Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › our responses to the 2022 draft
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April 30, 2022 at 7:02 pm #138632znModerator
Logan Bruss, OG, Wisconsin (104)
Decobie Durant, CB, South Carolina State (142 overall)
Kyren Williams, RB, Notre Dame (164 overall)
Quentin Lake, S, UCLA (211 overall)
Derion Kendrick, CB, Georgia (212 overall)
Daniel Hardy, DE, Montana State (235 overall)
Russ Yeast, S, Kansas State (253 overall)
A.J. Arcuri, OT, Michigan State (261 overall)April 30, 2022 at 7:26 pm #138639Billy_TParticipantOverall, not happy with the Draft. I think they bypassed a lot of talent and went seriously idiosyncratic. They seemed to draft mostly below average athletes, with the exception of Daniel Hardy. To me, when you draft late, you go for superior athletes you can coach up. Small school gems. Guys wh0 weren’t given a chance on loaded teams, but have speed, explosion, strength, etc. You can’t coach slow kids into being fast, but you can coach up poor technique, and make up for lack of experience, etc. You can coach/correct for “lesser” competition, but you can’t turn a below average athlete into someone who consistently wins matchups, in general.
Boiled down, football is a game of speed, quickness, explosion, and strength. The side with the best athletes will win more often than the side with average athletes. Yeah, ya got your “intangibles” and drive and want-to and all of that. But, speed kills, strength kills, suddenness makes ya miss, etc.
This was one of the deepest and most athletic drafts I can remember, just chalked full of RAS freaks, and the Rams basically grabbed just one of them.
Hoping they can make up for that, at least somewhat, via UDFAs.
April 30, 2022 at 7:45 pm #138642JackPMillerParticipantI gave it a C
Not happy trading up for an RB, drafting two Safeties(unless Taylor Rapp is going to get traded),
May 1, 2022 at 9:40 am #138667ZooeyModeratorI gave it a C Not happy trading up for an RB, drafting two Safeties(unless Taylor Rapp is going to get traded),
Rapp won’t get a second deal from the Rams. Better to start grooming a replacement now. And safety isn’t a strong spot on the Rams right now anyway. They had to hire a guy who was retired for two years to come in and play in the playoffs last year. That’s not sustainable.
May 1, 2022 at 10:14 am #138669znModeratorRapp won’t get a second deal from the Rams. Better to start grooming a replacement now. And safety isn’t a strong spot on the Rams right now anyway. They had to hire a guy who was retired for two years to come in and play in the playoffs last year. That’s not sustainable.
I agree with all that but much of what led to them signing Weddle (which turned out to be a freaking brilliant move) was injuries.
If no injuries, then it is possible that a safety duo of Fuller and Scott could be one of the best the Rams have had in a long time.
They did need future depth though. No question.
May 1, 2022 at 10:21 am #138670znModeratormerlinThis secondary looks a lot stronger now.
The corner pieces first off are far better than they were a year ago. There’s more juice. The slot is a far better bet to get good play (Durant should win the job), which could be a significant upgrade for the Rams over last year. They added Hill too who brings versatility. And they’re sitting on a lottery ticket with Kendrick where he might bust quickly or get his head on straight and make the Rams look like geniuses.
Long’s still there too, so the competition for this group is real. And Rochell has had a year’s worth of development.
One thing I like about Lake is that he was in such a poorly coordinated defense. That matters for the safeties a great deal. Which is to say I don’t think he or a lot of the talent on that side of the ball was maximized. Azzinaro was not a good teacher, and his poorly-timed calls often cost the team. So there’s room to think Lake might end up a better pro just by virtue of going from a DC that was rightly fired to a defensive staff with the Rams that will help him use all his tools. So assuming Lake does things right, from being a good special teams member on to taking the coaching, he should have a chance to be a player at this level.
The defense is going to be less dangerous on the rush but might be much improved in coverage. I think that was a nice direction to go after Von went for that pack of cigarettes. And adding Wagner means being more stout vs the steroid matchups like Seattle and SF. It would not surprise me if this defense really took a big step forward this year.
May 1, 2022 at 11:47 am #138675Billy_TParticipantRams finished with the least athletic draft class of 2022
* https://theramswire.usatoday.com/lists/nfl-draft-2022-athletic-rams-score-least/
The Los Angeles Rams began the 2022 NFL draft with eight draft picks, and they finished with that same amount after making two trades: one up and one down. They filled most of their top needs, selecting four defensive backs, two linemen, one running back and an edge rusher.
What they didn’t do is put together a very athletic draft class. In fact, it was the least athletic in the NFL based on a number of measurables that go into Kent Lee Platte’s “Relative Athletic Score.” It accounts for height, weight, 40-yard dash time, broad jump and other combine drills, giving fans an idea of how athletic a player is compared to his peers.
According to average RAS, the Rams’ draft class ranks 32nd out of 32 teams for 2022. It was weighed down heavily by Derion Kendrick and Kyren Williams, who both had an RAS below 4.00.
Logan Bruss and Daniel Hardy are the only two players in the Rams’ class who scored above an 8.50, making them the most athletic of Los Angeles’ class.
Below are the Relative Athletic Scores of each player from the Rams’ class, though Quentin Lake’s was not available due to a lack of testing numbers from the combine and his pro day.
Bruss’ position was also changed from offensive tackle to guard to give a better idea of how he compares to players at the position he’ll play for the Rams.
May 1, 2022 at 12:14 pm #138676InvaderRamModeratorLogan Bruss and Daniel Hardy are the only two players in the Rams’ class who scored above an 8.50, making them the most athletic of Los Angeles’ class.
and probably my two favorite picks. although i do like the williams pick. i’m rooting for him hard. but more athleticism and potential would have been nice too.
May 1, 2022 at 1:03 pm #138681canadaramParticipantGiven the picks that they had, I liked it. They addressed positions of need and they picked up a veteran in Troy Hill. The Rams seem to know what they like with their db’s and have had success finding them late, so I have no ground to stand on when it comes to critiquing them. I remember not being impressed with Fuller’s 40 time at the Combine and I saw him as a special teams pick when the Rams took him. He has turned out to be a gem of a pick. At one point this draft reminded me of the Rams 2003 draft when they took 3 db’s (Groce, Walton, Garrett), but then the db’s just kept coming. It will be interesting to see who makes the roster and who ends up on the practice squad or elsewhere.
The Rams running game was underwhelming last year, so I like that they seem to be trying to address this with the picks of Bruss and Kyren Williams.
I would have liked to see a punter added, but I am assuming that there is a plan in place or that they really like Riley Dixon. Either way I am sure that there will be another guy present at training camp.
- This reply was modified 2 years, 6 months ago by canadaram.
May 1, 2022 at 1:03 pm #138682Billy_TParticipantLogan Bruss and Daniel Hardy are the only two players in the Rams’ class who scored above an 8.50, making them the most athletic of Los Angeles’ class.
and probably my two favorite picks. although i do like the williams pick. i’m rooting for him hard. but more athleticism and potential would have been nice too.
My favorite picks as well.
It’s almost as if they passed on freakish athletes on purpose. That they have something against them this year. And this draft was loaded with crazy-good athletes. Deeper in that area than I can ever remember. Size/speed demons all over the place, but especially at DB, a position they obviously cared about.
One would think picking them would fit right into the Rams overall strategy of — mostly — drafting for the future (next man up), not for rookies necessarily starting, etc. That means they have time to coach up “potential.” When the pick is less than average athletically, that can’t be coached up. They’re not going to win most matchups with the superior athletes around the league. But a freakish athlete, under Ram tutelage for a year or two?
It kinda baffles me. Common sense says that in a game of inches and split seconds, the fastest, quickest, longest, strongest athletes will win the down more often than not. If a QB has 2.4 or whatever seconds to get rid of the pass, who do you want rushing him? The 4.9 guy, with the 1.75 split? Or the the 4.55 guy with the 1.52 split?
Same thing with DBs, going up against the growing array of speedster receivers. I want the DB who can run a 4.3, and has a 1.47 split, defending a Metcalf or a Chase, etc.
And, yeah, I know. Playing speed, in pads, is what counts. But, generally speaking, it translates pretty well to pads-on speed too. Not always. But usually.
Anyway, I’m bummed in general about the draft. Still high from the Super Bowl. But I wanted them to get faster, stronger, etc. etc. I’m a greedy old fan.
May 1, 2022 at 1:14 pm #138684canadaramParticipantRapp won’t get a second deal from the Rams. Better to start grooming a replacement now. And safety isn’t a strong spot on the Rams right now anyway. They had to hire a guy who was retired for two years to come in and play in the playoffs last year. That’s not sustainable.
…. They did need future depth though. No question.
And based on his limited playing time last year, it seems that Terrell Burgess is not a favourite of the current defensive staff.
May 1, 2022 at 7:48 pm #138696znModeratorMy take.
The Rams have seriously done well in the lower rounds since 2017. They average about 4 hits per draft (not yet counting the too recent 2021 draft); and by hits I mean more than “makes the roster for a couple of years.” A hit is someone who either ends up as a starter, or when asked to step up as an injury replacement, comes through at a high level (eg. Scott).
They have done things like find a seriously good NT in round 6 one year (Sebastian-Day) and then when he was injured, his 4th round replacement came through (Gaines). You know before that I don’t think they ever drafted a good NT when they played 3/4 defenses.
Overall, this may be the best drafting in Rams draft history. Honestly.
Given all that I am reluctant to say anything about picks that are obscure to me. I mean–who here predicted that both Fuller and Scott would come through the way they did? They were afterthoughts when Rams fans discussed those drafts. So I can’t rule them out from having 4 solid hits in this draft, too. (Plus it is obvious they also stocked themselves with very good position coaches, so player development is real with them.)
Pick by pick.
Bruss. The highest the Rams have deliberately picked a guard since Incognito in 2005 (others like Saffold and Evans were initially taken as tackles and then later converted. Bruss is a draft, plug and play guard). Bruss makes this OL Wisconsin West. This is obviously a good pick.
Durant. He gets a lot of buzz as a good, talented, dedicated slot type corner. Rams have an extrordinary record drafting DBs, and that’s even with the disappointments we can all name. If Durant comes through, and Long and Rochell develop, and Hill is what he was, this is going to be a deep corner group. That’s a lot of ifs but it’s just not that implausible.
Williams. I like him. Low center of gravity, good elusiveness, and top contact balance–the trait he shares with both Henderson and Akers. He’s basically Henderson with alterations–not as fast but far more elusive. Write-ups on him say he is a very good pass protector too. He replaces Michel. Rams need 3 backs.
Lake. Nothing but love for this pick. He came through on a defense that was a poorly coached shambles.
Kendrick. A gamble, but not a costly one.
Hardy. Same as Kendrick. Except–it’s easier to find DBs this low in the draft then pass rushers. Every year the Rams will try a new potential diamond in the rough at this spot: Garrett, Lewis, Okoronkwo. But if you look at the entire league for the past 20 years, out of all the players taken after round 3 at DE or OLB edge rusher, only a handful have ever made it–a lowly percentage of just around 2%. If they don’t make another high profile trade, then, they just have to keep trying.
Yeast. Don’t know. Special teamer? Maybe he blossoms? Let’s see if he makes some bread (yuck yuck).
Arcuri. Strictly a right tackle and one very much in the Havenstein mold. This guy might make it and develop. (You know the Rams drafting at OL from Martz through Fisher was just bloody awful. This bunch, the 2017 and after gang, have been pretty good at it.)
…
What I miss: What did I want to see them do that they didn’t do? Believe it or not–a back-up qb. Unless Perkins develops, I don’t think they have one.
May 1, 2022 at 8:26 pm #138697JackPMillerParticipantI was not happy drafting two safeties.
May 1, 2022 at 8:33 pm #138698Billy_TParticipantAn article that tries to slot the eight picks versus where some draft services had them slotted pre-draft.
* https://theramswire.usatoday.com/lists/rams-draft-rankings-prospects-picks-big-board/
I know the Rams have their own board, and it’s often as idiosyncratic as New England’s, which is kind of why the Rams left-handed compliment regarding the Pats’ pick surprised me. So, yeah, they’re gonna do what they want to do (and should), not what those various media scouts and services say they should. And I also know, after researching the rankings pre-draft, that this was one of the strangest drafts, evah, after the first coupla rounds, when it comes to consistent slotting. Not a lot of consensus after the top 100 or so. Maybe even earlier. So many of them were all over the map, and the article indicates that too.
Why does any of this matter to me? Mostly cuz of this: I’m good with the Rams sticking to their guns, and not even trying to make Daniel Jeremiah and Mel Kiper happy. Not. Their. Job. But I don’t think they’re good at maximizing their picks by drafting in the general area that most outfits slot them. If, for instance, there’s a great chance they can draft player X in the 6th or 7th, they shouldn’t draft him in the 4th or earlier. Pick someone else on their board more likely to be gone if they don’t. And if it’s a pretty good bet the player is in the UDFA realm, aside from “priority” players, wait. If he’s not even ranked? Wait.
If they can’t wait, trade down, grab more picks, and then take him, if they find a willing partner.
The Rams did get a couple a round or two after their usual slotting, and that’s always good as far as “value.” The other way around generally isn’t. Not talking about within the round, cuz that can lead to a Bobby Wagner mistake. But a coupla rounds early? IMO, that’s not good draft-day chess.
Hoping I’m wrong, obviously, about this draft, and that the players, coaches, and staff prove me 100% wrong. Plus, of course, we won’t know one way or another for a year, or two, or three. It’s just on paper at this point. It’s not “real” yet.
May 1, 2022 at 8:59 pm #138699znModeratorI was not happy drafting two safeties.
I was. They are going to lose a couple of their safeties after this year. That was stocking up for the future.
May 1, 2022 at 9:00 pm #138700znModeratorBT, do me a favor and move that article to this thread (or post it both places):
media responses to the Rams 2022 draft
Thanks.
May 1, 2022 at 9:44 pm #138702Billy_TParticipantBT, do me a favor and move that article to this thread (or post it both places): media responses to the Rams 2022 draft Thanks.
In case you couldn’t tell, the comments were all mine. No excerpt from the article. I just linked to it and the software did its thing with the pic, etc.
It was intended as my response to the draft, with the article as kinda support.
Should that still be in the media response thread?
May 1, 2022 at 10:43 pm #138703znModeratorBT, do me a favor and move that article to this thread (or post it both places): media responses to the Rams 2022 draft Thanks.
In case you couldn’t tell, the comments were all mine. No excerpt from the article. I just linked to it and the software did its thing with the pic, etc. It was intended as my response to the draft, with the article as kinda support. Should that still be in the media response thread?
Okay thanks. The simple way to fix links that do that is to add text before them–I put an asterisk. I just thought the article should also be in the other thread, but that’s fine, I will put it there. I also fixed your link.
May 2, 2022 at 9:17 am #138713InvaderRamModeratori think secondary is set. especially with the trade for hill. so at this point i seriously doubt they go after mathieu.
but edge rusher seems to be the one big question mark on this defense. i do like the hardy pick, but yeah. it’s a big gamble this late in the draft. so i’m guessing they look to free agency for some more help.
so i’m guessing clowney is in play? the chance to play alongside donald and parlay that into a bigger contract? i don’t know how they afford him, but that could be a good fit.
May 2, 2022 at 2:18 pm #138717InvaderRamModeratorBut a freakish athlete, under Ram tutelage for a year or two?
one thing i would say is that the rams strategy may have been drafting for now rather than for the future. not on all their picks but for a significant portion of them.
sure they drafted hardy for potential, but bruss, williams, and lake seem to have been drafted more because they could possibly step in right away and contribute.
bruss comes from a program known for development of the oline. lake has the pedigree. he’s been compared to fuller. a guy who doesn’t stand out physically but knows football. fundamentally sound. and fits the scheme. williams is not just a physical runner, but he can catch and pass block.
they know the window is small. even just one or two years of development is too long when they’re trying to win now.
maybe i’m wrong about that. i don’t know.
- This reply was modified 2 years, 6 months ago by InvaderRam.
May 3, 2022 at 8:33 am #138728Billy_TParticipantInvader,
You make a lot of good points. It was a different draft for the Rams, on a lot of fronts. That drafting for the future is one of them. Not as much of that this time, possibly.
However, trading for Hill seems to be saying they still drafted those DBs for the future. Hill will start now. The rookies will be bench players. So, if we’re just dealing with DBs for a moment, I’m still thinking it was a mistake to let freakish athletes (like Woolen and McCollum) go to other teams, while picking so-so athletes and trading for Hill.
I may be reading all of this wrong by miles, but the Hill trade tells me that they don’t really trust the new picks back there either, or Rochell or Long. Rochell, of course, fits the profile I like the most. Crazy good athlete, but a bit “raw.” Again, I think a good coaching staff can work with “raw.” But no coach can make a poor or middling athlete into a freak. Boiled down, made overly simplistic, that’s why I prefer drafting for the great athletes, when possible, especially late.
It’s really all “taking a flier.” I want them to take those on rare athletes and coach them up. Not small, rather slow guys they still have to coach up.
I know it’s a personal bias, but I think it’s based on sound thinking.
May 3, 2022 at 9:32 am #138729InvaderRamModeratorI know it’s a personal bias, but I think it’s based on sound thinking.
good point about troy hill.
i am also in favor of high ceiling players. which is why hardy was one of my favorite picks. and i wish they had picked at least one high ceiling player at defensive back too.
i guess we’ll see. the one thing that gives me comfort is that they seem adept at picking secondary players in the lower rounds so those high ceiling players must not have ticked enough boxes to be selected over the more polished players.
May 3, 2022 at 10:18 am #138732Billy_TParticipantI know it’s a personal bias, but I think it’s based on sound thinking.
good point about troy hill. i am also in favor of high ceiling players. which is why hardy was one of my favorite picks. and i wish they had picked at least one high ceiling player at defensive back too. i guess we’ll see. the one thing that gives me comfort is that they seem adept at picking secondary players in the lower rounds so those high ceiling players must not have ticked enough boxes to be selected over the more polished players.
More good sense from you. Ya gotta stop that!!
;>)
We agree on going for the high ceiling guys when possible.
Listening to some of “11 personnel” this morning. So far, roughly 25 minutes in, it sounds like Jordan is pretty satisfied with the draft, and I respect her. I’m guessing they’ll go into more details later.
As always, I hope I’m flat out wrong and this is the Best Draft Class evah. But, right now, I can’t help but disappointed on the athletic front. Not just cuz of what the Rams lose, but for what other teams gain. I think it’s a double whammy, not just a loss for the Rams. As in, the Rams will have to face a lot of these freakish athletes down the road, and I wish that were just in their own practices.
Speed kills, etc. Size/speed destroys whole civilizations.
;>)
May 3, 2022 at 7:23 pm #138741wvParticipantI dont have a take, since I dont know anything about any of them,
but how can we not trust mcSnead at this point?
Other than the tutu-debacle, they’ve been as good as it gets
in the NFL.
Looking forward to seeing these kids play.
How do you replace a Hall of Famer like Vonn Miller?
Get better in the secondary and LB units, i guess.
I dunno.
w
v
May 4, 2022 at 1:14 am #138747znModeratorHow do you replace a Hall of Famer like Vonn Miller? Get better in the secondary and LB units, i guess. I dunno.
As has been said before, a defense with Von Miller is different from a defense with Wagner.
A defense with Wagner and a stocked secondary means less of what we didn’t like last year–those endless long drives by opposing offenses milking the short pass up the middle. (This is admittedly an impression and not the result of dedicated film study.)
If that is your defensive strength instead of weakness, you can also script in blitzes, stunts, and tailored 3rd down packages designed to isolate specific guys.
Last year the Rams were just 15th in Yards Per Passing Attempt Allowed, 13th in First Downs Allowed Per Game, 14th in Completion Percentage Allowed, and 20th in Opponent Time of Possession Percentage. Just a little improvement in those areas and its a good defense but in a different way. I want to see more punts from the other team (Rams were 15th in opposing teams punting.)
Anyway I wonder if Morris’s thing is turnovers more than sacks.
It may not go the way I’m saying but it could.
May 4, 2022 at 7:06 am #138748wvParticipantHow do you replace a Hall of Famer like Vonn Miller? Get better in the secondary and LB units, i guess. I dunno.
As has been said before, a defense with Von Miller is different from a defense with Wagner. A defense with Wagner and a stocked secondary means less of what we didn’t like last year–those endless long drives by opposing offenses milking the short pass up the middle. (This is admittedly an impression and not the result of dedicated film study.) If that is your defensive strength instead of weakness, you can also script in blitzes, stunts, and tailored 3rd down packages designed to isolate specific guys. Last year the Rams were just 15th in Yards Per Passing Attempt Allowed, 13th in First Downs Allowed Per Game, 14th in Completion Percentage Allowed, and 20th in Opponent Time of Possession Percentage. Just a little improvement in those areas and its a good defense but in a different way. I want to see more punts from the other team (Rams were 15th in opposing teams punting.) Anyway I wonder if Morris’s thing is turnovers more than sacks. It may not go the way I’m saying but it could.
==
In my mind, this next season will show us a lot about Morris. I know he did well last year, but if you have Vonn, Jalen and AD, I expect any DC would do well. Vonn and AD on the same line is just nutz.
But this year, will require something different. More…oh, i dunno the word…more ‘tactical’ or somethin.
Anyway, it will be inter estin.
Last time the Rams had a chance to repeat, the defense was atrocious
as i recall. It was like they all gave 17 percent of 110 percent.
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May 8, 2022 at 4:40 pm #138806znModeratorLast time the Rams had a chance to repeat, the defense was atrocious as i recall. It was like they all gave 17 percent of 110 percent.
That defense had huge major flaws (assuming you mean the 2000 defense). First, as we all know, the coordinator.
But also every single member of the DL had undergone major off-season surgery. With Carter it was his back and he really wasn’t ready for 2000.
2001 they rebuilt it and it was better. As we know.
Morris is a good question mark. But I have this sense somehow that he has in mind a different kind of D than the one he coached in 2021. I think he is okay with engineering sacks through packages and fronts and would rather build around or build in turnovers and coverage. A Wagner defense with a ton of new DBs might suit that better. That’s just speculation on my part but I have seen some hints and omens pointing that way.
May 8, 2022 at 5:14 pm #138807Billy_TParticipantThe focus on the D this draft might be a direct indication that Morris is far more in control this season. That’s it’s going to be his D now. And while I still wish they had gone for the freakish athletes when they were still on the board, I do like that they look for smart players, “mature,” whether via age or just hard-wired. Their “type” now seems to be guys with Masters degrees, often in the 24-25 year range, team captains, when possible. I don’t think they want to have to back-fill missed years of solid training, if it can be helped.
This also might be in part playing the cards they’ve been dealt. The absence of early picks can often mean that the numbers of players who check all of these boxes are all but gone:
Freakish athletes
Mature wiring, regardless of chronological time
Post-grad accomplishments
Team Captains
Noted history of We not Me ethosThe further the Draft goes, the fewer players remain who have that entire enchilada, etc. But it appears the Rams currently value some of those metrics much more than others. I don’t think they care as much about the athleticism aspect, though that may change as their own reigning super-athletes retire.
Finally, I’m also thinking the advanced age thing may be temporary too. More of a Covid related blip. Having 25-year-old rookies may soon become less common, though the introduction of the Transfer Portal mixes things up further. If I had my druthers, I’d prefer drafting as many mature and self-assured kids in the 21-22 range as possible, who didn’t need extra physical years to “get it together” (like I did!)
. . . . .
Oh, and I think the 2001 team was better than the 1999 team, as incredible and glorious as it was. By all rights, that should have been their second SB win, and they should have trounced NE.
May 8, 2022 at 9:24 pm #138810znModeratorOh, and I think the 2001 team was better than the 1999 team, as incredible and glorious as it was. By all rights, that should have been their second SB win, and they should have trounced NE.
All too true.
Their “type” now seems to be guys with Masters degrees, often in the 24-25 year range, team captains, when possible. I don’t think they want to have to back-fill missed years of solid training, if it can be helped.
+ Football smarts, love of the game, etc. I think what they have in mind is surrounding their stars with a solid team. You’re right, not necessarily athletically. But just in terms of being high-level consistent.
Though this is obvious that means they built are built around:
* Ramsey, Wagner, Donald. The rest are anywhere from good (Floyd, Robinson) to just smart role players.
* Stafford, Kupp. Maybe Akers?
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