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Factoid

Going the distance

11 running backs last year started in all 17 games

With the stats in front of me, I’m reminded that running backs were unusually lucky with injuries in the just-completed season. There were 11 featured running backs who started all 17 games – almost twice as many as ever before.

A reasonable drafter in August might have chosen to stay away from Christian McCaffrey and Kenneth Walker, given their extensive histories of injuries. But both were able to go the distance.

Tony Pollard, James Cook, Kyren Williams, Chase Brown and Jahmyr Gibbs don’t seem like rugged backs – they’re smaller guys. They all started all 17 games. Derrick Henry is 31, but he answered the bell for all 17 games.

We got up to 11 backs total – 12 if including fullback Kyle Juszczyk. In each of the three previous years, only 6 running backs started 17 games. And in 2021 (the first season they played 17 games) only three were able to do it.

I speak, of course, only in ballpark terms. Here, I make not attempt to make note of guys choosing to sit out in Week 17, or in others being healthy for all 17 but not being on the field for the first play of the game in some weeks for whatever reason. But we can paint with a general brush and say there were fewer running back injuries last year.

I expect we’ll be moving back to our usual levels in the upcoming season, probably with only a half dozen players at this position starting every game.

It’s tough staying healthy at this position. In the 17-game era, only six times have we seen a running back start 17 games, then come back and do it again the next year. Najee Harris has done it three times, Derrick Henry has down it twice, and Bijan Robinson has got the sixth.

In the following chart, the 2025 players are tagged with black dots. Players starting 17 games for a second straight season appear in bold. The final column of the chart shows the number of games the player started in the previous season.

RUNNING BACKS STARTING 17 GAMES
YearPlayerAgeRunRecTotTDPrev
2021Najee Harris, Pitt.231,2004671,66710R
2021Ezekiel Elliott, Dall.261,0022871,2891215
2021Jonathan Taylor, Ind.221,8113602,1712013
2022Najee Harris, Pitt.241,0342291,2631017
2022Aaron Jones, G.B.281,1213951,516715
2022Austin Ekeler, LAC279157221,6371816
2022Dalvin Cook, Min.271,1732951,4681013
2022Josh Jacobs, L.V.241,6534002,0531214
2022Nick Chubb, Cle.271,5252391,7641314
2023Najee Harris, Pitt.251,0351701,205817
2023Derrick Henry, Ten.291,1672141,3811216
2023Joe Mixon, Cin.271,0343761,4101214
2023Rachaad White, T.B.249905491,53998
2023Tony Pollard, Dall.261,0053111,31664
2023Travis Etienne, Jac.241,0084761,4841212
2024Derrick Henry, Balt.301,9211932,1141817
2024Najee Harris, Pitt.261,0432831,326617
2024Aaron Jones, Min.301,1384081,546711
2024Bijan Robinson, Atl.221,4564311,8871516
2024D'Andre Swift, Chi.259593861,345615
2024Josh Jacobs, G.B.261,3293421,6711613
2025• Bijan Robinson, Atl.231,4788202,2981117
2025• Derrick Henry, Balt.311,5951501,7451617
2025• Ashton Jeanty, L.V.229753461,32110R
2025• Tony Pollard, Ten.281,0822061,288516
2025• James Cook, Buff.261,6212911,9121416
2025• Kyren Williams, LAR251,2522811,5331316
2025• Jonathan Taylor, Ind.261,5853781,9632013
2025• Kenneth Walker, Sea.251,0272821,309511
2025• Chase Brown, Cin.251,0194371,4561110
2025• Christian McCaffrey, S.F.291,2029242,126174
2025• Jahmyr Gibbs, Det.231,2236161,839184

Reports indicate the Seahawks won’t tag Super Bowl MVP Kenneth Walker (pictured). That will make for some very interesting discussions regarding his value. He’s explosive, but he’s got some limitations in the passing game and as a tackle breaker, and he’s had all kinds of problems staying healthy in his first three seasons.

—Ian Allan

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