Brian Robinson Jr. Fantasy Profile: Commanders RB Might Be Undervalued

Brian Robinson Jr. is coming off a disappointing campaign. Can the Commanders RB return to being a fantasy RB2 in 2025?

Washington Commanders RB Brian Robinson Jr. took over the lead back role two years ago and looked to be on an upward trajectory. Last season, though, he took a bit of a step back while sharing touches with Austin Ekeler and battling a couple of injuries. What can fantasy football managers expect from Robinson in 2025?

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Should You Draft Brian Robinson Jr. in Fantasy?

Two years ago, Robinson averaged 13.2 fantasy points per game. He was pretty much the same guy he was as a rookie, though. The primary factor in his improved fantasy performance was an unexpectedly efficient season as a receiver.

Robinson’s 8% target share was a big jump from his rookie year. However, it wasn’t the volume that did it. He averaged 10.2 yards per reception, which led all running backs.

When a player only has 36 receptions on a season, his averages can be heavily influenced by a couple of plays. Robinson had two receptions in Week 10 against the Seahawks that went for 51 and 48 yards, respectively. That accounted for 27% of his season total receiving yards. Two plays!

These two plays had an impact on the perception of Robinson heading into the 2024 season. He was viewed as a capable receiver. Now, I’m not saying he has bricks for hands — the man can catch what is thrown to him. But he wasn’t suddenly becoming a running back whose floor was bolstered by receiving.

That was especially more so when the Commanders signed Austin Ekeler, which threw a whole lot of cold water on Robinson’s upside. With a minimal receiver role, Robinson would be heavily reliant on touchdowns.

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The arrival of Jayden Daniels served to increase the overall scoring volume of the Commanders. It also gave Robinson some competition for those short-yardage scores. That, combined with his regression back to a 6% target share and no random splash plays as a receiver (he averaged 8.0 yards per reception), made Robinson more of the guy he was as a rookie.

Robinson averaged 11.4 ppg, finishing as the overall RB28. In 14 games, he wasn’t able to crack 1,000 total yards.

So far, I’ve mostly painted a negative outlook on Robinson. The turn is coming.

The Commanders didn’t do anything of note to their backfield. They drafted Jacory Croskey-Merritt in the seventh round. That’s it. We’re looking at a Robinson-Ekeler duo once again.

The difference this year is that Robinson’s ADP is down at RB31. He’s finished above that each of the past two seasons. At that price, for Robinson to fail to meet expectations, he would have to get hurt or lose his job. I don’t see a 30-year-old Ekeler completely taking over this backfield. He doesn’t even want to.

I have Robinson ranked at RB30, right in line with ADP. While I would hesitate to say I am bullish on Robinson, he is a perfectly fine target for fantasy managers who go with Hero or Zero RB builds.

Dan Fornek’s Brian Robinson Jr. Fantasy Projection

Brian Robinson Jr. has been a steady, reliable running back for the Washington Commanders for the last three seasons. Since 2023, he has averaged 190.0 carries for 776.3 yards and 5.0 touchdowns per season. He’s also added 26.7 targets, 21.7 receptions, 195.7 receiving yards, and 1.7 touchdowns per year. Robinson scored at least 11.0 PPR points per game in fantasy the last two seasons with an RB22 finish in 2023 (13.2).

Robinson is a volume-dependent grinder in the backfield who doesn’t have a consistent role in the passing attack. However, he is in one of the best offensive environments in football on a team with a dynamic rushing quarterback (Jayden Daniels) and a significantly upgraded offensive line.

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Washington’s offense should be one of the best in the NFL in 2025, which will mean a lot of positive game scripts to close out games. Robinson will be the rusher they lean on during those times, which should provide him with enough value to return RB2 value. The presence of Austin Ekeler as the pass-catching back is annoying, but it shouldn’t eat too heavily into Robinson’s role as the closer and goal-line back.

There is plenty of risk with Robinson, considering he’s missed at least two games every season, but he’s a solid runner who should be in a high-volume role in 2025. He won’t finish as a top 15 RB in fantasy, but could easily grind his way to an RB2 finish again next season.

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