2RT9T8D New York Jets running back Breece Hall (20) carries the ball against the Buffalo Bills during the second quarter of an NFL football game, Monday, Sept. 11, 2023, in East Rutherford, N.J. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)
• Hall is the league’s best receiving back: The New York Jets running back was elite as a receiver last year, not just in terms of volume but also efficiency.
• The Jets’ reworked offense looks great on paper: Aaron Rodgers and a new look offensive line could thrust Breece Hall to new heights. That said, Hall will still be relying on two 33-year-old offensive tackles and a 40-year-old quarterback.
• Get a head start on fantasy football: Use PFF’s fantasy football mock draft simulator to create real live mock draft simulations to prepare for your live draft!
Estimated reading time: 7 minutes

The PFF player profile series gives the most in-depth view of a player possible. The profiles use the best data points at PFF’s disposal to examine how well the player has performed, what competition the player has for touches and how other teammates and coaches will impact each player’s performance.
Hall became one of the best options at the position last season, largely thanks to his work as a receiver. Hall finished the campaign with an 88.9 receiving grade, first among backs, and he also led the position in receptions despite ranking eighth in routes run.
It wasn’t until October that he started putting out that receiving production, as he was held to two receptions over the first three weeks of the season. 
However, his rushing attempt totals were inconsistent. He recorded 10 or fewer attempts four times over the last eight weeks of the season but also ran 37 times in Week 18. And while he graded pretty well as a runner, his statistics didn’t necessarily back that up.
Hall is excellent on perfectly blocked plays, but oddly enough, he averaged more yards per carry against stacked boxes (eight or more defenders in the box) than he did against light boxes (seven or fewer). 
Luckily, fantasy football values receptions more than carries, so his combination of receiving and rushing was good enough to finish as the overall RB2.
If he continues to run 20 routes per game at a 27% target rate (on his efficiency) and handle 13 carries per game, RB2 is certainly possible if he stays healthy. He would need to increase his rushing totals by about three attempts per game to be in the RB1 conversation, as that would put him around Christian McCaffrey’s level of utilization. 

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