Washington Commanders running back Jacory Croskey-Merritt has already done enough to turn heads, but Pro Football Focus still isn’t putting him near the top of the league’s starting backs.
Croskey-Merritt, known as Bill, landed at No. 30 in PFF’s recent ranking of all 32 projected starting running backs for 2026. That’s a tough spot for a player who was one of the biggest steals of the 2025 NFL Draft. Washington took him in the seventh round, 24 running backs went before him, and he still finished last season as the Commanders’ leading rusher with 805 yards and eight touchdowns.
He did it efficiently, too. Croskey-Merritt averaged 4.6 yards per carry as a rookie and started only seven games, all while logging just 38.5% of Washington’s offensive snaps.
The Commanders clearly believe in him. They let Austin Ekeler and Chris Rodriguez Jr. walk this offseason and passed on chasing top free-agent backs like Kenneth Walker Jr. and Travis Etienne. Instead, they added Rachaad White and Jerome Ford, brought back Jeremy McNichols, and used a sixth-round pick on Kaytron Allen.
Even with that added depth, all signs point to Croskey-Merritt handling the biggest workload. White is expected to have a significant role in David Blough's new offense, but Bill appears set up to be Washington’s lead back. He also spent the offseason bulking up for a larger role and sharpening his receiving ability.
PFF’s ranking leaned on the same question that hangs over a lot of young backs: can he do it for a full season as the guy? The outlet noted that Croskey-Merritt was one of the league’s best underdog stories last season, especially considering he played just one college game in 2024. It also pointed to his 75.4 PFF rushing grade and Washington’s decision to add a receiving complement in White, while still expecting Bill to take most of the carries with Chris Rodriguez Jr. now in Jacksonville.
There’s at least an argument that he belongs a little higher than No. 30, but the skepticism isn’t hard to understand. Croskey-Merritt has talent, and he’s already shown he can produce. What he hasn’t shown yet is that he can carry a backfield for an entire season.
That’s the next test. And if he’s the fit Washington thinks he is in Blough’s zone-blocking scheme, especially alongside a healthy Jayden Daniels, the 1,000-yard mark is there for the taking.
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