No, ALL Running Backs are off the board until at best the second round. In a perfect world it would be third round or later.
And to answer the question that probably just popped into your head after reading that sentence.
No, I'm not high.
It is my position, even back then, that most NFL GM's and Head Coaches were fumbling along as if trying to apply a Dusty Baker like strategy to football.
Drafting a running back in the first round. Is like having Neifi Perez lead off the game and then sacrificing him over to second base. Sure, there were times when it worked out and they hit on a player who racked up 1400-1600 yards or so on around 4.5-5.5 yards per carry. And then everyone gets to look on approvingly as if they had just witnessed Joe Morgan discussing the value of the RBI.
After Pittsburgh's victory in Super Bowl 14 ( 1979 season ) the old era essentially came to a close. With a few exceptions here and there the Super Bowl started to be regularly won by teams that had embraced this new reality.
Ultimately, after the NFL had first implemented a salary cap. And then later mandated that all Quarterbacks wear skirts, it was over for the value of any individual Running Back. It's all about building that group with less valuable draft capital and only on cheap contracts.