Should I Draft D’Andre Swift? Fantasy Outlook for the Bears RB in 2025

D’Andre Swift may not be exciting, but he’s been productive in consecutive years – should fantasy football managers feel comfortable with him in 2025?

D’Andre Swift has shown glimpses of fantasy football greatness, and he finally made it through an entire season without missing time last year.

Does that mean his best is yet to come? Here’s a breakdown of his profile as he enters his age-26 season, his second in the Windy City and coming off of a career-high 295 touches.

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D’Andre Swift Fantasy Outlook

Simply put, nothing is exciting about Swift. You don’t have to be exciting to be productive, but in the range in which he is being drafted, some semblance of upside would be nice to see.

Percentage of Carries Gaining 10+ Yards

  • 2021 (Lions): 13.9%
  • 2022 (Lions): 13.1%
  • 2023 (Eagles): 9.6%
  • 2024 (Bears): 7.1%

Swift averaged a career-low 3.8 yards per carry in 2024 and didn’t have a 20-yard carry over his final seven games. He’s seen his rush TD rate crater from once every 20.8 carries in his three seasons with the Lions to once every 46.9 totes since.

The profile isn’t pretty. Heck, it’s not appealing in the least. Swift has posted a negative EPA per carry in three of five seasons and averaged just 0.73 PPR points per touch a year ago, the worst mark of his career.

And yet, he’s tough to completely fade — he’s a true test of the value of volume.

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You’re not rostering him under the pretense that he’s a league winner. You’re going this direction because he had as many games last season with 14+ carries and 4+ catches as Bijan Robinson. You’re clicking his name because only Derrick Henry (81.9%) and Kyren Williams (79.6%) accounted for a higher percentage of their team’s rush attempts in 2024 than Swift (77.8%).

Simply functioning as a weekly bellcow was enough for Swift to hold up his end of the bargain if you started him consistently. Despite all of the negative metrics mentioned above, he was a top-20 running back on nine occasions — you’re not losing ground with him in your lineup, and there’s value in that.

Yes, the rookie running backs who should walk into a featured role offer more potential, and maybe that is what your specific roster needs. Personally, I’m willing to sacrifice ceiling in the middle third of the draft, understanding that I can access players with a wide range of outcomes in the later stages. If I can lock in a starting unit that I feel good about weekly, that frees me up to swing big as the draft winds down.

So no, Swift probably won’t directly be the reason you win. But could he provide you with the freedom to gamble late that does land you a true difference maker?

Like you, I’m not entering any draft room with the intention to draft him or to overextend. That said, if I’m being asked to pay market price for him and believe one of my top two backs carries with risk, I’ll pull the trigger and find comfort in knowing what I’m getting.

Cameron Sheath’s D’Andre Swift Fantasy Projection

D’Andre Swift could prove to be one of the values of the 2025 fantasy season, as the likely lead back in Ben Johnson’s new-look Bears offense. The former Lions back saw a career-high 253 carries in 2024, although he posted a career-low 3.79 yards per attempt.

Regardless, the Bears have done very little during the offseason to indicate that Swift will lose his starting job, but they have made significant improvements around him. Despite playing in Shane Waldron’s hapless offense, Swift outperformed his current RB21 ADP last season, finishing as the RB19.

With four new offensive linemen potentially starting for Chicago this coming year, and with a much-improved play-caller, Swift is a dark horse for a top-12 RB finish in 2025.

It’s too easy to compare Swift and teammate Roschon Johnson to Lions duo Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery, despite the clear talent gap. While there will undoubtedly be similarities, Chicago’s offense is unlikely to mirror the Lions completely.

That being said, Swift is the obvious pass-catching back in Chicago, while Johnson still has a lot to prove if he is to threaten his teammate’s rushing volume. Better blocking, better play-calling, and more scoring opportunities should see Swift thrive in 2025.

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