Should I Draft Aaron Jones Sr.? Fantasy Outlook for the Vikings RB in 2025

Are the days of counting on Aaron Jones behind fantasy football managers or should you embrace a cheaper price tag?

Aaron Jones Sr. has cleared 1,100 scrimmage yards in each of his past five healthy seasons (minimum 12 games played), but he’s now on the wrong side of 30 years old and experiencing an offense that is naturally going to look different with Sam Darnold taking his talents to Seattle.

Is the fantasy football floor high enough to justify penciling Jones into your weekly lineup, or is he a player to cross off of your cheat sheets this summer?

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Should You Draft Aaron Jones in Fantasy?

Jones is an interesting option. His advanced resume doesn’t look great, but he’s stayed on the field for a full season in two of the past three years (one such season prior in his career) and continues to be labeled as a bellcow.

  • Aaron Jones
  • Christian McCaffrey

That’s your entire list of players with at least 1,000 rushing yards and 50 catches in two of the past three seasons. That’s not too shabby, and we saw some ceiling in this profile as a featured part of this Kevin O’Connell system — Jones was a top-16 RB in three of four weeks to open 2024 and finished the campaign with five RB1 finishes.

The story has been great, but we as 2025 managers aren’t interested in the “story”. “Stories” take place in the past, and we are in the business of forecasting the future. From Weeks 8-13 last season, we saw Jones fade a bit (average weekly finish: RB24), and that’s about what I’m expecting this season, understanding that the peak of his powers is more likely to come in September than December.

Fueling that belief is the early (Week 6) bye — is this the type of player you want to be betting on while playing for a 10th consecutive week?

It’s not for me. Our internal Elusive Rating has Jones trending in the wrong direction for consecutive seasons (9.8% of his carries gained 10+ yards a season ago, down from his 12% career number), and there simply isn’t much upside to chase.

He ripped off a 34-yard gain against the Lions in Week 7, and that was fun, but he had just one game with a 20+ yard run after that point, with some real duds sprinkled in there (Week 11 at Tennessee: 15 carries with his longest carry going for 15 feet).

His role in the passing game stabilized his fantasy value a season ago, but color me pessimistic about a repeat performance in 2025. Not only is there a quarterback change that this offense has to navigate, but there’s natural regression to pencil in. In 2024, Jones caught 82.3% of his targets (51-of-62).

Still, considering that he caught 73.3% of his looks in 2019-20 with Aaron Rodgers playing at an elite level, we have to draw back some, if not a lot, of efficiency as a pass catcher in addition to his declining abilities on the ground.

He could, of course, save you with a spike touchdown season. This offense projects as a top-10 unit, and Jones does have a 19-touchdown season on his resume, but that was a long time ago (2019). Half of his career rushing scores came in those mentioned above 2019-20 stretch (50% of rushing TDs in 26.3% of his career games).

Remove that peak, and he’s averaging a mere 5.1 scores on the ground per 17 games, a rate that doesn’t have the potential to save you from an otherwise inefficient campaign.

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Jordan Mason was brought in this offseason, and I consider him a threat to subtract from his bottom line more than just a backup in case of an emergency. The incoming rookie running crop of running backs is strong, and I’d prefer almost any of them with a reasonable shot at playing time over Jones this year.

Jones, for me, is a volume/floor play only this season — picking him makes some sense if you are swallowing some risk with your first two running backs.

Outside of that, I’m more tempted by RBs who could improve as the regular season wears on than one who I believe will see his production fade as the days go by.

Frank Ammirante’s Aaron Jones Fantasy Projection

Aaron Jones hasn’t shown any signs of decline, rushing for 1,138 yards and five touchdowns while adding 408 receiving yards. The Vikings traded for Jordan Mason, who is likely to be the 1B in this committee, taking away red-zone carries. Expect the Vikings to have a potent one-two punch with these two backs.

However, their ADPs are relatively close, despite Jones having a much longer track record. This makes Jones look like a value, mainly due to his receiving ability.

I expect the Vikings to have a prolific offense once again. After all, J.J. McCarthy is a first-round prospect who was hand-picked by Kevin O’Connell to be his next quarterback. Don’t be surprised if McCarthy exceeds expectations.

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With that in mind, when you’re taking Jones, you’re getting a proven piece of what should be a high-scoring offense. I like drafting Jones as my RB3, especially in leagues where Mason comes off the board first. The former 49er has steamed up draft boards all offseason.

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