And yet, five of the six leading rushers last season were 1st round picks.
The leading rusher and 2nd leading rusher in the league last season were 1st round picks.
The RBs for three of the four teams that played in the conference championships were 1st round picks.
Seven RB's have been SB MVP, six were 1st round draft picks,
Of the seven RB's to make the Pro Bowl in 2024, four are #1 picks, three are #2 picks.
Talent is an issue for RB squads.
Yes, you can find RB in any round. However, the highly productive RBs in the NFL, the ones you see often in the playoffs are generally taken in the 1st and 2nd rounds.
Or maybe the teams that drafted those guys focused heavily on running the ball, which the Cowboys and many other teams have not done in recent years.
Also, there is the breakdown from their normalized running patterns. Meaning, take out all of the sub-2-yard runs and the over-10-yard-runs and see what they give you on most plays.
A running back that runs for 150 yards on 30 carries in a game sounds great, but if that includes two 50+ yard runs, it means on the other 28 carries they gained 50 yards, or 1.8 YPC.
Rating running backs on "yards gained" is no better than rating offenses on total yards gained or defenses on total yards given up. They don't define the best or worst teams.
Roger Staubach won 2 Super Bowls and averaged 204 yards per game and scored 153 touchdowns and threw 109 interceptions. He is a HoF quarterback.
Troy Aikman averaged less than 200 yards per game but won 3 Super Bowls and is a HoF quarterback. He also had 165 career touchdowns and 141 interceptions in his career.
Tony Romo averaged 251 yards per game and scored 248 touchdowns and threw 117 interceptions.
Based on stats alone, Romo was a lot better than Aikman and Staubach, but you would be hard-pressed to find any Cowboys fan who thinks that was true.
Why? Because the stats that matter are not based on yards, touchdowns or even interceptions, but rather if they performed well when it mattered.
More times than not, Staubach and Aikman did.
The same goes for running backs. 70 yard runs are great, but not when the rest of their carries average 2-3 yards per carry the rest of the game.