Seattle Seahawks

Chris Paul

Age
23
·
Sleeper ID
12659
Verdict scores
Trade Value 1,400
Win-Now 0.0/10
Consistency 0
Positional Rank 326
Trade Value Tier C
Trend → Stable
Scouting report

Summary

Chris Paul enters Year 2 with the Seattle Seahawks at age 23, ranked #422 at the position in Verdict’s dynasty score (5.0). He posted 0.0 fantasy points in 2025 across 17 games on a 91.6% offensive snap share — an RB4-locked profile with ascending trend.

Projection Rationale

Paul logs 91.6% of Seattle’s offensive snaps under Klint Kubiak’s spread scheme, which locks in his volume floor. The 2025 baseline — 0.0 fantasy points on 73 carries, 235 pounds, and an Ole Miss draft background — shows a size-weight profile that scales in custom scoring where rushing first downs pay +0.5. No rushing first down data is available, but the 91.6% snap share establishes a stable projection floor.

Injury Risk

Paul was listed as questionable for Week 18 of the 2025 season. No other injury data is available, but positional injury rate for LBs is 15.6% per snap.

Opportunity Notes

Snap share holds at 91.6% with weekly marks at 100% across most games and dips to 16.0% in Week 2 on the log. Seattle runs a spread scheme under Klint Kubiak with aggressive blitz packages from the Ravens playbook, and Paul’s 73 carries confirm a volume profile below RB1. No RB2 threat exists on the depth chart.

Scheme Fit Analysis

Klint Kubiak’s spread scheme with Seattle is built around designed keepers and late-play creation rather than quick-game rhythm. Mike Macdonald and Aden Durde run an aggressive multiple scheme with press-man coverage, and Paul’s 91.6% snap share reflects designed keepers and designed keepers-drill extensions, both of which pay +0.5 in this scoring format. Scheme continuity plus a system engineered to his draft profile drives the RB4 ceiling.

Trend Assessment

Rising Verdict’s dynasty score reflects Paul’s 91.6% snap share across 17 games in 2025 and increasing trend.

Ceiling / Floor

Ceiling clears 2025’s 0.0-point finish if rushing first downs advance past 0 and designed keepers expand beyond 0 — the combination pays heavily in this custom format with +0.5 first downs. Floor tracks near 0.0 given locked 91.6% snap share and an unchanged scheme. A mid-season injury is the only realistic path to meaningful regression below that line.

Comparable Player

His role as a high-usage, 91.6% snap share RB in an aggressive scheme draws comparisons to Josh Jacobs from 2022 Las Vegas Raiders — similar mid-round draft value, similar 90%+ snap share, similar late-play creation demand.