Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › Snead & Mcvay discuss Rams draft days 1 & 2 (actually it was days 2 & 3 but wth)
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April 29, 2017 at 12:33 am #68018znModerator
VIDEO: GM Les Snead explains why the Rams expected to trade down in the second round today. And did. @CVRamsClub pic.twitter.com/s4Zz6DtqPc
— Ventura County Star (@vcstar) April 29, 2017
April 29, 2017 at 12:41 am #68022znModeratorJoe Curley @vcsjoecurley
“We know we got better at three spots… Kind of exactly what we wanted to come out of tonight with.” — McVay
“You’re talking about adding three quality players. These are guys who Les and his staff really targeted for a long time.” — McVay’s open
“We got to pick today. That was fun,” how Les Snead opened the post-Day 2 press conference
“It didn’t work out. That’s how the draft goes sometime.” — Snead
Snead said Smith-Schuster “was definitely in the mix.” Was part of a local workout the Rams had for local talent.
Snead says Johnson will come in and play safety, but as a former corner “he does give you flexibility.”
“He is one of the most polished college receivers that I’ve evaluated in a while.” — McVay on Kupp
McVay brings up the interview with Kupp in Indy, says he was almost like a receiver coach.
McVay said that the Rams had both Everett and Kupp in for private workouts and liked what they saw.
“I have a feeling that Gerald was one of Sean’s favorite players in the draft.” — Snead
McVay says Higbee, Hemingway and Everett compliment each other.
“Anytime that you have some depth at that tight end position, it allows you to be more versatile.” — McVay
“We felt like adding more picks to the stock was a smart move.” — Snead
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Lindsey Thiry @LindseyThiry
McVay said he thouht he was talking to a receivers coach when he was interviewing Cooper Kupp at the combine. “He’s always got a plan.”McVay references Cooper Kupp’s production against Washington’s Budda Baker. Snead adds in that these guys also stood out at the Senior Bowl.
McVay says they consider the competition level these guys play against (FCS, Sun Belt, but individual workout performances also considered.
Myles Simmons @MylesASimmons
Snead says the @seniorbowl helped both Everett, Kupp in terms of seeing them compete in person and on the field.April 29, 2017 at 1:48 am #68026znModeratorSnead & McVay Friday Post-Draft Press Conference
GM Les Snead and head coach Sean McVay recap the rounds two and three of the NFL Draft and Rams picks TE Gerald Everett, WR Cooper Kupp and DB John Johnson.
April 29, 2017 at 2:30 pm #68063znModeratorMcVay: Rams’ 2nd- and 3rd-round picks ‘exactly what we wanted’
By Alden Gonzalez
The Los Angeles Rams turned two picks into three on Friday. They addressed their most glaring needs, at tight end, receiver and safety. And shortly after they were finished, new head coach Sean McVay was saying that Gerald Everett, Cooper Kupp and John Johnson represented “kind of exactly what we wanted to come out of tonight with.”
“We know we got better at three spots,” McVay told local reporters from the Rams’ facility late Friday night, moments after the second and third round came to an end. “Those are high-character guys that will get us better.”
The Rams sat out Thursday’s first round for the first time since 1987, a product of the 2016 trade that allowed them to draft Jared Goff first overall — and then they went about getting Goff more weapons.
When they were finally on the clock with the 37th overall pick, receiver Zay Jones and guard Forrest Lamp — two players heavily linked to the Rams heading in — remained on the board. Instead, the Rams traded down with the Bills for the 44th spot, netting an additional third-round pick in the process. Then they selected Everett, an explosive, 6-foot-3, 239-pound pass-catching tight end out of South Alabama who can help stretch the field.
“I have a feeling that Gerald’s one of Sean’s favorite players in the draft,” Rams general manager Les Snead said, and that shouldn’t surprise anyone who paid attention to last year’s Redskins.
With McVay as offensive coordinator, those Redskins led the NFL in yards by tight ends. He needed more help at that position for the Rams, especially after cutting ties with veteran Lance Kendricks. So Everett became the third tight end drafted by the Rams in 12 months, joining Tyler Higbee and Temarrick Hemingway. The Rams’ new coaches are seemingly high on all three of them, enough so that McVay even talked about running 13-personnel packages that involve one running back, one receiver and three tight ends.
Everett, who didn’t get serious about football until his senior year of high school, believes he brings “the complete package of a tight end.”
“Definitely a vertical threat first,” he said, “but also being a willing blocker in the run game. Just being able to create that mismatch at any point of time in the game.”
With the 69th overall pick in the third round, the Rams took Kupp, a sure-handed — though not physically overwhelming — slot receiver out of Eastern Washington who finished his collegiate career with 15 FCS records. Twenty-two slots after that came Johnson, who excelled as both a free safety and a slot corner at Boston College. Johnson will join the Rams as a safety, but can also be an asset as a special-teams gunner and will provide immediate depth for a Rams secondary that has as many as six upcoming free agents.
Johnson, 6-foot and 208 pounds, believes he fits best as a safety, “although I think I have a corner body type.”
He intercepted six passes over the last two years against stiff competition.
“I think the ACC is the best college football conference in America,” Johnson said. “We have various polls that say it’s the best competition.”
Everett and Kupp can’t say the same, and it clouds their numbers a bit. Everett, who bounced around early in college, caught 90 passes for 1,292 yards and 12 touchdowns over his last two years at South Alabama, being named All-Sun Belt Conference at the end of each season. Kupp had 6,464 receiving yards in his college career, more than any collegiate player at any level. Don’t try to tell him those numbers are diluted, either.
“If people want to question that, that’s fine,” Kupp said. “I’m just going to go and do what I do, and I believe that that opinion will change soon.”
The Rams scouted Everett and Cooper at the Senior Bowl in January and saw them up close during private workouts last week. McVay identified them as “guys that can separate and catch the football” and noted big performances against tough opponents. He mentioned Kupp’s 246-yard, three-touchdown game against Oregon in 2015. And he alluded to Everett’s impact against Ole Miss to start the 2016 season, when he caught for 95 yards and the winning touchdown.
The Rams identified Everett as a potential target two years ago.
They liked him enough to disregard whatever was available to them at 37th overall.
“If you ever have an early second-round pick, it’s a good spot to be in,” Snead said. “Usually there are a lot of teams that want to move up, and we felt like that was going to occur. And throughout the day it did. Basically, based on what we did last year, we felt like adding more picks to the stock was a smart move.
April 29, 2017 at 10:46 pm #68121znModeratorRams GM Les Snead: "The sixth (draft) is my favorite — concise, clear. It's a tribute to Sean. It really is." OK then!
— Alden Gonzalez (@Alden_Gonzalez) April 30, 2017
April 30, 2017 at 12:56 am #68137znModerator2017 Post-Draft Press Conference
Get instant reactions on the Rams 2017 draft class from general manager Les Snead and head coach Sean McVay
April 30, 2017 at 7:07 am #68148AgamemnonModerator -
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