NFL
Fantasy Football: Which Running Back Could Be This Year's Todd Gurley?
Todd Gurley's Sophomore year was disappointing for fantasy football owners. Is there a back who could slump similarly this season?

Maybe you couldn't have seen it coming to the degree in which it came, but you could've at least seen it coming.

Todd Gurley was bound to hit some sort of wall during his Sophomore season. Because his Freshman year just wasn't sustainable.

And this isn't annoyingly stupid hindsight analysis. Net Expected Points (NEP), which helps determine the number of points (real ones) a player is adding (or losing) for his team versus expectation. If you want to learn more about the metric, check out our

Given Gurley's per-rush average, we would've expected him to have a Success Rate of 42.83% during his rookie season. Instead, it was 36.24%. That difference -- 6.58% -- was the second-largest difference seen among the entire 86 running back sample.

In other words, Gurley was overperforming like a mad man.

And in 2016, he made fantasy owners mad, man.

(I'm so sorry for that.)

2017 Candidates

What was it that made Gurley a high-end fantasy football draft pick in 2016? Well, he performed at a high level in 2015 as a lead back, and he had a lot of unknown upside given the limited sample from which we were drawing.

This super-scientific reasoning leads us to three backs who could theoretically be this year's Todd Gurley: Melvin Gordon, Jordan Howard, and Jay Ajayi.

I hope you're nodding your head in approval.

Let's take a glance at the same chart above, but this time, we'll highlight the 2016 seasons for Gordon, Howard, and Ajayi, who all finished as top-12, RB1 backs in fantasy football last year.


Visually, it appears as though Melvin Gordon is that dude. He's the one who overperformed in efficiency given his overall Success Rate. He's the one who profiles closest to 2015's Todd Gurley.

Mathematically, that's the case, too. In fact, of the 86 running backs in the sample, Gordon's actual Success Rate versus his expected Success Rate saw the eighth-largest discrepancy in the wrong direction. Remember, Gurley's was the second-largest.

It wouldn't be fair to deem Gordon an auto-bust this season, though. His situation is entirely different from Gurley's. In 2016, for instance, Gordon had 20 carries within his opponents' 5-yard line, and 29 within his opponents' 10. Those were the third- and fourth-highest marks among all running backs, respectively.

And Gordon played just 13 of 16 games.

Back in 2015, Gurley played a similar number of games and saw just 25 fewer rushes than Gordon did last year. Gurley had 9 rushes within his opponents' 5-yard line and 16 within his opponents' 10-yard line, numbers that were significantly lower than Gordon's 2016 totals.

And it's because the Rams were -- and still are -- ineffective offensively, while the Chargers don't have those struggles.

There's more upside for Gordon in the passing game, as well. Going into last season, we weren't really sure how Gurley would be used in the Rams' passing attack. He saw just 26 targets his freshman year, and that rose to a decent-enough 58 targets last season.

Gordon, meanwhile, is coming off a season with 57 targets (roughly 0.7 targets per game more than Gurley had his rookie season), and he has little competition in the backfield for passing-game volume in the Chargers' offense.

What this all means is that, yes, if you were to pinpoint one player who performed like Todd Gurley and could push a disappointing result in 2017, it's Melvin Gordon. Because Gordon, as a running back, isn't as good as his fantasy numbers dictated last year.

But given Gordon's situation, it may not matter.

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