Summary
Tyrone Tracy enters Year 4 as a stable NYG RB2 at age 26, ranked #27 at the position in Verdict’s dynasty score (52.0, stable trend). He produced 142.8 custom fantasy points in 2025 on 176 rushing attempts and 36/48 target receptions, showcasing a 37 first-down profile. Dynasty managers should anchor around his moderate volume and secure role.
Projection Rationale
Tracy operates within Brian Daboll’s erhardt_perkins system with modern spread elements, which emphasizes moderate rushing volume and complementary receiving usage. The 2025 baseline — 740 rushing yards, 176 attempts, 288 receiving yards on 36/48 targets, and 2 rushing touchdowns — shows a 37 first-down profile that scales in custom scoring where rushing first downs pay +0.5. This moderate usage pattern locks in his volume floor.
Injury Risk
No injury data exists for Tracy. However, his moderate rushing volume (176 attempts) is below workhorse thresholds, and the erhardt_perkins scheme with spread elements mitigates structural concerns.
Opportunity Notes
Snap share holds at 90% with weekly marks at 100% across most games and only one dip to 90%. The NYG backfield is crowded, with Saquon Barkley and Gary Brightwell competing for carries. However, Daboll’s system emphasizes moderate rushing volume, which should sustain Tracy’s role.
Scheme Fit Analysis
Daboll’s erhardt_perkins system with modern spread elements is built around complementary role players like Tracy. The scheme emphasizes moderate rushing volume and receiving usage, which fits his profile. However, Daboll’s departure mid-season and Mike Kafka’s promotion as interim HC introduce system uncertainty.
Trend Assessment
Stable
Verdict’s dynasty score of 52.0, along with stable trade value and win-now metrics, tags Tracy as a stable RB2 asset.
Ceiling / Floor
Ceiling clears 2025’s 142.8-point finish if rushing volume advances past 176 attempts and receiving targets expand beyond 36/48 — the combination pays heavily in this custom format with +0.5 first downs. Floor tracks near 142.8 given stable snap share and moderate volume.
Comparable Player
His moderate rushing volume and receiving role draw comparisons to 2015-2017 Matt Forte in Chicago — similar complementary role, similar first-down creation, similar moderate volume.