Should I Draft Chase Brown? Fantasy Outlook for the Bengals RB in 2025

Chase Brown was a key member on fantasy football playoff teams last year – is he worth the premium price entering 2025?

This time last year, we were all interested in the Cincinnati Bengals’ backfield, but unsure of how to proceed due to a budding Chase Brown and Zack Moss committee. Moss was the newcomer with more NFL reps, while Brown was the little-used rookie loaded with potential but an unclear role.

Well, things cleared up. Brown was the 14th-best running back based on points per game (PPG) in points per reception (PPR) formats a season ago with 1,350 yards from scrimmage and 11 scores in his 16 games. As he enters his age-25 season, there’s a case to be made for him to be even better in 2025.

Should you buy in now, or has the value been sucked out of this profile?

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Should You Draft Chase Brown in Fantasy?

It’s not hard to build the case for Brown as an RB1 after what he put on film last season.

He had eight finishes as an RB1 and proved more than capable of holding up in his bellcow role (20+ touches in four straight to round out last season). Brown was drafted in the fifth round of the 2023 draft and profiled as a potential lead back (355 touches for Illinois in 2022); his versatility was a question mark (college career: just 7.9% of his touches were receptions).

He easily dispatched those concerns in 2024, catching 54 of his 65 targets in this high-flying attack led by Joe Burrow, including 19 of 21 in December. The dynamics of this offense allowed Brown to flourish situationally – of the 46 running backs who had 100+ carries a season ago, 42 of them ran into a loaded box at a higher frequency.

It may sound simple, but the fewer giant men you have to navigate around the line of scrimmage, the better. Brown gained yardage on 85.2% of his attempts last year, a rate that topped an RB that has a case to be the top overall pick (Jahmyr Gibbs: 84.4%) and another that is viewed as “safe” and thus going ahead of him with regularity (Josh Jacobs: 85%).

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The offensive environment, of course, offers more upside than just backing teams off the line of scrimmage. Targeting explosive offenses is something fantasy managers do for a multitude of reasons, with the top one being that their player is constantly in scoring position. Touchdowns can be fluky year-over-year in terms of count, but if you roster enough players who are constantly knocking on the door, you position yourself to be “lucky” more often than your competition, and that’s a place I want to be.

  • Weeks 1-8, 10 red zone touches
    • That ranked 37th at the position, behind Trey Sermon, Rachaad White, and Ray Davis
  • Weeks 9-18: 42 red zone touches
    • Only Bijan Robinson (44) had more

If you’re going to pick-a-nit, it’s that Brown isn’t going to light up the highlight shows. He’s not going to make a backwards hurdle and is unlikely to have a single play that elevates his fantasy standing in a major way (229 carries last season, and he didn’t have a gain longer than 40 yards).

But does that really matter if the volume is as stable as we expect it to be? The other RBs age-25 or younger last season with 200+ carries and no such chunk plays were Chuba Hubbard (PPR RB13), Kyren Williams (PPR RB10), and Bijan Robinson (PPR RB3)

I’m looking to buy cheap insurance on Brown when available, not because I have concerns about him, but because I’m that sold on this offense. I want to ensure that by investing valuable draft capital to get the lead dog isn’t undercut by some poor injury luck. Wheels up on Cincinnati’s bellcow, the 2024 campaign was anything but a mirage.

Cameron Sheath’s Chase Brown Fantasy Projection

Chase Brown could prove to be an absolute steal in fantasy this year. The Bengals’ breakout star of 2024, Brown excelled as the team’s lead back and was a consistent producer in both the run and passing games.

Starting in a backup role to Zack Moss, Brown stepped up when Moss went down with a neck injury, having already started to eat into the veteran’s workload. Despite the early lack of opportunities, the former Illinois standout finished as the RB10 in PPR.

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Over Brown’s 11-game run as the team’s starter, he was the RB7 in fantasy points per game; from Week 9 onward, he was the RB5 in that stat. That stretch included six straight top-10 weekly finishes at the position, suggesting that the Bengals star is more than a flash in the pan. His ability as a pass-catcher means that he isn’t affected by shoot-out games like more grounded running backs are. That’s an important factor, as the Bengals look set to struggle on defense again in 2025.

The team’s star-studded offense will be called upon to put up huge numbers again this year, and Brown will be a big part of that. Having earned the trust of Joe Burrow, the running back could put up top-five numbers at the running back position this coming season.

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