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Kenneth Walker vs Derrick Henry

2026 draft comparison · half-PPR

Updated Jul 10, 2026

RB · KC
ADP 19
Kenneth Walker
RB · BAL
ADP 23
Derrick Henry
VS
The crowd's leanLAST 7 DAYS
70.6% would rather draft Henry over Walker
29.4%Walker
70.6%Henry
Based on 27 duels

Should you draft Kenneth Walker or Derrick Henry?

Last season — 2025, per game

WalkerRB22 finish
2025
HenryRB7 finish
10.4Fantasy pts16.0
17Games17
13.0Carries18.1
60Rush yds94
4.6Yds/carry5.2
2.1Targets1.2
1.8Rec0.9
17Rec yds9
0.3TD0.9
Full game log & past seasons
Kenneth Walker
2025 game log
WKOPPFPTSRANKATTYDTDTGTRECRYDRTD
1
SF
3.9
RB42
10
20
0
3
3
4
0
2
PIT
18.3
RB8
13
105
1
1
1
13
0
3
NO
17.5
RB10
16
38
2
1
1
12
0
4
ARI
11.5
RB26
19
81
0
2
1
29
0
5
TB
9.1
RB26
10
86
0
1
1
0
0
6
JAX
4.2
RB40
10
34
0
1
1
3
0
7
HOU
6.6
RB28
17
66
0
0
0
0
0
8
9
WAS
7.1
RB28
11
42
0
2
2
19
0
10
ARI
7.5
RB36
14
67
0
1
1
3
0
11
LAR
18.6
RB10
16
67
1
3
3
44
0
12
TEN
11.6
RB17
11
71
0
4
3
30
0
13
MIN
8.9
RB35
13
56
0
4
3
18
0
14
ATL
3.3
RB49
10
29
0
3
1
-1
0
15
IND
2.4
RB56
9
17
0
1
1
2
0
16
LAR
23.9
RB7
11
100
1
3
3
64
0
17
CAR
6.7
RB30
15
51
0
2
2
6
0
18
SF
15.3
RB11
16
97
0
4
4
36
0
Derrick Henry
2025 game log
WKOPPFPTSRANKATTYDTDTGTRECRYDRTD
1
BUF
28.7
RB1
18
169
2
1
1
13
0
2
CLE
2.3
RB59
11
23
0
0
0
0
0
3
DET
10.2
RB22
12
50
1
1
1
7
0
4
KC
6.8
RB42
8
42
0
3
2
16
0
5
HOU
9.3
RB25
15
33
1
1
0
0
0
6
LAR
13.5
RB13
24
122
0
2
1
8
0
7
8
CHI
19.1
RB8
21
71
2
1
0
0
0
9
MIA
12.6
RB14
19
119
0
1
1
2
0
10
MIN
9.9
RB23
20
75
0
3
3
9
0
11
CLE
19.2
RB7
18
103
1
2
2
19
0
12
NYJ
21.8
RB4
21
64
2
2
2
24
0
13
CIN
16.9
RB10
10
60
1
1
1
44
0
14
PIT
10.7
RB23
25
94
0
2
1
8
0
15
CIN
10.0
RB27
11
100
0
0
0
0
0
16
NE
22.8
RB8
18
128
2
0
0
0
0
17
GB
45.6
RB1
36
216
4
0
0
0
0
18
PIT
12.6
RB14
20
126
0
1
0
0
0

Latest takes

Kenneth Walker
  • Despite splitting the workload with Zach Charbonnet for most of his career, he has averaged 13.4 PPR fantasy points per game, totaling 13.3 or more in all but one season. Don't be surprised if Walker takes advantage of a light box and dominates as the featured guy in a dangerous Kansas City offense.

    Mike Fanelli· Jul 8
  • Despite spending most of the time splitting the workload with Zach Charbonnet in Seattle, Walker has finished as a top-21 running back in non-PPR scoring every year of his career except the 2024 season, where he missed six games because of injury. Thankfully, he will finally get the chance to be a featured running back after the Chiefs invested significant money in him this offseason.

    Mike Fanelli· Jun 22
  • Walker finished with 1,027 rushing yards (his highest total since his rookie season in 2022), and started all 17 games for the first time in his career. Even in the midst of fending off Zach Charbonnet for touches, Walker helped carry Seattle to a playoff run, eventually taking over as the bell-cow back once Charbonnet was injured in the playoffs.

See 12 more
  • The most significant offseason addition on offense for the Chiefs was running back Kenneth Walker III, and their offseason actions would suggest they want to improve their running game, possibly leaning on Walker to take some work off Mahomes' plate in his return from knee surgery.

  • With the expectation that the offense could lean more heavily on the running game early in the season, Walker could see a significant touch count right away, and the hosts believe he possesses legitimate top-10 fantasy upside.

  • Walker has struggled to handle a heavy workload throughout his career and has often found himself sharing touches. Walker brings exactly what Kansas City's backfield has been missing: explosiveness, with elite explosive run rate and ability to force missed tackles.

  • With his salivating mix of talent and efficiency, Walker should be an explosive RB1 in 2026.

  • Last year, Walker ranked second in explosive run rate, first in missed tackle rate, ninth in yards per route run, and 12th in first downs per route run. He was a per-touch efficiency marvel.

  • Kenneth Walker arrives in Kansas City as the Chiefs' new lead back. Walker had a disappointing season in 2025 from a fantasy standpoint as the RB28 in fantasy points per game, but it's easy to see why it unfolded that way.

  • The addition of Kenneth Walker III will likely also reduce their reliance on short throws to Rice as a replacement for the traditional run game.

    Ted Chmyz· May 25
  • Fitzmaurice also sounded extremely optimistic about Kenneth Walker III after selecting him in the third round. The core argument was that Kansas City desperately needed explosiveness in the backfield and finally addressed it. Fitz believes the Chiefs are serious about re-establishing the run game, and Walker's big-play ability gives him league-winning upside in that offense.

  • Kenneth Walker III became a discussion about workload expectations. The issue is whether fantasy managers are now projecting a workhorse role that simply may never exist consistently. The panel highlighted his limited goal-line usage, injury history, and the fact that Seattle carefully managed touches throughout most of his career before finally leaning heavily on him during the playoff run.

  • Kenneth Walker III signed a 3-year, $43.05 million contract with the Kansas City Chiefs to be their lead back and is currently RB9 in dynasty. That is way too high for a running back who had a great playoff run, but otherwise was an average back in a committee system in Seattle. He is stepping in to lead a Kansas City backfield that hasn't produced a 1,000-yard rusher since 2017, and he will be losing pass-catching duties to rookie Emmett Johnson and Emari Demercado.

  • Johnson has a broader skill set than Smith, so the rookie is likely to be Kenneth Walker's primary backup. Johnson carried a big load for Nebraska last season, averaging 20.9 carries and 24.8 touches a game. If Walker were to miss any time in 2026, Johnson could handle a full workload.

  • Kenneth Walker left the team during free agency.

    Rich Hribar· Apr 24
Derrick Henry
  • Much like fine wine, it just seems like Derrick Henry is getting better with age. However, only the 1972 Miami Dolphins and Father Time are undefeated. King Henry is coming off a career season in which he had 27 carries in the 5-yard line. There isn't anyone challenging him on the depth chart for touches, so the only concern in 2026 is age and the departure of center Tyler Linderbaum.

  • Derrick Henry is entering his late-career danger zone, and the depth behind him is paper-thin.

    Dennis Sosic· Jul 6
  • Every season fantasy managers wonder whether Derrick Henry is finally slowing down. Jake Ciely isn't buying it. His reasoning is simple. Henry's draft cost continues to fall even though his production hasn't. Ciely also pointed out that Henry's fantasy scoring remains remarkably consistent regardless of game script, making him one of the safest veteran running backs available. At his current ADP, he's comfortable betting on Henry one more time.

See 12 more
  • While some won't draft Henry for fear his age makes him an injury risk, the veteran has played in at least 15 games in all but one year of his career, including 17 contests in three consecutive seasons. He was RB8 last year, averaging 16.4 PPR fantasy points per game despite totaling only 15 receptions, 18 fewer than any other running back to finish top 20.

    Mike Fanelli· Jul 3
  • If Lamar Jackson can bounce back, Henry could inch back closer to his 2024 production (RB4 in fantasy points per game). He's at worst a low-end RB1 with top-five upside.

  • Last year was another impressive year for Derrick Henry. He didn't show any signs of slowing down with 307 rushing attempts, 1,595 rushing yards, 16 total touchdowns, and an RB8 finish in fantasy points per game.

  • For all of his accolades as the league's most physical runner, Henry is a non-factor in Baltimore's passing game. With 20 or fewer receptions in eight of Henry's 10 NFL seasons, a sudden shift turning him into the next Christian McCaffrey or Jahmyr Gibbs is not envisioned.

  • The Ravens run first and do everything else second, and they run through Lamar Jackson and Derrick Henry, leaving few rush attempts for Randall.

    Jeff Krisko· Jun 21
  • Derrick Henry's 30.2 Sleeper ADP is a classic case of dynasty anxiety ruining redraft logic. Managers see his age and automatically assume a total collapse, completely ignoring the fact he ran for 1,500+ yards and 16 touchdowns last season. Henry remains the ultimate hammer in a Baltimore Ravens offense that completely sanitizes his negative game scripts. He retains a locked-in monopoly on goal-line touches and high-value red-zone opportunities.

    Dennis Sosic· Jun 18
  • At the end of the day, drafting Henry is a bet that he can continue to stiff-arm Father Time and post the best rushing season of the last two decades for a player this old. But there are other elite-upside players at his ADP without the red flags, so the juice is not worth the squeeze.

    Ted Chmyz· Jun 11
  • The issue with Henry is that, coming off a season with fewer than one reception per game, he needs to be absolutely dominant on the ground to provide elite fantasy value. And in recent history, the list of dominant rushing seasons by players 32 or older is essentially nonexistent.

    Ted Chmyz· Jun 11
  • Derrick Henry is just one representative of a simple site-wide trend: ESPN drafters love running backs compared to the expert consensus. His positional ECR is RB13; his ESPN ADP is RB10, where experts see King Henry as a high-end RB2, ESPN drafters still view him as a top-10 option.

    Ted Chmyz· Jun 11
  • That might be the right move and use that "leftover" $12 on a more impactful player, such as moving from Derrick Henry to Jahmyr Gibbs.

  • We saw it in 2024 with Saquon Barkley and Derrick Henry, for example.

    John Johnson· May 16
  • Derrick Henry is defying all the odds of being able to continue playing the running back position at such a high level at his age, but he will be 33, turning 34 in the 2027 season. While he hasn't shown any signs of slowing down yet, it's time for the Ravens to start looking for his long-term replacement.

So who do you have — Walker or Henry?

Make the call yourself. Build your own draft board free — quick A-vs-B picks, no spreadsheet — and let the season grade it.

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