On the RB front - here are some I've either bought already, or am looking to buy...
Stewart - lord help me, I still believe. As a Carolina fan, they're going to shake up everything with the new GM, and given the talent, the cap situation with DW, a new GM focusing exclusively on maximizing the talent on the roster, etc... I still believe he'll get feature-back duties next year.
Ivory - We're seeing the talent explode on the scene when he's given the opportunities. He looks better to me this year than he did before his Lisfranc injury, and that run against ATL was beautiful. Plus, consider the Saints salary cap situation. From Peter King's MMQB yesterday:
Cap numbers, of course, can and will change. But as of today, the Saints are in major trouble if they're going to use any avenue except the fixed-cost NFL Draft to repair their defense in 2013. The 15 heaviest contracts the Saints have, as of this morning, take up 87 percent of their 2013 salary cap. The NFL is scheduled to have a cap number of about $121 million per team next year, though that varies from team to team depending on cap credits and money carried over from the previous season.
Think of that: The Saints have 28 percent of their 53-man roster taking up 87 percent of the cap room. And they'll be at least $25 million over the $121 million cap at the start of the free-agency period.
Ivory is a RFA at the end of this year. If he keeps up this level of play, I can't imagine some team not looking to give him a shot at a starting job. And I don't think the Saints can afford to keep him.
Morris - depends on the situation of the owner in your league, but people aren't sold on him as a dynasty asset. His production this year speaks for itself... he's a beast between the tackles, and does everything Shanahan wants him to do. I personally don't see that changing heading into next season, barring injury. And to me, he's shown enough blocking prowess and decent enough hands to eventually work himself into an occassional 3rd down situation, and end up with 20-30 catches annually, only being replaced in obvious comeback mode by a passing-down specialist. Owners looking to cash in on his success may be willing to take less than he's actually worth - as mentioned a few pages ago, only a handful of top-30 RBs under 25. Morris is one of them, and I don't think he's going anywhere.
Lamar Miller - Miller is probably pretty easy to acquire right now, and I still think the talent can be productive in the long run. He's the first RB drafted by this coaching staff, and they traded up to acquire him. Some reports suggest Bush is already on the way out; others that he definitely won't be resigned. I don't personally see Daniel Thomas as anything special. I think Miller could be.
Hillman - Gotta love the situation, and the FBG week in review from this week brought up an interesting point that I hadn't thought of before: Fox's track record with RBs. While Lammey may be WAY over the cliff with Hillman, and that bias is certainly evident in his evaluation, Hillman's produced with his opportunities to this point, and his main competition for carries is OLD. Manning's offenses produce running back points, and Hillman appears to be gaining Manning's trust as well as the coaching staff's. You can't ask for a much better situation. Plus...
Here's a list of RBs drafted by John Fox in the first 4 rounds of the draft:
2002 - DeShaun Foster - Second Round (Hit)
2005 - Eric Shelton - Second Round (HUGE miss)
2006 - DeAngelo Williams - First Round (Hit)
2008 - Jonathan Stewart - First Round (Hit)
2009 - Mike Goodson - Fourth Round (Hit)
2012 - Ronnie Hillman - Third Round (TBD)
With Carolina, Fox hit on 80% of his RB draft picks, with one giant mistake in Eric Shelton. Yes, most were first or second round picks, but 80% is still a strong rate. It was rumored in Carolina that the Panthers often let position coaches overrule the scouting department when it came to selection of players (which is absurd IMO, but that's a different rant - thank God Hurney is gone), and that's why the Panthers drafted some positions much, much better than others (RBs, LBs, O-Line). The RBs coach from Fox's tenure in Carolina is also his RBs coach in Denver, and while I doubt he had influence in the Denver draft room like he may have in Charlotte, he still has a track record of producing talent from the position.
I'm looking to acquire Hillman.