Physical, patient runner who makes his living between the tackles by setting up blocks and cutting off contact with surprisingly nimble feet for a 220-pound frame. Faison's calling card is his contact balance and pad-level discipline — he drops and drives through defenders, consistently falls forward, and rarely goes down on first contact. The limitations are real: breakaway speed is lacking, his college production was modest outside of one strong Utah State campaign, and he'll be 26.5 before his first NFL training camp, leaving essentially zero developmental runway. He profiles as a committee power back who can contribute in pass protection, but his ceiling is a solid No. 2 rather than a lead-back role — a professional with a clear floor and a low ceiling.
- Elite contact balance and tackle-breaking ability — fights through contact with a well-balanced base and consistently falls forward
- Reliable pass protector with a reported 87.5 PFF pass block grade in 2025; shows willingness and functional strength in blitz pickup
- Patient, instinctive runner who sets up blocks and reads the carnage before committing — doesn't rush the action
- Physical build with above-average frame (6-0, 220 lbs) and exceptional strength numbers (reported 525 lb bench, 805 lb squat)
- Natural pass catcher capable of adjusting to the throw and running actual routes out of the backfield
- Lacks breakaway speed — rarely generates explosive runs over 40 yards and did not run the 40-yard dash at the combine
- Will be 26.5 years old at his first NFL training camp, leaving virtually no developmental upside and a compressed NFL shelf life
- Sharp change of direction and true cutting ability are limited; adequate but not dynamic in space
- 2025 South Carolina production was underwhelming (96 carries, 470 yards, 3 TDs) even accounting for a poor offensive line
Similar play style — patient, powerful between the tackles, reliable pass protector with receiving chops, but lacks the burst to be a true lead back. Both are best suited as complementary pieces who maximize short yardage through physicality and ball security rather than explosive athleticism.