Why 2021 Antonio Gibson Looks Like 2016 David Johnson

While their circumstances aren’t entirely the same, 2021 Antonio Gibson is certainly putting off 2016 David Johnson vibes. After an impressive rookie campaign, Antonio Gibson is shaping up to be a player that should be coveted in your 2021 fantasy league.

To start, players like Gibson and Johnson don’t grow on trees. Fast 220 lb. running backs with receiving abilities are rare. Let’s look at all the 220 lb. rookie running backs since 2000 to score at least 200 PPR points.

Player Year Age Draft Tm WT G GS PPR PPR/G
Saquon Barkley 2018 21 2 NYG 233 16 16 385.8 24.11
Ezekiel Elliott 2016 21 4 DAL 228 15 15 325.4 21.69
Matt Forte 2008 23 44 CHI 221 16 16 304.5 19.03
Adrian Peterson 2007 22 7 MIN 220 14 9 251.9 17.99
Leonard Fournette 2017 22 4 JAX 228 13 13 230.2 17.71
Trent Richardson 2012 22 3 CLE 228 15 15 254.7 16.98
Jonathan Taylor 2020 21 41 IND 226 15 13 252.8 16.85
Le’Veon Bell 2013 21 48 PIT 225 13 13 216.9 16.68
Eddie Lacy 2013 23 61 GNB 250 15 15 242.5 16.17
Todd Gurley 2015 21 10 STL 224 13 12 208.4 16.03
Anthony Thomas 2001 24 38 CHI 225 14 10 202.1 14.44
Antonio Gibson 2020 22 66 WAS 220 14 10 202.2 14.44
Jamal Lewis 2000 21 5 BAL 245 16 13 227 14.19
Willis McGahee 2004 23 23 BUF 235 16 11 225.7 14.11
David Johnson 2015 24 86 ARI 224 16 5 215.8 13.49
Jeremy Hill 2014 22 55 CIN 230 16 8 210.9 13.18

Despite playing essentially just 13 games, Antonio Gibson made the list. Remember, in Week 12, Gibson played just four snaps before being removed from the game with turf toe. Gibson and Johnson are the two lowest selections in the NFL Draft to make the list.

Below are the raw stats from each season.

Player Att Yds TD YPC Rec Yds TD TGT YPT
Saquon Barkley 261 1307 11 5.01 91 721 4 121 5.96
Ezekiel Elliott 322 1631 15 5.07 32 363 1 39 9.31
Matt Forte 316 1238 8 3.92 63 477 4 76 6.28
Adrian Peterson 238 1341 12 5.63 19 268 1 28 9.57
Leonard Fournette 268 1040 9 3.88 36 302 1 48 6.29
Trent Richardson 267 950 11 3.56 51 367 1 70 5.24
Jonathan Taylor 232 1169 11 5.04 36 299 1 39 7.67
Le’Veon Bell 244 860 8 3.52 45 399 0 66 6.05
Eddie Lacy 284 1178 11 4.15 35 257 0 44 5.84
Todd Gurley 229 1106 10 4.83 21 188 0 26 7.23
Anthony Thomas 278 1183 7 4.26 22 178 0 30 5.93
Antonio Gibson 170 795 11 4.68 36 247 0 44 5.61
Jamal Lewis 309 1364 6 4.41 27 296 0 36 8.22
Willis McGahee 284 1128 13 3.97 22 169 0 36 4.69
David Johnson 125 581 8 4.65 36 457 4 57 8.02
Jeremy Hill 222 1124 9 5.06 27 215 0 32 6.72

Out of the 2020 draft class, only Gibson and Jonathan Taylor made this impressive list. Obviously, these are some of the most impressive rookies over the past two decades and many have gone on to have sustained success in the NFL. Johnson and Gibson lead the cohort in TD rate per rush. It helps to have the lowest volume of the cohort for this particular metric, but the touchdowns illustrate the explosive nature of the two players.

Speaking of explosiveness, here are the 40 times of the players listed above.

Player 40 Time
Jonathan Taylor 4.39
Antonio Gibson 4.39
Saquon Barkley 4.4
Adrian Peterson 4.4
Willis McGahee 4.45
Matt Forte 4.46
Ezekiel Elliott 4.47
Todd Gurley 4.5
David Johnson 4.5
Leonard Fournette 4.51
Trent Richardson 4.53
Jamal Lewis 4.58
Le’Veon Bell 4.6
Eddie Lacy 4.62
Anthony Thomas 4.62
Jeremy Hill 4.66

While speed isn’t everything, guys who can run sub-4.5 40-times appear to be pretty special. Jonathan Taylor, Gibson, Saquon Barkley, and Adrian Peterson are the only ones to run the test in 4.4 seconds or less.

Antonio Gibson vs. David Johnson

Let’s compare Johnson and Gibson more closely to examine how similar they are. Entering the NFL, both players were extremely impressive athletic specimens.

Player Age WT Draft 40 Speed Score Burst Score
David Johnson 24 224 86 4.5 109.3 134.1
Antonio Gibson 22 220 66 4.39 122.8 118.5

Selected 20 picks before Johnson, Gibson entered the NFL a couple of years younger at a similar weight. Gibson is impressively faster with a magnificent 99th percentile speed score, although Johnson was the superior leaper in the jumping drills. Athletically, both players are special even by NFL standards.

Production-wise, Gibson was used as a wide receiver in college, so his college numbers don’t necessarily contextualize his profile. Gibson had just 34 rushing attempts in college.

Johnson was so impressive athletically and productive in college that I called him a league-winning steal before the 2015 season on RotoViz. Skeptics were concerned about his competition at Northern Iowa, but he turned out to be a league-winner in both 2015 and 2016.

Let’s compare the two as rushers after their rookie seasons.

Player ruATTS ruYDS YPC ruTDS ruFPOEPA
David Johnson 7.8 36.3 4.65 0.5 0.19
Antonio Gibson 12.1 56.8 4.68 0.8 0.23

Gibson ran just over four more times per game for 20.5 more yards, edging Johnson in touchdowns and fantasy points over expectation per attempt. Johnson was the superior player in the passing game.

Player reRECS TGTs reYDS YPT TDs CR PPR
David Johnson 2.2 3.6 28.6 8.0 0.3 63.2% 13.2
Antonio Gibson 2.6 3.1 17.6 5.6 0 81.8% 14.7

Johnson received 0.5 more targets per game, 11 more receiving yards, and was more efficient per target. Johnson was receiving more targets downfield leading to a higher yards per target number. Gibson was receiving a lot of dump-offs from Alex Smith at the line of scrimmage, leading to a higher catch rate and more receptions.

Despite the lack of explosive receiving production, Gibson scored more PPR fantasy points per game – even when including the game in which he departed early due to injury. Note that Gibson played just 44% of his team’s snaps as a rookie, while Johnson played 37%.

Partial Season

When you include the games that Gibson played over 40% of the snaps, 11 games are included. Here are his per-game averages.

Att Yds Y/A TD TGT Rec Yds PPR
13.5 62.2 4.6 1.0 3.5 2.8 21.0 17.14

Quite impressive for a rookie who had never started as a running back before. That’s more PPR points per game than Ezekiel Elliott, Joe Mixon, and Austin Ekeler (who is also undervalued) averaged last year – all of whom are being drafted ahead of Gibson.

Obviously, Gibson is a good rusher who benefited from touchdowns, but why should we expect him to score more in 2021?

The Value of Receiving

Like Johnson, Antonio Gibson is a natural receiver. As a senior in 2019, Gibson finished second on the team in receiving yards and touchdowns, but you can easily argue he should have been used even more.

Player Tgt Rec CR reYDS TD YPT TDrate
Antonio Gibson 56 38 67.9% 735 8 13.1 14.3%
Damonte Coxie 127 76 59.8% 1276 9 10.0 7.1%

Damonte Coxie was funneled the ball, but it can be objectively argued that Gibson should have been targeted much more frequently. Gibson averaged 3.1 more yards per target and scored more than twice as frequently per target than the team’s leading receiver.

If you’re a film watcher, maybe you’d prefer to watch how explosive Gibson was as a receiver. You’ll come to the same conclusion about his receiving abilities. He is literally as explosive as they come.

So, what’s stopping Gibson from producing more as a receiver? Are we this worried about J.D. McKissic?

McKissic was certainly valuable in fantasy leagues last season, catching 80 of 110 targets for 589 receiving yards. Let’s see how he compared to Gibson on a per-target basis.

Using RotoViz’s AYA app, you can see that Gibson was more productive per target with all three Washington Football Team quarterbacks. Is that surprising? It shouldn’t be.

McKissic, although he’s maximizing his talents, is an undrafted running back that entered 2020 with 515 receiving yards in five NFL seasons. He more than doubled his receiving yards for his career in 2021, and was less efficient than Gibson regardless of which quarterback was under center.

Nothing against McKissic, but he’s simply a 28-year-old NFL journeyman that is facing competition from a 23-year-old freak athlete – one who is much heavier and faster than him. The Redskins shouldn’t hesitate when determining who should be receiving the snaps – they should have Gibson on the field as much as possible. The reports from beat writers seem to indicate as much.

Training Camp Reports

Gibson has been one of the league’s most hyped players this summer. The Washington Football Team beat writers haven’t stopped talking about how much he’s grown as a player.

Head coach Ron Rivera has also joined in.

ESPN’s John Keim reports the Football Team wants Antonio Gibson to run more pass routes in 2021.

Washington RBs coach Randy Jordan said Antonio Gibson’s improvement in year two is “like night and day.” Jordan believes in Gibson’s ability as a receiver. “I think that’s something we haven’t really tapped into a lot,” Jordan said after minicamp. “I think the biggest thing for him is utilizing his ability to catch the ball because he has caught the ball in college.”

In Summary

Like Johnson, Gibson is an athletic freak with receiving ability. After 34 career collegiate rush attempts, Gibson took the league by storm as a rookie.

By all accounts, he looks significantly better this offseason and the Redskins have consistently declared their intent to feature Gibson more as a receiver.

We know that Ryan Fitzpatrick loves to throw the ball downfield and doesn’t dump off as much as WFT’s quarterbacks last season. But if he begins to target Gibson more down the field, the differences between him and Johnson may be even harder to find.

In 2016, during David Johnson’s league-winning season, I wrote about why he should be the RB1. This year, Antonio Gibson is my must-draft running back.