Aaron Jones 2026 Season Preview — what repeats, what doesn't | Muffed
2026 NFL Season · Half-PPR Scoring · Thursday, Jul 2
The Rundown
Minnesota nearly moved on from Aaron Jones in March. Then it kept him at a forty-percent pay cut. Drafts run him out fortieth at the position, pick one-twenty — and for a back entering year ten off a hamstring season, the front office, the market, and the aging curve are all making the same call. Our job is to check their math.
The season: twelve games around a hamstring injury and an injured-reserve stint, per CBS Sports — a hundred thirty-two carries for five hundred forty-eight yards, four-point-two a carry, twenty-eight catches for a hundred ninety-nine, three touchdowns. Eight-point-seven Half-PPR points a game, thirty-third among backs per game, forty-third in total. The twenty-eight catches came on forty-one targets, and the split was real even when he was healthy: Mason out-carried him a hundred fifty-nine to a hundred thirty-two. Jones still averaged more per game than Mason, for whatever a part-time sample says — eight-seven to seven-six.
The career deserves the respect of exact numbers: an eighteen-point-one peak in twenty-nineteen, double-digit scoring every year from twenty-eighteen through twenty-twenty-four — twelve-seven a game as recently as the year before last, on seventeen games. Then eight-seven. Year ten is where those two facts fight. Before last season he had posted seven straight years in double figures, twenty-eighteen through twenty-twenty-four — the durability of the scoring, if not the hamstrings, was remarkable for the position.
The pattern math, plainly: backs in career year five or beyond fade about one-point-one Half-PPR points a game — n of seventy-one, directional, our weakest but most relevant pattern — and one-point-one off eight-seven lands at seven-six. Seven-six a game last season ranked… fortieth. The fade lands him exactly where he's priced. His touchdown share is low, so there's nothing extra to unwind; and the twenty-eight catches in twelve games say the passing-down skill — the one that ages last and pays half a point each in this format — is still on the books.
[[SITUATION]]
The situation: ESPN reported in early March that Minnesota would trade or cut him; instead he took the revised deal — nine million down to five and a half, per NFL.com. The room got framed all spring as Mason's to lead with Jones as the veteran passing-down half, per Yahoo and Zone Coverage in June, with sixth-round rookie Demond Claiborne added behind them, per the team site. Jones spent late June publicly pushing back on the washed label, per Heavy. The room's rookie, Demond Claiborne, cost a trade-up — the same conviction signal we flagged in Mason's episode, aimed at both their workloads. Zone Coverage's June read says the roles may stay undefined into the season — which, for a year-ten back, is its own kind of verdict. The quarterback — Murray or McCarthy — is unresolved, which muddies every projection in this backfield equally.
The price: RB40 for a year-ten back whose fade math lands at RB40. The slot assumes spot-start value with bye-week utility — the passing-down role delivers exactly that, if he keeps it. [pause] Our verdict: no call — the market priced the aging curve nearly to the decimal, and we checked the decimal. The caveat, both ways: if the passing-down role is truly his, Half-PPR hands him a floor this price never asks for; if the rookie takes it, year-ten backs don't get mid-season second chances.
Watch the passing-down snap split in September, and his touch count in the first three weeks — veteran phase-outs announce themselves early. They start on the play sheet before anyone says a word out loud. [[CLOSE]] He's one of your guys? This show covers your whole roster — every player, every week, all season.
The Bottom Line
NO CALL — RB40 for a year-ten back whose fade math lands at RB40; the market priced the aging curve to the decimal.
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