Blake Corum 2026 Season Preview — what repeats, what doesn't | Muffed

2026 NFL Season · Half-PPR Scoring · Thursday, Jul 2

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The Rundown

Blake Corum is being drafted at pick one hundred as the thirty-fifth running back — nine spots ahead of what he actually produced last year. The gap is a promotion the Rams have hinted at and never announced.

What he produced was real, just modest: seventeen games, a hundred forty-five carries, seven hundred forty-six yards — five-point-one a carry — six touchdowns, and seven-point-oh Half-PPR points a game, which ranked forty-fourth among regular backs. Eight catches all season. That last number matters in this format: in Half-PPR, a back who doesn't catch passes needs volume or touchdowns to pay his price, and last year he split both with Kyren Williams on a twelve-and-five wild-card team. The receiving role was nearly nonexistent — eight catches on fourteen targets, under one look a game — so his hundred eighteen total Half-PPR points, thirty-seventh at the position, came almost entirely on the ground.

The career arc is short and pointed up: from two Half-PPR points a game as a rookie to seven in year two, on essentially identical usage share behind the same starter. Year three is where second-round backs either take a room or settle into a rotation. The efficiency case travels, though: five-point-one a carry over a hundred forty-five carries isn't a small-sample trick.

The pattern check comes back quiet, and we'll say so plainly. His touchdown share was point-two-nine-five — sitting just under the point-two-nine-eight line where the running back TD-fade cohort starts, the one that gives back three points a game the next season, n of seventy-two. That fade replicates in both halves of the decade — minus two-point-nine before twenty-twenty-one, minus three-point-three since — which is why we take its threshold seriously enough to report a near-miss. Close, but under: the fade doesn't fire, and we don't round cohorts up to manufacture a take. Nothing else fires either — no aging risk in year three, no injury discount, and no validated pattern that converts spring buzz into carries. When the library is silent, the verdict tier exists for exactly this.

[[SITUATION]]

The situation is why the market is paying early. Kyren Williams is still the starter and got extended last August — three years, thirty-three million, twenty-three guaranteed, per CBS Sports — but the team's own June position preview framed this backfield as a rotation for the third straight year, and Los Angeles reporting has openly floated a move toward an even split, per the Rams' site and Roundtable in June. The club's twenty twenty-five breakout feature credited Corum with about thirty percent of the snaps last season — their number, not ours. No running back was drafted in April. Sean McVay is back for year ten with Nate Scheelhaase promoted to coordinator, per the team site. Jarquez Hunter, last year's fourth-rounder, is the third name in the room, per Turf Show Times, and camp opens July twenty-seventh.

The price: pick one hundred pays RB35 for a back whose scoreboard said RB44 — you're buying the role change in advance. RB35 is a flex price, and a flex season at his efficiency needs either the split to move or the touchdown rate to hold. [pause] Our verdict: watchlist. We can't underwrite carries that haven't been assigned, and we won't fade a situation this plausible either — that's the honest middle. The caveat, spoken: if the split really does move toward fifty-fifty, this price is roughly fair, and the touchdown role could make it cheap.

Watch the preseason backfield script — who opens drives two and three — and whether his receiving usage grows past a courtesy. Preseason rotation scripts are staff messaging — the cheapest honest signal a drafter gets. [[CLOSE]] If he's on your roster, this show covers all of it — every player, every week, all season.

The Bottom Line

WATCHLIST — RB35 prices a promotion the Rams keep hinting at but never announced; we won't underwrite unassigned carries.

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