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Michael Carter Dynasty Value

Michael Carter

Michael Carter
Player Profile
RB ARI

Height

5'8"

Weight

201 lbs.

Experience

4 yrs.

Bye

11

Birthday

May 07, 1999

Age

25.8

College

North Carolina

NFL Draft Pick

2021 - Rd 4, Pk 107

Dynasty Analysis

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Draft Sharks Model

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Michael Carter Player Comp

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Michael Carter Dynasty Trade Values

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Michael Carter Combine Results

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Michael Carter Future Projections

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Michael Carter Scouting Report

Michael Carter Scouting Report

  • Height: 5'8
  • Weight: 201
  • Age: 21.9

Pro Day Results

  • 40-yard dash: 4.56 seconds
  • Vertical jump: 34 inches
  • Broad Jump: 9 feet 11 inches
  • Short Shuttle: 3.98 seconds
  • 3-Cone: 6.81 seconds
  • Bench press: 16 reps

Michael Carter College Stats

Car Yds YPCTDsRecYdsYPRTDs
2017975585.88111009.11
2018 84 597 7.12251355.41
2019 177 1003 5.73211547.32
2020 156 1245 8.092526710.72

A 3-start recruit, Carter chose North Carolina over Mississippi State, Florida, Tennessee, West Virginia and others.

He saw the field right away in 2017 and even led the backfield in TDs (8) and YPC (5.8).

As a 2018 sophomore, Carter missed the first 3 games with a broken wrist. He still came within 7 carries of attempt leader Antonio Williams, a junior at the time who appeared in just 1 additional game. Carter also led the backfield with 25 catches.

2019 brought the emergence of Carter and Javonte Williams, the perfect power complement. Carter out-carried Williams 177-166 and out-targeted him 24-17.

Voted a team captain as a senior, the 21-year-old took another step into the national spotlight. Again sharing carries with Williams, he posted a school-record 8.0 yards per carry and 10.7 yards per catch. Carter really embarrassed Miami (FL) with a 24-308-2 rushing line, including a career-long 65-yard run.

Carter earned a better PFF rushing grade (91.1) than Najee Harris and Travis Etienne did in any of their 8 combined seasons.

Like his backfield cohort, Carter recorded one of PFF’s top Elusive Ratings (135.1) and yards-after contact averages (4.47). Other independent evaluators have repeatedly heaped praise on the Tar Heel throughout the pre-draft process.

“The discipline that he has in addition to his vision, quickness and ability to catch the football.” ESPN’s Todd McShay said of Carter's strengths. “He’s what you want in your locker room and your team.”

An eye-opening Senior Bowl experience further solidified his draft stock. Carter made Daniel Jeremiah’s list of 10 winners from the week back in January:

“Every now and then there's a player who just pops off the screen when I sit down to watch tape, and Carter was that guy this year,” DJ wrote. “He showed burst and an ability to make plays out of the backfield as a receiver. I think he has a legitimate shot to be a Day 2 (Rounds 2-3) pick. In an era when running backs are being devalued, he has a unique skill set. I envision him playing a role similar to the one Nyheim Hines fills for the Colts.”

Carter’s former HC — Mack Brown — isn’t exactly an impartial evaluator. But his words still hold some weight, as the pair spent over 2 years together.

“Michael's got great vision as a runner,” Brown said via Pensacola News Journal. “He can catch the ball, but he's got the speed to go score and run over people.” Brown went so far as to compare the Carter/Williams duo to the Reggie Bush/LenDale White tandem that dominated at USC in the 2000s.

Carter looks more like Hines/Dion Lewis than Bush. But there’s no doubt his tape was impressive.

Michael Carter Highlights

Games watched: Virginia Tech (2020), Miami [FL] (2020), Boston College (2020), NC State (2020), Notre Dame (2020)

Your first impression of Carter might have something to do with his size. UNC listed him at 199 pounds, and he came in at 201 at the school’s Pro Day on March 29. He’s a hair under 5’8.

So it's fair to question how his NFL team will use him on inside runs and early downs.

That said, Carter did well making himself smaller in tight spaces and using his low center of gravity to break tackles.

UNC RB Michael Carter gets through a tight hole and then picks up big yardage.

Make no mistake about it, though. Carter projects well in the pros because he can dodge tacklers with plus agility, vision, burst and acceleration...

UNC RB Michael Carter gets around the edge and scoots for big yardage.
UNC RB Michael Carter shows his stop-start ability on this TD run.

Carter's long speed isn't elite, but he has enough juice to bust off a long run on occasion. Per PFF, he led the class in runs of 15+ yards (29, 18.5%).

UNC RB Michael Carter runs for a long TD.

Carter's pass-catching ability is perhaps even more essential. He primarily ran angle routes, wheel routes and swings at UNC. He fared well in both the short and deep passing game, dropping only 1 pass while showing more elusiveness post-catch.

UNC RB Michael Carter shows good balance in picking up yardage after the catch.
UNC RB Michael Carter makes a catch for a first down.
UNC RB Michael Carter makes a catch downfield.

Carter wasn't a textbook pass protector. Mike Renner of Pro Football Focus even admits there's "worry" about him in that area. Still, it's unwise to just write him off as an automatic liability. In 2020, Myles Gaskin, Darrell Henderson and Devin Singletary combined to allow only 6 pressures on 160 combined pass blocking snaps. All of those guys bring size that comps favorably to Carter.

Fantasy Potential

Carter will always be a long-shot for RB1 value. Smaller backs like Austin Ekeler (5’10, 200) and Devonta Freeman (5’8, 206) have showed it’s possible in recent seasons, but they’re outliers.

And that’s fine.

Carter’s Dynasty League Football ADP isn’t in Round 1 (like it is for Najee Harris, Travis Etienne and Javonte Williams). He’s going late in Round 2 as the RB7. That’s a reasonable range to take a shot on someone who profiles as 1 of the top receiving backs in this class.

Shark Bites

James Conner RB ARI

12:06pm EST 1/1/25

James Conner Out For Week 18

James Conner Out For Week 18

Cardinals RB James Conner (knee) won't play in this weekend's game vs. the 49ers, HC Jonathan Gannon said Wednesday. RB Trey Benson (ankle) was placed on IR on Tuesday, leaving Michael Carter as Arizona's lead back for the finale. He out-touched RB DeeJay Dallas 15-1 in last week's loss to the Rams and sits surprisingly high in the Week 18 RB Rankings.

Cardinals RB Trey Benson has been placed on Injured Reserve with an ankle injury, so he will not be playing in Week 18. With RB James Conner battling a knee injury, Benson had a chance to start and potentially go off heading into the 2025 season. Instead, Michael Carter will likely start if Conner is out.

Cardinals RB James Conner (knee) is active for tonight’s game vs. the Rams. RB Trey Benson (ankle) is inactive, leaving RBs Michael Carter and DeeJay Dallas behind Conner. Conner was limited in practice all week and listed as questionable after hurting his knee six days ago. He won’t be at 100% tonight and could have his touches scaled back with the Cardinals eliminated from postseason contention. Check your Team Intel page to see if Conner belongs in your starting lineup.

The Cardinals expect RB James Conner (knee) to play vs. the Rams on Saturday night, according to Amazon's Albert Breer. RB Trey Benson (ankle) remains "up in the air," Breer added. Conner got in three limited practices this week and is listed as questionable. It's safe to assume he won't be at 100% tomorrow. And, with the Cardinals having nothing to play for, Conner's volume could be scaled back. We'll look for any reports on his expected workload. For now, consider him a risk/reward RB2 in Week 17 fantasy lineups.

Cardinals RBs James Conner (knee) and Trey Benson (ankle) are listed as questionable for Saturday's game vs. the Rams. Both guys were limited in practice all week. HC Jonathan Gannon said Conner has progressed well throughout the week, so it sounds like he has a legitimate chance to play. We'll look for further updates on Conner and Benson and get Arizona's inactives a little after 6:30 pm ET on Saturday. If both guys are out, Michael Carter would be the favorite for touches in the Cardinals backfield.

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