The 2025 fantasy season delivered one of the wildest running back landscapes we’ve seen in years. Established stars reclaimed their thrones, rookies burst onto the scene with league‑shifting upside, and more than a few early‑round picks left managers questioning every draft decision they made in August. With breakout performers, waiver‑wire miracles, and weekly heartbreak sprinkled throughout the year, it’s time to look back and celebrate the backs who carried teams to glory but also call out the ones who derailed entire seasons.
Fantasy RB MVP

Winner: Bijan Robinson (Falcons) Why: Atlanta finally unleashed him. Robinson delivered elite usage, top‑tier efficiency, and massive receiving volume. He became the rare running back who could give you 25+ points without even scoring a touchdown. Managers who drafted him early got exactly what they hoped for: a true weekly cheat code.
Breakout Running Back of the Year

Winner: Jonathan Taylor (Colts) Why: Jonathan Taylor reclaimed his spot among fantasy football’s elite by delivering the kind of dominant, every‑down production managers had been waiting for since his early‑career explosion. After multiple seasons disrupted by injuries, contract drama, and inconsistent usage, Taylor finally entered 2025 fully healthy and paired with an offense that committed to feeding him like a true workhorse. The result was a massive resurgence.
Taylor’s efficiency returned to elite levels, highlighted by explosive runs, improved red‑zone success, and a noticeable jump in receiving involvement: something fantasy managers had begged for in previous years. He consistently delivered RB1‑level performances, often carrying lineups with 20‑plus‑point outings while maintaining one of the safest weekly floors at the position.
League‑Winner of the Year
Winner: Christian McCaffrey (49ers) Why: Christian McCaffrey once again proved why he’s the most valuable running back in fantasy football. Even in a season filled with emerging young stars and surprise breakouts, McCaffrey separated himself with a rare combination of volume, efficiency, and reliability. He dominated touches in one of the league’s most explosive offenses, giving him both a high weekly floor and a ceiling few players can match.
What truly made him a league‑winner was his performance when it mattered most. Down the stretch, especially during the fantasy playoffs, McCaffrey delivered multiple monster games, piling up touchdowns and explosive plays that single‑handedly carried teams to victory. While other top backs battled injuries, inconsistency, or committee usage, McCaffrey remained the one constant you could trust every week.
Bust of the Year

Winner: Saquon Barkley (Eagles) Why: Saquon Barkley entered the season with sky‑high expectations after joining an offense that many believed would unlock his full potential. Instead, he became one of the most frustrating early‑round picks in fantasy football. His workload never matched his draft capital, and the offense around him struggled to create scoring opportunities, limiting his touchdown upside: a critical component of elite fantasy RB production.
Efficiency was another major issue. Barkley rarely broke off the explosive plays that once defined his game, and he often found himself bottled up behind inconsistent blocking. Even worse, his receiving usage dipped, removing the safety net that had historically buoyed his fantasy value during down weeks. Without steady targets or reliable red‑zone work, his weekly floor collapsed.
The result was a player drafted as a top‑10 running back who delivered mid‑tier flex numbers far too often. Managers who invested heavily in Barkley were forced to scramble for replacements, and many found themselves playing catch‑up all season long.
Comeback Player of the Year

Winner: Chase Brown (Bengals) Why: Brown started the season with 7 games under 15 PPR points, underwhelming for fantasy managers. But with the return of Joe Burrow, he erupted, as his managers likely made it far in the fantasy playoffs with 10 straight games over 15 fantasy PPR points and a few 20-30 pointers.
Waiver Wire Hero

Winner: Rico Dowdle (Panthers) Why: Rico Dowdle went from an afterthought to a fantasy lifesaver almost overnight. When injuries and depth‑chart shakeups hit his backfield, Dowdle stepped into a featured role and immediately produced at a level no one saw coming. His combination of burst, physicality, and surprising receiving involvement made him a plug‑and‑play RB2, and at times an RB1, during the most chaotic stretch of the fantasy season.
What made him a true waiver hero wasn’t just the points he scored, but when he scored them. Dowdle delivered steady double‑digit production during bye weeks, injury crises, and playoff pushes, giving managers a reliable starter they didn’t have to spend draft capital on. He stabilized rosters that were falling apart and gave competitive teams the depth they needed to stay dominant.
Because he cost nothing to acquire, filled a massive positional need, and produced far above expectations, Dowdle became one of the most impactful waiver pickups of the entire year. He didn’t just help teams survive — he helped them win.
Most Consistent Running Back

Winner: De’Von Achane (Dolphins) Why: De’Von Achane didn’t have a single game under 10 fantasy points and had over 15 most of the season in PPR as the most consistent fantasy football running back (other than CMC).
Most Frustrating Running Back

Winner: Bucky Irving (Buccaneers) Why: Bucky Irving drove fantasy managers up the wall all year long thanks to a combination of unpredictable usage, inconsistent production, and a backfield rotation that never seemed to stabilize. Every time it looked like Irving was about to take over as the clear lead back, the coaching staff shifted touches, rotated drives, or leaned on another runner in key situations. That constant volatility made him nearly impossible to trust in weekly lineups.
Irving’s efficiency didn’t help either. Some weeks, he flashed the explosiveness that made him a preseason sleeper, ripping off chunk plays and looking like a breakout waiting to happen. Other weeks, he disappeared entirely, posting single‑digit fantasy totals despite favorable matchups or positive game scripts. The highs were just high enough to keep managers hanging on, but the lows were brutal.
The most frustrating part was the timing. Irving’s big games often came on benches, while his dud performances showed up the moment managers finally felt confident starting him. That start‑sit whiplash made him one of the most stressful players to roster all season.
Streamer of the Year

Winner: Kenneth Gainwell (Steelers) Why: Kenneth Gainwell carved out a unique fantasy role in 2025 as the running back you could rely on whenever you needed a spot start. He wasn’t drafted as a starter in most leagues, but his combination of passing‑down work, red‑zone involvement, and steady snap share made him one of the most dependable emergency options at the position. Whenever injuries struck or star players hit their bye weeks, Gainwell stepped in and produced.
What made him the standout streamer was his consistency in those fill‑in weeks. Gainwell routinely delivered double‑digit fantasy points when managers plugged him into lineups, thanks to his reliable target volume and his ability to capitalize on favorable matchups. He rarely busted when called upon, and he often outperformed more highly drafted backs who were struggling with efficiency or usage.
