Isaiah Crowell had a funny year. If you were paying attention in the beginning of the season — or maybe just the end of the season — you probably thought he did really well. Crowell rushed for 394 yards in Cleveland’s first four games, the second-most among all players through their team’s first four games. He also rushed for 347 yards in the Browns last four games, the fifth-most among all players in their team’s final four games. And he averaged about 6.5 yards per carry during each of those quarter-season stretches, too.

The middle of the year? Well, that was a very different story. Crowell ranked 48th among all players in rushing yards in their team’s middle 8 games of the season, with just 211 yards and an anemic 2.51 yards per carry average. Given that Crowell was the Browns main running back, Cleveland as a team experienced similar results. Absent a week game in week 7 when backup quarterback Kevin Hogan entered the game and wound up rushing for 104 yards himself, the Browns rushing split was dramatic: in all 8 games in the first/final quarter of the season, Cleveland rushed for at least 107 yards; in the 7 games in the middle of the season, the Browns rushed for fewer than 70 yards in every game. Take a look:

Browns Rushing By Game



Another team that had a weird rushing split was the Miami Dolphins. This was closely tied to the success of Jay Ajayi, who had three games with over 200 yards, one other game with over 100 yards, and failed to hit 80 yards in Miami’s other 12 games.

Dolphins Rushing By Game

I didn’t pick Miami and Cleveland at random: those two teams had the largest variation in rushing performance in 2016, at least when measured as a percentage of average output. Miami rushed for 114 yards per game, with a standard deviation of 69.8 rushing yards, or 61.8% of the team’s average performance. Cleveland was at 107.0 and 64.8, respectively, or 60.6%. The table below shows the standard deviation in rushing for each team in 2016:

Rk Team St Dev Rush Avg Ratio 1 Miami Dolphins 69.8 114.0 61.3% 2 Cleveland Browns 64.8 107.0 60.6% 3 Cincinnati Bengals 62.5 110.6 56.5% 4 Washington Redskins 57.4 106.0 54.1% 5 San Diego Chargers 49.2 94.4 52.1% 6 Jacksonville Jaguars 53.1 101.9 52.1% 7 New Orleans Saints 55.9 108.9 51.4% 8 Seattle Seahawks 49.8 99.4 50% 9 Denver Broncos 46.4 92.8 50% 10 Pittsburgh Steelers 54.0 110.0 49.1% 11 Buffalo Bills 80.7 164.4 49.1% 12 Atlanta Falcons 56.1 120.5 46.6% 13 Oakland Raiders 55.8 120.1 46.4% 14 Kansas City Chiefs 47.3 109.3 43.3% 15 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 43.7 101.0 43.2% 16 New York Jets 47.2 112.6 41.9% 17 New York Giants 36.6 88.3 41.4% 18 Green Bay Packers 42.8 106.3 40.3% 19 San Francisco 49ers 49.5 126.2 39.2% 20 Baltimore Ravens 35.8 91.4 39.1% 21 Arizona Cardinals 41.8 108.3 38.6% 22 Los Angeles Rams 30.1 78.3 38.4% 23 Tennessee Titans 50.2 136.7 36.7% 24 Detroit Lions 29.4 81.9 35.9% 25 Minnesota Vikings 25.6 75.3 34% 26 Houston Texans 38.4 116.2 33% 27 Carolina Panthers 37.5 113.4 33% 28 Chicago Bears 34.1 108.4 31.5% 29 Philadelphia Eagles 35.5 113.3 31.3% 30 New England Patriots 34.4 117.0 29.4% 31 Dallas Cowboys 40.7 149.8 27.2% 32 Indianapolis Colts 27.3 101.8 26.9%

One team that didn’t have much variation was Indianapolis. In 13 of 16 games, the Colts finished within a narrow 29-yard window of between 76 and 105 rushing yards.

Colts Rushing By Game

And, of course, it would be silly to not spend a sentence or two on the 2016 Cowboys. Powered by rookie Ezekiel Elliott (and with an assist from fellow rookie Dak Prescott) Dallas had the 2nd most consistent running game in the NFL *and* ranked 2nd in rushing yards. The team was arguaby even more consistent than these numbers indicate: Dallas hit the century mark in 15 games this year, only failing to rush for 100 yards in a meaningless week 17 game when Elliott was rested. Remove that game, and the Cowboys standard deviation drops to 35.8, and the Cowboys average rises to 155.1. At that point, the ratio would be just 23.1%, giving Dallas the most consistent attack in the league.

As always, please leave your thoughts in the comments.