looking forward to the 2024 OL

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  • #151188
    zn
    Moderator

    From 2024 NFL Offensive Line Rankings: https://ftnfantasy.com/nfl/offensive-line-rankings

    4. Los Angeles Rams
    Alaric Jackson, Jonah Jackson, Steve Avila, Kevin Dotson, Rob Havenstein

    The Rams were one of the more surprising offensive line units in 2023, turning a largely inexperienced offensive line into one of the NFL’s most dominant units. The Rams transitioned to a gap-blocking run scheme that rolled through opposing defenses while providing strong protection (11 sacks surrendered) in the passing attack.

    The Rams will return four of their five starters, including right guard Kevin Dotson. The Rams traded for Dotson during training camp after three uneven years with the Steelers. He rewarded the team with an 85.2 PFF grade, including an 88.8 run-blocking grade. Rookie second-round pick Steve Avila also posted a solid first season as the left guard, allowing just 32 pressures on a team-leading 685 pass-blocking snaps.

    Los Angeles will re-shuffle its offensive line in 2024 after letting starting center Coleman Shelton walk in free agency. The team will kick Avila over to center and fill his position with former Lions guard Jonah Jackson. Jackson has struggled with injuries the last two seasons but is a solid veteran piece who will help stabilize the interior.

    The Rams don’t have a ton of depth on the offensive line, but they do return former starting left tackle Joe Noteboom to serve as their swing tackle. Noteboom was expected to be the starter at left tackle in 2023 but lost his job to Alaric Jackson. He has starting experience and has played over 2,000 career snaps for the Rams, including 573 snaps between left tackle, right tackle and right guard in 2023.

    #151189
    zn
    Moderator

    from Offensive Line Rankings and Tiers – End of Season: https://www.playerprofiler.com/article/offensive-line-rankings-and-tiers-end-of-nfl-season-review-2024-offensive-line-outlook/

    Tier 2: Great, just not Elite

    1. Los Angeles Rams

    Alaric Jackson, Steve Avila, Coleman Shelton, Kevin Dotson, Rob Havenstein

    The Rams were arguably my biggest miss coming into the season. The unit had very little NFL experience but has been one of the best units in the NFL. This has helped Matthew Stafford enjoy a resurgence while putting Kyren Williams on the map in the backfield. The right side of the offensive line has been especially impressive with the combination of Kevin Dotson and Rob Havenstein combining to allow just five sacks and 42 pressures on 465 pass-blocking snaps. Dotson especially has been a revelation after coming over from the Steelers. He ranks as PFF’s No. 2 overall guard in 2023.

     

    #151190
    zn
    Moderator

    69RamFan

    I say we have a top five OL.

    In 2023, they changed their OL scheme from zone to power blocking, which it helped out the whole OL.  So, you give credit to Wendell and McVay for making the change.

    At the start of the season, AJ beat out NB for the starting LT, which  put NB as the RG, then into 6th OL man role. I used to use Football Outsiders for OL stats, but it’s no longer available. Now I just view the tapes and I have my own type of judgements compared to these other football sites. I just reviewed the vids for the first 13 games in the condensed mode on the offensive side of the ball. By my count, AJ only gave up 1 sack, 1 QB hit, 11 pressures in those 13 games.

    Out of those 11 pressures, eight passes were completed, to include those throws were 3TD, 1 incomplete, 1 a coverage sack, 1 INT, in 13 games. Those eight pressure that had a completed pass, I could say it doesn’t count as a pressure, IMO. To me, it’s like a running type QB who has escape from the pocket, the NFL doesn’t count that as a pressure unless he gets sacked.

    But I’ll just put it as a pressure, and it’s still some great stats.

    The RAMs RB average 28 carries in 17 games. The RAMs RB average over 8 runs to the left side between and outside of the LT/LG. Only 1 game running to AJ side that he gave up 1 TFL for 1 yd lost out of those first 13 games. Based on those numbers, I consider him being in the second or third tier from the top 5 LT. I would rate him anywhere between 6 to 15, strictly based off the numbers I calculated playing in the RAMs scheme, IMO.

    We actually had two outstanding Guards that played off each other’s tackles. I felt last year, our weakest link on the OL was C/Shelton, he was serviceable, especially in the zone blocking scheme, but when it came to pass protection, against powerhouse DT/NT, he struggled. That’s where the most sacks came from, up the middle.  I feel that 2024 is going to be even better with Avila playing center. Hopefully AJ & JJ can have the same continuity that AJ had with Avila, in picking up switches, I think they will with JJ’s experience, so we shouldn’t see any downgrade on that.

    What else helps the OL is Stafford, he has a great feel for the pocket and pressure, and has a quick release when needed. McVay, Stafford, Williams, Kupp, Nacua, Higbee, and the OL, all play for each other. This team is about WE and NOT ME.

    #151199
    zn
    Moderator

    Praise for Ryan Wendell.

    It’s early but I am already considering comparing Wendell to Hudson Houck in terms of great Rams OL coaches. And the Rams have not lacked for good ones–Houck, Hanifan, Boudreau, Kromer. Houck was elite and the other 3 were all very good, in Hanifan’s case legendary good.

    Wendell played center with the Patz under the great OL coach Dante Scarnecchia from 2008-2015 and then worked as an assistant OL coach in Buffalo with Aaron Kromer in 2022. So he has the pedigree. More importantly it already looks like it’s not just pedigree with him, he has the chops too.

    Avila is likely a step up at center. It’s really a good thing that his transition to NFL center is being handled by Wendell–a former starting center and guard for the Patz who played in the playoffs under Scarnecchia for a few years and was voted a team captain in 2015 (though he missed that season w/ injuries). That last sentence was a bit long winded but you get the point.

    Will the Rams lose Wendell to the Great NFL Coaching Raids of Rams Staff? Well they could but odds are against it. As a rule, OL coaches don’t get “raided.” Unless a team won’t pay the guy (which happened in 1991 with the great Hudson Houck, who the Rams just let walk after his contract ran out…he ended up being the coach who put together the great Dallas OLs in the 90s. Houck coached the Rams OL from 1983-91, and in that span had 5 different Rams OL go to a combined 21 Pro Bowls [Slater, Doug Smith, Hill, Harrah, & Newberry]).

    As we know, to get raided you have to be promoted, and as a rule, OL coaches don’t end up being hired as either offensive coordinators or head coaches. So generally speaking, if you want to keep your OL coach around you just keep paying him. For example Scarnecchia coached the Patz OL from 1999 to 2019. Now and then an OL coach becomes a head coach, but it’s very rare (the 3 that come to mind are Chuck Knox, Jim Hanifan, and Bill Calahan, though I am likely forgetting 1 or 2 others). OL coaches are so specialized, I think it’s a case where the people who do the hiring don’t see their skills as translating “up.”

    #151202
    Zooey
    Moderator

    Yeah, we’re all pretty excited by the prospect of watching a dominant OL this season. It’s part of the reason I’m bullish on the Rams. A big part of it.

    And I really don’t understand the writer at The Athletic who published this today:

    #151204
    zn
    Moderator

    And I really don’t understand the writer at The Athletic who published this today:

    Agree. That’s something Rams fans are used to. Superficial accounts that are not really based on knowing the team.

    One of my favorites from the old days was from before the season in 99, when some writers said “Faulk can’t run up the middle.”

    #151259
    zn
    Moderator

    from https://www.turfshowtimes.com/2024/6/24/24184732/rams-offensive-line-rankings-brandon-thorn-steve-avila

    Brandon Thorn of Trench Warfare and Establish the Run recently ranked the NFL’s offensive line groups. Coming in at number 11 and in the “solid offensive lines” tier was the Rams. Said Thorn,

    “Head coach Sean McVay‘s transformation from utilizing a zone-based run scheme to a downhill, gap-based one will be complete this year, as the line is slated to have one of the heaviest in the league, particularly on the interior. Last year’s standout rookie left guard, Steve Avila, is moving inside to center to make room for free-agent signing Jonah Jackson from the Lions. With Kevin Dotson coming off of a career year, and as long as Avila can settle into the pivot (which he played more of in college than guard), this will be one of the best interior trios in the NFL. Add in the ever-steady presence of right tackle Rob Havenstein, and the unit really just has one main question at left tackle with Alaric Jackson. Jackson was adequate last year at tackle over 15 starts, but there needs to be improvements in pass protection for him to avoid being picked on too much by higher-end competition.”

    #151314
    zn
    Moderator

    from: https://www.turfshowtimes.com/2024/7/2/24190991/rams-offensive-line-rankings-brandon-thorn

    The Los Angeles Rams have invested more capital into the interior of their offensive line than any other team in the NFL recently, so you would hope that they have a top-5 guard and center trio going into the 2024 season. According to Brandon Thorn, a respected expert on offensive line play and author of the Trench Warfare newsletter on Substack, that’s exactly what the Rams have now.
    .

    On The Athletic Football podcast, Thorn was asked to give four teams who aren’t getting enough respect and his final answer was the L.A. Rams:

    .
    “I think this offensive line could be very good and that’s the Rams, that really starts with the interior offensive line which has a care this year going in to be one of the five best interior lines in the league. There’s a little bit of projection there with Steve Avila moving to center but he played center more at TCU than left guard, so I think that shouldn’t be too difficult of a transition for him. Then you have one of the biggest centers in the NFL, which is kind of cool, especially for what they want to do.”

    .
    Thorn then goes onto talk about Jonah Jackson as a good signing as long as he’s healthy, and Kevin Dotson, giving the Rams “the most physically imposing interior in the entire NFL in terms of run blocking and considering what McVay has morphed into with this duo lead run game, this could be a lot of fun this year.”

    .

    He then calls Rob Havenstein “unspectacular, but solid” and says that while A.J. Jackson has questions in pass protection, but is a “powerful run blocker”.

    .

    Thorn not only sees the Rams as having a good offensive line in its own right, but that McVay finally has the right pieces in place to do what he wants to do in the run game with Kyren Williams and Blake Corum. That’s what could make the Rams a very dangerous team in the NFC.

    #151315
    InvaderRam
    Moderator

    Avila is likely a step up at center. It’s really a good thing that his transition to NFL center is being handled by Wendell–a former starting center and guard for the Patz who played in the playoffs under Scarnecchia for a few years and was voted a team captain in 2015 (though he missed that season w/ injuries). That last sentence was a bit long winded but you get the point.

     

    as avila goes so does this oline. if he stands out then the rams oline can be among the best.

     

    and i agree. Wendell might just be the ideal guy to oversee his development. looking at his college career center might actually be a better fit for him.

     

    also on wendell. he’s from diamond bar. and although that’s no guarantee i could easily see him staying with the rams for a long time.

    #151316
    zn
    Moderator

    i could easily see him staying with the rams for a long time.

    Yep. As I said above, OL coaches can be with a team for a long time…unless their head coach gets fired. Scarnecchia was Belichick’s OL coach for a total of 19 years.

    #151333
    zn
    Moderator
    Brandon Thorn@BrandonThornNFL
    Heaviest OL units:
    1. Bengals
    2. Eagles (w/Steen at RG, would be 1 if Becton wins the job)
    3. Rams
    .
    Rams Bros.@RamsBrothers
    Rams tied for 6th least sacks allowed in 2023 and their offensive line did nothing but improve this offseason.
    #151341
    zn
    Moderator

    from https://www.turfshowtimes.com/2024/7/5/24192754/rams-depth-chart-offensive-line-steve-avila-andrew-whitworth?utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter&utm_content=turfshowtimes&utm_campaign=socialflow
    .

    OTAs the Rams voiced a lot of confidence in Avila as he makes the switch. Offensive coordinator Matt LaFleur voiced that nothing is ever too big for Avila and that the spring is all about learning opportunities. Sean McVay added to that by saying,

    “He’s done a really good job. He’s really smart, really conscientious. I think (Offensive Line Coach) Ryan Wendell has done a great job of being able to teach him the big picture because of the amount of communication that is required of that center position. And then obviously having Matthew there is a huge bonus to be able to lean on him.”

    #151391
    zn
    Moderator
    .
    While the Rams coaching staff certainly signed off on transplanting Avila from left guard to center, what are the opinions of other third party NFL analysts? One analyst who has consistently been objective and honest is Justin Melo, the NFL Draft analyst extraordinaire from The Draft Network. In a recent article, he lauded Steve Avila as a solid second-year offensive lineman, despite his migration to a new starting role.
    Justin M@JustinM_NFL
    #RamsHouse IOL Steve Avila was outstanding last season while playing every single snap. He’ll now move to C in a revamped interior that features Kevin Dotson + Jonah Jackson at G. A Pro Bowl-caliber season is within Avila’s reach.
    .
    .
    Avila was particularly outstanding in pass protection. The former TCU standout was credited with allowing just 2.0 sacks, 32 quarterback pressures, and seven hits in the passing game en route to a protection grade of 67.2, according to Pro Football Focus. As a whole, the Rams’ offensive line ranked seventh in sacks allowed (34), and seventh in total offense.
    With Dotson and Jackson possessing multiple years of experience at guard, the natural solution was for the youngest interior blocker, Avila, to make the positional switch. Avila should make a swift transition. He played more than 1,000 snaps at center for the Horned Frogs and has the athleticism necessary to develop into a high-level one at the pro ranks quickly.
    .
    Avila was arguably the best rookie offensive lineman in the league throughout 2023. The trio of Avila, Jackson, and Dotson could form an elite interior this coming season. A Pro Bowl-type season is well within the realm of possibility for the Rams’ workhorse blocker.
    #151394
    InvaderRam
    Moderator

    i don’t think i’m going on a limb when i say avila goes into this season with the most potential of any center the rams have had in the past 30 years.

    #151395
    zn
    Moderator

    i don’t think i’m going on a limb when i say avila goes into this season with the most potential of any center the rams have had in the past 30 years.

    Since Doug Smith retired after 1991. And Avila is both more athletic than Smith and weighs in at 73 pounds more. 😲

    #151396
    Billy_T
    Participant

    i don’t think i’m going on a limb when i say avila goes into this season with the most potential of any center the rams have had in the past 30 years.

    Since Doug Smith retired after 1991. And Avila is both more athletic than Smith and weighs in at 73 pounds more. 😲

    Smith was a good one. Rich Saul, too. The Rams used to have excellent O-lines, consistently, with several players making the Pro Bowl each season. From the late 1960s thru the 1980s, with just a few lost years here and there . . . they were great in the trenches, on both sides of the ball.

    Avila has Pro Bowl potential at guard, and he’s supposed to be better at center than guard. Yep. This should be the best line they’ve had in a long time. That means Stafford should be at his best, the receivers have time to get open, and Williams and Corum have room to run.

    #151399
    wv
    Participant

    I love the fact the Oline is not a question mark this year.   Seems like most years, for most teams Oline is a question mark.

    Solid Oline line.  Good RBs.  Good WRs.  Stafford.   If Tight Ends come through, it should be a playoff level offense.

    Dunno if they have the overall firepower of the 49ers or Lions though.

    w

    v

    #151402
    zn
    Moderator

    From the late 1960s thru the 1980s, with just a few lost years here and there . . . they were great in the trenches, on both sides of the ball.

    I’ve posted this before but I enjoy repeating it.

    There is at least one Ram offensive lineman in the pro bowl every single season from 1967 until 1990. That’s 12 different pro-bowl lineman across 24 consecutive years.

    In fact the 68 line had 4 pro bowlers, as did the 78 line and the 85 line.

     

    #151406
    Billy_T
    Participant

    From the late 1960s thru the 1980s, with just a few lost years here and there . . . they were great in the trenches, on both sides of the ball.

    I’ve posted this before but I enjoy repeating it. There is at least one Ram offensive lineman in the pro bowl every single season from 1967 until 1990. That’s 12 different pro-bowl lineman across 24 consecutive years. In fact the 68 line had 4 pro bowlers, as did the 78 line and the 85 line.

     

    Thanks, ZN.

    Hope they can get back to that. A bunch of Pro Bowlers in the trenches would be great. That’s the way to build a Super Bowl winner.

    #151409
    zn
    Moderator

    #151418
    zn
    Moderator

    Countdown to Camp: Rams enter 2024 training camp with one of NFL’s heaviest projected starting offensive lines

    Stu Jackson

    https://www.therams.com/news/countdown-to-camp-rams-enter-2024-training-camp-with-one-of-nfl-s-heaviest-projected-starting-offensive-lines

    Countdown to Camp is a series breaking down the Rams roster by position group heading into the team’s first open training camp practice. The first installment examines the offensive line.

    Transitioning to a bigger, more physical offensive line in 2023, the Rams gained even more size this offseason. And, based on their projected starters, they enter training camp with the NFL’s third-heaviest unit in 2024, according to offensive line/defensive line analyst Brandon Thorn, who published the Trench Warfare Newsletter.

    The Rams brought back restricted free agent Alaric Jackson (signed 1-year tender), last season’s starting left tackle, and also re-signed breakout right guard Kevin Dotson to a 3-year deal. They also signed former Lions guard Jonah Jackson to a 3-year deal in free agency, and his arrival led to Steve Avila sliding over from left guard to center. Rob Havenstein, a team captain and last season’s starting right tackle, returns as well.

    Here’s how that projected starting five measures across the line:

    A. Jackson: 6-foot-7, 345 pounds
    J. Jackson: 6-4, 315
    Avila: 6-3, 338
    Dotson: 6-4, 330
    Havenstein: 6-8, 323

    With four of those five starting along the offensive line last year, Los Angeles averaged the seventh-most total yards of offense (359.3). More importantly, it rebounded from 27th in rushing yards per game in 2022 to 11th in 2023, their average increasing by 22.6 yards. The improvement up front translated not only in the run game, but also the pass game – a bigger, more physical unit tied for the 6th-fewest sacks allowed last season after the 2022 edition – shuffling through 12 different combinations through the first 13 games due to injury – allowed the third-most.

    Now, that unit puts Avila at center and adds Jonah Jackson.

    “We’ve had some cross tape through the season so I was able to see the work that they do,” Jackson said after signing with the Rams on March 14. “That’s a powerful bunch. I came out the same year as Dotson so I had some familiarity with him through college and watching him, Steve, Alaric and Rob, that’s a good group. Kind of similar to what we had in Detroit. There’s some specialness there so I’m excited to be a part of it.”

    Jackson is the most intriguing piece to this heavier and slightly-reconfigured offensive line, and he arrived in Los Angeles with some schematic carryover from what Detroit did, namely in the run game.

    “The gap scheme and the duo just in general is probably our bread and butter in Detroit and glad it’s the bread and butter over here,” Jackson also said on March 14. “So it’s not going to be too hard of a transition and things like that are right up my alley.”

    An offensive line with that size and physicality not only should aid the run game and the pass game, but also the offense as a whole situationally – short-yardage and being able to control the clock late in games with a lead, as two examples.

    It will be fun to see this group in action when the pads come on in training camp.

    #151434
    InvaderRam
    Moderator

    from https://www.turfshowtimes.com/2024/7/18/24201163/rams-offensive-line-rankings-steve-avila-brandon-thorn

    Brandon Thorn of the Trench Warfare Substack just released part 1 of his 2024 OL Almanac. One of the best offensive line analysts, Thorn considered the Rams one of his two breakout units heading into the 2024 season. Said Thorn,

    “Head coach Sean McVay has gradually morphed his running game from a zone-based scheme to a gap-heavy one with Duo as the central concept. This has emphasized more size, power and differing skill-sets than what the Rams have leaned towards in recent years…Entering the 2024 season the Rams have gone from the 24th heaviest unit last season to the 3rd heaviest with the off-season addition of Jonah Jackson in free agency that bumped last year’s rookie second-round pick Steve Avila inside to center. Add in Kevin Dotson coming off a breakout season as one of the most physically imposing guards in the league and the Rams all of a sudden are armed with a potentially dominant interior trio that can control football games. Left tackle Alaric Jackson’s ability to hold up in pass protection against higher-end competition remains a question mark, but the four other starters across from him lack any glaring concerns, providing this line with a ‘trump card’ as a run blockers and shrewd enough scheming to cover up their primary weakness. McVay’s transformation from having a smaller, quicker line operating in a zone heavy scheme should be complete this season and the pieces are in place for the results to lead to an elite ground game in 2024.”

    In Thorn’s preseason offensive line rankings, he ranked the Rams at number 11 heading into the season in the ‘solid offensive lines’ tier. With that said, it will wouldn’t be surprising to see the Rams jump into the top-seven by the end of the season.

    This is a group that the Rams have invested heavily in over the last few years. While they rank tied for 25th in total draft capital, they are the sixth-highest paid unit in the NFL. Avila remains the best value for the Rams at center as he’s paid $2.1M in 2024. Said Thorn on Avila,

    “Avila balled out as a rookie at left guard and despite kicking inside to center this season, has plenty of experience there dating back to his days at TCU. Avila is also in the perfect scheme to capitalize on his skill-set.”

    #151439
    InvaderRam
    Moderator

    i don’t think i’m going on a limb when i say avila goes into this season with the most potential of any center the rams have had in the past 30 years.

    Since Doug Smith retired after 1991. And Avila is both more athletic than Smith and weighs in at 73 pounds more. 😲

     

    ok. another question. the jackson dotson combo. best pair of guards the rams have had in the past thirty years?

    #151441
    zn
    Moderator

    the jackson dotson combo. best pair of guards the rams have had in the past thirty years?

    I think so but this is a somewhat less dramatic a difference. In the GSOT days Nutten and Timmerman were a good pair of guards, though as I remember it, Nutten was basically just really solid. Jackson and Dotson appear to be more than that. Nutten/Timmerman were pretty good but just not Jackson/Dotson good. So then yeah you go back to Hill and Harrah at the height of the Dickerson days (Hill/Harrah were the Rams guards together from to 79 to 85. In 85 btw the Rams had 4 pro bowl OL–Hill Smith Harrah Slater.)

    That OL btw, the 80s Dickerson OL, also had a first-rate, “one of the best in the league” level OL coaches, Hudson Houck. The Shaw Rams wouldn’t pay him when it was contract time so he left after 91. He then earned fame as the great OL coach of the Dallas OL from 93-2001, in the Aikman era.

    Hanifan was a very good OL coach when he was with the Rams, though he had Pace to help him with that.  He made something out of guys like Nutten and McCullum, though his stars were Pace and Timmerman.

    Anyway. The point is, I am wondering if Ryan Wendell is that level. Best Rams OL coach since Houck? You can’t say that after just 1 year but that’s where my thoughts are tending.

    #151443
    InvaderRam
    Moderator

    Anyway. The point is, I am wondering if Ryan Wendell is that level. Best Rams OL coach since Houck? You can’t say that after just 1 year but that’s where my thoughts are tending.

     

    i agree with you about nutten and timmerman. and just as you say it’s too early to say about wendell it’s a little early to anoint jackson and dotson. but on paper that trio looks top drawer.

    #151444
    zn
    Moderator

    i agree with you about nutten and timmerman. and just as you say it’s too early to say about wendell it’s a little early to anoint jackson and dotson. but on paper that trio looks top drawer.

    We’re seein all this the same.

    I agree. Way it looks so far, the Rams 2024 IOL has a chance to be spectacular. Because of the players and because of Wendell.

    #151452
    zn
    Moderator

    from https://www.turfshowtimes.com/2024/7/22/24203972/rams-training-camp-steve-avila-all-pro-predictions?utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter&utm_content=turfshowtimes&utm_campaign=socialflow
    .

    Sports Illustrated’s Matt Verderame was tasked with picking the best player at each position in terms of the highest-odds to make an All-Pro team for the first time this season. At first, I wondered why Puka Nacua wasn’t on the list, but as a second-team All-Pro in his rookie campaign, Puka was ineligible. But a Rams player did make the list:

    Center: Steve Avila, Los Angeles Rams
    Avila was fantastic as a rookie left guard last season. However, he’s now kicking inside after the offseason signing of Jonah Jackson. While the competition at center is fierce with Ragnow and Creed Humphrey, Avila has a chance to earn the nod provided he continues to ascend.

    #151568
    zn
    Moderator
    Mike Garafolo@MikeGarafolo
    #Rams OL Jonah Jackson suffered a bruised scapula, source says. Expected to miss around six weeks. In all, not bad news for the big free-agent pickup.

    Rams’ resource-heavy OL under pressure with Jonah Jackson, Alaric Jackson injuries

    Jourdan Rodrigue

    https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/5672961/2024/07/31/la-rams-offensive-line-injuries/?utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=nfltw&source=nfltw

    LOS ANGELES — The position investment that the Los Angeles Rams were proudest of this offseason is already under pressure.

    They are currently minus two starters on their offensive line: Left guard Jonah Jackson has a shoulder injury, a team source said, and will miss some time although there is optimism that recovery won’t stretch significantly into the regular season. Left tackle Alaric Jackson has an ankle injury and is day-to-day, head coach Sean McVay said Tuesday (McVay was not scheduled to address reporters Wednesday, so couldn’t speak further to the severity of Jonah Jackson’s situation).

    Jonah Jackson signed a three-year, $51 million deal with the Rams this spring and the team subsequently moved previous starter Steve Avila to center. The $17 million per year average is currently tied for seventh-highest among interior linemen. While Avila could slide back over in a pinch, he has spent the entire spring and summer developing rapport at center with veteran quarterback Matthew Stafford — and it could be unwise to shift him again, especially without a viable backup center on the roster as rookie Beaux Limmer continues his development.

    Alaric Jackson is on a one-year tender worth $4.8 million — the Rams could keep their rising star left tackle on a cheaper deal because they originally signed him as an undrafted free agent in 2021. Jackson took over the position full-time in 2023 from Joe Noteboom, who is now the backup at multiple positions (including left guard).

    Noteboom could continue to fill in for Jackson at left tackle, as McVay at least sounded slightly optimistic about his injury. When Jackson returns, Noteboom can slide one spot over to left guard as Jonah Jackson recovers. Players who have also repped in the left guard and left tackle spots in camp include A.J. Arcuri and Zach Thomas.

    The Rams ran the ball more productively than they had in years in 2023, behind a beefed-up interior offensive line that included then-rookie Avila and trade-acquisition Kevin Dotson at right guard (he signed a three-year, $48 million contract extension this spring, right before Jonah Jackson).

    They also would like to keep Stafford (who just agreed to an adjusted contract) upright and healthy to replicate the league-leading production he buoyed a young roster with last season.

    “Next man up, right? That’s what this game is,” said offensive coordinator Mike LaFleur, who deferred to McVay on more specificities about both injuries when speaking to reporters Wednesday. “There is gonna be guys going down for sometimes a day, sometimes an extended period of time. So I think the guys that stepped in (on Tuesday) got better as the practice went on, as we got to that second day and (they got) used to the speed of going against the No. 1s.”

    #151577
    InvaderRam
    Moderator

    rams oline going down with injuries. both jacksons and now hav.

     

    the exact thing we didn’t want to see.

    #151610
    zn
    Moderator

    2022 wrecked the OL with massive injuries, as we know.

    They started over in 2023, adding Avila and Dotson, and hiring Wendell.

    We looked forward to a top OL in 2024, especially after they added Jackson.

    But we forgot that the Rams new OL  is so new, it has no depth. Or, rather, the depth is so young that no one has a bead on them. Behind the starting 5 are rookies and 2nd year players, and low-round developmental players (and Noteboom, who has his own injury history).

    So do this summer’s injuries hurt the OL? Well yes, on one side of the coin,  it does. But on the other side of the coin, it also allows them more time to develop the depth. Guys like McClendon, Limmer, and Bruss…and? who knows? Right now, we’re not even sure who it is.

    But if you have to develop depth in a short time, better to do it during the summer. All 3 of the injured OL–A.Jackson, J.Jackson, and Havenstein–will be back during the season. And when they’re back, they will have more experienced depth behind them, guys who have more experience and are better known by the coaches.

    I don’t think it’s a 2022 situation, where they started up to 16 different players. I think it’s the difference between a potentially great line (which it still can be when the starters are back) and a potentially solid line (which it could be up until the starters are back).

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