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š“ 17 Sleeper RBs for fantasy football 2023
Draft targets with LEAGUE-WINNING upside
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Happy Thirsty Thursday, fellow fantasy fanatics! Have a post-draft-draught for me!
Today in 5 minutes or less, youāll learn:
Deep fantasy sleepers š
Zero-RB Draft Targets 0ļøā£
Fresh-faced rookies with skill š¶
The latest NFL news š


James Cook (BUF), ADP 95.9, RB30:
Dalvinās little brother still has a team, and was explosive for them last season.
⢠2nd in true yards per carry (5.3)
⢠1st in breakaway run rate (12.1%)
Devin Singletary and his 53 targets have left Buffalo, so Cookās 31.2% opportunity share should rise a little higher.
Damien Harris was brought in as a bigger, physical goal-line back.
Cook being established helps his outlook here, and he can be drafted at ADP.
Zach Charbonnet (SEA), ADP 101.8, RB32:
He may not get early-down work over Ken Walker right away, but he can catch:
He earned an 11.2% target share at UCLA in ā22, catching 37 balls for 321 yards.
It paired nicely with 1,329 rush yards.
Recently, the coaching staff has been impressed with Charbonnet in workouts.
(per Rotoballer)
Charbonnet projects to slot in as Seattleās RB2, and could increase his role as the 2023 season wears on.
Antonio Gibson (WAS), ADP 106.4, RB34:
Brian Robinson is probably the starter.
Even though Gibson lost some of his efficiency, he was good in some key areas:
⢠9th in yards per route run (1.66)
⢠12th in yards per reception (7.7)
J.D. McKissic had 40 targets in his 8 games in ā22, and a 13.9% target share.
That means Gibsonās 12% target share could rise, making him a PPR value.
Samaje Perine (DEN), ADP 107, RB34:
The fantasy community is up on Perine lately and itās for really good reasons.
Check out his 3rd-down skill set:
⢠14th in yards per reception (7.6)
⢠15th in yards per route run (1.34)
⢠11th in fantasy points per opp. (0.97)
With Javonte Williamsās health still a question mark, Perine can step up.
He scored 23.6 points per game over 3 weeks as the main guy in Cincinnati last year.
Even if Williams is healthy, Perine is a later-round draft pick with serious upside.
Rashaad Penny (PHI), ADP 115.5, RB38:
Penny will compete with DāAndre Swift to be Philadelphiaās RB1. Tough to know how it might shake out.
Swiftās ADP is 40 spots earlier.
Penny has been an efficient runner:
⢠1st in true YPC in 5 games in ā22
⢠2nd in true YPC in 10 games in 21
He doesnāt have the same receiving chops as Swift, but can carve out a role for Philly.
Ditto for your fantasy squad.
PrizePicks doesnāt have Penny yet for season props, but they do have Swift listed for 599.5 yards (I like him to surpass it).
Considering Miles Sanders rushed for 1,269 last season, they probably believe Penny has a significant role to play.
Devon Achane (MIA), ADP 117.5, RB39:
Achaneās elite speed and his competition will give him a shot to contribute right away.
Heās competing with 31-year-old Raheem Mostert and Jeff Wilson Jr, whoās never had more than 600 rushing yards.
Achane caught 60 balls for 457 yards over the last 2 years at Texas A&M.
He had a 38-215-2 game against LSU.
If Miami can get him in the right spots to utilize the elite speed, heāll be worth a pick.
I expect heāll see the field.
Elijah Mitchell (SF), ADP 123, RB41:
Heās one of the premiere backups in football as Christian McCaffreyās handcuff.
As a rookie in ā21, he nearly reached 1,000 yards on the ground, and was:
⢠17th in breakaway runs (8)
⢠3rd opportunity share (80.8%)
⢠16th in true yards per carry (4.5)
⢠14th in fantasy points per game (15)
CMC touched the ball nearly 330 times last season, so the 49ers would be wise to ease his workload to keep him fresh.
If they do, Mitchell could be in line to produce at the level the heās flashed.
Jaylen Warren (PIT), ADP 138.8, RB45:
As Najee Harrisās backup, Warren was:
⢠5th in juke rate (40%)
⢠16th in breakaway run rate (6.5%)
And had a respectable 1.47 yards per route run, albeit on not many total routes.
Harris has a lock on the bell cow role, but Warren has been an OTA standout and may force the coaching staffās hands.
(The Athletic)
Tank Bigsby (JAX), ADP 141.3, RB46:
Over the last two seasons at Auburn:
⢠402 carries
⢠2,069 yards
⢠20 total TDs
Perhaps most impressively, he was 6th in yards after contact per attempt (4.13)
Travis Etienne scored just 5 total TDs despite 45 red zone touches in ā22.
Itās possible Bigsby will slide into that role for the Jags, raising his ceiling.
Roschon Johnson (CHI), ADP 149.2, RB47:
Neither Khalil Herbert nor DāOnta Foreman are known for their pass-catching abilities.
Johnson graded highly as a pass-blocker and had 128 receiving yards in ā22, so he could earn 3rd-down work for da Bears.
It doesnāt hurt that PlayerProfiler names Josh Jacobs as his closest comparison. As we know, heās a huge fantasy asset.
Jerome Ford (CLE), ADP 158.6, RB50:
RB coach Stump Mitchell recently praised Nick Chubbās presumable backup.
Reports are he will get some receiving work out of the backfield.
(per FantasyPros)
Ford had a tremendous college season in ā21, rushing for 1,315 yards and adding 220 more through the air with 20 total TDs.
If Chubb goes down, heāll inherit the work in Deshaun Watsonās offense.
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Chase Brown (CIN), ADP 188.7, RB58:
Brown was a workhorse for Illinois in 22:
⢠2nd in total carries (328)
⢠4th in total rush yards (1,643)
He had over 100 yards in 10 of 12 games.
And, he ranked 5th at his position for athleticism score (PlayerProfiler).
Joe Mixonās efficiency took a hit last season, and if that continues, the Bengals may possibly turn to Brown to put in work.
Gus Edwards (BAL), ADP 190.1, RB59:
I prefer J.K. Dobbins.
But, if he succumbs to injury woes again, Edwards is the next guy in line.
He ranked 11th in true yards per carry (4.8) and Baltimoreās been top-3 in rushing yards every year since heās been a pro.
Plenty of opportunities for production in Baltimore, especially for a late pick.
Kareem Hunt (FA), ADP 203.1, RB61:
He still needs a team, but weāve seen him produce as a pass-catching back.
In an injury-shortened ā21:
⢠10th in true yards per carry
⢠6th in fantasy points per opportunity
Itās been floated recently that the Commanders have interest in Hunt. If that happens, it will affect the ceilings of a few other guys.
Pierre Strong (NE), ADP 206.3, RB63:
Rhamondre Stevenson canāt get ALL the carries in New England, as much as we in the fantasy world want to see it.
James Robinson didnāt make Belichickās cut, and Ty Montgomery is 30 years old.
Strongās speed keeps him in the conversation; heās got a 4.37 40-time and a 95th-percentile speed score from PlayerProfiler.
If he earns the role as Rhamondreās backup, heās got fantasy upside.
Kyren Williams (LAR), ADP 215.6, RB75:
OTAs are not reliable for making predictions, but Williams got first team reps while consistently rotating with Cam Akers.
Akers was expected to be the workhorse.
Sean McVay called Williams āone of the bright spotsā of the offense over the course of those workouts (Sports Illustrated).
He may need to beat out other guys like Sony Michel, but the Ramsā offense isnāt the worst place to find fantasy relevance.
Sean Tucker (TB), ADP 215.8, RB79:
Rachaad White said Tucker is called āBaby Nick Chubbā due to his look and running style.
(per Pewter Report)
While a nickname does not a playing comparison make, Tucker did run for 2,556 yards on 452 carries and 27 total TDs for Syracuse the last 2 years.
He added 56 receptions.
Tampaās RB room will have to shake itself out before we give Tucker a serious look, but heās worth monitoring this summer.

šŖ Justin Fields' Passer Progress: Fantasy Goldmine or Fool's Gold?
š¬ Tyreekās Trouble: Assault Allegations Rock Miami
š Broncos' Secret Weapon Ready to Shine
š« Steelers Release Enigmatic Wideout
šāāļø Journeyman RB Joins Rams: Akers' Backup or Challenger for the Throne?
š Giants WR Getting First Team Reps: Surprise Fantasy Gem?
š” Jamison Crowder's Roster Snub: Will He Find a New Home?
š± Surprise TE Emerging in Jets' Offense: Sleeper Alert!
āļø Jets' Crowded Receiving Corps Clouding Mimsā Future
𩼠Zonovan Knight's Injury Woes: Jets' RB Depth Question Mark

Cheers for today. May your victories be plentiful!
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