
Unstoppable Force: Meet the NFL Draft Running Backs Nobody Can Bring Down
If you thought the 2025 NFL Draft would be just another cycle passing the running backs by, think again. This year’s crop isn’t just good—they’re downright remarkable. Could it be a mirage conjured by college glory translating into pro prospects? Nah, not this time. As someone who’s kept a keen eye on college stars and their sometimes harsh NFL transitions, I’m genuinely impressed. Ashton Jeanty’s 2024 campaign alone was so spectacular it’s practically a blueprint for tackling nightmares at the next level. Plus, the class is stocked with tailbacks versatile enough to anchor offenses for years—if not decades. So, how do these electric runners really stack up when it comes to evading tackles, their most critical skill? Let’s dive into the data-driven rankings of the toughest backs to bring down, a clutch guide for teams hungry for game-changers this draft weekend in Green Bay. LEARN MORE.
This week’s NFL Draft offers an excellent class of running backs for those teams that missed out on a difference-maker in free agency.
The 2025 NFL Draft running backs class is really good.
Is that a mirage? Maybe, but I think not this time.
College football reporters like me might be prone to overrate running backs entering the NFL, because so many of them are huge stars on campus before running into the difficult positional realities of the professional game, but I find this yearâs class to be excellent.
Ashton Jeantyâs 2024 season was among the best for a running back in decades, and the draft class has a host of other tailbacks who are built like real three-down backs and could become the foundations of NFL offenses. At least four or five running backs in this class could be multi-year NFL starters, though guessing which ones (other than Jeanty) is difficult.
With the help of player-tracking statistics, hereâs a ranking of this yearâs running backs based on one critical running back trait: being hard to tackle.
The research focuses on the seven running backs who appear in the top 85 of the most recent consensus big board by NFL scouts, before a bit of a drop until the next running backs appear outside the top 100.
The NFL Draft will be held from April 24-26 in Green Bay, Wisconsin. Hereâs how these key running backs stack up in⦠not getting stacked up.
1. Ashton Jeanty, Boise State
Standard worries about drafting a running back in the first round simply should not apply to Jeanty. The 2024 Heisman Trophy runner-up is as good as everyone says, and his numbers are comical.
Jeanty leads our group with 0.295 missed or broken tackles per touch. He also leads by miles in the counting stats âbroken tackles forcedâ and âmissed tackles forced,â with a combined 97.
Jeanty isnât just slippery, heâs durable enough to make defenders miss again and again, even as he carries a heavier load than other running backs. His 374 carries last year led FBS college football by 64, and he averaged nearly 7.0 yards per carry while gaining 2,601 overall (the second-most rushing yards in an FBS season to Oklahoma Stateâs Barry Sanders with 2,628 in 1988).
Everything about Jeanty is exceptional. He averaged 4.75 yards per run disruption; even on runs when a defender beat an offensive lineman and blew up a gap, Jeanty got about 5 yards per clip. He averaged 3.60 yards after contact.
All of these numbers are easily the best in the class. He even averaged 6.30 yards on carries when defenders in the box outnumbered blockers.

No need to overcomplicate this one: Jeanty is a star. Draft him early and let NFL defensive coordinators try to figure out how to tackle him.
Their college counterparts usually couldnât crack him.
2. Kaleb Johnson, Iowa
It didnât get a lot of fanfare, but Iowaâs infamous offense upgraded last year from âdisgustingly badâ to âjust pretty bad.â Thatâs a bigger achievement than it sounds, and Johnson was the biggest reason. He might have been the most underrated running back in the nation as he rushed for 1,537 yards and 21 touchdowns, and, more impressively, was his physical dominance in context.
On carries with eight defenders or more in the box, Johnson averaged 5.03 yards â not just better than Jeanty at 4.73, but a total outlier among anybody who carried the ball nearly as often as Johnsonâs 95 rushes in those situations.
Iowa had a severely lacking passing game, and defenses knew they could key on Johnson, who had an absurd 59% usage rate when he was on the field (in contrast, Jeanty saw the ball on 53% of his snaps).
Defenses simply struggled to get Johnson to the ground.
3. TreVeyon Henderson, Ohio State
Working in a timeshare with Quinshon Judkins for the national champion Buckeyes, Henderson has a talent for getting a head of steam and then dusting a bunch of athletic defenders.
Consider this regular season touchdown run against Oregon, which only preceded him scoring on similar plays against both the Ducks and Texas in the College Football Playoff:
4. Cam Skattebo, Arizona State
Skattebo, whose 1,711 rushing yards ranked second to Jeanty, is a 5-foot-9, 219-pounder who looks like a bulldozer, but he actually has a track record of toasting defenders at top speed in the open field.
He posted a 58.5% burn rate on his receiving routes â second-best among these tailbacks â and was second at 0.251 missed or broken tackles per touch. Put those things together, and you get a 26.8% big play rate, or 5.0 percentage points better than anyone else.
5. Quinshon Judkins, Ohio State
That Judkins is this low on the list feels a bit silly, but this is a stacked running back class. Hereâs why heâs down here, though: His 0.158 missed or broken tackles per touch ranks last among these seven runners, and his 3.09 yards per run-disrupted carry is below the groupâs 3.26-yard average.
More than a few times in 2024, Judkins struggled in short yardage, which at one point was a weakness that couldâve derailed the Buckeyes. Chalk that up to noise because Judkins is 221 pounds and outrageously athletic, and he just may run people over at the next level.
Letâs consider this an area in which heâs likely to improve upon in the NFL.
6. Omarion Hampton, North Carolina
Again, it doesnât feel quite right that Hampton is down here among key NFL Draft running backs. He was a hugely productive back at UNC, totaling 3,164 rushing yards over the past two seasons and serving as a consistent star for a program that had a miserable defense and some coaching turmoil (especially in 2024).
He did come in last among this group in yards gained per run disruption (2.64), while finishing second-to-last in burn rate as a receiver (38.6%) and third-to-last in missed or broken tackles per touch (0.204).
NFL teams probably should not worry a lot about Hampton, either. And it does not seem like they are because he has a chance to get picked in the first round, per some mock drafts.
7. Dylan Sampson, Tennessee
Sampson might become a good NFL running back, but heâs stuck in last place in this ranking on a technicality. The other six players faced a bad box percentage â the rate of their snaps on which the defense has more players in the box than the offense has blockers â between 42% and 57%.
Then there is Sampson, down at 27.3%.

What gives?
Tennesseeâs offensive spacing is a unique strategic quirk. The Volunteers align their receivers way outside the formation and force the defense to spread itself as thinly as possible, allocating safeties, nickel cornerbacks and linebackers into areas where they can quickly defend deep and perimeter passes.
The primary beneficiary of that strategy was Sampson, who got to run against lighter defensive fronts than any of his peers in the NFL draft.
It doesnât mean Sampson wasnât great at Tennessee. In fact, he was the Volsâ best offensive player, and his 61.5% burn rate on receiving targets is the best of the NFL Draft running backs listed here.
But heâs last on this list not only in bad box percentage faced and yards after contact (2.29). Heâs sixth out of seven in missed or broken tackles per touch (0.173).
Sampsonâs work is cut out for him in the NFL, and it involves getting comfortable with carrying regularly against more-standard defensive alignments.
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The post NFL Draft Running Back Rankings: The Prospects Who Are the Toughest to Tackle appeared first on Opta Analyst.
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