Vikings Backfield Just Got The Kind Of Snub Fans Hate

Despite a strong season, the Minnesota Vikings' running backs find themselves absent from ESPNs top-10 rankings, underscoring the fierce competition and strategic design of the team's offense.

The Minnesota Vikings have a backfield that worked, but ESPN’s latest running back rankings didn’t give it much love.

Jeremy Fowler’s 2026 list, built from votes by NFL executives, coaches and scouts, left both Aaron Jones and Jordan Mason outside the top 10. Bijan Robinson took the No. 1 spot, with Jahmyr Gibbs, Saquon Barkley, Christian McCaffrey and Jonathan Taylor filling out the top five.

For Minnesota, the snub lands on a tandem that produced real value in 2025. Jones appeared in 12 games and ran 132 times for 548 yards, averaging 4.2 yards per carry and scoring two touchdowns. Mason led the Vikings in rushing with 159 carries for 758 yards and six touchdowns, while averaging 4.8 yards per attempt.

Jones’ season was interrupted by missed time, and that clearly hurt his standing in a ranking like this. Even so, he still brings the kind of traits Minnesota leans on: vision, burst, receiving ability and experience in a system that asks its backs to do more than just take handoffs. The numbers were steady, but not the kind that usually push a runner into the national top tier.

Mason’s case looks different. He handled the heavier load, finished with more carries, more yards and more rushing touchdowns than Jones, and gave the offense a tougher edge. Minnesota has already pointed to the idea of the two backs complementing each other, and the team’s own coverage had highlighted Mason’s rushing profile before he arrived, including a high missed tackle forced rate with San Francisco.

The bigger question now is whether Mason can turn one strong season in Minnesota into a wider league reputation. He has the size and downhill style to make a real case, but top-10 recognition usually comes with elite production, major receiving value or a full-season workload that dominates the conversation. He may not be there yet, but 2025 gave him a strong argument as one of the NFC’s more underrated backs.

And that may be the real story here. Minnesota doesn’t need Jones or Mason to stack up with Robinson, Gibbs or Barkley.

It needs the run game to support the quarterback, keep the offense balanced and set up favorable looks for Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, T.J. Hockenson and the passing game.

A committee can still matter a lot, even when neither piece is getting top-10 national billing.

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