
5 Fantasy Football Sleepers for 2026 (The League-Winning List Nobody Is Talking About)
February 10, 20265 Running Backs to Avoid in 2026 Fantasy Football (Major Draft Traps)

These 5 Fantasy RBs are set to bust in 2026!

These 5 Fantasy RBs are set to bust in 2026!
If you want to destroy your fantasy football season in 2026… DO NOT Draft these running backs.
I’m serious.
Every single year, fantasy managers get trapped. They draft off name value. They draft off last year’s points. They draft off copy-and-paste rankings.
And then by Week 6, their season is over. We’re not doing that.
We’re planting seeds early in the offseason. Because before you know it, July hits. Then August. Then you’re on the clock. And the sheep in your league will be scrambling while you already know exactly who to avoid.
Today, we’re breaking down five running backs to avoid in fantasy football 2026 — including one massive trap at the end that people are going to get emotional about.
Let’s get into it. Watch the full video as well for the full explanation and grab 16 Rounds to win your leagues!
1. James Conner – The Age & Injury Time Bomb
Age in 2026: 31
2025 Finish: RB80
Games Played in 2025: 3
Let’s start with reality.
James Conner is 31 years old and coming off another injury-riddled season. That alone should make you uncomfortable.
Here’s the bigger picture:
Only two 1,000-yard rushing seasons in nine years
Career high: 236 rushing attempts
Multiple seasons with major missed time
Arizona likely to address RB depth
This isn’t about hating the player. It’s about understanding trends.
Running backs over 30 historically decline. Add injury volatility and a team that may draft competition, and you have a recipe for fantasy disaster.
Even if he’s sitting at RB33 and looks like “value,” you’re still banking on:
Health
Volume
Offensive stability
That’s too many variables.
Verdict:
James Conner is not someone you build around. Let someone else take the risk.

Fall of year is here! (Photo by Jordon Kelly/Icon Sportswire)
2. Derrick Henry – The Cliff Is Coming
Age in 2026: 32
2025 Stats: 307 carries, 1,595 yards, 16 TDs
2025 Finish: RB8
Let’s be clear — Derrick Henry is a freak.
He proved doubters wrong last season. Again.
But here’s the uncomfortable truth: Father Time always wins.
Henry has:
Massive career workload
Multiple 300-carry seasons
Heavy mileage for nearly a decade
Running backs don’t age gracefully. Especially not ones who play this violently.
Even if he finished RB8 in 2025, you have to ask:
Are you willing to draft a 32-year-old RB in Round 2 or 3 knowing the drop-off can happen instantly?
Because when it happens, it happens fast.
We’ve seen it with:
Todd Gurley
Le’Veon Bell
Ezekiel Elliott
Elite… until they weren’t.
Henry may still produce, but I don’t want to be the one holding him when the cliff shows up.
Verdict:
Great career. Dangerous 2026 investment at cost.
3. Jaylen Warren – The Placeholder Trap
Age in 2026: 27
2025 Stats: 958 yards, 6 TDs
2025 Finish: RB17
This one is sneaky.
Jaylen Warren looks safe. Looks steady. Looks draftable.
But ask yourself this:
Has he ever truly taken over a backfield?
No.
The Steelers’ backfield has been a rotating mess. They tried adding talent. They haven’t found a long-term answer. And if they’re serious about contending, they will address RB again.
Warren:
Has never had a 1,000-yard season
Isn’t elite in any one category
Has always split work
He feels like a “safe RB2” — but safe often means capped ceiling.
And if Pittsburgh drafts or signs competition? His value tanks immediately.
Verdict:
Jaylen Warren is a volume-dependent RB in a shaky situation. That’s a trap.
4. Kyren Williams – Workhorse No More?
Age in 2026: Mid-prime
2025 Stats: 259 carries, 1,252 yards, 10 TDs
2025 Finish: RB9
Kyren Williams had another solid season.
But here’s what changed:
Blake Corum.
The workload dipped. The committee increased. The “true workhorse” role disappeared.
And that matters.
If you’re drafting a running back in the second round, you want:
Elite volume
Minimal competition
Clear goal-line control
Kyren doesn’t check all three anymore.
Corum’s usage wasn’t insignificant. It wasn’t just change-of-pace. It was meaningful.
And if that trend continues, you’re paying RB1 prices for RB2 production.
Verdict:
Kyren Williams is fine — but not at his 2026 cost.

CMC do for regression! (Photo by Ric Tapia/Icon Sportswire)
5. Christian McCaffrey – The Biggest Trap of 2026
This one is going to upset people.
That’s fine.
2025 Finish: RB1
Fantasy Points: 416+ PPR
Age in 2026: Over 30
On paper, CMC looks automatic.
But zoom out.
Since 2020:
2020: 3 games
2021: 7 games
2022: Strong
2023: Elite
2024: 4 games
2025: Elite
That’s a coin flip.
Three strong seasons. Three injury-disaster seasons.
Now add this historical fact:
Running backs almost never finish RB1 in back-to-back seasons.
The last one to dominate back-to-back at the top level consistently? Priest Holmes… over two decades ago.
Regression is real. Age is real. Wear and tear is real.
CMC is currently projected as a top-3 pick again.
Ask yourself:
Are you willing to spend a first-round pick on a 30+ year old running back with a documented 50% injury volatility rate?
Because that’s the bet you’re making.
He could be great.
He could also miss half the season.
And that’s not how you build a championship roster.
Verdict:
Christian McCaffrey is the biggest risk-adjusted trap in 2026 fantasy drafts.
The Bigger Picture: Why Running Backs Bust So Often
Fantasy managers make the same mistake every year:
They draft based on what already happened.
But running backs are the most volatile position in fantasy football because of:
Age cliffs
Injury probability
Workload changes
Coaching decisions
Draft additions
You don’t win by drafting yesterday’s points.
You win by drafting tomorrow’s opportunity.
Final Thoughts: Think Ahead or Get Left Behind
By the time July hits, these warning signs will be obvious.
But right now? People don’t want to hear it.
That’s your advantage.
If you’re serious about dominating 2026 fantasy football:
Study age curves
Study contract situations
Study workload trends
Draft upside, not nostalgia
And most importantly — avoid traps.
Let me ask you:
Are you drafting CMC again?
Are you taking Derrick Henry in Round 2?
Do you trust James Conner at 31?
Make sure you grab the 16 Rounds Draft solution to be light years ahead of your league mates!



