewer snaps after the first quarter. Yikes.
- And it actually looks worse if you sort by Indy's first three drives (22 of 24 snaps) vs. the rest of the game (eight of 41, or 19.5%... did I say "Yikes" yet?). The Colts did trail by 11 points for much of the third quarter, and they were either tied or down by three for most of the fourth.
- After the first quarter, Hines got each of the six snaps on 3rd-and-medium/long. Taylor took one of those snaps in Q1.
- Taylor played six of seven snaps inside the 5-yard line and took five carries in that area, but he didn't score. That included three consecutive stuffs from the 1-yard line on the opening drive.
- I wouldn't sell low on Taylor right now, but I might try to move him next time he has a big game if the Colts are still crushing on Hines and Mack intermittently. JT is at 50.3% snap share through two games... all the way up from 50.2% last season :)
- It also isn't great for Hines if Mack is involved. They mostly play in different packages/situations, but Taylor could take more from Hines' pie if he's losing some first downs to Mack. Adding another body is never good, even if the effect is indirect.
Patriots (25) at Jets (6)
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
James White | 49.2% | 5 | 20.8% | 6 | 21.4% | 23 | 23.9% | 18.5 |
Damien Harris | 42.4% | 16 | 66.7% | 1 | 3.6% | 9 | 37.0% | 13.4 |
J.J. Taylor | 8.5% | 2 | 8.30% | 0 | 0.0% | 3 | 4.4% | 0.3 |
- Rhamondre Stevenson was a healthy scratch, after fumbling in his NFL debut. It's not automatic that he'd just take over Harris' role if Harris were to miss time; the Pats could also use Taylor a little more, or even Brandon Bolden.
- White and Harris got six touches apiece in the first quarter, both playing 10 of 22 snaps (Taylor got the other two).
- Harris finished Sunday's action ranked sixth in the NFL for carries (39) and eighth in rushing yards (162) this season.
- Harris got 75% of snaps and eight carries in the fourth quarter but gained only 12 yards.
- White's 13 targets through two weeks are good for second on the team and tied for second among NFL running backs, but he's run only 32 routes, which isn't even top 20 among running backs.
- White has always been targeted on a huge share of his routes, including 41.3% last year. He isn't likely to hit that mark again — even though he's there through two weeks — but it is possible for him to average 5-6 targets on only ~15 routes. For real upside, a.k.a. more routes/targets, White would need the Pats to place more emphasis on Mac Jones and less on Harris.
- Matchups have helped, but cumulative backfield production is way up from last year. Cam Newton may have helped with YPC, but he was terrible for the RB routes/targets and goal-line carries.
- Harris has both of New England's inside-the-five carries this year, and four of the five inside-the-10 carries. However, his snap share (48.1%) and receiving production (three catches for 19 yards) do reflect some of the preseason concerns.
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ty Johnson | 45.2% | 12 | 38.7% | 0 | 0.0% | 19 | 24.0% | 5 |
Michael Carter | 45.2% | 11 | 35.5% | 3 | 9.1% | 20 | 26.0% | 10.8 |
Tevin Coleman | 9.6% | 5 | 16.1% | 0 | 0.0% | 2 | 10.0% | 2.4 |
- Johnson got the start but split work with Carter throughout. Coleman had two carries in the second quarter and three in the third.
- Johnson got seven of the nine snaps on 3rd-and-medium/long. Carter took the other two.
- Johnson played 38.7% of snaps on first down, 38.5% on second down, 69.2% on third down.
- Carter got 48.4% of first downs, 50.0% of second downs and 30.8% on third downs. So maybe he'll see a few more carries and Johnson a few more targets in future weeks, despite the opposite happening Sunday. Or maybe not. This was pretty close to interchangeable use, and both guys are smaller, speedy backs. Either way, there isn't likely to be much production to go around.
- Carter got four of seven red-zone snaps and took three carries. Johnson played the other three and took two carries.
- Carter played two of three snaps inside the 10 and took two carries. Johnson played the other and took a carry.
- However, Johnson got the lone inside-the-five look... he was stuffed from the 2-yard line on a 3rd-and-goal in the second quarter.
Broncos (23) at Jaguars (13)
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Melvin Gordon | 59.4% | 13 | 43.3% | 2 | 5.9% | 26 | 26.8% | 8.9 |
Javonte Williams | 40.6% | 13 | 43.3% | 1 | 2.9% | 13 | 25.0% | 8.4 |
- This was pretty close to a 50/50 split for the second straight week, though tilted slightly more toward the veteran, especially when we look at routes and pass snaps. Gordon now has a 5-2 advantage in targets, while Williams has a 27-24 lead in carries. Both are dicey-but-startable in most fantasy leagues, with Gordon the better play short term.
- Denver's final three snaps of the game were the only three that occurred inside Jacksonville's 10-yard line. Williams played all three, but it doesn't mean much given that the Broncos were up by 10 and the opponent had no timeouts. It was pretty much the same deal as last week, with the two backs splitting clock-killing work before Williams took over in true garbage time.
- In other words, Gordon's managers shouldn't panic if they read that Williams has played 80% of snaps inside the 10-yard line. (It's a five-snap sample from mostly garbage time.)
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
James Robinson | 72.7% | 11 | 68.8% | 3 | 9.1% | 27 | 46.7% | 9.4 |
Carlos Hyde | 25.5% | 2 | 12.5% | 2 | 6.1% | 10 | 6.7% | 0.7 |
- In Week 1, Robinson played 63% of snaps — including 61.8% of first downs — but got only five carries. Whereas Hyde logged only 34.2%, yet led the team with nine carries.
- As predicted, Robinson got more of the rushing work this week, though production remained lackluster as he was again stuck in negative game script with a struggling Jags team.
- Robinson is benchable if you have a trustworthy RB2 to replace him with. But he does have nine targets and 67.7% snap share through two weeks, so I wouldn't bench him for someone like Javonte or Devin Singletary.
Bills (35) at Dolphins (0)
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Devin Singletary | 66.2% | 13 | 43.3% | 3 | 10.3% | 25 | 31.9% | 17.1 |
Zack Moss | 27.7% | 8 | 26.7% | 2 | 6.9% | 8 | 21.3% | 15.4 |
Matt Breida | 3.1% | 0 | 0.00% | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
- Moss rejoined the offense after a Week 1 scratch, but he played only 16.7% of snaps in the first half, while Singletary handled 83.3% of snaps, 10 carries and one target before the break.
- Singletary and Moss both played four of eight snaps inside the 10-yard line, with Moss getting three carries (two TDs) and Singletary one (no TD; he scored from 46 yards out on the opening drive.
- Moss scored a 7-yarder early in the fourth quarter to make it 28-0, then a one-yarder midway through the fourth to make it 35-0. But Singletary did get snaps/touches on both drives, so it's not like he'd been pulled for the day when Moss scored... at least not for the first TD. There's a pretty good chance the Bills prefer Moss over Singletary for goal-line work again, even if Singletary has increased his lead everywhere else. And this is still a good bet to be a bottom-10 offense for RB production, given Josh Allen's dominance of high-value opportunities (and all opportunities, at that).
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Myles Gaskin | 60.8% | 5 | 25.0% | 5 | 11.9% | 37 | 20% | 8.6 |
Salvon Ahmed | 31.1% | 6 | 30.0% | 3 | 7.1% | 15 | 13% | 1.7 |
Malcolm Brown | 12.2% | 5 | 25.00% | 0 | 0 | 4 | 11% | 2.1 |
- Gaskin played 65.4% of first downs, 60.0% of second downs and 57.9% of third downs. That's three-down usage, but with Ahmed (and occasionally Brown) subbing in. And in an offense that looked bad even before its starting QB was injured. So not a ton of upside.
- Gaskin's eight pass-blocking snaps were three more than any other RB this weekend (Najee Harris had five). And PFF's charting suggests Gaskin was a disaster on those eight snaps, somehow allowing six pressures, four hurries and two QB hits. Maybe that opens the door for Ahmed, though he had a fourth-down drop in garbage time and has otherwise been quiet in his limited role so far.
- Gaskin's stat lines so far are very similar to how he started last season... lots of snaps and targets but not many carries, in part because the Dolphins aren't playing well. Maybe he turns it on again, or maybe the team never gets a running game going this year. Or maybe the mediocre start allows Ahmed/Brown to get more work. TBD. But it's not like Gaskin has lost the lead role; at least not yet. In fact...
- Brown got four of his five carries in the fourth quarter. Ahmed got three of his six carries in the fourth.
- Prior to the fourth quarter, Gaskin played 75.9% of snaps, taking five of nine RB carries and five of six RB targets. (There's still hope for RB2 production.)
Raiders (26) at Steelers (17)
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
Kenyan Drake | 71.2% | 7 | 28.0% | 6 | 16.20% | 37 | 22.64% | 10.5 |
Peyton Barber | 28.8% | 13 | 52.0% | 0 | 0% | 4 | 24.53% | 3.2 |
- Josh Jacobs (toe) was inactive, setting the stage for the highly anticipated return of Peyton Barber.
- Barber didn't play many snaps (19), but got carries (13) on most of them. Eight of Barber's 13 carries came on the final two drives.
- The Raiders didn't run any plays inside the 5-yard line, but Drake did play each of four snaps inside the 10, including one carry.
- Drake played 80.9% of snaps through three quarters, with five carries and six targets to Barber's five carries and zero targets.
- But then Drake dropped to 47.4% in Q4, with two carries to Barber's eight.
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
Najee Harris | 94.6% | 10 | 71.4% | 5 | 12.5% | 40 | 36.6% | 19.1 |
Benny Snell | 5.4% | 2 | 14.3% | 0 | 0.0% | 1 | 4.9% | 0.1 |
- Harris obviously won't get as many touches as Christian McCaffrey, but the rookie is about as good of a bet to lead all halfbacks in snaps this season. Harris played 100% of snaps in the opener and missed just three plays in Week 2.
- Harris scored from 25 yards out on a catch, with his 5-43-1 receiving line making up for 10-38-0 on the ground. He's averaging only 13.0 carries for 41.5 yards (3.2 YPC) through two games, despite rarely leaving the field. In other words, he'll need those targets (fortunately, he should get them).
- Harris has run 56 routes, second-most among RBs after Ezekiel Elliott (60). Both figure to see more targets per route going forward, though Zeke could also lose routes with Tony Pollard earning more work.
49ers (17) at Eagles (11)
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Elijah Mitchell | 61.4% | 17 | 44.7% | 2 | 6.7% | 16 | 31.7% | 7.3 |
JaMycal Hasty | 35.7% | 5 | 13.2% | 5 | 16.7% | 15 | 15.0% | 9.9 |
Trey Sermon | 1.4% | 1 | 2.6% | 0 | 0.0% | 0 | 1.7% | 0.8 |
Trenton Cannon | 1.40% | 1 | 2.6% | 0 | 0.0% | 0 | 1.7% | -0.1 |
- Mitchell got the start and played 67.4% of snaps through three quarters, seeing 12 carries and two targets. Hasty got zero carries and four targets on 32.6% of snaps.
- Prior to the fourth quarter, Mitchell got 80.0% of first-down snaps and 81.3% of second-down snaps, while Hasty took eight of nine third downs (88.9%).
- Mitchell then had a one-yard TD overturned early in the fourth quarter, and he hurt his shoulder on the play. So, Hasty took three straight carries to start the next drive, but he injured his ankle and was replaced by Trey Sermon.... who promptly suffered a concussion on his first NFL snap.
- After Sermon, the Niners brought Cannon in for one carry, then had Mitchell come back into the game for three more carries (for 10 yards) down the stretch. Did you follow all that?
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Miles Sanders | 68.4% | 13 | 44.8% | 2 | 8.3% | 21 | 34.2% | 6.9 |
Kenneth Gainwell | 31.6% | 6 | 20.7% | 3 | 12.5% | 7 | 19.5% | 7.2 |
- The split was pretty similar Week 1, with Sanders having a 46-25 snap advantage (65.7%), 15-9 carry advantage and 5-3 target advantage over Gainwell. Both guys were far more productive in the opener, facing Atlanta rather than San Francisco. That'll happen.
- Sanders played 60.0% of snaps on first down, 77.8% on second down and 69.2% on third down. That includes six of 10 of 3rd-and-medium/long. This is another one where the lead guy and his backup are used interchangeably, rather than the early/late-down split that dominated in recent years.
- Sanders got both snaps inside the 5-yard line and three of five in the red zone (but no carries/targets).
- In Week 1, Gainwell got three of five snaps inside the 10, including a TD on the only non-Hurts carry.
- The Eagles have run 11 plays in the red zone. Sanders has been on the field for four, and hasn't seen a carry or target on any. Small sample warning does apply; he's still the lead guy, and there hasn't been any real goal-line work (Gainwell's TD in Week 1 was from eight yards out). So Sanders could still be the TD-scoring back, but in an offense where the QB also figures to do a lot of the red-zone rushing.
Vikings (33) at Cardinals (34)
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dalvin Cook | 77.0% | 22 | 81.5% | 3 | 9.38% | 22 | 49.0% | 16.8 |
Alexander Mattison | 21.3% | 3 | 11.1% | 1 | 3.13% | 8 | 8.2% | 3.8 |
Ameer Abdullah | 1.6% | 0 | 0.0% | 1 | 3.13% | 1 | 0 | 0 |
- Cook played through an ankle sprain late in the game. I'd pick up Mattison wherever he's available, as it's possible Cook deals with swelling that threatens his availability for Week 3 against Seattle.
- Everyone remembers Mattison's Week 6 dud against Atlanta last year, but his second start of the season (Week 17 at DET) yielded a 21-95-1 rushing line and 3-50-1 receiving line.
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chase Edmonds | 63.9% | 8 | 38.1% | 5 | 14.7% | 28 | 26.0% | 12.5 |
James Conner | 39.3% | 8 | 38.1% | 0 | 0% | 11 | 16.0% | 2.6 |
- The split was similar Week 1, with Edmonds at 58% snaps, 12 carries and 4 targets. While Conner got 49% snap share, 16 carries and zero targets.
- Conner got eight of 10 snaps in the red zone, but just one carry. Edmonds got three of 10, and also one carry.
- That includes four of five snaps (and the one carry) inside the 10, but 'Zona didn't run any plays inside the five. Conner did get the one inside-the-five snap so far... a Kyler Murray run in Week 1.
- Through two games, Edmonds has a 9-0 advantage in targets and a 47-15 advantage in routes, while Conner has a slight edge in carries (24-20) and is probably preferred at the goal line. It looks like Edmonds is way ahead for PPR scoring, while the two could be pretty close in standard (even though they aren't so far).
Falcons (25) at Buccaneers (48)
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mike Davis | 63.4% | 9 | 45.0% | 7 | 14.6% | 33 | 29.1% | 13.3 |
Cordarrelle Patterson | 33.8% | 7 | 35.0% | 6 | 12.5% | 17 | 21.8% | 23.9 |
- If you'd told me that Davis and Patterson would have 21 combined targets through two weeks, I'd tell you that the Falcons must be absolutely terrible again. Sound about right?
- Davis played 67.7% of snaps on first down, 66.7% on second down, 53.3% on third down.
- Both backs were involved throughout, with Patterson getting six or more snaps and multiple touches in each of the first three quarters.
- C-Patt did drop to 16.7% snap share (three snaps) in the fourth quarter when Atlanta was in full-blown comeback mode, showing that Davis is preferred for clear passing situations even if Patterson does poach some third downs.
- Davis' receiving volume seems more sustainable than Patterson's. Davis has 13 targets on 55 routes (23.6%), while Patterson has eight on 26 (30.8%). Sure, Patterson is a former wideout, but this is also the second straight team to prefer a different back on passing downs (Montgomery in Chicago, now Davis in Atlanta). In other words, Patterson needs more snaps in order to maintain his four-target-per-game average through two weeks.
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Leonard Fournette | 49.2% | 11 | 52.4% | 4 | 11.1% | 20 | 33.3% | 11.6 |
Ronald Jones | 41.3% | 6 | 28.6% | 3 | 8.3% | 16 | 15.6% | 4.6 |
Giovani Bernard | 9.5% | 0 | 0.0% | 2 | 5.6% | 5 | 4.4% | 3.6 |
- Jones technically got the start, but even in the first quarter Fournette took 57.9% of snaps, four of the seven carries and two of the three RB targets.
- In Week 1, with RoJo benched after an early fumble, Fournette played 65% of snaps with nine carries and seven targets.
- In terms of snaps, first downs were a 55/45 split in favor of Fournette, as were second downs. And then third downs went 50% to Bernard, 25% apiece to Jones and Fournette. So, it was messy, though Fournette put up an okay line again.
- Fournette and Jones each played two of four snaps inside the 5-yard line (all four were pass plays, none to the RBs). The team's fifth play inside the 10 was a Fournette carry from the Atlanta 7-yard line (for a gain of four).
- Tampa has seven carries in the red zone so far, with Fournette getting six and Brady one. But none of those has been inside the 5-yard line.
Titans (33) at Seahawks (30) - OT
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Derrick Henry | 76.1% | 35 | 87.5% | 6 | 15.3% | 26 | 61.2% | 47.7 |
Jeremy McNichols | 23.9% | 1 | 2.5% | 3 | 7.7% | 19 | 6.0% | 5.9 |
- This feels like one where I can get away with one bullet point and save us all a little time, but I guess I should mention that McNichols played 11 of 15 snaps on third down, because I know there are some Henry drafters trying to talk themselves into 4-5 targets per game now. Don't be so greedy; the rushing production is enough.
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chris Carson | 63.0% | 13 | 72.2% | 0 | 0.0% | 19 | 32.5% | 15.1 |
Travis Homer | 25.9% | 0 | 0.0% | 2 | 6.5% | 13 | 5.0% | 3.4 |
Alex Collins | 11.1% | 1 | 5.6% | 0 | 0.0% | 5 | 2.5% | 2.5 |
- Rashaad Penny (calf) didn't play, while Travis Homer jumped from two snaps in Week 1 to 14 in Week 2, taking work away from Carson on passing downs.
- Homer played eight of the nine snaps on 3rd-and-medium/long, after Carson had taken four of nine the previous week.
- Carson still ran more routes (14) than Homer (10), but 14 routes on 37 QB dropbacks (37.8%) isn't quite what you want to see. Especially after Carson was all the way up at 64.3% in Week 1. He really needed the TD deodorant in this one, and may need it in the future if/when Seattle goes pass-heavy. Week 1 was more encouraging, even though Carson finished with more points (thanks to two TDs) in Week 2.
Cowboys (20) at Chargers (17)
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ezekiel Elliott | 71.0% | 16 | 51.6% | 2 | 7.4% | 26 | 33.3% | 17.7 |
Tony Pollard | 33.9% | 13 | 41.9% | 3 | 11.1% | 8 | 29.6% | 23 |
Corey Clement | 1.6% | 0 | 0.0% | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
- Elliott still had a comfortable snap lead, but touches were close to 50/50, largely because Pollard got the ball on 16 of his 21 snaps (76.2%).
- Pollard finished with 13-109-1 rushing and 3-31-0 receiving. Elliott put up 16-71-1 and 2-26-0.
- Elliott got eight of 10 snaps on third down. And although he saw one fewer target, Zeke ran 22 routes to Pollard's seven.
- Pollard got five carries in the fourth quarter, but Elliott was also plenty busy in the final frame, with four carries and two targets on 77.8% of snaps. It's not like the Cowboys pushed Elliott aside after Pollard blew up. They just made room for both. That's a problem for Zeke's fantasy prospects, but we aren't in panic territory just yet.
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Austin Ekeler | 62.9% | 9 | 47.4% | 9 | 22.5% | 31 | 36.0% | 22.5 |
Justin Jackson | 22.9% | 4 | 21.1% | 1 | 2.5% | 10 | 10.0% | 3.9 |
Larry Rountree | 14.3% | 1 | 5.3% | 1 | 2.5% | 8 | 4.0% | 0.8 |
- Ekele has now played 58% and 63% of snaps, averaging 12.0 carries for 55.5 yards and 4.5 catches for 30.5 yards. Not quite what managers were hoping for, but also not far off.
- Rountree's role was scaled back after eight carries and 27% of snaps Week 1. Naturally, given that I picked him up in a bunch of deep leagues last week.
- Jackson, meanwhile, got a bit more involved, after seeing only one carry and one target on 14% of snaps in the opener.
Chiefs (35) at Ravens (36)
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt. % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Clyde Edwards-Helaire | 64.7% | 13 | 72.2% | 0 | 0% | 18 | 31.0 | 2.6 |
Darrel Williams | 27.5% | 3 | 16.7% | 0 | 0% | 10 | 7.1 | 5.8 |
Jerick McKinnon | 7.8% | 0 | 0.0% | 1 | 3.30% | 3 | 2.4 | 2.4 |
- Another rough night for Edwards-Helaire, who had zero targets and a long gain of nine yards, not to mention his massive lost fumble on what should've been a game-winning FG drive for the Chiefs. He's lucky he's a first-round pick who doesn't have a whole lot else behind him in the backfield. Still, patience may be wearing thin in KC.
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt. % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ty'Son Williams | 47.9% | 13 | 31.7% | 2 | 8.0% | 14 | 25.4% | 11.3 |
Latavius Murray | 37.0% | 9 | 22.0% | 0 | 0% | 9 | 15.3% | 9.6 |
Devonta Freeman | 13.7% | 2 | 4.9% | 0 | 0% | 5 | 3.4% | 2.9 |
- Williams got the start and played 60.5% of first-half snaps, entering the break with 10 touches (eight carries) for 69 yards.
- After halftime, Williams got just five carries on 34.3% of snaps, losing more playing time to Murray (48.6%, four carries) and Freeman (17.1%, one carry).
- Freeman took his first carry in a Ravens uniform for a 31-yard gain in the first quarter, sprinting upfield after a beautiful cut in the backfield. But he didn't get another touch until the third quarter, and then just the one.
- Williams took five of the six snaps in goal-to-go situations. All six plays were rushes; three for Lamar Jackson, two for Williams and one for Murray. Jackson went for 2-for-3, Murray 1-for-1 and Williams 0-for-2.
- Williams nearly scored a 10-yard TD in the first quarter, but he coughed the ball up near the goal line and Ravens WR Devin Duvernay jumped on it for the TD. Later on, in the fourth quarter, Williams was brought down at the Chiefs' 1-yard line after a gain of three. So he did come close to scoring twice.
- Passing-down work was split, and the Ravens even used FB Patrick Ricard a few times. Out of eight snaps on 3rd-and-medium/long, Williams and Ricard got three apiece, followed by Freeman (two) and Murray (one).
- Through two weeks, Williams is averaging 11.0 carries and 3.0 targets on 49.6% snap share. He has 187 total yards and a touchdown, looking like a tolerable RB2 if not yet a reliable one.
- Le'Veon Bell is still on the practice squad.
Lions (17) at Packers (35)
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
D'Andre Swift | 63.2% | 8 | 42.1% | 5 | 13.9% | 25 | 26.7% | 11.8 |
Jamaal Williams | 38.6% | 7 | 36.8% | 3 | 8.3% | 12 | 22.2% | 6.7 |
- The split was similar to Week 1, but with far fewer cumulative productions and less production. The big Week 1 was largely a product of Detroit having more than 90 snaps in the loss to San Francisco.
Snap % | Carries | Carry % | Targets | Tgt % | Pass Snaps | Touch % | PPR | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aaron Jones | 69.2% | 17 | 54.8% | 6 | 22.2% | 22 | 43.4% | 41.5 |
A.J. Dillon | 29.2% | 5 | 16.1% | 1 | 3.7% | 12 | 11.3% | 3.6 |
Kylin Hill | 7.7% | 2 | 6.5% | 0 | 0.0% | 0 | 3.8% | 0.8 |