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Can Blake Corum Rush For 1,000 Yards This Season?

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SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - JANUARY 25: Blake Corum #22 of the Los Angeles Rams runs with the ball against the Seattle Seahawks during the second quarter in the NFC Championship game at Lumen Field on January 25, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Running back Blake Corum was one of the biggest breakout performers for the Los Angeles Rams last season. After posting a paltry 207 yards and no touchdowns on the ground as a rookie, Corum took on a much larger share of the running back workload in 2025, rushing for 746 yards on 5.1 yards per carry with six touchdowns. He became yet another legitimate weapon for one of the most dangerous offenses in the NFL.

How much more can he produce in 2026?

Rams beat writer Nate Atkins of The Athletic posted a piece late this past week about potential breakout candidates in L.A. this coming season, and Corum was the second name on his list (after tight end Terrance Ferguson). Atkins said that while Kyren Williams will still likely be the Rams’ third-down back, he thinks the rushing attempts splits will be closer to even, and had a bold thought about Corum’s ceiling in 2026.

“If he can stay healthy, Corum could push for his first 1,000-yard rushing season this year, even with Williams’ presence,” Atkins wrote.

Rams RB usage after their Week 8 bye last season (including playoffs):

Carries: Kyren Williams 196, Blake Corum 130
Targets: Kyren 33, Corum 11
Snaps: Kyren 563, Corum 326

The Athletic (see below) suggesting that could get tighter, at least on carries.

Would note that Kyren a… pic.twitter.com/8KajeyjCZT

— Adam Levitan (@adamlevitan) June 25, 2026

If the former third-round pick out of Michigan could crack the 1,000-yard threshold it would obviously be a huge boon for the Rams offense. At the same time, it would mean that either Los Angeles is making history or a trend is getting bucked.

If Corum is to pass 1,00 yards, that likely means a significant drop-off for Williams, who isn’t a perfect player and isn’t always the most popular in the Rams fan ecosystem, but he’s been consistently productive during his NFL career. He has at least 1,100 yards rushing three straight years and over 1,200 in the last two. He’s a scoring machine, with 10+ touchdowns in three consecutive seasons. And while he has his flaws, his under-the-hood advanced numbers grade him favorably as well. He ranked 23rd out of 49 qualified rushers in Rush Yards Over Expected per Attempt last season, and ranked 11th in rushing EPA, all according to NFL Pro/NextGenStats.

Of course, Corum is something of an analytical darling himself, finishing last season 10th in RYOE/attempt and second in rushing EPA, so it’s not a huge leap to think he can be even more productive with more snaps and a heavier workload.

It’s also, frankly, hard to see a scenario in which both Corum and Williams rush for over 1,000 yards, especially considering the other weapons on this offense and the fact that as long as you have Matthew Stafford playing a high level you still want to let him throw it plenty.

There have only been two 1,000-yard rushers on the same team seven times in NFL history. The last time was when Lamar Jackson and Mark Ingram did it for the Baltimore Ravens in 2019, and the last time it was two running backs pairing for the feat was the duo of Jonathan Stewart and DeAngelo Williams for the 2009 Carolina Panthers. That team’s quarterback play was split between Jake Delhomme, who had eight touchdowns and 18 interceptions in 11 games, and Matt Moore, who started the other five games and also had eight touchdowns (although only threw two picks). Not quite the firepower of the 2026 Rams.

Blake Corum – every regular season touch of 15+ yards in 2025

Corum ranked RB15 (out of 54 qualifiers) in the rate of touches that resulted in 15+ yards pic.twitter.com/PlDB0TitWX

— Jacob Gibbs (@jagibbs_23) June 17, 2026

Total yards is an imperfect stat for plenty of reasons, and it’s probably not be the best way to evaluate a player’s true impact or importance, even if that huge, round number still feels like a big deal. But there are plenty of other ways to evaluate Corum’s potential impact. Can he post similar advanced metrics to last season again? Can he earn a true 50-50 snap share with Williams, or even surpass it?

If Corum can do any of that, it’s a win for the Rams’ development system and it’s a win for the offense this year in general. We’ve already seen him be an impact player; now it’s time to find out if he can be a featured one on maybe the best offenses in the league.