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RB Isaiah Davis, Jets (2 Viewers)

JohnnyU

Footballguy
Rookie RB with lots of talent, but also on the same team as Breece Hall and Braelon Allen. Hall is doubtful this week so he may get a few carries behind Allen.

Isaiah Davis was drafted by the New York Jets in the fifth round of the 2024 NFL draft.

  • 6’0” 218
  • 40-Yard Dash 4.57 Seconds​

  • 2023: First-team Associated Press FCS All-American. Missouri Valley Football Conference Co-Offensive Player of the Year (with SDSU QB Mark Gronowski). First-team All-MVFC. Led the FCS with 1,578 rushing yards (236 carries, 6.7 per). Tied for the FCS lead with 18 rushing TDs. Team captain. Played all 15 games for the national champions (23-199-8.7, TD receiving)..
  • DRAFT PROFILE: BIO​

    Isaiah Davis with over 2,000 rushing yards and 45 touchdowns in his senior year of high school, showcased early on his potential on the ground, earning Missouri Gatorade Player of the Year. Opting for South Dakota State for his collegiate career, Davis hit the ground running despite a COVID-19 delayed start, amassing impressive stats over his tenure - 4,548 rushing yards, 50 touchdowns, and 487 receiving yards, solidifying his role as a workhorse back for the Jackrabbits.

    Davis' college career is decorated with accolades, underlining his impact on the field. He was twice honored as an FCS All-American (2022-23) and snagged the MVFC co-Offensive Player of the Year in 2023. His consistency and dominance were also recognized with two First-Team All-MVFC selections (2022-23) and earlier nods as HERO Sports Sophomore All-American (2021) and a spot on the MVFC All-Newcomer Team (2020-21).
  • SCOUTING REPORT: STRENGTHS​

    • Combines size with agility, effective in navigating between tackles, showcasing impressive forward momentum.
    • Exhibits exceptional ball security with only three fumbles across four years, indicative of reliable hands and awareness.
    • Displays advanced vision and patience, adept at identifying and exploiting running lanes, contributing to his high yardage gains.
    • Possesses the build and frame of an NFL-caliber running back, ready to handle a workhorse role.
    • Strong lower body and ability to gain yards after contact, beneficial in short-yardage and goal-line situations.
    • Capable receiver out of the backfield, offering a viable option for check-downs and short-area throws.
    • Demonstrates notable discipline and understanding as a zone runner, efficiently reading blocks and leveraging defensive movements.
    • Quick feet allow for effective one-cut and slashing running style, making him elusive despite size.
  • SCOUTING REPORT: WEAKNESSES​

    • Lacks elite long-speed, limiting breakaway potential on longer runs.
    • Tends to bounce runs outside rather than taking direct paths, affecting efficiency.
    • Pass protection techniques need refinement to enhance value in passing situations.
    • While having decent burst, lacks top-end explosiveness characteristic of elite NFL running backs.
    • Route-running abilities are underdeveloped, narrowing his utility in diverse passing schemes
    • It can't be overlooked that he's padded his stats at a lower level of play at South Dakota

SUMMARY
Isaiah Davis enters the NFL Draft as a back with a bulldozer style, capable of grinding down defenses with his physical run game. His tape at South Dakota State displays a runner with a nose for the end zone, thriving in gap schemes and showcasing an ability to turn upfield with decisiveness. Davis' leg churn and pad level make him a nightmare for solo tacklers, illustrating the kind of power and balance that earns tough yards after contact. While his contributions as a receiver offer some versatility, his skill set screams ground-and-pound, fitting schemes that favor a smashmouth approach.​
However, Davis' evaluation isn't without its red flags. The lack of elite burst and top-end speed limit his threat as a breakaway back, potentially capping his ceiling in an NFL increasingly biased towards versatile, dual-threat RBs. His pass pro needs refinement; his tendency to telegraph cuts could make him a liability in blitz pickup situations. These elements of his game will require attention and development at the next level, raising questions about his ability to be a three-down back from day one.​
Overall, Davis is a mixed bag with clear NFL upside and equally evident limitations. His ability to absorb contact and push piles fits well with teams in need of a physical presence in the backfield. Yet, his immediate impact may be limited to early-down work and short-yardage situations, where his downhill mentality and toughness shine. His draft stock will likely reflect this dichotomy, positioning him as a Day 3 pick with the potential to outplay his selection as he refines his game.​
 
Last edited:
Jim Nagy
RB is one position where scouts can find Sunday players at sub-FBS levels and @GoJacksFB do-it-all back Isaiah Davis’ name consistently comes up on @seniorbowl calls with NFL teams. Davis (5117v, 227v) catches it well out of backfield with his unusually large 10.5”hands so he has 3-down value NFL teams are looking for. 🐰

#TheDraftStartsInMOBILE™️

2023-10-07
 
B. Allen banged up. B. Hall the same...could get shut down.

Surprised no chatter on Davis.

Jets offense is starting to roll (when it's all over lol).

Could be a surprise in the semis and finals.
 
B. Hall the same...could get shut down.
Breece is expected to play this week. As for next week who knows, but this is the same team that gave him 37 carries in the meaningless season finale last year.
Breece reported as DNP today.
https://x.com/ZackBlatt
Zack Rosenblatt

@ZackBlatt


Breece Hall is further along with his injury than Braelon Allen, Jeff Ulbrich said — aka Hall is more likely to play this week.
 
Not in a good situation, but I believe the talent is there. Then again I thought the same thing about Abanikandi when he was drafted by the Jets.
 
Still don’t want to drop. My running backs stink but right now this guy is RB3 on his own squad. I’m seeing a rough path. If Hall keeps malcontenting (neologism here) then he might be the pass-catching/relief back for Braelon Allen, but what does that get you in fantasy? Still not likely to drop him.
 
Still don’t want to drop. My running backs stink but right now this guy is RB3 on his own squad. I’m seeing a rough path. If Hall keeps malcontenting (neologism here) then he might be the pass-catching/relief back for Braelon Allen, but what does that get you in fantasy? Still not likely to drop him.

With you on this. Something about it feels like it might work out for him
 
Still don’t want to drop. My running backs stink but right now this guy is RB3 on his own squad. I’m seeing a rough path. If Hall keeps malcontenting (neologism here) then he might be the pass-catching/relief back for Braelon Allen, but what does that get you in fantasy? Still not likely to drop him.

With you on this. Something about it feels like it might work out for him

I want to make a feel-good post and say I really see it in him, but it's really because I've been to the finals three years in a row and had no picks this year (traded back in to take Croskey-Merritt at 6.3) and my running backs freaking stink. That's a bit of a personalized post. I should say that in general, if you have a good running back room for FF, he's got quite a ways to go to relevancy and you have to consider that. If you don't and he's available, wait to see how available other guys are. That's kind of a stinging non-endorsement, and he was good for a rookie last year, but I look at these guys as interchangeable at a certain point, and you want to be picking a better path (things can change radically and who knows how long Glenn and Mougey want to wake up and read a disgruntled Breece Hall in the press) than the one he has at this very moment.

Two things cause me to hold a bit. He's got reasonable talent and the Breece Hall thing. I think if somebody really wanted Hall and offered the Jets enough (I do not know what that is— a second is probably out of the question, and I think he's worth more than a third) then Hall would be gone so fast he'd give everybody the vapors.

He basically took over RB2 from Braelon Allen last year, and I'm not sure why (I think it was a bit injury, a bit because Allen hit a rookie wall that Davis apparently didn't). The Jets didn't know what on earth they were doing and the dysfunction we could all see is now in the press. So they're resetting everything and I think he's back to RB3 because everybody keeps pumping Allen's tires.
 
I’m not dropping him. There is definitely something there.
He's a tough one to guage going forward considering that depth chart. I've advocated for him many times before, but you will have to be patient. In shallow leagues it has proven to be very difficult to roster him, but yes, in 14 team leagues, and / or leagues with deep rosters, he is most certainly a hold.
 
Still don’t want to drop. My running backs stink but right now this guy is RB3 on his own squad. I’m seeing a rough path. If Hall keeps malcontenting (neologism here) then he might be the pass-catching/relief back for Braelon Allen, but what does that get you in fantasy? Still not likely to drop him.
If you drop Davis I can grab him and trade him to you a third time.
 
I’m not dropping him. There is definitely something there.
He's a tough one to guage going forward considering that depth chart. I've advocated for him many times before, but you will have to be patient. In shallow leagues it has proven to be very difficult to roster him, but yes, in 14 team leagues, and / or leagues with deep rosters, he is most certainly a hold.
Agreed, hard to hold in a shallow league but a hold for sure in a deeper league. Don't forget, this year is the last year on Hall's rookie deal and he may just want to move on after this year.
 
I’m not dropping him. There is definitely something there.
He's a tough one to guage going forward considering that depth chart. I've advocated for him many times before, but you will have to be patient. In shallow leagues it has proven to be very difficult to roster him, but yes, in 14 team leagues, and / or leagues with deep rosters, he is most certainly a hold.
Agreed, hard to hold in a shallow league but a hold for sure in a deeper league. Don't forget, this year is the last year on Hall's rookie deal and he may just want to move on after this year.
yep - i can see the Jets not paying Breece after breaking bank fior GW and Sauce - and go with a B Allen/I Davis tandem next year. Davis practically free.
 

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