different units: WRs, TEs, secondary, LBs

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  • #118949
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    Countdown to Camp: Rams WRs coach Eric Yarber counting on veterans’ leadership to maintain “quality depth”

    Stu Jackson

    https://www.therams.com/news/countdown-to-camp-wide-receivers

    Countdown to Camp is a series breaking down the Rams roster by position group heading into training camp. The fifth installment examines the wide receivers.

    For the last three years, depth has been a luxury afforded to Rams wide receivers coach Eric Yarber’s group.

    As Rams Training Camp presented by UNIFY Financial Credit Union approaches, the challenge in a current pandemic environment is to build on existing continuity and keep the quality depth going.

    “Back in the day, we had Josh (Reynolds) as a No. 4 (receiver),” Yarber told theRams.com in a phone interview this week. “We had three starters and Josh was the No. 4. Josh could start for 20 to 25 teams in the NFL. He had a quality backup in Mike Thomas, and Mike Thomas had a quality backup in Nsimba (Webster). Now, Josh is a starter and we’ve got to find good quality backups right now. That’s one of our next objectives (besides) coming out of this thing safe and healthy.”

    Meeting that secondary objective starts with the veteran voices. Robert Woods, who enters his fourth season with the Rams and eighth in the NFL overall, as well as Reynolds and Cooper Kupp, who both enter their fourth seasons with Los Angeles and in the NFL, bringing along new or less experienced faces.

    And L.A. has a quite a few.

    Nsimba Webster, one of three undrafted free agents to make 2019’s initial 53-man roster, will be entering his second season with the team. The Rams selected Florida product Van Jefferson 57th overall in this year’s draft, then signed five undrafted free agents – Washington State’s Easop Winston Jr., Cal Poly’s J.J. Koski, James Madison’s Brandon Polk, Syracuse’s Trishton Jackson and Maine’s Earnest Edwards IV – to give them 10 wide receivers on their roster entering training camp.

    “I’ve asked Robert, Josh and Cooper to help me get these guys ready by being leaders,” Yarber said. “Show ’em how to practice, show ’em how to prepare, show ’em how to be a pro so that we can create quality depth on our quest to a Super Bowl.”

    Jefferson is one player who can help create the depth Yarber desires in his rotation. According to Yarber, Jefferson is “a football-savvy receiver that catches on quickly” – a reflection of being the son of a former NFL wide receiver in Shawn Jefferson, who played 13 years in the league and currently coaches the same position for the New York Jets .

    “Just watching him and seeing him on film, he is a great route-runner with big-time separation skills,” Yarber said. “He knows how to separate, he knows how to set DBs up to separate. If he’s covered, he can use his big body or he can use his athletic ability, man. He has the talent to separate and the know-how.”

    Speaking of skillsets, Yarber, like Rams head coach Sean McVay, believes Reynolds is capable of stepping into a bigger role. McVay said this spring the Brandin Cooks trade was a reflection of how strongly they felt about Reynolds.

    Cooks excelled in his role because of his speed, according to Yarber, but Reynolds is “deceptively fast.”

    “You don’t think he’s moving as fast as he does, but he’s had one of the top-three fastest miles-per-hour times on our team in practice,” Yarber said. “He’s a fast guy that people don’t think is fast, but he’s got a big catch radius and he’s got big-time quickness for a big man.”

    While the wide receiver room looks different and perhaps younger entering training camp compared to previous years, Yarber is confident the leadership of Woods, Kupp and Reynolds will help them maintain the group’s standard.

    “This should be a training camp that could be made difficult by the COVID experience, but with these guys having so much continuity in our offense, it makes this almost like seamless,” Yarber said.

    #118951
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    from https://www.therams.com/news/countdown-to-camp-cornerbacks

    cornerbacks coach Aubrey Pleasant told theRams.com in a phone interview last week. “I think have the best corner in the game. I also think that I have some other players that have solidified themselves as starters in the NFL that want to take their game to the next level. And then I have some younger guys that are ready to show the world their potential.”

    Among the younger returning players, injuries afforded both Darious Williams and David Long playing time late last season that aided their growth.

    “Both are two totally different situations as far as what they bring to the table, but they’re both young guys that have been able to progress,” Pleasant said of Williams and Long. “Darious Williams, the way he played those last four weeks, was of starting caliber in the NFL. Not only was he able to make plays, but he was able to get his hands on the ball. And when you can create turnovers in the National Football League, that’s something that separates you from the others.”

    As for Long, Pleasant tasked him with playing an “inside-out” role as a rookie last year because of his versatility.

    “You saw as the weeks progressed later on in the season versus Chicago, later on in the season two times versus Arizona, we asked that young man to come and play in several different roles, but just kind of shows you his skill set is so unique, he can do anything that’s asked,” Pleasant said. “And then the final game of the season, he had to play at corner and he stood up and made some plays.”

    #119002
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    Countdown to Camp: Rams TEs coach Wes Phillips says group’s receiving, blocking skills give team “a lot of options”

    Stu Jackson

    https://www.therams.com/news/countdown-to-camp-tight-ends

    Countdown to Camp is a series breaking down the Rams roster by position group heading into training camp. The seventh installment examines the tight ends.

    What does Rams tight ends coach Wes Phillips like about his group?

    “What don’t I like is really the better question,” Phillips said with a laugh.

    With the official start of Rams Training Camp presented by UNIFY Financial Credit Union on the horizon, it’s easy to see why Phillips sees few, if any flaws in his group.

    The tight end room currently consists of fifth-year pro Tyler Higbee, fourth-year pros Gerald Everett and Johnny Mundt, second-year pro Kendall Blanton and a “steal” of a draft pick in fourth-round rookie Brycen Hopkins from Purdue. Collectively, it’s a unit regarded by scouting service Pro Football Focus as the fifth-best in the NFL.

    Phillips, who is in his third season overseeing the Rams tight ends, saw Higbee, Everett and Mundt each play critical roles for Los Angeles in his second.

    Both Higbee and Everett had career seasons in 2019. In Higbee’s case, it set franchise single-season records for receptions (69) and receiving yards (734) for the position. Though Everett missed three games due to injury, he still produced career-bests for receptions (37) and receiving yards (408) in a single season. Meanwhile, with Everett out, Mundt ascended into a bigger role that helped him become a key contributor as a run-blocker.

    “We’ve got just an excellent group that is not only talented as far as they’ve all shown what they can do, obviously, particularly Tyler and Gerald in the pass game, but also their attention to detail and their physicality in the run game,” Phillips said. “So they really give us a lot of options.”

    For Phillips, Higbee’s breakout play last season didn’t come as as a surprise.

    “Everyone who has been around our football team, players and coaches included, I think we all knew that he was capable of doing those types of things,” Phillips said. “It was just about getting the opportunity and, you know, in this league, someone goes down with injury and someone’s role increases, and Tyler was more than ready to step up what his number was called, for sure.”

    The opportunity, of course, came when Everett was unfortunately dealing with a knee injury. Now that he’s healthy, Phillips is eager to have Everett back in the fold.

    One might assume it’s because of how valuable Everett is as a receiver, but Phillips reminded that Everett is also a capable blocker. When Higbee missed the Rams’ Week 3 game against the Browns, Everett was tasked with blocking players like Pro Bowl defensive ends Myles Garrett and Olivier Vernon and “did a great job,” according to Phillips.

    “He’s a smart player, he’s instinctive, but extremely explosive,” Phillips said. “One of the best athletes, maybe as far as raw, athletic talent – maybe the best athlete that I’ve coached. From a tight end standpoint, he can run. He’s great with the ball after the catch. The first guy never brings him down. He’s strong. He’s explosive, from that standpoint running, but what a lot of people don’t always realize either is that in the run game, that same explosion, it applies, and he’s a tough, tough, tough man.”

    Just because the Rams tight end room already returns a lot of experience entering training camp doesn’t mean Hopkins won’t be able to contribute to the rotation. However, Like any rookie entering the upcoming NFL season, getting acclimated will take a little bit longer than normal due to the absence of on-field work during the offseason program – valuable time used for honing footwork technique, for example.

    “He’s been very studious, he’s been studying everything, but it’s still a lot for a young guy,” Phillips said. “So right now, his job is just to make sure he knows his assignments. We’re trying to work with the technique on the fly here and make sure he catches up to those other guys, because right now, he’s behind. But, when you see him out there and you see him move, and when he does do a technique correctly, you see what he brings to the table. He’s very athletic, he’s strong, he’s physical.”

    Like fellow rookie Terrell Lewis, though, that gradual transition for Hopkins should be smooth based on how well his college duties translate to the Rams.

    “One of the reasons we liked him is that we could see him on tape at Purdue doing all the things we’re really going to ask him to do,” Phillips said. “He’s just got to switch over that terminology and then kind of learn our technique the way we do it.”

    #119003
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    Robert Woods, Rams receivers out to prove their worth in 2020

    https://www.si.com/nfl/rams/news/la-rams-robert-woods-out-to-prove-worth

    Put some respect on my name.

    That’s what Los Angeles Rams receiver Robert Woods wants accomplish this season — among other things – as his team works through the first week of training camp.

    Woods understands he’s put up good numbers since joining the Rams in 2017, but still would like to see he and the rest of the team’s wide receiver group get a little more love nationally.

    “We’re not like the flashiest group of receivers, but we’re just up there with production, up there with the best if not the best, as a group and as a unit,” he said.

    Woods is not wrong.

    Pro Football Focus places the Rams at No. 17 in the analytics site’s ranking of the top 32 receiving groups in the league.

    Woods fellow L.A. receiver Cooper Kupp were an afterthought in Mike Florio and Chris Simms of Pro Football Talk’s discussion of the top WR tandems in the league.

    And neither are among Bleacher Report’s selection of the top five WRs duo in the NFL.

    But Woods can simply point to production in asking the NFL to put some respect on the Rams’ name.

    According to Football Outsiders, Rams’ receivers caught 249 passes last season — second only to the Atlanta Falcons — and averaged a league-high 5.8 yards after the catch in 2019.

    Woods (1,134) and Kupp (1,161) both finished the season with over 1,000 receiving yards, one of five receiving duos to accomplish the feat in 2019, joining the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (Chris Goodwin 1,333, Mike Evans 1,157), the Dallas Cowboys (Amari Cooper 1,189, Michael Gallup 1,107), the Cleveland Browns (Jarvis Landry 1,174, Odell Beckham Jr. 1,035) and the Los Angeles Chargers (Keenan Allen 1,199, Mike Williams 1,001).

    Cooper and Woods are close. The two spent time this offseason hopping fences of local high schools in Thousand Oaks and getting chased off fields trying to get in their daily training regimen.

    Kupp points to Woods’ guidance as one of the reasons he led the team in receptions (94), receiving yards (1,161) and touchdowns (10) last season.

    “I’ve got so much respect for Rob,” Kupp said. “Personally, I’ve learned more from Rob then I have any other receiver. I’ve been studying receivers since I was in high school, and studying pros when I was in high school. Being here, and being able to play with someone who in my mind is one of the best receivers in the league in terms of his ability to do everything.

    “There’s no position he can’t play. He can run the underneath routes. He can get over the top of people. He’s just been an incredible asset to have a friend, and as a teammate. So I’m incredibly thankful for him, and his willingness to share.”

    As a group, the Rams will have to replace deep threat Brandin Cooks, now with the Houston Texans. However, the Rams have Josh Reynolds ready to step up and second-round draft selection Van Jefferson competing for playing time.

    Individually, Woods’ 176 catches over the last two seasons is good enough for No. 6 among receivers over that time period, while his 2,353 receiving yards is seventh.

    Woods, 28, has performed like a No. 1 receiver the past two seasons. Now, he’s looking to get paid like one. The USC product still has two years left on a five-year, $34 million contract that will pay him $7 million in total compensation for the 2020 season.

    “You want to go in and get paid for what you’re worth,” Woods said. “I think everyone feels that way. I’ve been working here for the Rams and want to be here for the rest of my career, keep playing here in L.A., home stadium. I want to get the job done and be here long-term.”

    #119026
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    Countdown to Camp: For first time since arriving in Los Angeles, safeties coach Ejiro Evero has group hand-picked by current staff

    Stu Jackson

    https://www.therams.com/news/countdown-to-camp-safeties

    Safeties coach Ejiro Evero is entering his fourth training camp and season with the Rams this fall, but it’s the first time since he arrived in Los Angeles that the collection of talent in his position room was either drafted or acquired by the current coaching staff.

    Having a chance to work with a group that he helped construct and knows so well is what makes him excited for Rams Training Camp presented by UNIFY Financial Credit Union.

    “It’s fun to have a group of guys that we did a lot of research on, we really liked them coming out,” Evero told theRams.com in a phone interview this week. “The best part is, we’ve got two guys that have played a lot of good football in the league and are experienced and ready to take another bigger step in their careers, and we’ve got two young guys that have a very, very promising future.”

    Fourth-year pro John Johnson III and second-year pro Taylor Rapp are the “established” members of the safeties room. The former suffered a season-ending shoulder injury against the 49ers in Week 6 last year but told reporters this spring that he was “100 percent” healthy, while the latter emerged as a starter in his place and finished with the third-most tackles on the team (100 total).

    In that same April video conference in which he provided an update on his health, Johnson also said he thinks his and Rapp’s skillsets will complement each other well. Evero can also see it, saying they are both “really similar players.”

    “First of all, they’re both just extremely, extremely bright and smart,” Evero said. “They’re both good communicators. They both have a passion for football. They’re both tough guys. And so I think it’s exciting because from a mental standpoint and a communication standpoint, they’re very aligned. They both are up to the high level part of football in terms of making checks and adjustments and recognizing offensive formations and all that jazz. So we’re going to be good in terms of communication, in terms of guys that can play really smart.”

    Johnson and Rapp not only can process what’s happening in front of them on the field at a high level, but also translate it through execution.

    “They’re both elite tacklers from that safety position, they’re both guys that can go find the ball, and they’re guys that just have a sense of getting to the ball, too,” Evero said. “It’s very, very exciting to have two guys that are just very complementary.”

    Beyond that duo, the group also includes second-year pro Nick Scott, rookies Terrell Burgess (Utah) and Jordan Fuller (Ohio State), and undrafted free agent signee JuJu Hughes (Fresno State).

    When asked specifically about third-round pick Burgess and sixth-round pick Fuller, Evero said both fit the mold of the safeties the Rams already have, in terms of being “really smart, cerebral football players that can translate it to the field.” Echoing defensive coordinator Brandon Staley’s comments earlier this spring, Evero also sees versatility in each that L.A. will be able to take advantage of.

    “Terrell has a different specific skillset, in terms of, he’s a guy that has really good movement ability and he has corner-type skills. He’s a guy that we’re going to give a little sniff at nickel (defensive back) as well as safety, so he’s got that kind of dynamic,” Evero said. “And then Jordan Fuller’s a big-body guy, he moves around really well but he’s got a build almost like a damn linebacker.”

    Like other members of their rookie class, the biggest challenge will be getting up to speed after not having traditional on-field work during the offseason program. However, according to Evero, going full-speed against a Rams offense that stresses a defense with different looks and tempos during training camp will help make the transition go smoother.

    Regardless, Evero is confident in what his group will contribute to Los Angeles’ defense.

    “There’s enough talent in our room to be very, very productive,” Evero said.

    #119458
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    merlin

    Outside LBs

    Only one of these guys has flashed. Obo. He just has that burst off the edge, not elite burst or anything but he has it. We honestly need him to show up. And if he doesn’t then hopefully the rook shows up (which will be difficult,IMO, for him to pick everything up right away in this environment).

    If they don’t it’s unlikely Ebukam will. And I really like Ebukam by the way, he seems to be a great dude and teammate but he simply doesn’t have that edge gift. Most guys don’t. Ebukam is like a lot of guys on this OLB roster, he’s a hard worker who will give you a full whistle to whistle effort but he’s not special. Patrick is similar to my eye, really liked his preseason edge snaps last year and he’s flexible but can he provide heat off the edge snap to snap? Unlikely.

    Polite I suppose is a longshot. He does have some really good edge instincts and natural ability but he’s not someone we can count on either.

    IMO it’s basically Obo or bust for us on the blindside. And if not we can still end up with a good overall sack/pressure total thanks to Donald. So I’m not worried about the group overall even though I don’t have high expectations for them.

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