I've said this before but it bares repeating, Aaron Jones is not a generic RB situation, for one he's a low mileage pro RB compared to the others, has had no major injury's, and touches to impact, is as good or better then any of these other RB's, we have hardly taped into Jones as a receiver. read.
The most efficient running back in football might be Jones, whose 61% success rate leads all backs.
https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/281 ... -disasters
in most situations I agree with everyone that thinks that ya pluck a RB, give him the rock 18 to 20 times a game for 4 seasons rinse and repeat, but we havn't done that with Jones ( I was right NCF, jones got 10 run touches against the Colts, my faith in Leroy as been restored
) in fact if anything he has been way under utilized, in fact there are so many yrds, receptions, and points still sitting on the tundra because we kept Jones on the bench, this in itself makes Jones a perfect type RB to pay out a 2nd contract to, I'd give him 3 years , use him as a receiver a bit more, let Dillon do the heavy lifting and wouldn't look back.
always baffles me that fans don't balk at giving a corner or a receiver big time 2nd contracts, and frown on paying a low mileage RB that produces more impact plays then either of the other two, that just makes no sense at all.
Was tied for the NFL lead in rushing TDs (16) in 2019, the second most in team history behind only FB Jim Taylor (19 in 1962), and was tied for the league lead with 19 total TDs, which tied for the second most in franchise annals behind only RB Ahman Green (20 in 2003).
Including playoffs, posted a team-record 23 TDs last season, topping Green's single-season franchise high of 22 TDs in 2003.
Rushed for 28 TDs from 2017-19, the most ever by a Packer in his first three seasons in the NFL.
Is one of only five RBs in league history to post 2,000-plus rushing yards and 25-plus rushing TDs with an average of 5-plus yards per carry in their first three seasons (Paul Lowe, Gale Sayers, Jim Brown, Larry Johnson).
Is one of only two active NFL running backs (Browns RB Nick Chubb) with 450-plus career rushing attempts and an average of 5-plus yards per carry (5.02 average on 450 attempts).
Ranked No. 1 in the league in yards per carry (5.47) in 2018, the first Packer to lead the league in the category since the NFL went to a 16-game schedule in 1978.
His career average of 5.02 yards per carry ranks No. 1 in team history among players with 400-plus attempts
https://www.packers.com/team/players-ro ... ron-jones/