Rhamondre Stevenson 2025 Season in Review
2025 NFL Season · PPR Scoring · Monday, May 11
The Rundown
Rhamondre Stevenson finished 2025 as the number 25 running back in total PPR scoring and the number 22 running back in PPR per game. That's the whole story in one sentence: a timeshare year where Stevenson lost the lead role to a rookie and settled into a complementary piece on the best offense in football. The Patriots went 14-3 and rode it to a Super Bowl, but inside that backfield, TreVeyon Henderson took 180 carries and nine rushing scores to Stevenson's 130 and seven. Stevenson missed three regular-season games, and even when active, he was rarely the centerpiece. Here's the frustrating part — isolate his per-touch work and he was fantastic. The volume just never showed up.
Now let's dig into the numbers, because the efficiency story is wild. Stevenson racked up plus 175.6 rushing yards over expected, the number one mark among qualified running backs — better per attempt than even teammate Henderson, who came in tenth. Per carry, he was plus 1.4 yards over expected and averaged 4.6 a pop on 130 totes. Through the air, he caught 32 of 37 targets for 345 yards and two scores — a 10 percent target share, useful but not featured. The problem was consistency. Stevenson averaged 12.8 PPR per game, but the game logs read like a coin flip: 4.7, then 21.2, then 4.6, then 5.1, single-digit duds at New Orleans and Cincinnati, then a closing kick of 17.8, 27.2, and 35.3 in the final three weeks. Pure boom-or-bust — touchdown-dependent, splash-play dependent, tied entirely to whether the script handed him carries.
The play that captures the season is the Week 18 closer against Miami: seven carries, 131 yards, two touchdowns, including a 35-yard score up the gut in the third quarter with New England already up 24-10. That's the Stevenson paradox in one box score. When he touched it, almost nobody in the league was more efficient. He just didn't touch it enough.
Your Starters
Rhamondre Stevenson
RB · NE
178.8
PPR
No narrative available for this player.
The Bottom Line
RB25 on the season — 14 games, 12.8 PPR/game
Stevenson was the number 25 running back in total PPR and the number 22 in per-game scoring — a boom-or-bust complementary back on a Super Bowl team who still graded out as the most efficient runner in football on a per-carry basis. The weakness the data flags is volume: 130 carries and a 10 percent target share aren't enough usage to stabilize a weekly floor when you're splitting a backfield with a more productive rookie.
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