2023 Pre-Season Rank #106, 2022 Pre-Season Rank #142, 2021 Pre-Season Rank #141. Peak Period: 2019-23
Brown had a breakthrough year in 2020 on an explosive Tennessee offense but was not able to build on that in 2021. Tennessee surprisingly traded him to Philadelphia in the following off-season, and what we thought was an early crossroads for Brown would see the Wide Receiver take the correct fork in the road. Brown added two Pro Bowls in his two years in Philadelphia, and as Jalen Hurts’ primary weapon, he should be able to add more honors to his trophy case.
2023 Pre-Season Rank #91, 2022 Pre-Season Rank #114, 2021 Pre-Season Rank #140. Peak Period: 2018-22
Chubb emerged as the top rusher for an improving Browns offense and was a perennial Pro Bowl Selection from 2019 to 2022. He likely would have been again last year, but he tore his ACL in Week 2 and is not expected back until October. If Chubb returns to what he was, he can reclaim that HOF momentum.
2023 Pre-Season Rank #69, 2022 Pre-Season Rank #98, 2021 Pre-Season Rank #117. Peak Period: 2019-23.
Josh Allen is in contention as the top dual-threat Quarterback in football and is least in the conversation as one of the most exciting. That is all fine and good, but Quarterbacks have to win it all, and while Allen has taken the Bills deep into the playoffs multiple times, the Hall looks for more.
Past that, Allen is a two-time leader in Approximate Value, but he is the leader of a rebuilding Bills team. Like Dak Prescott of Dallas, he is a Super Bowl win away from seeing that probable PFHOF bust.
2023 Pre-Season Rank #115, 2022 Pre-Season Rank #122, 2021 Pre-Season Rank #127. Peak Period: 2018-22
After seven seasons with Green Bay, Aaron Jones joined NFC North rival Minnesota, but the Vikings don’t have the same offensive horses from where he left off. Jones’s peak run is likely over, but there are some statistical milestones in his sight on 10,000 Yards From Scrimmage (1.984 away) and is five Rushing Touchdowns away from an even 50.