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Fantasy Football RB Tiers 2023: A Few Big-Name Backs Fall Just Outside the Upper Echelon

We are inching closer to the start of the 2023 NFL season, so it’s time for the mad dash of fantasy football drafts to begin. That makes it more important than ever to put your players into positional “tiers.” Unlike my player rankings, tiers group players of similar value. So, if you miss out on a particular player, you can see others on the same tier as an alternative. And if that tier has been cleared, it might be a good idea to wait a round or two on players who fall into the next tier at the position.

I’ll cover all four of the offensive positional tiers for our fantasy football purposes. We started with the quarterbacks, now let’s move to the running backs.

Bill Streicher/USA Today Sports

— Tier 1 —

Christian McCaffrey49ers
Austin EkelerChargers
Saquon BarkleyGiants

McCaffrey, Ekeler and Barkley are likely to be the first runners off the board in most fantasy drafts, with CMC being the consensus top player at the position. Both CMC and Ekeler averaged over 20 points per game last season, and no one else at the position put up more than 19.3 (Josh Jacobs). It can be argued that this tier should include more names, but I put these three at a slightly higher level in drafts.

— Tier 2 — 

Nick Chubb, Browns
Bijan Robinson, Falcons
Derrick Henry, Titans
Tony Pollard, Cowboys
Jonathan Taylor, Colts

There are a lot of backs in this second tier who could be included in Tier 1, including Chubb, Robinson and Henry. I see CMC, Ekeler and Barkley as having a bit more value, but it’s close. Henry and Chubb averaged 16.6 or more points last season, and Pollard was close at 15.6. He should see an increase in this total with Ezekiel Elliott no longer in the backfield, however. Taylor, who is in the middle of a squabble with the Colts and still dealing with a bum ankle, has dropped in my ranks but remains a second-tier fantasy runner. He could move up in the coming weeks.

— Tier 3 — 

Joe Mixon, Bengals
Josh Jacobs, Raiders
Najee Harris, Steelers
Aaron Jones, Packers
Rhamondre Stevenson, Patriots

This tier is a crowded one and includes past fantasy stars looking to rebound after a bad season or backs looking to prove last year wasn’t a fluke. Jacobs was the RB3 overall a season ago and might be ranked a bit low in the opinions of some, but he’s holding out of Raiders camp and regression seems imminent. Mixon had a down year, but he’s a true featured back in an elite offense. Harris should be better overall this season compared to a ho-hum sophomore campaign, and Stevenson was ranked higher before the Patriots signed veteran runner Ezekiel Elliott.

Jeremy Reper/USA Today network

— Tier 4 —

Jahmyr Gibbs, Lions
Travis Etienne, Jaguars
Alexander Mattison, Vikings
Miles Sanders, Panthers
Breece Hall, Jets
Kenneth Walker III, Seahawks

Gibbs’s stock is on the rise, as he’s now a top-15 fantasy running back based on the NFFC average draft position data. Etienne could lose some goal-line work to Tank Bigsby, but he’s still expected to see the top back in Jacksonville. Mattison is in a great position to break out in Minnesota without Dalvin Cook, and Sanders is likely to be the lead back in Carolina. The addition of Cook in New York hurts Hall’s stock. He’s now more of an RB2 option. Walker’s stock took a hit in terms of ceiling with the addition of Zach Charbonnet, but I still view him as a mid-RB2.

— Tier 5 —

James Conner, Cardinals
Dameon Pierce, Texans
Cam Akers, Rams
J.K. Dobbins, Ravens
James Cook, Bills
Rachaad White, Buccaneers
Javonte Williams, Broncos

This tier is loaded with backs who will make or break fantasy rosters. With more of an emphasis on wideouts in the first three rounds, these backs will end up being big parts of countless rosters. Conner has no real competition for touches in Arizona but needs to remain free of injuries. Pierce is the lead back in Houston, but will Devin Singletary hurt his ceiling? Akers, Dobbins, Cook and White all have pretty clear paths to workload, but having expectations and meeting them are different things. Williams is coming off a knee ailment and comes with questions.

— Tier 6 —

Alvin Kamara, Saints
Khalil Herbert, Bears
David Montgomery, Lions
D’Andre Swift, Eagles
Isiah Pacheco, Chiefs
Dalvin Cook, Jets

Kamara would be on a higher tier but he is out for the first three weeks due to a suspension. Still, he should be an RB2 upon his return. Montgomery should be a viable flex option even with Gibbs in the Detroit backfield, and Pacheco is in the same boat in Kansas City’s rotation. Herbert’s stock is on the rise in Chicago, while Swift looks destined to split work in Philadelphia. Cook looks destined to land in a committee with Hall in New York, which limits his draft stock.

— Tier 7 —

AJ Dillon, Packers
Antonio Gibson, Commanders
Jamaal Williams, Saints
Jerick McKinnon, Chiefs
De’Von Achane, Dolphins
Brian Robinson, Commanders

This tier includes several players who could push for standalone flex value but have another back hindering their ceiling. Achane could etch out a pass-catching role in Miami, but he won’t get ahead of Raheem Mostert and Jeff Wilson Jr., and Dillon remains capped with Jones ahead of him in Green Bay. Gibson and Robinson will share the work in Washington, making it tough to trust either on a regular basis. The Saints will lean on Williams in the first three games, but he’ll fall back into a shared situation when Kamara returns from his suspension.

Rob Schumacher/USA Today Sports Network

— Tier 8 —

Rashaad Penny, Eagles 
Zach Charbonnet, Seahawks
Damien Harris, Bills
Devin Singletary, Texans
Samaje Perine, Broncos
Ezekiel Elliott, Patriots

Welcome to the tier of handcuffs! Alright, some of these backs could earn a bigger role and hold some standalone value, but for the most part they’re the lesser part of a committee or simple insurance. Penny is the poster child for injury-prone backs, but he’s effective when on the gridiron. He’s an RB4 for fantasy purposes, as are all of these backs. Perine could be a bit more depending on how well Javonte Williams recovers from his knee injury, but that’s still to be determined. Elliott could see some early-down and goal-line work, but he’s now an RB4 in New England.

— Tier 9 —

Raheem Mostert, Dolphins
Kenneth Gainwell, Eagles
Elijah Mitchell, 49ers
Jaylen Warren, Steelers
Chuba Hubbard, Panthers
Tyler Allgeier, Falcons

Another tier, another group of committee backs and fantasy handcuffs. Mostert and Wilson could share the early-down work in Miami, while Mitchell, Warren, Hubbard and Carter are all likely secondary backs and handcuffs. Gainwell could see a bigger role in Philadelphia than just insurance, though. In fact, he could be in the mix to start. Stay tuned. Allgeier is the best handcuff of them all playing behind Robinson in Atlanta, but he could push for standalone value at times, too.

— Tier 10 —

Chase Edmonds, Buccaneers
Gus Edwards, Ravens
Jeff Wilson Jr., Dolphins
Cordarrelle Patterson, Falcons
Zamir White, Raiders
Trayveon Williams, Bengals
D’Onta Foreman, Bears
Keontay Ingram, Cardinals
Joshua Kelley, Chargers
Tyjae Spears, Titans

All of these running backs are draftable late, but injuries would have to occur for most of them to have any value in fantasy lineups. Edwards could turn into a viable flex if Dobbins misses time (Dobbins returned to the Ravens this week), and the same goes for White if Jacobs’s holdout extends into the regular season. Ingram, Kelley and Spears are worth late fliers as handcuffs or dart throws.

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