NFL history

Derrick Henry 2020 Season Still Stands at No. 5 on NFL’s Single-Season Rushing List

The NFL posted a clip Wednesday morning that cut straight to the physical heart of the sport. “The ground game at its finest,” the league wrote, showing bodies tangled at the line of scrimmage and a clean graphic of the top five single-season rushing totals in NFL history.

At No. 5 on that list sits Derrick Henry and the 2020 season he put together with the Tennessee Titans. 2,027 yards. 378 carries. 17 touchdowns. Sixteen games. The mark has not moved since.

The All-Time Top 5 Single-Season Rushing Performances

Rank Player Year Team Rushing Yards
1 Eric Dickerson 1984 Los Angeles Rams 2,105
2 Adrian Peterson 2012 Minnesota Vikings 2,097
3 Jamal Lewis 2003 Baltimore Ravens 2,066
4 Barry Sanders 1997 Detroit Lions 2,053
5 Derrick Henry 2020 Tennessee Titans 2,027

These are not fluke seasons built on extra games or schedule quirks. Every name on this list played a 16-game schedule. Every one of them took a massive volume of touches and kept producing when defenses knew exactly what was coming.

What Derrick Henry’s 2020 Season Actually Looked Like

The clip the league chose shows a classic short-yardage or goal-line pile. Linemen drive their blocks. Linebackers and safeties swarm. For a second the ball carrier vanishes under the mass of bodies. Then the pile shifts forward another yard or two. That image captures the 2020 Titans offense in one frame.

Henry did not rely on finesse or wide-open lanes. He ran with a low center of gravity, kept his legs churning on contact, and turned first-and-ten into second-and-six or better on a regular basis. Defenses stacked the box late in the year. He still finished with the league lead in rushing yards, attempts, and touchdowns.

The physical cost showed on opponents. By December, front sevens that had taken on Henry for 60 minutes looked slower getting off the ball. That is what a true workhorse back does. He does not just gain yards. He changes the math for the entire defense for the rest of the game and the rest of the season.

Why the Mark Has Held Up

Saquon Barkley came closest in the modern era, finishing 2024 with 2,005 yards for the Eagles. Close, but still short of Henry’s total. No one else has cracked the top five since Henry joined the list. The combination of size, straight-line speed, vision, and durability required to reach these numbers has become even rarer in a league that spreads the ball around more than ever.

Henry’s 2020 campaign also came in a year when the Titans leaned heavily on the run to control games and protect a young quarterback. The scheme fit the player. The player rewarded the scheme. That alignment does not happen by accident.

The NFL’s post served as a quick reminder that the ground game still carries weight when it is executed at this level. The numbers on the graphic are impressive. The style of football that produced them is what fans remember long after the final whistle.

Tyler Reed

Staff Writer, Enfell
Tyler Reed writes NFL coverage for Enfell, spanning breaking news, trade and free agency reporting, and week-to-week game analysis throughout the season. He's followed the league closely for most of his life and turned that into a writing career built on fast, accurate reporting during the moments when NFL news moves quickest. At Enfell, Tyler covers league transactions as they break, contributes to draft season coverage, and writes recaps and analysis breaking down what happened in Sunday's games. He also has a strong interest in fantasy football, and regularly writes matchup previews and start/sit guidance for readers managing their own rosters. Tyler's philosophy is simple: be first when you can be, be right always, and never sacrifice the second for the first. He values clear, direct writing that gets readers the information they need without unnecessary fluff. Have a tip or a correction? Reach Tyler at contact@enfell.com.

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