Jadarian Price Dynasty Value: Hidden Star Ready to Shine
QUICK LINKS:
It’s unprecedented for one school to produce the RB1 and RB2 in the same class.
But that's exactly what happened this year.
Despite a light career workload, Price maximized his carries over the past two seasons. He rebounded from a ruptured Achilles in 2022 to showcase the power and burst that garnered Round 1 attention from Seattle.
In a thin class, the landing spot cements Price as the RB2 behind Jeremiyah Love.
Let’s dig into the profile to project Price’s dynasty value with the Seahawks.
Jadarian Price Dynasty Values
| Dynasty 1-qb | Dynasty Superflex | ||
| Non-PPR | 37.9 | Non-PPR | 27.1 |
| PPR | 35.5 | PPR | 29.4 |
| TE Premium | 36.8 | TE Premium | 30.6 |
To see Jadarian Price's dynasty value for your exact league setup, check out our Dynasty Draft War Room.
Let Value Drive Your Drafting & Trading
Our Dynasty Draft War Room assigns dynamic player values based on your league’s specific settings.
Use these values to compare players at the same position and across positions for help with draft, trade, and add/drop decisions.
Our Trade Value Charts use the same system to compare players across positions -- as well as future rookie-draft picks and even startup picks.
Whether you play superflex or 1-QB, PPR or otherwise, you can find a chart to fit your format.
Did we mention tight end premium trade value charts?
Jadarian Price Draft Profile
Position: RB
Height: 5'11
Weight: 203
BMI: 28.3
Draft Age: 22.6
NFL Draft Pick: Round 1, Pick 32
Draft Sharks Model Score: 7.98
Analytics Score: 4.80
Film Score: 4.80
Production Score: 4.60
Jadarian Price Combine Results
| Wingspan | Arm Length | Hand Size | 40-yard Dash | 10-yard split |
| - | 30 7/8’’ |
9 5/8’’ |
4.49s | 1.61s |
| Bench Press | Vertical | Broad Jump | 3-cone drill | 20-yard shuttle |
| 21 reps | 35" | 10’ 4’’ |
- | - |

Jadarian Price College Stats
| Games | Carries | Yards | YPC | TDs | Catches | Yards | YPC | TDs | |
|
2022 (DNP, injury) |
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 2023 | 13 | 47 | 272 | 5.8 | 3 | 5 | 65 | 13.0 | 1 |
| 2024 | 16 | 121 | 744 | 6.1 | 7 | 4 | 10 | 2.5 | 0 |
| 2025 | 12 | 113 | 674 | 6.0 | 11 | 6 | 87 | 14.5 | 2 |
Price had his pick of college programs coming out of Denison, Texas.
The four-star recruit chose Notre Dame, then almost immediately fought through a rough opening chapter.
2022 Wiped Out By a Major Injury
Price looked like a freshman-year factor after an impressive spring. But that momentum stopped abruptly in June due to a ruptured left Achilles tendon.
“It was loud,” Price said. “I tried to get up and I couldn’t walk.”
Surgery and a lengthy rehab followed.
Back on the field in 2023, Price logged 47 carries across 12 games. He flashed in a bowl win over Oregon State, ripping off 106 yards and a TD on just 13 carries.
That hyper-efficiency wasn’t a fluke. In fact, it previewed the impact Price would make the next fall.
Price Forms One-Two Punch With Star Teammate
The 2024 Fighting Irish lost 210 carries when Audric Estime turned pro.
You’d expect a likely top-15 pick such as Jeremiyah Love to absorb nearly all of that work. He did separate as a receiver, hauling in 28 catches to Price’s four.
But the split stayed much closer on the ground. Love averaged 10.2 carries per game, with Price at 7.6.
Both RBs appeared in all 16 games. Here’s how they compared from an efficiency standpoint:
| Yards Per Carry | YAC per Attempt | PFF Rush Grade | PFF Elusive Rating | |
| Love | 6.9 | 4.39 | 91.8 | 180.2 |
| Price | 6.1 | 4.50 | 80.4 | 112.0 |
Love was the best back on Notre Dame’s roster. But Love’s numbers also compare favorably against the top RBs in all of college football.
That didn’t help Price earn more touches. Still, his limited sample attracted attention from programs across the country.
Price Fields Offers But Returns to South Bend
Let’s start here: Price could have earned a starting role at another school last season.
Draft analyst Dane Brugler said on the Third and Gold Podcast that Price “would have been a featured back at 90-95% of schools,” even floating a possible Heisman-level outcome in the right situation.
Maybe. Maybe not. Teams clearly wanted his services, though.
“Every other day my agents (A&P Sports Agency) would hit me up saying, ‘Here’s a new offer; here’s a new coach that’s interested in you,’” Price said via The South Bend Tribune. “And I just had to tell them I appreciate it, but I’m sticking to my word.”
So, back with Love once more, Price’s low-volume ways continued … this time with a twist.
A New Problem Emerges, But High Efficiency Sticks
Price and Love remained healthy, appearing in all 12 games.
But here’s what stunk for Price: Love’s role expanded during a Heisman-finalist campaign. Price finished with just 113 carries, trailing Love by 86.
One blemish emerged late, and it may explain the lack of attempts. Price put the ball on the ground three times, with each fumble coming in a goal-line situation.
He also managed only 6 catches, although they went for 87 yards and two scores.
Rushing efficiency stayed intact. Price averaged 6.0 yards per carry and set a career high with 11 TDs, while his advanced metrics largely mirrored his 2024 profile.
Ultimately, we’re evaluating a smaller total sample than most RB prospects. Price exits college without a single game of more than 15 carries. He averaged just 8.3 attempts per game over his final two seasons.
Sure, the low mileage is nice. But does the tape justify betting on efficiency without volume?
Let’s review the film for clues.
Jadarian Price Highlights
Film breakdown by Shane Hallam
Games watched: USC (2024), Indiana (2024), Georgia (2024), Ohio State (2024), Miami (2025), Texas A&M (2025), Purdue (2025), Arkansas (2025), Boise State (2025), USC (2025), Syracuse (2025), Stanford (2025)
Price may be overlooked due to splitting with Love, but his film shows a RB who can be a three-down player.
Decisive Vision with Breakaway Speed
On this zone run, Price makes a sharp cut and transitions smoothly through the open hole. He keeps his feet moving through contact to stay upright. Price stays focused downfield, adjusting his angles based on the blocks.
Price accelerates into the open field with an angle toward the sideline and continues sidestepping tacklers. The combination of his size, open-field vision, and long speed makes Price a home-run threat on every touch.
Price’s ball security crops up as an issue on this run (and many of his runs). Price plays loose with the ball in his hand, leaving it susceptible to getting punched out. He had three fumbles this past season alone.
Built for the Goal Line
On this play, Price shows good burst through the hole. He keeps a low center of gravity and moves effortlessly through open space.
That low pad level allows Price to lower his shoulder at the goal line and power through the safety. He can excel as a red-zone runner and shows a strong nose for the end zone.
Price Flashes Functional Receiving Skill Set
Price displays strong catch technique on this play, extending his arms and catching the ball away from his body. After the reception in the flat, he reaches full speed quickly and accelerates to the second level. Price shows excellent open-field vision, shifting laterally between defenders to evade would-be tacklers.
Love’s domination of the backfield receiving work leaves sparse film on Price in that area, so it’s tough to fully evaluate his receiving. When he does get targets, though, Price shows natural hands and receiving ability. It remains an underrated part of his game.
Price’s open-field ability also shows up in the return game with three career kick-return TDs. He'll have a shot to return kicks in the NFL.
Struggles to Sustain Speed to the Edge
On this play, Price shows only average burst on an outside zone run. While he can be explosive off the snap, he struggles to maintain that speed when moving parallel to the line of scrimmage. That allows defenders to set the edge before he arrives, which happens here.
Jadarian Price Team Fit: Seattle Seahawks
Price will immediately get a chance to see fantasy-starter volume.
Kenneth Walker departed in free agency and leaves behind 252 touches. Zach Charbonnet returns for a contract season, but he's rehabbing an ACL tear that required surgery in February. That means he could miss the majority of the regular season.
Seattle also added free agent Emanuel Wilson as insurance, but he's not an impactful talent. He posted 4.0 yards per carry on 125 attempts with the Packers last season.
There's some risk to this offense taking a step back after losing OC Klint Kubiak to Vegas. Last year, Seattle ranked third in rushing attempts, third in points, sixth in yards per play, and eighth in yards per game. Kubiak's replacement -- Brian Fleury -- spent last year as the 49ers' run-game coordinator/TEs coach. But he has never called plays at any level.
Modest regression would still place Seattle as an above-average unit, and there's no reason to knock the landing spot from a dynasty perspective. That all should mean plenty of touch volume and scoring chances available for Price.
Dynasty Value Conclusion: Draft Capital, Opportunity Align
Price never checked the traditional workhorse box at Notre Dame, but draft capital has a way of clarifying intent.
A Round 1 selection says the Seahawks aren't worried about the light college workload. Per ESPN's Brady Henderson, the team "believed some of his skills as a runner compared favorably" to Jeremiyah Love.
Price's ultimate dynasty value will come down to his development as a receiver. He exits college with only 15 catches across three seasons, although he posted hyper-efficient totals with 162 yards and 3 TDs. Our film review showed that he brings a functional receiving skill set to the NFL.
Price is the easy RB2 in this class and hits our dynasty PPR rookie rankings at fifth overall.
Ready to Go from Perennial Rebuilder to Constant Contender?
Subscribe to Draft Sharks and show the fantasy world you're not here to play games. You're here to win.
Don't be a spectator; be a champion.
Hit that subscribe button or step aside for those hungry for victory.
Need more convincing? Explore the suite of dynasty tools that will serve as your exclusive analytics department.
Draft Sharks -- your unfair advantage.
Jadarian Price Dynasty Value: Hidden Star Ready to Shine
QUICK LINKS:
It’s unprecedented for one school to produce the RB1 and RB2 in the same class.
But that's exactly what happened this year.
Despite a light career workload, Price maximized his carries over the past two seasons. He rebounded from a ruptured Achilles in 2022 to showcase the power and burst that garnered Round 1 attention from Seattle.
In a thin class, the landing spot cements Price as the RB2 behind Jeremiyah Love.
Let’s dig into the profile to project Price’s dynasty value with the Seahawks.
Jadarian Price Dynasty Values
| Dynasty 1-qb | Dynasty Superflex | ||
| Non-PPR | 37.9 | Non-PPR | 27.1 |
| PPR | 35.5 | PPR | 29.4 |
| TE Premium | 36.8 | TE Premium | 30.6 |
To see Jadarian Price's dynasty value for your exact league setup, check out our Dynasty Draft War Room.
Let Value Drive Your Drafting & Trading
Our Dynasty Draft War Room assigns dynamic player values based on your league’s specific settings.
Use these values to compare players at the same position and across positions for help with draft, trade, and add/drop decisions.
Our Trade Value Charts use the same system to compare players across positions -- as well as future rookie-draft picks and even startup picks.
Whether you play superflex or 1-QB, PPR or otherwise, you can find a chart to fit your format.
Did we mention tight end premium trade value charts?
Jadarian Price Draft Profile
Position: RB
Height: 5'11
Weight: 203
BMI: 28.3
Draft Age: 22.6
NFL Draft Pick: Round 1, Pick 32
Draft Sharks Model Score: 7.98
Analytics Score: 4.80
Film Score: 4.80
Production Score: 4.60
Jadarian Price Combine Results
| Wingspan | Arm Length | Hand Size | 40-yard Dash | 10-yard split |
| - | 30 7/8’’ |
9 5/8’’ |
4.49s | 1.61s |
| Bench Press | Vertical | Broad Jump | 3-cone drill | 20-yard shuttle |
| 21 reps | 35" | 10’ 4’’ |
- | - |

Jadarian Price College Stats
| Games | Carries | Yards | YPC | TDs | Catches | Yards | YPC | TDs | |
|
2022 (DNP, injury) |
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 2023 | 13 | 47 | 272 | 5.8 | 3 | 5 | 65 | 13.0 | 1 |
| 2024 | 16 | 121 | 744 | 6.1 | 7 | 4 | 10 | 2.5 | 0 |
| 2025 | 12 | 113 | 674 | 6.0 | 11 | 6 | 87 | 14.5 | 2 |
Price had his pick of college programs coming out of Denison, Texas.
The four-star recruit chose Notre Dame, then almost immediately fought through a rough opening chapter.
2022 Wiped Out By a Major Injury
Price looked like a freshman-year factor after an impressive spring. But that momentum stopped abruptly in June due to a ruptured left Achilles tendon.
“It was loud,” Price said. “I tried to get up and I couldn’t walk.”
Surgery and a lengthy rehab followed.
Back on the field in 2023, Price logged 47 carries across 12 games. He flashed in a bowl win over Oregon State, ripping off 106 yards and a TD on just 13 carries.
That hyper-efficiency wasn’t a fluke. In fact, it previewed the impact Price would make the next fall.
Price Forms One-Two Punch With Star Teammate
The 2024 Fighting Irish lost 210 carries when Audric Estime turned pro.
You’d expect a likely top-15 pick such as Jeremiyah Love to absorb nearly all of that work. He did separate as a receiver, hauling in 28 catches to Price’s four.
But the split stayed much closer on the ground. Love averaged 10.2 carries per game, with Price at 7.6.
Both RBs appeared in all 16 games. Here’s how they compared from an efficiency standpoint:
| Yards Per Carry | YAC per Attempt | PFF Rush Grade | PFF Elusive Rating | |
| Love | 6.9 | 4.39 | 91.8 | 180.2 |
| Price | 6.1 | 4.50 | 80.4 | 112.0 |
Love was the best back on Notre Dame’s roster. But Love’s numbers also compare favorably against the top RBs in all of college football.
That didn’t help Price earn more touches. Still, his limited sample attracted attention from programs across the country.
Price Fields Offers But Returns to South Bend
Let’s start here: Price could have earned a starting role at another school last season.
Draft analyst Dane Brugler said on the Third and Gold Podcast that Price “would have been a featured back at 90-95% of schools,” even floating a possible Heisman-level outcome in the right situation.
Maybe. Maybe not. Teams clearly wanted his services, though.
“Every other day my agents (A&P Sports Agency) would hit me up saying, ‘Here’s a new offer; here’s a new coach that’s interested in you,’” Price said via The South Bend Tribune. “And I just had to tell them I appreciate it, but I’m sticking to my word.”
So, back with Love once more, Price’s low-volume ways continued … this time with a twist.
A New Problem Emerges, But High Efficiency Sticks
Price and Love remained healthy, appearing in all 12 games.
But here’s what stunk for Price: Love’s role expanded during a Heisman-finalist campaign. Price finished with just 113 carries, trailing Love by 86.
One blemish emerged late, and it may explain the lack of attempts. Price put the ball on the ground three times, with each fumble coming in a goal-line situation.
He also managed only 6 catches, although they went for 87 yards and two scores.
Rushing efficiency stayed intact. Price averaged 6.0 yards per carry and set a career high with 11 TDs, while his advanced metrics largely mirrored his 2024 profile.
Ultimately, we’re evaluating a smaller total sample than most RB prospects. Price exits college without a single game of more than 15 carries. He averaged just 8.3 attempts per game over his final two seasons.
Sure, the low mileage is nice. But does the tape justify betting on efficiency without volume?
Let’s review the film for clues.
Jadarian Price Highlights
Film breakdown by Shane Hallam
Games watched: USC (2024), Indiana (2024), Georgia (2024), Ohio State (2024), Miami (2025), Texas A&M (2025), Purdue (2025), Arkansas (2025), Boise State (2025), USC (2025), Syracuse (2025), Stanford (2025)
Price may be overlooked due to splitting with Love, but his film shows a RB who can be a three-down player.
Decisive Vision with Breakaway Speed
On this zone run, Price makes a sharp cut and transitions smoothly through the open hole. He keeps his feet moving through contact to stay upright. Price stays focused downfield, adjusting his angles based on the blocks.
Price accelerates into the open field with an angle toward the sideline and continues sidestepping tacklers. The combination of his size, open-field vision, and long speed makes Price a home-run threat on every touch.
Price’s ball security crops up as an issue on this run (and many of his runs). Price plays loose with the ball in his hand, leaving it susceptible to getting punched out. He had three fumbles this past season alone.
Built for the Goal Line
On this play, Price shows good burst through the hole. He keeps a low center of gravity and moves effortlessly through open space.
That low pad level allows Price to lower his shoulder at the goal line and power through the safety. He can excel as a red-zone runner and shows a strong nose for the end zone.
Price Flashes Functional Receiving Skill Set
Price displays strong catch technique on this play, extending his arms and catching the ball away from his body. After the reception in the flat, he reaches full speed quickly and accelerates to the second level. Price shows excellent open-field vision, shifting laterally between defenders to evade would-be tacklers.
Love’s domination of the backfield receiving work leaves sparse film on Price in that area, so it’s tough to fully evaluate his receiving. When he does get targets, though, Price shows natural hands and receiving ability. It remains an underrated part of his game.
Price’s open-field ability also shows up in the return game with three career kick-return TDs. He'll have a shot to return kicks in the NFL.
Struggles to Sustain Speed to the Edge
On this play, Price shows only average burst on an outside zone run. While he can be explosive off the snap, he struggles to maintain that speed when moving parallel to the line of scrimmage. That allows defenders to set the edge before he arrives, which happens here.
Jadarian Price Team Fit: Seattle Seahawks
Price will immediately get a chance to see fantasy-starter volume.
Kenneth Walker departed in free agency and leaves behind 252 touches. Zach Charbonnet returns for a contract season, but he's rehabbing an ACL tear that required surgery in February. That means he could miss the majority of the regular season.
Seattle also added free agent Emanuel Wilson as insurance, but he's not an impactful talent. He posted 4.0 yards per carry on 125 attempts with the Packers last season.
There's some risk to this offense taking a step back after losing OC Klint Kubiak to Vegas. Last year, Seattle ranked third in rushing attempts, third in points, sixth in yards per play, and eighth in yards per game. Kubiak's replacement -- Brian Fleury -- spent last year as the 49ers' run-game coordinator/TEs coach. But he has never called plays at any level.
Modest regression would still place Seattle as an above-average unit, and there's no reason to knock the landing spot from a dynasty perspective. That all should mean plenty of touch volume and scoring chances available for Price.
Dynasty Value Conclusion: Draft Capital, Opportunity Align
Price never checked the traditional workhorse box at Notre Dame, but draft capital has a way of clarifying intent.
A Round 1 selection says the Seahawks aren't worried about the light college workload. Per ESPN's Brady Henderson, the team "believed some of his skills as a runner compared favorably" to Jeremiyah Love.
Price's ultimate dynasty value will come down to his development as a receiver. He exits college with only 15 catches across three seasons, although he posted hyper-efficient totals with 162 yards and 3 TDs. Our film review showed that he brings a functional receiving skill set to the NFL.
Price is the easy RB2 in this class and hits our dynasty PPR rookie rankings at fifth overall.
Ready to Go from Perennial Rebuilder to Constant Contender?
Subscribe to Draft Sharks and show the fantasy world you're not here to play games. You're here to win.
Don't be a spectator; be a champion.
Hit that subscribe button or step aside for those hungry for victory.
Need more convincing? Explore the suite of dynasty tools that will serve as your exclusive analytics department.
Draft Sharks -- your unfair advantage.
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