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All-Time Greatest Running Backs
- Adrian Peterson - Minnesota Vikings
In order to further drive home the
importance of rookie runners, let's examine 10 of the
greatest statistical performances from rookie running backs
in the Super Bowl era. We've rewarded each back one point
for every 10 rushing and receiving yards and six points for
all touchdowns. Points were not subtracted from the final
total for lost fumbles.
Eric Dickerson, L.A.
Rams (341 points): Dickerson, who was drafted behind
John Elway in 1983, came out of Southern Methodist like a
man possessed. He rushed for a rookie record 1,808 yards and
18 touchdowns, caught 51 passes for 404 yards and scored
another two touchdowns as a receiver out of the backfield.
While Dickerson would never reach those receiving totals in
a single season again, he did go on to rush for an NFL
record 2,105 yards and 14 touchdowns in his second season
(1984). Dickerson also recorded 1,000-plus yards in his
first five NFL seasons and finished his illustrious career
with 13,259 rushing yards and 96 touchdowns. He was inducted
into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1999.
Edgerrin James, Indianapolis (316 points): Fantasy
footballers who took a chance on James in 1999 drafts were
thrilled with the results. He rushed for 1,553 yards and 13
touchdowns, hauled in 62 passes for 586 yards and scored
four times as a receiver. Outside of 2001-2002, when he
endured a surgical procedure to repair a torn ACL, James has
rushed for 1,000-plus yards in each of his pro seasons. The
bloom has come off the rose for James in recent seasons,
however, as he left Indianapolis for Arizona and has failed
to provide owners with the same level of production. Now as
he closes in on 3,000 carries and the dreaded age of 30,
James should be seen as no more than a low-end No. 2 fantasy
runner.
Clinton Portis, Denver (289 points): The second
running back on our list out of the University of Miami,
Portis recorded a memorable rookie season with 33 catches,
1,872 all-purpose yards and 17 total touchdowns. What makes
those numbers even more incredible is that Portis rushed for
a combined 46 yards and no
touchdowns in his first two pro contests and didn't emerge
atop the Broncos depth chart until Week 5. He went on to
rush for 100-plus yards in seven of his final 12 games that
season. Portis has found continued statistical success after
a blockbuster trade that sent him to Washington in exchange
for
Champ Bailey in 2004, and he remains a No. 1 fantasy
back headed into the 2008 season.
Billy Sims, Detroit
(288 points): When we associate the term "running back"
with the
Detroit Lions franchise, Barry Sanders is the first name
that comes to mind. But it was Sims, not Sanders, who had
the team's best rookie season at the position in the past
three decades. Sims, the first overall selection in the 1980
NFL Draft, rushed for 1,303 yards and 13 touchdowns in his
first NFL season. He also caught a career-best 51 passes for
621 yards and found the end zone three times as a receiver.
Sims had an impressive second season with 1,888 all-purpose
yards and 15 total touchdowns, and notched his third
consecutive Pro Bowl selection in the strike-shortened 1982
season, but his career fizzled soon thereafter.
Curtis Martin, New
England (265 points): When we talk about the greatest
draft bargains of all time, the names
Tom Brady and Terrell Davis are mentioned. However, we
tend to forget about Martin, who was a third-round selection
(74th overall) and is destined to have his bust in the halls
of Canton. The list of backs taken ahead of him in the 1995
NFL Draft include Ki-Jana Carter, Tyrone Wheatley, Napoleon
Kaufman, James Stewart, Rashaan Salaam and Sherman Williams.
Martin was a tremendous find for the Patriots and fantasy
footballers alike in his first NFL season, as he rushed for
an impressive 1,487 yards and 14 touchdowns. He added 30
receptions for 261 yards and a 15th touchdown as a receiver
out of the backfield.
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Curt Warner, Seattle
(261 points): Before there was ever a
Kurt Warner the superstar fantasy quarterback, there was
Curt Warner the stud fantasy running back. The former Penn
State standout produced immense numbers in his rookie
season, as he recorded 42 receptions, 1,774 all-purpose
yards and 14 total touchdowns. Warner, who was the No. 3
overall selection behind Elway and Dickerson in the 1983 NFL
Draft, would tear up his knee in the 1984 regular-season
opener and was forced to miss the rest of the season. He
would return with a vengeance to rush for a combined 2,574
yards and 21 touchdowns from 1985-1986, but Warner would
have just one more 1,000-yard season the rest of his pro
football career.
Barry Sanders,
Detroit (259 points): Arguably the greatest running back
of all time, Sanders came out of Oklahoma State and made an
instant impact both on the field and in fantasy circles.
Sanders, who was taken with the No. 3 overall selection
behind Troy Aikman and Tony Mandarich in the 1989 NFL Draft,
rushed for 1,470 yards and 14 touchdowns in his rookie
season. He would go on to rush for 1,000-plus yards in every
single season of his pro career and was a first-round staple
in most fantasy football drafts for much of his time at the
NFL level. Had he not decided to suddenly retire after the
1998 season, it might be Sanders, not Emmitt Smith, who
holds the NFL record for career rushing yards.
George Rogers, New
Orleans (258 points): Rogers, the No. 1 overall
selection in the 1981 NFL Draft, was a serious superstar for
owners that participated in fantasy football leagues at that
time. He rushed for what was an NFL rookie record 1,674
yards, scored 13 touchdowns and averaged 104.6 rushing yards
per game. While he never found that same level of success
again with the Saints, Rogers did rush for 1,203 yards and a
career-best 18 touchdowns with the
Washington Redskins in 1986. He retired after the
Redskins beat Denver in Super Bowl XXII. Despite nagging
injuries throughout his career, Rogers still averaged 1,025
rushing yards and close to eight touchdown in his seven
seasons at the NFL level.
Mike Anderson,
Denver (256 points): The reputation of running backs
under the watch of head coach Mike Shanahan is evident, as
Anderson is the second Broncos back to make our list of the
best rookie performances at the position since 1966.
Anderson came out of nowhere to produce 1,487 rushing yards
and 15 touchdowns in Shanahan's offense and was one of the
season's best sleepers in fantasy land. Injuries and the
selection of Clinton Portis in the 2002 NFL Draft put a halt
on whatever value Anderson had from 2001-2003, but he did
re-emerge into a viable option with 1,014 rushing yards and
13 total touchdowns in 2005. The Utah product has spent the
past two seasons as a reserve runner in Baltimore.
Marshall Faulk,
Indianapolis (252 points): The 1994 NFL Draft was loaded
with first-round busts like Dan Wilkinson, Heath Shuler and
Trev Alberts (to name a few), so the Colts looked like brain
surgeons with the selection of Faulk. (Or it was at least
enough to overshadow that Alberts pick.) The versatile
runner out of San Diego State made an immediate impact both
for his team and fantasy football owners, as he totaled
1,804 all-purpose yards and 12 total touchdowns in offense
that fielded Jim Harbaugh and Don Majkowski at quarterback.
Faulk would go on to become one of the greatest running
backs of all time between Indianapolis and St. Louis. It's
only a matter of time before the talented Faulk is inducted
into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
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